State of Minnesota v. Jerry Expose, Jr. , 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 71 ( 2014 )


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  •                              STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A13-1285
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Jerry Expose, Jr.,
    Appellant.
    Filed July 14, 2014
    Reversed and Remanded
    Chutich, Judge
    Ramsey County District Court
    File No. 62-CR-12-8934
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    John J. Choi, Ramsey County Attorney, Thomas R. Ragatz, Assistant County Attorney,
    St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Bridget Kearns Sabo, Assistant
    Public Defender, Jenna Yauch-Erickson, Assistant Public Defender, Theodore Sampsell-
    Jones, Special Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Johnson, Presiding Judge; Rodenberg, Judge; and
    Chutich, Judge.
    SYLLABUS
    Minnesota law does not recognize a “threats exception” to the statutory
    psychologist-client testimonial privilege in Minnesota Statutes section 595.02,
    subdivision 1(g) (2012).   Absent a client’s knowing and intentional waiver of the
    privilege, a psychologist may not testify in a criminal trial about threats of physical
    violence made by the client during an individual therapy session.
    OPINION
    CHUTICH, Judge
    Appellant Jerry Expose Jr. appeals his conviction of terroristic threats, arguing that
    the district court erroneously ruled that an exception to the psychologist-client privilege
    exists for threatening statements made by a client to his or her psychologist and that the
    district court improperly allowed witnesses to testify about privileged information.
    Because Expose’s communications with a therapist qualify under the psychologist-client
    privilege statute and no “threats exception” to the privilege exists in Minnesota, we
    reverse Expose’s conviction and remand.
    FACTS
    In the fall of 2012, appellant Jerry Expose Jr. attended individual counseling
    sessions with N.M., a therapist at Thad Wilderson & Associates, a mental-health clinic.
    Expose was required to attend anger-management therapy as part of a court-ordered case
    plan in a child-protection case.
    On October 10, 2012, Expose arrived at his appointment with N.M. visibly upset.
    Before his appointment with N.M., Expose’s child-protection worker, D.P., canceled a
    planned unsupervised visit with his children because Expose did not comply with a
    requirement of his case plan. N.M. noticed Expose’s emotional state and asked him why
    he was upset. In response, Expose threatened the child-protection worker. N.M. testified
    2
    at trial that Expose said:
    [H]e felt that the child protection worker was a barrier to him
    getting his kids back and if . . . his future court date did not go
    the right way that he would break her back, and then if he
    could not get to her . . . he’d just have to make a couple
    phone[] calls and he can have someone else do it if he
    couldn’t get to her.
    After Expose made these threats against D.P., N.M. told Expose that she was a
    “mandated reporter.” Expose said, “I don’t give a f-ck,” and noted that “[e]verybody has
    to go to their car at some point.” Because N.M. believed that Expose’s threats triggered
    an ethical duty to warn, she contacted her supervisor, H.F., the assistant clinical director.
    H.F. agreed with her and directed her to call the child-protection worker and the police to
    alert them to the threats.
    After learning of Expose’s threat to harm her, D.P. showed visible signs of
    concern. She was no longer comfortable meeting with families at work, had nightmares,
    and had difficulty falling asleep. D.P.’s superior removed her from Expose’s case,
    relocated her office, and instructed a deputy to escort her to and from her car.
    In November 2012, the state charged Expose with one count of terroristic threats.
    See 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.713
    , subd. 1 (2012). Before trial, Expose moved the district court
    to prohibit N.M. from testifying that she called D.P. and the police because she had a
    statutory duty to warn D.P. He contended that because N.M. was not a licensed mental-
    health professional, the duty-to-warn statute did not apply.1 In response, the prosecution
    1
    The “duty to warn” statute applies to a “licensee” and requires the licensee to
    communicate a “specific, serious threat of physical violence” to a potential victim. 
    Minn. Stat. § 148.975
    , subd. 2 (2012).
    3
    asserted that N.M. should be treated as a licensed psychologist because she was working
    under the supervision of someone who was licensed. The district court denied Expose’s
    motion.
    After opening statements, but before any testimony, Expose again objected to
    N.M.’s testimony, contending that, consistent with the district court’s prior ruling, N.M.
    should be treated as a psychologist under the psychologist-client privilege and thereby
    precluded from testifying against her client. The district court denied Expose’s motion,
    concluding that N.M.’s testimony was admissible “[a]s an exception to the privilege.”
    The district court found that the statements “are not protected because they are statements
    of a threat of serious imminent harm to another person.”
    A jury convicted Expose of making terroristic threats, and the district court
    sentenced him to a stayed sentence of 28 months’ imprisonment. This appeal followed.
    ISSUES
    I.     Did Expose fail to object to N.M.’s testimony in a timely manner, waiving his
    claim of privilege?
    II.    Does the psychologist-client privilege statute, Minnesota Statutes section 595.02,
    subdivision 1(g) (2012), apply to Expose’s communications with N.M.?
    III.   Do Expose’s threats against a third person during a therapy session fall under an
    exception to the psychologist-client privilege statute for threatening statements?
    IV.    Was admission of N.M.’s testimony harmless error?
    ANALYSIS
    Expose asserts that the district court erred by allowing N.M. to testify about
    statements he made while he was in an individual therapy session with her. The state
    4
    counters that we need not reach the merits of Expose’s privilege argument because
    Expose failed to timely object to N.M.’s testimony and any error in admitting N.M.’s
    testimony was harmless. The state further contends that N.M. does not qualify as a
    psychologist under Minnesota Statutes section 595.02, subdivision 1(g), and that, even if
    she did qualify as a psychologist, the threats that Expose made during therapy were not
    necessary to enable N.M. to act in a professional capacity. Finally, the state asserts that
    N.M. testified against Expose under a “threats exception” to the statutory privilege.
    Because we conclude that Expose did not waive his objection to N.M.’s testimony; the
    requirements of the testimonial privilege set out in section 595.02, subdivision 1(g), were
    met; a “threats exception” to the psychologist-client privilege is not recognized in
    Minnesota; and admission of Expose’s statements was not harmless, we reverse Expose’s
    conviction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I.     Expose Did Not Waive His Objection to N.M.’s Testimony
    As a threshold issue, the state argues that Expose waived the privilege issue on
    appeal because he failed to object to N.M.’s testimony in a timely fashion under
    Minnesota Rule of Criminal Procedure 10.01, subdivision 2.2 We reject this assertion
    because, unlike a constitutional challenge to the admission of evidence, which must be
    2
    Subdivision 2 provides in pertinent part:
    Defenses, objections, issues or requests that can be
    determined without trial on the merits must be made before
    trial by a motion . . . to grant appropriate relief. The motion
    must include all defenses, objections, issues, and requests
    then available. Failure to include any of them in the motion
    constitutes waiver . . . . The court can grant relief from the
    waiver for good cause.
    Minn. R. Crim. P. 10.01, subd. 2.
    5
    raised at an omnibus hearing to be timely, see State v. Pederson-Maxwell, 
    619 N.W.2d 777
    , 780 (Minn. App. 2000), Expose raised an evidentiary objection based on privilege.
    Under the Minnesota Rules of Evidence, any “timely objection” preserves a claimed error
    in admitting evidence. Minn. R. Evid. 103(a).
    Expose first objected to N.M.’s testimony through a motion in limine, which is
    one way to timely object to anticipated evidence. See Minn. R. Evid. 103(a) 2006
    advisory comm. cmt. Before N.M. testified, and based upon the district court’s ruling
    that N.M. could testify about her duty to warn, Expose then objected to her testimony,
    contending that the psychologist-client privilege precluded her from testifying against
    Expose, her client. In response, the state never contended that Expose waived this
    objection by failing to assert it earlier; instead, it argued the merits of the objection.
    After hearing the parties’ positions, the district court again ruled in the state’s
    favor, finding that the privilege did not apply because the statements were threats of
    “serious imminent harm to another person.” Accordingly, Expose preserved the issue of
    the applicability of the psychologist-client privilege for appeal.
    II.    The Psychologist-Client Testimonial Privilege Applies to Expose’s Statements
    The district court did not explicitly rule that Expose’s statements to N.M. were
    within the scope of the psychologist-client privilege, but it implicitly did so when it ruled
    that N.M.’s testimony was admissible “[a]s an exception to the privilege.” Even though
    the state asserted to the district court that, for purposes of the duty-to-warn statute, N.M.
    should be treated as a licensed psychologist, it now contends that the psychologist-client
    evidentiary privilege does not apply because Expose did not show that N.M. fits the plain
    6
    language of the statute. The state further contends that, even if N.M. is considered to be a
    psychologist, Expose’s statements to her were not “necessary” for counseling. These
    contentions are not persuasive.
    The availability of a privilege established by statute “is an evidentiary ruling to be
    determined by the [district] court and reviewed based on an abuse of discretion standard.”
    State v. Gianakos, 
    644 N.W.2d 409
    , 415 (Minn. 2002). “We will reverse for an abuse of
    discretion where we find a clearly erroneous conclusion that is against logic and the facts
    on record.” State v. Williams, 
    842 N.W.2d 308
    , 313 (Minn. 2014) (quotation omitted).
    But the interpretation of a statute is a legal question that is reviewed de novo. State v.
    R.H.B., 
    821 N.W.2d 817
    , 820 (Minn. 2012). And the determination of “whether a
    particular testimonial privilege or exception exists . . . is a question of law” that we
    review de novo. Gianakos, 644 N.W.2d at 415.
    “The object of all interpretation and construction of laws is to ascertain and
    effectuate the intention of the legislature.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 645.16
     (2012). If the language
    of the statute is clear and free of all ambiguity, we apply the plain meaning of the statute.
    State v. Leathers, 
    799 N.W.2d 606
    , 608 (Minn. 2011). A statute is ambiguous when its
    language “is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation.” Am. Family Ins. Grp. v.
    Schroedl, 
    616 N.W.2d 273
    , 277 (Minn. 2000) (quotation omitted). “We construe statutes
    to effect their essential purpose but will not disregard a statute’s clear language to pursue
    the spirit of the law.” Lee v. Fresenius Med. Care, Inc., 
    741 N.W.2d 117
    , 123 (Minn.
    2007).
    7
    The psychologist-client privilege statute states, in pertinent part:
    A registered nurse, psychologist, consulting psychologist, or
    licensed social worker engaged in a psychological or social
    assessment or treatment of an individual at the individual’s
    request shall not, without the consent of the professional’s
    client, be allowed to disclose any information or opinion
    based thereon which the professional has acquired in
    attending the client in a professional capacity, and which was
    necessary to enable the professional to act in that capacity.
    
    Minn. Stat. § 595.02
    , subd. 1(g). To establish the existence of a psychologist-client
    privilege, the client must establish that “(1) a confidential psychologist-patient
    relationship existed between defendant and the psychologist, (2) during which the
    psychologist acquired information of the type contemplated by the privilege statute,
    (3) while attending the patient, and (4) which was necessary for diagnosis and treatment.”
    State v. Gullekson, 
    383 N.W.2d 338
    , 340 (Minn. App. 1986) (citing State v. Staat, 
    291 Minn. 394
    , 399, 
    192 N.W.2d 192
    , 197 (1971)), review denied (Minn. May 16, 1986).
    “[T]he absence of one essential fact requisite to extending the privilege to a claimant is
    fatal [to the privilege claim].” Staat, 291 Minn. at 403, 
    192 N.W.2d at 198
    .
    A. Existence of a Psychologist-Client Relationship
    Concerning the first disputed factor, whether a psychologist-client relationship
    existed, Expose contends that the state should be judicially estopped from now asserting
    that N.M. is not a psychologist, because it previously argued before the district court that
    N.M. should be treated as a licensed psychologist under the duty-to-warn statute. We
    need not determine whether judicial estoppel applies, however, because the undisputed
    8
    facts in the record show that a confidential psychologist-client relationship existed
    between N.M. and Expose that meets the requirements of the privilege.
    The testimonial privilege applies to “[a] registered nurse, psychologist, consulting
    psychologist, or licensed social worker engaged in a psychological or social assessment
    or treatment of an individual.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 595.02
    , subd. 1(g). The section does not
    define “psychologist,” and unlike the duty-to-warn statute, the testimonial privilege does
    not specifically include a licensing requirement.3 Construing “psychologist” according to
    its “most natural and obvious usage,” see Amaral v. Saint Cloud Hosp., 
    598 N.W.2d 379
    ,
    384 (Minn. 1999), we note that the dictionary defines the term as “[a] person trained and
    educated to perform psychological research, testing, and therapy.”                The American
    Heritage Dictionary 1125 (4th ed. 2007). In addition, the term “psychological treatment”
    is best construed in harmony with Minnesota law that defines the “practice of
    psychology.” See 
    Minn. Stat. § 148.89
    , subd. 5 (2012). The practice of psychology
    includes, among other things, “counseling . . . and . . . treatment of: (i) mental and
    emotional disorder or disability; . . . (iii) disorders of habit or conduct; . . . [and] (vi)
    child, family, or relationship issues . . . .” 
    Id.,
     subd. 5(4)(i), (iii), (vi).
    With these definitions in mind, we conclude that N.M. functioned as a
    “psychologist” under the evidentiary privilege. When she counseled Expose for anger-
    management issues, she had a bachelor’s degree in psychology, had completed the
    requirements of her master’s degree program in clinical counseling and marriage and
    3
    The duty-to-warn statute, by contrast, uses the term “licensee,” 
    Minn. Stat. § 148.975
    ,
    subd. 2, which is defined to include “licensed psychologist” or a “licensed psychological
    practitioner.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 148.89
    , subd. 4 (2012).
    9
    family therapy, and was working as a mental-health practitioner under the guidance of a
    supervisor at Thad Wilderson & Associates, a mental-health clinic. In short, she meets
    the dictionary definition of a “person trained and educated to perform psychological . . .
    therapy,” and she did, in fact, counsel Expose on managing his anger.
    Even if N.M.’s professional background is somehow insufficient to establish that
    she is a “psychologist” for purposes of the privilege, N.M. held herself out as a
    psychologist and informed Expose that his information would be kept strictly confidential
    unless certain limited exceptions applied. Under circumstances similar to these, the
    psychologist-client privilege has been applied when a client makes a “reasonable, but
    mistaken, belief that a mental health counselor is a psychologist or licensed social
    worker.” See Speaker ex rel. Speaker v. Cnty. of San Bernardino, 
    82 F. Supp. 2d 1105
    ,
    1112 (C.D. Cal. 2000). Similarly, courts have applied the attorney-client privilege when
    the client reasonably believed that an imposter was a lawyer. See United States v. Mullen
    & Co., 
    776 F. Supp. 620
    , 621 (D. Mass. 1991) (dictum); United States v. Tyler, 
    745 F. Supp. 423
    , 425–26 (W.D. Mich. 1990); United States v. Boffa, 
    513 F. Supp. 517
    , 523–
    25 (D. Del. 1981).
    In sum, because N.M. met the common understanding of a “psychologist” when
    she counseled Expose about his mental health, or, alternatively, the circumstances of their
    interactions allowed Expose to reasonably believe that N.M. was a psychologist or
    licensed social worker, we conclude that a psychologist-client relationship was formed.
    10
    B. Necessity of Statements to Treatment
    The state next contends that the psychologist-client privilege should not apply
    because Expose did not show that his statements were “necessary” for N.M.’s treatment
    of him. Under the statute, the privilege applies to “information or opinion based thereon
    which the professional has acquired in attending the client in a professional capacity, and
    which was necessary to enable the professional to act in that capacity.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 595.02
    , subd. 1(g).
    We decline the state’s invitation to parse the dialog of a therapy session in this
    manner. The record shows that N.M. acquired information on Expose’s thoughts toward
    D.P. as a result of her questioning him about his emotional state during a regularly
    scheduled therapy appointment for anger-management treatment in a mental-health
    clinic. Ordered to attend anger-management therapy by the judicial system, Expose was
    expected to fully participate in his therapy or risk failing his case plan. N.M. asked
    Expose questions about his anger, and he responded.            Anger-management therapy
    necessarily involves talking about and working through angry thoughts and emotions.
    Notably, N.M. agreed that it is “harmful to the therapeutic process for the patient to have
    to hold back,” and that a patient “should be able to tell [her] anything.”
    Similarly, when recognizing a federal psychotherapist evidentiary privilege, the
    United States Supreme Court explained, “Effective psychotherapy . . . depends upon an
    atmosphere of confidence and trust in which the patient is willing to make a frank and
    complete disclosure of facts, emotions, memories, and fears.”       Jaffee v. Redmond, 
    518 U.S. 1
    , 10, 
    116 S. Ct. 1923
    , 1928 (1996). N.M.’s ability to help her clients is dependent
    11
    upon establishing “an atmosphere of confidence and trust” for her clients to receive
    “successful treatment.” See 
    id.
     We hold that, based on these facts, Expose established
    that his conversation with N.M. fell under the psychologist-client privilege statute and
    that it was a necessary part of effective anger-management treatment.
    III.   Minnesota Law Contains No “Threats Exception” to the Statutory
    Psychologist-Client Privilege
    The state asks this court to affirm the district court’s ruling that Expose’s threats
    are admissible because threats qualify “[a]s an exception to the privilege.” Because
    section 595.02, subdivision 1(g), and other relevant laws do not contain a “threats
    exception,” the district court’s erroneous legal ruling is an abuse of discretion. See
    Williams, 842 N.W.2d at 313.
    We note initially that the district court made no finding, and the state makes no
    claim now, that, for purposes of the privilege statute, Expose somehow “consented” to
    N.M.’s testimony. To be sure, the plain language of the privilege statute allows a
    psychologist to disclose information or opinion gained during therapy sessions with “the
    consent of the professional’s client.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 595.02
    , subd. 1(g). And Expose did
    sign a “Client Rights and Responsibilities” document at the clinic before beginning
    therapy. That document stated that Expose had the right to have his personal information
    “treated as strictly confidential, unless: . . . There is sufficient reason to believe that a
    client may do bodily harm to self or others. In such a case, appropriate persons or
    agencies will be contacted in order to prevent such injury.”
    12
    Critically, however, the clinic never warned Expose that his treating psychologist
    may disclose information gained during a therapy session not simply to a third party to
    prevent possible injury, but instead by testifying in a court of law to aid a later criminal
    prosecution based on Expose’s statements. And no evidence was presented to show that
    Expose knew of the testimonial privilege that he purportedly consented to waive or that
    he intended to waive that privilege. Cf. State v. Penkaty, 
    708 N.W.2d 185
    , 204 (Minn.
    2006) (applying the intentional relinquishment standard to the waiver of a testimonial
    privilege).
    Because the issue of “consent” was not raised by the state or supported by the
    record, we next examine whether any other exception to the testimonial privilege may be
    found in section 592.02 or elsewhere in Minnesota law.           “[T]he rules of statutory
    interpretation forbid us from adding words to a statute that the Legislature omitted.”
    State v. Garcia-Gutierrez, 
    844 N.W.2d 519
    , 523 (Minn. 2014). The plain language of
    section 595.02 shows that the legislature knows how to create exceptions to the
    psychologist-client privilege when it so desires. In fact, an entire subdivision in the
    psychologist-client privilege statute sets forth “exceptions.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 595.02
    , subd. 2
    (2012). Subdivisions 2(a) and 2(b) create exceptions to the privilege for evidence of
    child abuse and neglect, including an exception that applies to criminal proceedings. 
    Id.,
    subds. 2(a), (b). Notably absent from the “exceptions” subdivision is any reference to
    threats by patients.
    In addition, the legislature created another exception to the psychologist-client
    privilege in statutes pertaining to civil-commitment proceedings, specifically providing
    13
    that “[a]ny privilege otherwise existing between . . . patient and psychologist . . . is
    waived as to any . . . psychologist . . . who provides information with respect to a
    patient.” Minn. Stat. § 253B.23, subd. 4 (2012). No similar language waiving the
    psychologist-client privilege is present in any other Minnesota law, including
    Minnesota’s duty-to-warn statute. See 
    Minn. Stat. § 148.975
    , subd. 2.
    The duty-to-warn statute requires a licensee to “take reasonable precautions to
    provide protection” to a potential victim of violent behavior “only when a client . . . has
    communicated to the licensee a specific, serious threat of physical violence against a
    specific, clearly identified or identifiable potential victim.” 
    Id.
     “‘Reasonable efforts’
    means communicating the . . . threat to the potential victim and if unable to make contact
    with the potential victim, communicating the serious, specific threat to the law
    enforcement agency closest to the potential victim or the client.” 
    Id.,
     subd. 1(c) (2012).
    Notably, the duty-to-warn statute makes no reference to a psychologist later
    testifying in court. And it does not contain any language suggesting that it creates an
    exception to the privilege, much less the explicit language used in the commitment
    statute that waives “[a]ny privilege otherwise existing . . . between patient and
    psychologist.” Accordingly, we conclude that the legislature did not intend for the
    limited disclosure required by the duty-to-warn statute to create an exception to the
    psychologist-client privilege.
    Given that the legislature has the power to create exceptions to the statutory
    privilege and has used that power in the past to limit the psychologist-client privilege, the
    absence of a “threats exception” in the privilege statute, or a waiver of the privilege in
    14
    any other statutory section, shows that the legislature did not intend for a “threats
    exception” to exist.4 Because the plain language of the statute governs, we need not
    consider the policy arguments advanced by the state to support a “threats exception” to
    the psychologist-client privilege.
    In reaching our conclusion that the psychologist-client privilege applies here, we
    do not minimize the harm that D.P. suffered after she learned of Expose’s alarming
    statements. We also are mindful that application of the privilege is “an impediment to the
    ascertainment of truth.” Staat, 291 Minn. at 397, 
    192 N.W.2d at 196
    . Nevertheless,
    where the legislature has balanced competing and weighty policy concerns, it is our duty
    to apply the privilege to fulfill its purpose: to safeguard and to promote confidential
    communications that enhance meaningful treatment for those suffering from mental or
    emotional problems. See 
    id.
     (discussing the purpose of the physician-patient privilege).
    “The mental health of our citizenry, no less than its physical health, is a public good of
    transcendent importance.” Jaffee, 
    518 U.S. at 11
    , 
    116 S. Ct. at 1929
    .
    IV.    Admission of D.P.’s Testimony Was Not Harmless Error
    Finally, the state contends that, even if we do not recognize a “threats exception”
    to the psychologist-client privilege, we should affirm Expose’s conviction based on
    D.P.’s testimony, which the state now contends on appeal is admissible through the
    residual hearsay exception. Minn. R. Evid. 807. D.P. testified at trial that N.M. warned
    her that Expose had threatened to harm her, and the state argues that D.P.’s testimony is
    4
    We note that a majority of states “have no such [threats] exception as part of their
    evidence jurisprudence.” United States v. Hayes, 
    227 F.3d 578
    , 585 (6th Cir. 2000).
    15
    sufficient to sustain Expose’s conviction. But use of the residual hearsay exception
    cannot overcome the separate basis for inadmissibility created by the psychologist-client
    privilege. Because Expose’s statements to N.M. were privileged, the privilege belongs to
    Expose and he did not waive it, and no “threats exception” exists, the admission of
    Expose’s statements through any witness was erroneous. And no question exists that the
    statements substantially influenced the jury’s decision to convict Expose. See State v.
    DeShay, 
    669 N.W.2d 878
    , 888 (Minn. 2003).
    D.P. learned about Expose’s threats because N.M. believed that she had a duty to
    warn D.P. under Minnesota law. The purpose of the duty-to-warn statute, however, is to
    protect a third-person’s personal safety, not to facilitate criminal prosecution; it does not
    pertain to the admissibility of testimony. See United States v. Ghane, 
    673 F.3d 771
    , 786
    (8th Cir. 2012) (“‘[C]ompliance with the professional duty to protect does not imply a
    duty to testify against a patient in criminal proceedings . . . and such testimony is
    privileged and inadmissible if a patient properly asserts the psychotherapist/patient
    privilege.”’ (quotation omitted)). As discussed above, nothing in the language of the
    duty-to-warn statute shows that the legislature intended for it to limit the psychologist-
    client privilege statute by creating a “threats exception” to the privilege. And allowing
    every person warned under the duty-to-warn statute to testify under the residual hearsay
    exception would undermine the purpose of the psychologist-client privilege statute. Cf.
    State v. Gillespie, 
    710 N.W.2d 289
    , 297 (Minn. App. 2006) (“The [physician-patient]
    privilege is solely for the protection of the patient and is designed to promote health and
    not truth.” (quotation omitted)), review denied (Minn. May 16, 2006).
    16
    In sum, the duty-to-warn statute does not permit D.P. to testify to Expose’s
    confidential communications to N.M.        Expose did not waive the privilege to the
    substance of his communications with N.M. during his counseling session. Because
    Expose’s communications to N.M. were privileged, neither N.M. nor D.P. can testify
    about them. Without N.M. or D.P.’s testimony, the jury likely would not have found
    Expose guilty. We therefore reverse and remand.
    DECISION
    Because Expose’s communications with N.M. met the requirements of
    Minnesota’s psychologist-client privilege statute, a “threats exception” does not exist in
    Minnesota law, and admission of N.M.’s testimony was not harmless, we reverse
    Expose’s conviction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    17