State v. Chong Hung Han , 130 Haw. 83 ( 2013 )


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  •     ***FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-11-0000814
    19-JUN-2013
    09:56 AM
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I
    ---o0o---
    STATE OF HAWAI#I, Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    CHONG HUNG HAN, Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    SCWC-11-0000814
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-11-0000814; CR. NO. 10-1-1098)
    JUNE 19, 2013
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, ACOBA, MCKENNA, AND POLLACK, JJ.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY ACOBA, J.
    We hold that under State v. Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i 226,
    
    900 P.2d 1293
     (1995) and State v. Lewis, 94 Hawai#i 292, 
    12 P.3d 1233
     (2000), a colloquy between the judge and a defendant
    involves a verbal exchange in which the judge ascertains the
    defendant’s understanding of the defendant’s rights.            In this
    case, the advisement by the Family Court of the First Circuit
    (the court) did not adequately ascertain whether Petitioner/
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    Defendant-Appellant Chong Hung Han (Petitioner) understood his
    Constitutional right to testify or not to testify. Further,
    Petitioner’s need for an interpreter during the trial was a
    “salient fact” heightening the necessity for the court to insure
    that Petitioner understood the rights that he waived.              See State
    v. Barros, 105 Hawai#i 160, 170, 
    95 P.3d 14
    , 24 (App. 2004).
    Under the circumstances, the error in this case was not harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt.      Accordingly, we vacate the October
    30, 2012 judgment of the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA)
    filed pursuant to its September 12, 2012 Summary Disposition
    Order (2012), vacate the court’s October 13, 2011 Amended
    Judgment of Conviction and Sentence, and remand the case to the
    court.
    I.
    On January 26, 2010, Petitioner was charged, via
    complaint, with the offense of Abuse of Family and Household
    Members, HRS § 709-906 (Supp. 2006).1        The Complaint alleged that
    on January 17, 2010, Petitioner “did intentionally, knowingly, or
    1
    HRS § 709-906 provides, in relevant part:
    (1) It shall be unlawful for any person, singly or in
    concert, to physically abuse a family or household
    member or to refuse compliance with the lawful order
    of a police officer under subsection (4). The police,
    in investigating any complaint of abuse of a family or
    household member, upon request, may transport the
    abused person to a hospital or safe shelter.
    For the purposes of this section, “family or household
    member” means spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries,
    former spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries, persons
    who have a child in common, parents, children; persons
    related by consanguinity, and persons jointly residing
    or formerly residing in the same dwelling unit.
    2
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    recklessly physically abuse [his wife,] Kyung Soon Jung
    [(complainant)], a family or household member[.]”           A jury trial
    was held over the course of three days, from January 19 to
    January 21, 2011.    Prior to jury selection and trial, a Korean
    language interpreter was sworn in before the court to translate
    the proceedings for Petitioner.
    On the first day of trial2, the following exchange took
    place between the court and Petitioner:
    THE COURT: Counsel, before we recess for the day, the court
    would like to, at this point, advise the defendant of -- of [State
    v.] Tachibana[, 79 Hawai#i 226, 
    900 P.2d 1293
     (1995),] before we -
    - before we recess for the day, okay.
    All right, [Petitioner], good afternoon -- good afternoon
    again. The court, at this point, will take this opportunity to
    advise you of your rights.
    Okay. All right. [Petitioner], you have a constitutional
    right to testify in your own defense. You should consult with
    your lawyer regarding the decision to testify. However, it is
    ultimately your decision, and no one can prevent you from
    testifying should you choose to do so. If you decide to testify,
    the prosecutor will be allowed to cross-examine you based on your
    direct testimony.
    You also have a constitutional right not to testify and to
    remain silent. If you choose not to testify, the jury will be
    instructed that it cannot hold your silence against you in
    deciding your case.
    If you have not testified by the end of the trial, I will
    question you to ensure that it was your decision not to testify.
    Do you have any questions about what I just explained?
    [PETITIONER]: (No audible response)
    THE COURT: Okay, thank you very much.
    (Emphases added.)
    On the final day of trial, January 21, 2011, Petitioner
    informed the court that the “[d]efense is going to rest.”             The
    following exchange immediately took place:
    THE COURT: Oh, okay. All right. And so let me take
    this opportunity, then, to question your client again and --
    before we bring in our jury.
    All right, [Petitioner], good morning. Your attorney
    2
    The Honorable Fa#auuga L. To#oto#o presided.
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    just informed the court that you are not going to testify on
    your behalf.
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) Yes.
    THE COURT: Okay. All right, remember in the beginning --
    beginning of our trial, this court advised you of your rights.
    And that is, one, you have the right to testify on your behalf,
    and that -- that decision to testify -- whether to testify or not
    is your decision alone and that nobody can force you to testify.
    And then, of course, second, you also have the constitutional
    right to remain silent and that if you decide to exercise your
    right to remain silent, the jury will be instruct -- will be
    instructed not to hold that against you.
    Okay. And -- and I trust that you have -- now that the
    State has finished its case and you had a chance to discuss what
    happened with your attorney, and based on that discussion, you
    have decided that you are not going to testify on your behalf. Is
    anybody threatening or forcing you this morning not to testify?
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) No.
    THE COURT: The decision not to testify is yours and yours
    alone after you have discussed the matter with your attorney.
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) Yes.
    (Emphasis added.)    The trial concluded, and the jury found
    Petitioner guilty as charged.       Petitioner was sentenced to two
    years probation, fined, and sentenced to serve two days in jail.
    II.
    Petitioner appealed to the ICA.         On appeal, Petitioner
    claimed that his right to testify, as set forth in the Hawai#i
    Constitution and the United States Constitution, was violated
    because the court’s Tachibana colloquy was deficient.            (Citing
    Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i 226, 
    900 P.2d 1293
    .)         Petitioner argued
    that the court “failed to adequately ascertain whether
    [Petitioner] understood his Tachibana rights.”          According to
    Petitioner, the colloquy “significantly differed” from the
    colloquy cited “with approval” by this court in State v.
    Christian, 88 Hawai#i 407, 967, P.2d 238 (1998), in that the
    court did not engage in a dialogue with Petitioner after each
    segment or ensure that Petitioner understood his rights.            “Thus,”
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    Petitioner asserted, “[his] waiver of his right to testify was
    not knowing and voluntary.”
    Petitioner further argued in his Opening Brief that the
    court’s error was not harmless.       He cited to State v. Hoang, 94
    Hawai#i 271, 
    12 P.3d 371
     (App. 2000), for the proposition that
    “[i]n general, it is inherently difficult, if not impossible, to
    define what effect a violation of the defendant’s constitutional
    right to testify had on the outcome of any particular case.”               Id.
    at 279, 12 P.3d at 37.     As applied to the instant case,
    Petitioner alleged that the error was not harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt, because, “[i]f [Petitioner] had testified, the
    decisive issue in the instant case would have been credibility,
    as his version as to what occurred on the night in question would
    have conflicted with [his wife’s] version.”          “Hence,” Petitioner
    concluded, ”[Petitioner’s] conviction and sentence must be
    vacated.”    (Citing Hoang, 94 Hawai#i at 279-80, 12 P.3d at 379-
    80; Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 240, 
    900 P.2d at 1307
    .)
    In its Answering Brief to the ICA, Respondent
    maintained that (1) the “court conducted a colloquy with
    [Petitioner] both before trial commenced and before the defense
    rested at trial, which is plainly consistent with Tachibana [],”
    (citing Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 240, 
    900 P.2d at 1307
    ), (2)
    whether the “right to testify is knowingly, intelligently, and
    voluntarily waived requires looking at ‘the totality of [the]
    facts and circumstances of each particular case[,]’” (citing
    Christian, 88 Hawai#i at 420, 967 P.2d at 253 (quoting State v.
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    Merino, 81 Hawai#i 198, 221, 
    915 P.2d 672
    , 695 (1996)(internal
    quotation marks omitted)), and that (3) “Christian did not hold
    that any portion of the colloquy that was conducted in that case
    should be replicated in all subsequent cases[.]”           (Citing
    Christian, 88 Hawai#i 407, 
    967 P.2d 239
    .)
    According to Respondent, “there is nothing in the
    record to indicate that the interpreter had difficulty
    interpreting the [] court’s colloquy of [Petitioner], or that
    [Petitioner] was unable to understand any portion of the court’s
    colloquy with him.”     Thus, “by answering either ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to
    the questions asked by [the court, Petitioner] [] clearly
    indicat[ed] through his answers that he understood the questions
    . . . .”   The court “clearly asked [Petitioner] whether he had
    any questions about the colloquy that the court ‘just explained’
    . . . .”   “Although the transcript indicates ‘no audible
    response’ in [Petitioner]’s reply [], it is apparent from [the
    court’s] subsequent response of, ‘[o]kay, thank you very much,’
    that [Petitioner] did not have any questions with regard to the
    colloquy. . . .”    Respondent contends then that “based on the
    totality of the circumstances, the record in this case clearly
    envinces that [the court] conducted a colloquy that is consistent
    with Tachibana, . . .     and [Petitioner] knowingly, intentionally,
    and voluntarily waived his constitutional right to testify.”               See
    Merino, 81 Hawai#i at 220, 
    915 P.2d at 694
    .         Therefore, according
    to Respondent, “there was ‘no occasion to apply the doctrine of
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    harmless error.’”     (Citing State v. Lewis, 94 Hawai#i 292, 264, 
    12 P.3d 1233
    , 1235 (2000) at 264, 12 P.3d at 1235.)
    As Petitioner recounts in his Application, the ICA
    affirmed his conviction, stating the following, inter alia:
    1. [The court] informed [Petitioner] of his right to testify
    or not testify before trial commenced and conducted a brief
    colloquy with [Petitioner] before the defense rested at trial, to
    ensure that [Petitioner’s] decision not to testify was his own[,]
    see Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 237 n.9, 
    900 P.2d at
    1304 n.9.
    2. [Petitioner] argues, however, that [the court’s] end-of-
    trial colloquy was inadequate because it was conducted with the
    assistance of an interpreter, it was relatively brief, and
    [Petitioner’s] responses to the court were simply ‘yes’ or ‘no.’
    3. [T]here is nothing in the record to indicate, that the
    interpreter had any problem interpreting [the court’s] colloquy or
    that [Petitioner] did not understand the colloquy . . . .
    4. [B]ased on the totality of the circumstances, . . .
    [Petitioner’s] waiver of his constitutional right to testify was
    done knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily.
    (Citing State v. Chong Hung Han, No. CAAP-11-0000814, 
    2012 WL 4009906
    , at *2-3 (App. Sept. 12, 2012)(SDO).)
    III.
    In his Application Petitioner maintains that “[t]he ICA
    gravely erred in holding that [Petitioner] made a knowing,
    intelligent, and voluntary waiver of the right to testify at
    trial because the ICA erroneously concluded that [Petitioner]
    understood his constitutional rights.”          Respondent did not file a
    response.
    IV.
    It is established that “‘[a] defendant’s right to
    testify in his or her own defense is guaranteed by the
    constitutions of the United States and Hawai#i and by a Hawai#i
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    Statute.[3]’”   Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 231, 
    900 P.2d at 1298
    (quoting State v. Silva, 78 Hawai#i 115, 122-23, 
    890 P.2d 702
    ,
    709-10 (App. 1995))(brackets omitted).         Three separate amendments
    of the United States Constitution guarantee such a right.
    Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 231, 
    900 P.2d at 1298
    .
    “It is guaranteed by the due process clause of the
    fourteenth amendment as essential to due process of law in a
    fair adversary process. . .
    The right to testify is also guaranteed to state defendants
    by the compulsory process clause of the sixth amendment as
    applied through the fourteenth amendment. . .
    Lastly, the opportunity to testify is also a necessary
    corollary to the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee against
    compelled testimony, since every criminal defendant is
    privileged to testify in his [or her] own defense, or to
    refuse to do so.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Silva, 78 Hawai#i at 122-23, 
    890 P.2d at 709-10
    ).
    The Hawai#i Constitution also guarantees the right to testify in
    the provisions that parallel the fourteenth, fifth, and sixth
    amendments to the United States Constitution.          See id.; Haw.
    Const. art. I, §§ 5, 14, and 10.
    In Tachibana, this court first considered what
    procedures would best protect criminal defendants’ exercise of
    their right to testify.     Id. at 233-38, 
    900 P.2d at 1300-05
    .
    After reviewing the three primary approaches that other
    jurisdictions had taken in cases where defendants had claimed
    3
    HRS § 801-2 (1993) states:
    In the trial of any person on the charge of any offense, he
    [or she] shall have a right. . . to be heard in his [or her]
    own defense.
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    that their attorneys deprived them of their right to testify,4
    this court concluded that requiring trial courts to conduct an
    on-the-record discussion with the defendant was the best
    approach.    Id.   The risk that “‘by advising the defendant of his
    [or her] right to testify, the court could influence the
    defendant to waive his [or her] right not to testify, thus
    threatening the exercise of this other, converse,
    constitutionally explicit and more fragile right[,]’” was
    recognized.    Id. at 235, 
    900 P.2d at 1303
     (quoting United States
    v. Martinez, 
    883 F.2d 750
    , 760 (9th Cir. 1989)) (brackets and
    emphases in original).      However, this court also observed that
    “[a]lthough trial judges would be required to advise
    defendants who do not testify, the burden would be
    relatively minimal. Indeed, by engaging in the colloquy, a
    trial judge would establish a record that would effectively
    settle the right-to-testify issues in the case, and thereby
    relieve the trial judge of extended post-conviction
    proceedings.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Boyd, 586 A.2d at 679-80) (emphasis added).             Thus,
    it was held that “in order to protect the right to testify under
    the Hawai#i Constitution,[] trial courts must advise criminal
    defendants of their right to testify and must obtain an on-the-
    4
    The Tachibana court first rejected the “demand rule” which would
    have required that “‘a defendant who fails to complain about the right to
    testify during trial is conclusively presumed to have waived that right.’” 79
    Hawai#i at 233, 
    900 P.2d at 1301
     (quoting Boyd v. United States, 
    586 A.2d 670
    (D.C.App. 1991)). The court then decided between the remaining two
    approaches. Id. at 234, 900 P.3d at 1301. One approach was the “colloquy
    procedure[,]” which it adopted. 79 Hawai#i at 234, 
    900 P.2d at 1301
    . The
    remaining approach was the post-conviction challenge approach, in which “‘a
    trial judge need not sua sponte question the defendant during the trial, but
    the defendant is free to bring a post-conviction challenge based on a denial
    of the right to testify. To prevail in such a challenge, the defendant must
    demonstrate that he or she did not knowingly waive the right to testify at
    trial.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Boyd, 
    586 A.2d at 675-677
    .)
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    record waiver of that right in every case in which the defendant
    does not testify.”       Id. at 1303.
    Tachibana also discussed when such a colloquy must take
    place, concluding that “the ideal time to conduct the colloquy is
    immediately prior to the close of the defendant’s case.”               Id. at
    237.    Further, Tachibana indicated how the colloquy must be
    conducted.      Id. at 236 n.7, 
    900 P.2d at
    1303 n.7.          It stated,
    In conducting the colloquy, the trial court must be careful
    not to influence the defendant’s decision whether or not to
    testify and should limit the colloquy to advising the
    defendant
    “[(1)] that he or she has a right to testify, [(2)] that if
    he or she wants to testify that no one can prevent him or
    her from doing so, and [(3)] that if he or she testifies the
    prosecution will be allowed to cross examine him or her. In
    connection with the privilege against self-incrimination,
    the defendant should also be advised that [(4)] he or she
    has a right not to testify and [(5)] that if he or she does
    not testify then the jury can be instructed about that
    right.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Neuman, 
    179 W.Va. 580
    , 585 (1988))(brackets
    and citation omitted).
    This court’s subsequent opinion in Lewis further
    clarified the requirements of when and how a court must conduct
    the colloquy.      First, Lewis incorporated the colloquy
    requirements that were set forth in footnote 7 of Tachibana,
    quoted supra, into the text of the opinion, when it described how
    a trial court must engage a defendant.            Lewis, 94 Hawai#i at 293-
    94, 12 P.3d at 1234-35.        Second, in recognizing that the
    Tachibana colloquy was the “product of two objectives: (1) the
    protection of a defendant’s personal right to testify; and (2)
    the minimization of post-conviction disputes over the actual
    waiver of the right to testify[,]” id. at 295, 12 P.3d at 1236,
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    Lewis held that a trial court need not engage in a Tachibana
    colloquy except where the defendant has indicated that he or she
    will not testify.      Id. at 296-97, 12 P.3d at 1237-38.          This court
    also stated, however, that “we believe there is a salutary effect
    to be obtained in all cases from a trial court addressing a
    defendant [at the start of trial],” and thus this court held that
    “we now mandate that . . .        such advice shall be imparted by the
    trial court to defendants . . . . prior to the start of trial[.]”
    Id.
    Therefore, Lewis (1) reiterated the requirements set
    out in footnote 7 of Tachibana regarding how the trial court must
    advise the defendant, id. at 294-95, 12 P.3d at 1234-35, (2)
    required that a colloquy regarding defendant’s right to testify
    or not to testify be conducted at the start of trial in all
    cases, id. at 296, 12 P.3d at 1237, and (3) stated that the
    “ultimate colloquy,” the one described in Tachibana, must be
    given in all cases, except where the defendant has indicated that
    he or she does intend to testify, id. at 296, 12 P.3d at 1237.
    V.
    In the instant case, Petitioner contends that his
    waiver of the constitutional right to testify in his defense was
    not knowing, intelligent, and voluntary.           This court has held
    that “to determine whether a waiver [of a fundamental right] was
    voluntarily and intelligently undertaken, this court will look to
    the totality of the facts and circumstances of each particular
    case.”    State v. Friedman, 93 Hawai#i 63, 66-67, 
    996 P.2d 268
    ,
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    273-74 (2000) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted);
    see also Christian, 88 Hawai#i at 420, 967 P.2d at 252 (applying
    the “totality of the facts and circumstances” test to determine
    whether the defendant’s waiver of his right to testify in his own
    defense was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary).           Based on the
    transcripts of the court’s proceedings in this case, taken as a
    whole, it appears that the defendant did not knowingly,
    intelligently, and voluntarily waive his constitutional right to
    testify.
    VI.
    In this case, two advisements took place regarding the
    defendant’s right to testify, one before trial began, in
    accordance with Lewis, 94 Hawai#i at 297, 12 P.3d at 1238, and one
    at the close of the defendant’s case, as required by Tachibana,
    79 Hawai#i at 236, 
    900 P.2d at 1303
    .        With respect to the first
    advisement, Lewis requires that “‘prior to the start of trial,’”
    the court shall “‘(1) inform the defendant of his or her personal
    right to testify or not to testify and (2) alert the defendant
    that, if he or she has not testified by the end of the trial, the
    court will briefly question him or her to ensure that the
    decision not to testify is the defendant’s own decision.’”             94
    Hawai#i at 297, 12 P.3d at 1238 (quoting Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at
    237 n.9, 
    900 P.2d at
    1304 n.9).       Petitioner challenges the first
    pre-trial colloquy on the ground that the court did not obtain
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    from the defendant an audible indication that he understood his
    rights.
    As indicated supra, before the start of trial, the
    court advised Petitioner of his “constitutional right to testify
    in his own defense.”     To reiterate, at the end of his pre-trial
    advisement, the judge asked Petitioner if he had any questions
    about what the judge had explained, but it was noted on the trial
    transcript that Petitioner’s response was inaudible.
    There is no requirement for this first advisement that
    a court obtain an on-the-record waiver of the defendant’s right
    to testify.   However, Lewis implemented the pre-trial advisement
    requirement with the intent that it would “have the beneficial
    effect of limiting any post-conviction claims that a defendant
    testified in ignorance of his or her right not to testify.”                94
    Hawai#i at 297, 
    12 P.3d 1238
    .      It is thus important that the
    defendant actually have an understanding of what the court
    articulates in its pre-trial advisement.
    In this case, there was no audible response by
    Petitioner to the court’s inquiry as to whether Petitioner had
    any questions about the rights that the court explained.
    Contrary to Respondent’s assertion that the court’s “[o]kay,
    thank you very much,” indicates acquiescence on the part of
    Petitioner, it cannot be inferred exactly what was said because
    Petitioner’s response was inaudible.        Therefore, even though an
    on-the-record waiver is not required, the fact that it is not
    known whether Petitioner was able to understand the court’s
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    advisement is problematic inasmuch as appellate review of the
    adequacy of the advisement is precluded.
    On appeal, the pre-trial advisement is reviewed for
    “actual prejudice.”     Lewis, 94 Hawai#i at 297, 12 P.3d at 1238
    (“Because we view this prior-to-trial advisement as incidental to
    the ‘ultimate colloquy’ [], any claim of prejudice resulting from
    the failure of the trial court to give it must meet the same
    ‘actual[] prejudice[]’ standard applied to violations of the
    colloquy requirement.”)     In holding that the failure to properly
    conduct the Tachibana colloquy was harmful error, infra, the
    issue of whether Petitioner could demonstrate “actual prejudice”
    with respect to the pre-trial colloquy need not be addressed
    here.
    VII.
    Petitioner also challenges the second colloquy, the
    Tachibana colloquy given at the close of his case, on two
    different grounds.    First, he alleges that the court failed to
    adequately ascertain whether Petitioner understood his Tachibana
    rights.   Second, he contends that because he needed a Korean
    language interpreter, the court’s failure to inquire into whether
    he understood the advisement was even “more egregious.”
    Pursuant to Tachibana, this second colloquy is
    considered to be the “ultimate colloquy,” 79 Hawai#i at 237 n.9,
    
    900 P.2d 1304
     n.9, and while Lewis held that this colloquy was
    not required where the defendant had decided to testify, 94
    Hawai#i at 296-97, 12 P.3d at 1237-38, in this case such an
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    exchange was necessary, because Petitioner’s attorney had
    indicated that Petitioner would not be testifying.           In this case,
    to reiterate, the transcript indicates that the following
    exchange took place at the close of Petitioner’s case:
    THE COURT: Oh, okay. All right. And so let me take
    this opportunity, then, to question your client again and --
    before we bring in our jury.
    All right, [Petitioner], good morning. Your attorney just
    informed the court that you are not going to testify on your
    behalf.
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) Yes.
    THE COURT: Okay. All right, remember in the
    beginning -- beginning of our trial, this court advised you
    of your rights. And that is, one, you have the right to
    testify on your behalf, and that -- that decision to testify
    -- whether to testify or not is your decision alone and that
    nobody can force you to testify. And then, of course,
    second, you also have the constitutional right to remain
    silent and that if you decide to exercise your right to
    remain silent, the jury will be instruct -- will be
    instructed not to hold that against you.
    Okay. And -- and I trust that you have -- now that
    the State has finished its case and you had a chance to
    discuss what happened with your attorney, and based on that
    discussion, you have decided that you are not going to
    testify on your behalf. Is anybody threatening or forcing
    you this morning not to testify?
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) No.
    THE COURT: The decision not to testify is yours and yours
    alone after you have discussed the matter with your attorney.
    [PETITIONER]: (Through the interpreter) Yes.
    (Emphases added.)
    A.
    First, the court failed to ascertain whether Petitioner
    understood his right to testify.          As mentioned, following
    Tachibana, “in order to protect the right to testify under the
    Hawai#i Constitution, trial courts must advise criminal defendants
    of their right to testify and must obtain a waiver of that right
    in every case in which the defendant does testify.”           79 Hawai#i at
    236, 
    900 P.2d at 1303
    .     Tachibana characterized such an exchange
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    as a “colloquy.”    Id. at 237, 
    900 P.2d at 1304
    .        “Colloquy” is
    defined as “[a]ny formal discussion, such as an oral exchange
    between a judge, the prosecutor, the defense counsel, and a
    criminal defendant in which the judge ascertains the defendant’s
    understanding of the proceedings and of the defendant’s rights.”
    Black’s Law Dictionary 300 (9th ed. 2009) (emphases added).
    In this case, the transcript does not indicate that a
    true “colloquy” took place.      Instead, the court simply advised
    Petitioner of his rights, without any “discussion,” “exchange” or
    ascertainment that Petitioner understood his rights.            See 
    id.
    Respectfully, at least twice during the colloquy, the court
    should have engaged in a verbal exchange with Petitioner to
    ascertain Petitioner’s understanding of significant propositions
    in the advisement.
    The first time the court should have requested a
    response was after it stated, “you also have the constitutional
    right to remain silent, and that if you decide to exercise your
    right to remain silent, the jury . . . will be instructed not to
    hold that against you.”     The court did not obtain an affirmative
    or negative response from Petitioner as to his understanding of
    these principles, but simply continued on with the advisement.
    The second time the court should have requested a
    response was following its statement that “[a]nd -- and I trust
    that you have -- now that the State has finished its case and you
    had a chance to discuss what happened with your attorney, and
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    based on that discussion, you have decided that you are not going
    to testify on your behalf.”      Again, the court did not engage
    Petitioner in any acknowledgment of his understanding of these
    propositions.    Instead of asking for Petitioner’s response to
    these important matters, the court singled out one factor for a
    response, inquiring “[i]s anybody threatening or forcing you this
    morning not to testify?”, to which Petitioner responded, through
    his interpreter, “No.”     It is not evident why the court chose
    this particular issue as one deserving of a response, but did not
    inquire into other matters of constitutional magnitude.
    Under the circumstances, the court did not adequately
    establish, on-the-record, that Petitioner understood what rights
    he was waiving when he agreed that his decision not to testify
    was his alone.    Nothing in the record indicates that in making
    that decision for himself, Petitioner had in fact understood the
    rights listed by the court and to which the court did not obtain
    responses.
    Moreover, Petitioner’s two responses to the court
    during this colloquy do not indicate that Petitioner understood
    that he had the right to testify.         Regarding the first question,
    “[i]s anybody threatening or forcing you this morning not to
    testify?”, (emphasis added), Petitioner’s response of “No” does
    not indicate that he understood that he had a constitutional
    right to testify, only that no one was forcing him not to do so.
    Moreover, although Petitioner responded “[y]es” to the court’s
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    statement that “[t]he decision not to testify is yours and yours
    alone after you have discussed the matter with your attorney[,]”
    it is not clear that the defendant was responding “yes” that he
    understood that the decision was his alone, or “yes[,]” he had
    discussed the matter with his attorney.5
    The failure to ensure that Petitioner understood his
    rights amounts to a failure to obtain the on-the-record waiver
    required by Tachibana.      In Tachibana, this court declared that
    one of its reasons for adopting such a requirement was so “a
    trial judge would establish a record that would effectively
    settle the right-to-testify issues in the case, and thereby
    relieve the trial judge of extended post-conviction proceedings.”
    79 Hawai#i at 234-35, 
    900 P.2d at 1302-03
     (quoting Boyd, 
    586 A.2d at 679-80
    ) (emphasis added).        The colloquy in the instant case by
    no means produced a record that would “settle the right-to-
    testify issues.”     
    Id.
       Respectfully, the colloquy does not
    establish any confidence that the defendant understood each of
    his rights, and that the court had an objective basis for finding
    that Petitioner knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily gave up
    those rights.6
    5
    The Hawaii Criminal Benchbook also sets forth the Tachibana
    requirements.
    6
    By contrast, in Christian, the court administered the colloquy as
    follows:
    THE COURT: As I have discussed with you before the
    start of the trial, you do have the constitutional right to
    testify in your own defense, You understand?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
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    B.
    Next, Petitioner’s observation that the court’s error
    in failing to ensure his understanding was “more egregious”
    because of the need for an interpreter is accurate.            The language
    barrier in this case was a “salient fact” that impacted
    Petitioner’s ability to understand the rights that he waived.
    See Barros, 105 Hawai#i at 170, 
    95 P.3d at 24
    .
    In determining how language barriers can affect the
    waiver of constitutional rights, case law regarding the waiver of
    the right to a trial by jury, see U.S. Const. amend XI; Haw.
    Const. art. 1, § 14, is instructive.          In United States v. Duarte-
    Higareda, the Ninth Circuit considered whether a defendant had
    knowingly and intelligently waived his Constitutional right to a
    jury trial.    
    113 F.3d 1000
    , 1002 (9th Cir. 1997).          That court
    THE COURT: And although you should consult with [],
    your lawyer regarding your decision to testify, it is your
    decision and no one can prevent you from testifying if you
    chose to do so . . . Do you understand?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
    THE COURT: And if you decide to testify, the
    prosecutor will be allowed to cross-examine you. You
    understand that?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
    THE COURT: You also have the constitutional right not
    to testify and to remain silent. You understand?
    THE DEFENDANT: I understand.
    THE COURT: And you understand that if you chose not
    to testify, that the jury will be instructed that it can not
    hold your silence against you in deciding your case.
    THE DEFENDANT: I understand.
    THE COURT: It’s the understanding of the Court that you do
    not intend to testify in this case, is that correct?
    THE DEFENDANT: That’s correct.
    THE COURT: And that’s your decision.
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
    88 Hawai#i at 414-15, 967 P.2d at 246-47 (emphases added).
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    noted that “the district court should question the defendant to
    ascertain whether the defendant understands the benefits and
    burdens of a jury trial and freely chooses to waive a jury.”               Id.
    (citing United States v. Cochran, 
    770 F.2d 850
    , 853 (9th Cir.
    1985)).
    The defendant had used a Spanish language interpreter
    throughout the proceedings, but signed a written jury waiver form
    that was written entirely in English.        Id. at 1003.     Under these
    circumstances, Duarte-Higareda held that “[the defendant’s]
    language barrier, like [] mental illness, is a salient fact that
    was known to the district court and put the court on notice that
    [the defendant’s] waiver might be less than knowing and
    intelligent[.]”    Id. (emphasis added) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).      The Ninth Circuit thus held that the
    language barrier triggered an additional reason for the district
    court to engage in a colloquy with the defendant “to carry out
    its ‘serious and weighty responsibility’ of ensuring that a
    defendant’s jury waiver is voluntary, knowing, and intelligent.”
    Id. (quoting United States v. Christensen, 
    18 F.3d 822
    , 826 (9th
    Cir. 1994)).
    This court has acknowledged this “salient fact”
    requirement in Friedman, where it addressed whether or not the
    defendant’s waiver of a jury trial was voluntary, knowing and
    intelligent. 93 Hawai#i at 70, 
    996 P.2d at 275
     (“[The defendant]
    has failed to direct us to any ‘salient fact’ bearing upon his
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    ability to understand his jury waiver that would have created the
    need for an extensive colloquy by the trial court . . . [.]”);
    see also Barros, 105 Hawai#i at 169, 
    95 P.3d at 23
    ; State v.
    Mitchell, 94 Hawai#i 388, 395, 
    15 P.3d 314
    , 321 (App. 2000).
    While Friedman is not controlling in terms of addressing a
    defendant’s waiver of his or her right to testify, the rationale
    in Friedman highlights the necessity of ensuring that a trial
    court’s procedures are designed to adequately protect vulnerable
    defendants.
    The presence of a “salient fact” underscores the
    importance of the court’s colloquy as a procedural safeguard that
    protects a defendant’s right to testify or to not testify.
    “Salient facts,” such as mental illness or language barriers,
    require that a court effectively engage the defendant in a
    dialogue that will effectuate the rationale behind the colloquy
    and the on-the-record waiver requirements as set forth in
    Tachibana.    See 79 Hawai#i at 325, 
    900 P.2d at 1302
    .
    In Duarte-Higareda, the language barrier was a concern
    with regard to filling out the jury waiver form that was in
    English.    
    770 F.2d at 1003
    .     Here, a number of complex concepts
    addressing Petitioner’s constitutional rights were articulated by
    the court and then apparently translated for Petitioner.7             With
    7
    The record reflects that the defendant had a Korean language
    interpreter and that the discussion occurred “[t]hrough the interpreter[.]”
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    respect to a waiver of the right to testify, Tachibana and Lewis
    require a colloquy in all cases where defendant is not
    testifying, see Lewis, 94 Hawai#i at 297, 12 P.3d at 1238, so
    whether or not a colloquy should have been conducted is not at
    issue in this case.     However, as in Duarte-Higareda, a language
    barrier was present, and thus there was a “salient fact” that
    made the Petitioner’s understanding of the colloquy critical.
    In these circumstances, the court was duty bound under
    Tachibana to inquire into Petitioner’s understanding of the
    rights that the court articulated.         The language barrier that
    triggered the colloquy requirement in Duarte-Higareda, 
    770 F.2d at 1003
    , and, by analogy, the language barrier in this case,
    implicate the importance of proper questioning to confirm that
    the Petitioner understood each of his rights with respect to his
    decision not to testify.
    VIII.
    Taken together, the errors by the court in the instant
    case demonstrate that Petitioner’s waiver of the right to testify
    was not made knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily.            See
    Christian, 88 Hawai#i at 420, 967 P.2d at 252.          With respect to
    the Tachibana colloquy at the close of defendant’s case, first,
    the court did not ask Petitioner for appropriate responses to
    ensure that Petitioner understood the rights articulated, and
    second, the risk that Petitioner did not understand was
    exacerbated by the fact that Petitioner needed an interpreter
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    during the proceedings.       Accordingly, a review of the court’s
    interactions with Petitioner with respect to the constitutional
    right to testify establishes that the court did not obtain a
    valid on-the-record waiver of Petitioner’s right to testify.8
    IX.
    With respect to the Tachibana colloquy at the close of
    Petitioner’s case, first, the court did not ask Petitioner for
    appropriate responses to ensure that Petitioner understood the
    rights articulated, and second, the risk that Petitioner did not
    understand was exacerbated by the fact that Petitioner needed an
    interpreter during the proceedings.         Taken together, the errors
    by the court in the instant case demonstrate that Petitioner’s
    8
    In addition, because the case is remanded, we note that in the
    Tachibana colloquy, two of the advisements may have been confusing and one of
    the required advisements was omitted altogether.
    First, the court must indicate to a defendant that no one can prevent
    him or her from testifying. Id. However, here, the court stated, “whether to
    testify or not is your decision alone and [] nobody can force you to testify.”
    At the end of the colloquy, the court then asked Petitioner, “[i]s anybody
    threatening or forcing you this morning not to testify?” The court’s
    questions indicated coercion was involved, but, to the contrary, “preventing”
    need not involve threats or force.
    Second, the court should tell a defendant “that if he or she testifies,
    the prosecution will be allowed to cross examine him or her.” Tachibana, 79
    Hawai#i at 236 n.7, 
    900 P.2d at
    1303 n.7 (brackets and citations omitted).
    Here, the court did not advise Petitioner of this at all during the Tachibana
    colloquy. Although Petitioner’s counsel had indicated that Petitioner did not
    intend to testify, it was still critical that the court inform Petitioner that
    if he did testify, the prosecutor could cross-examine him, inasmuch as
    Petitioner could change his mind and decide to testify.
    Finally, the court should advise a defendant that he or she has the
    right not to testify. Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 235, 
    900 P.2d at 1303
    . Here,
    the court told Petitioner that he had “the constitutional right to remain
    silent[,]” and said nothing about the right not to testify. However, for a
    defendant, “remaining silent” could mean something other than “not
    testifying,” since the phrase “right to remain silent” popularly invokes the
    familiar Miranda warnings. As Chief Justice Rehnquist noted in his opinion in
    Dickerson v. United States, “Miranda has become embedded in routine police
    practice to a point where the warnings have become part of our national
    culture.” 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 430 (2000). A defendant could be confused if a court
    states simply, “you have the right to remain silent” without using the
    accompanying phrase, “you have the right not to testify.”
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    waiver of the right to testify was not made knowingly,
    intelligently, and voluntarily.       See Christian, 88 Hawai#i at 420,
    967 P.2d at 252.    Accordingly, a review of the court’s
    interactions with Petitioner with respect to the constitutional
    right to testify establishes that the court did not obtain a
    valid on-the-record waiver of Petitioner’s right to testify.
    Additionally, we note advisedly for purposes of remand,
    that the court misstated two portions of the Tachibana colloquy
    and omitted a third portion entirely.
    X.
    Respondent does not make any arguments with respect to
    harmless error, except to state that, “there is no error here,
    and thus ‘no occasion to apply the doctrine of harmless error.’”
    (Quoting Lewis, 94 Hawai#i at 264, 12 P.3d at 1235.)           However,
    “[o]nce a violation of the constitutional right to testify is
    established, the conviction must be vacated unless the State can
    prove that the violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 240, 
    900 P.2d at
    1307 (citing Silva, 78
    Hawai#i at 125, 
    890 P.2d at 712
    ).         In this case, Respondent has
    not attempted to prove the violation was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    “The relevant question under the harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt standard is ‘whether there is a reasonable
    possibility that error might have contributed to conviction.’”
    State v. Schnabel, 127 Hawai#i 432, 450, 
    279 P.3d 1237
    , 1255
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    (quoting State v. Duncan, 101 Hawai#i 269, 278, 
    67 P.3d 768
    , 777
    (2003)) (emphases in original).        As stated, the ICA observed in
    Hoang that, “it is inherently difficult, if not impossible, to
    divine what effect a violation of the defendant’s constitutional
    right to testify had on the outcome of any particular case,”                94
    Hawai#i at 379, 12 P.3d at 379 (citing Silva, 78 Hawai#i at 126,
    
    890 P.2d at 713
    ), and thus the burden rests on the State to
    establish “the violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Tachibana, 79 Hawai#i at 240, 990 P.2d at 1307.
    The jury in the instant case heard testimony from
    complainant, who testified as to the incident, and Honolulu
    Police Officer Kelly Crail (Crail), who responded to the scene of
    the alleged incident.      During his cross-examination of
    complainant,9 and the cross-examination of Crail,10 Petitioner’s
    9
    The following excerpts, inter alia, from the cross-examination of
    complainant support Petitioner’s theory of the case:
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: So you went to Straub
    [clinic] with these two people from the church, right?
    [Complainant]: That’s correct.
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: And you told them what
    happened?
    [Complainant]: Yes.
    . . . .
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: So they didn’t find that --
    your breathing was normal, and your breath sounds normal,
    and you had no respiratory distress?
    [Complainant]: Yes, they say nothing wrong.
    . . . .
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: [] So at Straub [clinic], they did
    some tests on you, yeah, x-ray?
    [Complainant]: Yes.
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: They found no fracture?
    [Complainant]: Yeah, that’s right.
    10
    The following excerpts, inter alia, from the cross-examination of
    Crail support Petitioner’s theory of the case:
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    counsel attempted to call into question whether complainant was
    actually injured as a result of the events that took place on
    January 17, 2010.     Thus, the theory of Petitioner’s defense at
    trial appears to have been that complainant’s testimony was not
    credible, in other words, that she was lying about the alleged
    incident.
    In closing argument, Petitioner’s counsel argued, inter
    alia, that (1) “the physical evidence [didn’t] match” the
    complaint’s version of events,11 (2) that complainant
    “exaggerated” her account and was “not credible[,]”12 (3) that the
    only account of the incident that Respondent presented was
    complainant’s account, which again, was not corroborated by the
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: If she hadn't been able to
    walk around because of pain, that certainly would have gone
    in your report, correct?
    [Crail]: Yes.
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: Do you recall ever seeing
    her walk at all that night? Was she moving and standing at
    all?
    [Crail]: Yes.
    . . . .
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: Did you see her walk with a
    limp, dragging her back foot?
    [Crail]: No.
    [Counsel for Petitioner]: Something like that, you
    certainly would have noticed, and probably the EMS person
    would have noticed, everybody would have noticed, right?
    [Crail]: Yes.
    11
    Counsel for Petitioner stated, “[p]hysical evidence doesn’t lie.
    The physical evidence doesn’t match, and when the physical evidence doesn’t
    match, you have a reasonable doubt as to whether things happened the way
    [complainant] said.”
    12
    Counsel for Petitioner stated, “[s]o [complainant] exaggerated.
    And what does the law say about exaggerating? You can use that to see if you
    find the witness credible. She’s not credible.”
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    physical evidence,13 (4) that the jury cannot know, based only on
    complainant’s account, what actually occurred on the date of the
    incident,14 and (5) that complainant’s “stories conflict,” which
    could create questions in the minds of the jurors, and therefore
    reasonable doubt.15    As a result, based on the cross-examination
    of Respondent’s witnesses and the closing argument, the case
    would have rested on the credibility of the witnesses.
    As Petitioner noted before, “[i]f [Petitioner] had
    testified, the decisive issue in the instant case would have been
    credibility, as his version as to what occurred on the night in
    question would have conflicted with [complainant’s] version.”
    13
    Counsel for Petitioner stated,
    And if you have a doubt about that -- because it’s just
    [complainant’s] word. There’s no other witnesses. There’s
    no video of something happening. There’s no neighbor who
    even heard shouting. There’s no other testimony. That’s
    all [Respondent’s] introduced, is her word that this
    happened. And you look at the physical evidence, which
    doesn’t lie, it can’t lie, and has no reason to lie, has
    nothing to gain from -- by lying, and it doesn’t match what
    she said.
    14
    Counsel for Petitioner stated:
    [Complainant] came in, and she lied, and she
    exaggerated. And you don’t know what really happened
    that night. You don’t know if [Petitioner] hit her.
    You don’t know if he was even there. You don’t know
    if she just whacked herself in the face enough to get
    it red and show an old bruise or a new bruise, rammed
    herself against the counter. Who knows, okay? Who
    knows?
    15
    Finally, counsel for Petitioner stated:
    [Complainant’s] stories conflict. You’re allowed to
    question her credibility. You may have a question about her
    credibility. And she’s the only eyewitness. If you have
    questions about your decision. When you have questions,
    that means you have a doubt. When you have just one, single
    reasonable doubt -- doesn’t have to be the same as everybody
    else -- you have to vote not guilty.
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    Thus, in this case, as in Tachibana and Silva, it would be
    “‘impossible to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt,’” that
    Petitioner’s testimony, “‘could not have created a reasonable
    doubt in the mind of the factfinder and, hence, that the error
    could not have contributed to the conviction.’”          Tachibana, 79
    Hawai#i at 240, 
    900 P.2d at 1307
     (quoting Silva, 78 Hawai#i at
    126, 
    890 P.2d at 713
    ).     Thus, the court’s error in failing to
    obtain an knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of
    Petitioner’s right to testify was not harmless.
    XI.
    Based on the foregoing, we vacate the ICA’s October 30,
    2012 judgment and the court’s October 13, 2011 Amended Judgment
    of Conviction and Sentence, and remand the case to the court for
    proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    Evan S. Tokunaga,                    /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    /s/ Simeon R. Acoba, Jr.
    /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    28