State v. Redd , 2013 NMCA 89 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •                                                           I attest to the accuracy and
    integrity of this document
    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 09:50:58 2013.09.20
    Certiorari Denied, August 26, 2013, No. 34,221
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2013-NMCA-089
    Filing Date: May 29, 2013
    Docket No. 31,558
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    SHAWN T. REDD,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF McKINLEY COUNTY
    Grant L. Foutz, District Judge
    Gary K. King, Attorney General
    James W. Grayson, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellant
    Paul Kennedy & Associates
    Paul J. Kennedy
    Arne R. Leonard
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee
    OPINION
    WECHSLER, Judge.
    {1}     The State appeals from the district court’s order dismissing charges filed against
    Defendant Shawn Redd. The district court dismissed the charges because, due to computer
    problems, the State lost an audio recording of the alleged victim’s initial interview with the
    investigating officer conducted on the day the allegations were reported to the police. We
    1
    hold that the district court erred in dismissing the charges because the loss of the recording
    of the initial interview was not prejudicial to Defendant. Accordingly, we reverse the district
    court’s dismissal of Defendant’s charges.
    BACKGROUND
    {2}     The district court dismissed three counts of criminal sexual penetration of a minor
    (CSPM), one count of criminal sexual contact of a minor (CSCM), one count of false
    imprisonment, and two counts of intentional child abuse. The charges arose out of
    allegations of sexual abuse against Defendant by a ten-year-old victim (the Victim). Two
    CSPM counts were based on allegations that Defendant caused Victim to engage in anal
    intercourse with Defendant, and the remaining CSPM count was based on an allegation that
    Defendant caused Victim to engage in oral penetration. Both child abuse counts were based
    on allegations that Defendant anally penetrated Victim.
    {3}     On November 5, 2009, Investigator Merle Bates, a deputy sheriff with the McKinley
    County Sheriff’s Department, responded to a domestic call at Defendant’s home. Once
    Investigator Bates arrived at the residence, he conducted interviews with Victim and
    Victim’s mother. Investigator Bates recorded the interviews on a digital recorder and later
    transferred the files to his computer. The ten-minute interview Investigator Bates conducted
    and recorded with Victim (hereafter referred to as the initial interview) is the subject of this
    case.
    {4}    In the initial interview, Victim told Investigator Bates that Defendant attempted oral
    penetration, but she did not allege any other type of sexual penetration, including anal
    penetration. In later interviews and during grand jury testimony, Victim alleged that
    Defendant attempted or completed anal penetration, which formed the basis of two of the
    CSPM counts and both child abuse counts.
    {5}      The district court held a pretrial conference on August 16, 2010, in which Defendant
    raised discovery issues, including that the State had not disclosed the audio recording of the
    initial interview. The State told the district court that it had only been able to retrieve two
    of the ten minutes of the initial interview due to “computer problems” and that Investigator
    Bates said that it was impossible to access the remaining eight minutes because the computer
    file could not be read. The district court advised Defendant to file a motion so that it could
    order Investigator Bates to come before the court and explain the issue with the audio file.
    {6}     Defendant filed a motion to compel production of the initial interview and Victim’s
    mother’s interview on August 30, 2010. In his motion, Defendant asserted that the initial
    interview was lost or destroyed due to a computer difficulty and that the loss of the evidence
    violated his right to a fair trial. Defendant stated that the initial interview was critical to his
    defense because Victim did not disclose anal penetration or any other type of sexual
    penetration to Investigator Bates. Defendant asserted that if the recording could not be
    produced, the proper remedy would be for the district court to dismiss the charges with
    2
    prejudice, and he asked the district court to order that the audio files be provided to
    Defendant or that the recording be sent to an expert for analysis. In the alternative,
    Defendant asked the district court to suppress the testimony of Victim and any other
    testimony the recording of the initial interview would impeach. The State, in its response,
    acknowledged that the recording of the initial interview was “damaged,” but argued that
    there was no prejudice because Investigator Bates routinely does not ask for details when
    interviewing a child victim of sexual abuse, and Investigator Bates could testify as to his
    memory of the initial interview.
    {7}      The district court held a motions hearing on January 27, 2011, at which Investigator
    Bates testified. He stated that he recorded the initial interview using a digital recorder and
    transferred the recording to his computer. His computer crashed in December 2009, and his
    hard drive was replaced. Investigator Bates testified that he had only recovered two of the
    ten minutes of the initial interview after he hired a private computer company to recover his
    data files. He stated that a county information technology employee, John Goins, tried but
    could not further recover the remaining eight minutes of the initial interview. Investigator
    Bates further testified that it might be possible to send the old hard drive containing the
    initial interview, or at least the new hard drive that contained the partially recovered file, to
    a computer expert for analysis and that he would be willing to try to find the old hard drive.
    The State indicated that it had no objection to sending the hard drive to a computer expert.
    The district court directed Defendant to choose an expert and determine the cost and stated
    that the district court would determine the action to pursue after receiving this information.
    {8}     At the next status conference, on February 7, 2011, defense counsel indicated that
    she found an out-of-state company specializing in data recovery and that the cost would be
    between $500 and $1800. Defense counsel stated that she accompanied Investigator Bates
    to speak with Goins and that Goins indicated that the old hard drive was available to send
    to the expert. Defense counsel indicated that she would provide the district court with an
    order to sign, ordering the hard drive to be sent to the expert. The district court set a status
    conference for March 7, 2011, in order to determine the status of the hard drive.
    {9}      On March 4, 2011, Defendant filed a motion to compel production of the hard drive.
    The motion indicated that defense counsel and Investigator Bates spoke with Goins, who had
    removed the hard drive from Investigator Bates’ computer. Goins initially said that he could
    locate Investigator Bates’ hard drive as defense counsel told the district court at the February
    7, 2011 hearing, but Goins later told defense counsel that the hard drive was placed
    unlabeled with around one hundred other discarded hard drives and that he had not attempted
    to find the one belonging to Investigator Bates. Defendant asked the district court to order
    the hard drive be turned over to the defense or to dismiss the charges against Defendant.
    {10} At the status conference three days later, on March 7, 2011, the district court stated
    that it was its understanding that Defendant was going to locate an expert and that the State
    would provide the hard drive. Defendant then reiterated what he stated in his motion: that
    Goins indicated that Investigator Bates’ hard drive was among one hundred unlabeled hard
    3
    drives and that Goins had not attempted to locate the hard drive. Defendant stated that he
    would ask the district court for an order directing Goins to begin opening the unlabeled hard
    drives so that he could locate the one belonging to Investigator Bates. The district court
    responded that “the hard drive needs to be produced.” The State likewise asked the district
    court for an order. The district court indicated that it would agree to such an order but that
    it needed to know how many hard drives Goins would have to analyze and acknowledged
    it had no familiarity with recovering data from hard drives and the time it takes. The district
    court ultimately directed the State to speak with Goins and determine how long it would take
    to find Investigator Bates’ hard drive and if Goins would be willing to do so. The district
    court then scheduled another status conference.
    {11} At a status conference held on March 21, 2011, the State informed the district court
    that Goins indicated that it would not be possible to locate the hard drive, and that he could
    not identify Investigator Bates’ hard drive. The State also informed the district court that
    Goins told the State that it would be against county protocol to release all the hard drives to
    an outside expert for analysis because the hard drives contained confidential information
    from various county agencies. Upon questioning by the district court, the State indicated
    that its information was based on conversations with Goins. The district court indicated that
    if the hard drive was not turned over to Defendant, dismissal might be the only viable option.
    Defendant suggested an evidentiary hearing in which Goins could testify about the
    possibility of locating the hard drive, and the district court agreed to set a hearing once
    Defendant filed whatever motion he deemed appropriate.
    {12} Defendant filed a motion to dismiss on June 1, 2011. In his motion, Defendant
    argued that the initial interview was critical to his defense because the “only consistency in
    [Victim]’s . . . version of events is the[] inconsistency.” Defendant specifically pointed out
    that Victim disclosed anal penetration in her pre-trial interview and during grand jury
    testimony and said that she told Investigator Bates about anal penetration, which differed
    from Investigator Bates’ report from the initial interview. Defendant’s motion characterized
    the conclusion of the January 27, 2011 hearing as the district court “order[ing] the State to
    produce the crashed hard drive . . . for inspection and analysis by an expert” and argued that
    “the State has failed to comply with the [district court’s] order compelling the production of
    the crashed hard drive for analysis by a defense expert.” The motion to dismiss included an
    affidavit from a computer expert that it is “reasonably likely” or “most likely” that a
    professional data recovery specialist could recover the entire initial interview from the hard
    drive. The State responded, arguing that issues regarding credibility and inconsistent
    versions of events should be decided by the jury, that it did not intentionally destroy
    evidence, that Investigator Bates engaged in his best efforts to retrieve the lost recording of
    the initial interview, and that dismissal was an inappropriate remedy under the circumstances
    in this case.
    {13} The district court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss on July 21,
    2011. At the hearing, Goins testified that he attempted to recover data from Investigator
    Bates’ hard drive by “slav[ing]” it to another machine, in other words, by connecting it to
    4
    another computer and attempting to read the data on the other computer. He testified that
    other companies specialize in advanced data recovery and may have other methods of
    recovering data that he did not. Goins stated that he placed Investigator Bates’ old hard
    drive in the “junk pile,” or a trash can, once he removed it from Investigator Bates’ computer
    and that he does not label hard drives he puts in the trash can. Goins testified that he
    received a request from Investigator Bates and Defendant to locate Investigator Bates’
    original hard drive. He spent most of one day trying to access ten hard drives of the roughly
    one hundred that were saved in one trash bin, he saw information on two that did not match
    the data on Investigator Bates’ hard drive, and he informed Investigator Bates that the drive
    could not be located at that point.
    {14} Richard Chavez testified that he is an employee with two companies that specialize
    in data recovery. He testified that Investigator Bates brought his computer to one of Chavez’
    stores and asked Chavez to do everything possible to fix his computer and recover the lost
    data. Chavez used his experience and a software program to recover between ten and
    fourteen gigabytes of data and testified that he was not aware of any more sophisticated
    software that he could have used to recover more data. Chavez testified that Investigator
    Bates’ computer had faulty memory due to a manufacturer’s defect and that the defect
    caused data to become corrupted when it was saved onto the computer. He stated that more
    sophisticated techniques could be used to retrieve more data when a drive is not physically
    working but that Investigator Bates’ computer suffered defective memory that corrupted the
    data as it was saved.
    {15} After the testimony, Defendant argued that dismissal was the only appropriate
    remedy based on (1) the legal analysis for lost or destroyed evidence, and (2) the State’s
    failure to comply with the district court’s order to produce the evidence, in particular to find
    the hard drive and notify the district court how long it would take to search the approximate
    one hundred unlabeled hard drives to determine which hard drive belonged to Investigator
    Bates. The State conceded that it breached a duty to preserve but argued that the appropriate
    remedy was admitting the loss of the initial interview and the circumstances to the jury and
    permitting Investigator Bates to disclose to the jury that Victim did not disclose anal
    penetration in the initial interview.
    {16} The district court issued an order granting Defendant’s motion to dismiss. The
    district court stated that the initial interview contained inconsistencies with other statements
    made by Victim. It concluded that the lost initial interview was material and that the loss
    was prejudicial to Defendant. Additionally, the district court’s order contains language
    indicating that the dismissal was, at least partially, based on a discovery sanction for the
    State’s inability or refusal to locate Investigator Bates’ hard drive and turn it over to
    Defendant. In its findings granting the motion to dismiss, the district court stated, apparently
    based on its oral directive at the January 27, 2011 hearing, that “[p]rior to January [2011],
    as well as after January 2011, the [district court] directed the State to identify the hard
    drive.” Additionally, the order contained findings that “[f]rom January 2011 until July 2011,
    the State spent only eight hours trying to identify the correct hard drive after it was
    5
    commingled with other hard drives, and examined only ten percent of the hard drives in the
    trash can.” Further, “[t]o [the] date of this order, the State has not identified [Investigator]
    Bate[s’] hard drive.” There was no express finding of bad faith or intentional conduct on the
    part of the State.
    {17} The State appeals the district court’s order granting the motion to dismiss and makes
    several arguments as to why the district court abused its discretion. It argues that dismissal
    was not an appropriate remedy under a lost or destroyed evidence analysis because (1) the
    evidentiary value of the lost recording was minimal, and Defendant failed to establish
    materiality and prejudice due to the lost recording, and (2) dismissal is not a proper remedy
    when raised pre-trial. The State also contends that the district court erred to the extent that
    it granted Defendant’s motion to dismiss as a discovery sanction for failure to provide the
    hard drive to Defendant because (1) the district court never ordered the State to produce the
    hard drive, (2) Defendant failed to show actual prejudice, and (3) the district court failed to
    consider less severe sanctions.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    {18} We review a district court’s remedy for lost or destroyed evidence for an abuse of
    discretion. See State v. Duarte, 2007-NMCA-012, ¶¶ 5, 11, 
    140 N.M. 930
    , 
    149 P.3d 1027
    .
    Likewise, “[s]anctions for violations of discovery orders are discretionary” and will not be
    reversed absent an abuse of that discretion. State v. Bartlett, 
    109 N.M. 679
    , 680, 
    789 P.2d 627
    , 628 (Ct. App. 1990). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the ruling is clearly against
    the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances of the case.” Duarte, 2007-NMCA-012,
    ¶ 3 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Additionally, we view the evidence and
    the inferences drawn from that evidence in favor of the district court’s ruling. See Mathis
    v. State, 
    112 N.M. 744
    , 747-48, 
    819 P.2d 1302
    , 1305-06 (1991).
    BASIS FOR GRANTING THE MOTION TO DISMISS
    {19} As an initial matter, the parties dispute the type of analysis this Court should apply
    to the order dismissing this case. Both parties point out the distinction between cases in
    which evidence is lost or destroyed and cases in which a district court sanctions the state for
    a bad faith or intentional violation of a discovery order. In State v. Chouinard, 
    96 N.M. 658
    ,
    661, 
    634 P.2d 680
    , 683 (1981), our Supreme Court formulated a three-part test to determine
    the appropriate remedy for lost or destroyed evidence. Under this test, in evaluating whether
    the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the case for lost or destroyed evidence,
    we look to whether (1) the state breached a duty or intentionally deprived the defendant of
    evidence, (2) the lost or destroyed evidence is material, and (3) the defendant suffered
    prejudice. See 
    id. The purpose
    of this test is to assure that the district court arrived at a
    determination that will serve the ends of justice. 
    Id. {20} In
    contrast, as a general rule, a district court may impose sanctions against the state
    for a failure to comply with a discovery order. See 
    Mathis, 112 N.M. at 747
    , 819 P.2d at
    6
    1305. Our Supreme Court has clarified that dismissal for the violation of a discovery order
    requires (1) culpable state conduct such as “bad faith, willful non-compliance, or flat-out
    disregard for a discovery order”; ( 2) tangible prejudice to the defendant as a result of the
    deprivation of the evidence; and (3) a consideration of lesser sanctions. State v. Harper,
    2011-NMSC-044, ¶¶ 16-18, 27, 
    150 N.M. 745
    , 
    266 P.3d 25
    . We initially discuss discovery
    sanctions as they apply to this case and then address the Chouinard test for lost or destroyed
    evidence.
    {21} The district court’s order dismissing the charges did contain the following findings
    regarding the production of the hard drive:
    4.      Prior to January 2011, as well as after January, the [district court]
    directed the State to identify the hard drive.
    5.      . . . Defendant requested the hard drive be identified so that
    Defendant’s expert could attempt to retrieve the lost portion of the
    [initial] interview.
    6.      From January 2011 until July 2011, the State spent only eight hours
    trying to identify the correct hard drive after it was commingled with
    other hard drives, and examined only ten percent of the hard drives
    in the trash can.
    7.      To date of this order, the State has not identified [Investigator]
    Bate[s’] hard drive.
    These findings stop short of finding that (1) the district court issued a discovery order
    compelling the State to turn over Investigator Bates’ hard drive, and (2) the State willfully
    did not comply with or intentionally disregarded such a discovery order or otherwise failed
    to find the hard drive in bad faith. To be sure, these findings indicate a level of frustration
    from the district court. Additionally, as Defendant points out, at times during the
    proceedings, the district court questioned the State’s efforts to locate the hard drive.
    However, it is dispositive that the district court never issued an unambiguous order requiring
    the State to turn over the hard drive to Defendant.
    {22} As we have discussed, at the January 27, 2011 hearing, the district court told
    Defendant to determine the cost and identify an expert and that the issue of turning over the
    hard drive could be discussed at a later time upon receipt of that information. At the
    February 7, 2011 status conference, Defendant indicated that he would present an order to
    the district court to sign compelling production of the hard drive, but such an order does not
    appear in the record. At the March 7, 2011 status conference, the State likewise asked for
    an order compelling the production, but the district court indicated that it needed to know
    the number of hard drives that Goins would have to analyze and acknowledged that it had
    no familiarity with the process for recovering data from hard drives or the time that it takes.
    7
    At the March 21, 2011 status conference, once the State indicated that Goins was unable or
    unwilling to locate the hard drive, the district court directed Defendant to file whatever
    motion he deemed necessary. Defendant subsequently filed his motion to dismiss. Under
    these circumstances, the district court did not unambiguously order the State to produce the
    hard drive before dismissing the case, and the State therefore could not have intentionally
    disregarded or defied a discovery order. See Harper, 2011-NMSC-044, ¶ 27 (reversing the
    suppression of witness testimony because, among other reasons, the district court did not
    unambiguously order the state to produce the witness for a witness interview).
    {23} Additionally, it is unclear to what extent the district court granted the motion to
    dismiss as a discovery sanction for the failure of the State to produce the hard drive. As we
    have discussed, and as the State points out, the district court’s order lacks any specific
    finding of bad faith, willful noncompliance, or intentional disregard of a discovery order to
    produce the hard drive. On this basis alone, the district court’s order is an abuse of
    discretion in dismissing the case to the extent it did so as a discovery sanction for the State’s
    failure to provide the hard drive to Defendant. Cf. State v. Hill, 2005-NMCA-143, ¶¶ 22-23,
    
    138 N.M. 693
    , 
    125 P.3d 1175
    (reversing a district court’s dismissal of charges because the
    district court’s finding did not indicate that it applied all three prongs of the test for lost or
    destroyed evidence). To the extent that the district court dismissed Defendant’s charges for
    the failure of the State to produce Investigator Bates’ hard drive in defiance of a discovery
    order to produce the hard drive, the district court abused its discretion. We thus turn to
    whether the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the charges against Defendant
    under the framework for lost or destroyed evidence based on the lost or destroyed eight
    minutes of the recording of the initial interview.
    LOST OR DESTROYED EVIDENCE
    {24} From the order granting the motion to dismiss, it appears that the district court
    granted the motion based on the Chouinard line of cases for lost or destroyed evidence. The
    district court made findings, although conclusory, that the lost audio recording of the initial
    interview was material and that the loss was prejudicial to Defendant. In evaluating whether
    the district court abused its discretion under Chouinard, we look to whether (1) the State
    breached a duty or intentionally deprived Defendant of the recording of the initial interview,
    (2) the lost or destroyed recording of the initial interview is material to the defense, and (3)
    whether Defendant suffered prejudice. See 
    Chouinard, 96 N.M. at 661
    , 634 P.2d at 683.
    The purpose of this test is to assure that the district court arrived at a determination that will
    serve the ends of justice. 
    Id. {25} The
    State concedes that the first prong of the test is met because the State is required
    to disclose statements made by any anticipated State witness. See Rule 5-501(A)(5) NMRA.
    The State challenges the district court’s determination as to the second and third prongs of
    the Chouinard test. As to materiality, Defendant primarily contended in the district court
    that the initial interview was material because Victim did not disclose anal penetration in the
    initial interview in contrast to subsequent interviews in which she disclosed anal penetration.
    8
    Defendant argued that the inconsistency between the initial interview and subsequent
    interviews bears on the credibility of Victim and is exculpatory in the sense that it does not
    support any allegation of anal penetration, which formed the basis of four counts of the
    indictment.
    {26} The State contends that the district court abused its discretion in finding materiality
    because (1) Victim disclosed oral penetration and identified Defendant as the perpetrator,
    and therefore the initial interview did not fully support a claim of innocence; (2) the initial
    interview was not exculpatory because the hearsay rules prevent Defendant from introducing
    the statement as substantive evidence for the truth of the matter asserted; and (3) although
    the initial interview could be used to impeach Victim and question her credibility, it did not
    rise to the level of “material” as defined by our Supreme Court under the framework for lost
    or destroyed evidence because it was simply cumulative impeachment evidence in view of
    numerous inconsistencies made during her interviews with the safe house, her grand jury
    testimony, and her pre-trial interview. Our Supreme Court has defined “material” as a “
    ‘reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient
    to undermine confidence in the outcome.’ ” State v. Fero, 
    107 N.M. 369
    , 371, 
    758 P.2d 783
    ,
    785 (1988) (quoting United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682 (1985) for the definition of
    materiality from the United States Supreme Court’s test for due process analysis for
    undisclosed evidence).
    {27} We do not agree with the State that Victim’s initial statement to Investigator Bates
    was not material because its only purpose was to impeach Victim’s testimony and challenge
    her credibility. The State primarily cites State v. Boeglin, 
    105 N.M. 247
    , 254, 
    731 P.2d 943
    ,
    950 (1987) and United States v. Cooper, 
    654 F.3d 1104
    , 1120 (10th Cir. 2011), for the
    proposition that “cumulative impeachment evidence” is not material under our standard.
    However, both cases are distinguishable. Boeglin involved a case in which the defendant
    claimed that the state knowingly used false evidence after trial in a different procedural
    posture than this 
    case. 105 N.M. at 253-54
    , 731 P.2d at 949-50. In Boeglin, the state
    conceded and disclosed to the jury that the transcript at issue was erroneous because it was
    missing information, and the district court instructed the jury to rely upon the actual tapes
    and not on the transcript with the missing information. 
    Id. at 254,
    731 P.2d at 950. Our
    Supreme Court considered the alleged omission in the “context of the entire record” and
    determined that it was not material because its only purpose was to bolster the defendant’s
    credibility “generally” and to attack the credibility of the two investigators conducting the
    interview. 
    Id. {28} Cooper
    addressed a situation in which the district court suppressed testimony that a
    government witness prepared false or fraudulent tax returns, which the defendant intended
    to use for impeachment 
    purposes. 654 F.3d at 1122
    . The Tenth Circuit held that the
    testimony was not “material” because it was only for impeachment and the witness was not
    a crucial or critical witness to the government’s claim. 
    Id. at 1123.
    In this case, we cannot
    say that Victim is not a crucial or critical witness. An initial statement to investigators made
    9
    by an alleged victim shortly after the incident in question and which the defendant wishes
    to use to attack the alleged victim’s credibility is material under the second prong of the
    Chouinard test. See 
    Bartlett, 109 N.M. at 681
    , 789 P.2d at 629 (holding that a tape recorded
    statement made to investigators after the incident in which the alleged victim described the
    perpetrator was material because it bore on the credibility of the alleged victim); see also
    Smith v. Cain, __ U.S. __, 
    132 S. Ct. 627
    , 629-30 (2012) (holding that notes from the
    investigating investigator that the only eyewitness could not describe the perpetrator was
    material).
    {29} We thus turn to whether Defendant suffered prejudice by the loss of the recording
    of the initial interview with Investigator Bates. See 
    Chouinard, 96 N.M. at 661
    , 634 P.2d
    at 683. In the district court, Defendant argued that the loss of the recording was prejudicial
    because it was the most contemporaneous account of the allegations against Defendant, it
    was inconsistent with later accounts Victim gave investigators, and the later accounts
    occurred only after Victim had the opportunity to talk with her mother. Defendant also
    contends that the initial interview was “extremely critical” to the defense because Victim
    was the only eyewitness to the alleged crimes and there was no inculpatory physical
    evidence against Defendant. The district court found that the loss of the initial interview
    prejudiced Defendant without elaborating upon its finding.
    {30} On appeal, the State contends that the district court erred in finding prejudice because
    (1) Defendant did not need the recording to establish the inconsistency because Investigator
    Bates could have testified that Victim did not disclose anal penetration in the initial
    interview, and (2) the district court could have considered a stipulation or instruction to the
    jury regarding the contents of the initial interview and explaining the circumstances
    regarding the lost recording. The State points out that Defendant conceded at the January
    27, 2011 hearing that Investigator Bates took “copious notes,” that Investigator Bates
    testified that his report contained everything said during the initial interview, and that
    Investigator Bates listened to the recording several times before the file was corrupted to
    ensure his report was accurate. Investigator Bates further testified that he would testify at
    trial that Victim did not disclose anal penetration during the initial interview.
    {31} When evaluating prejudice, we examine “the importance of the missing evidence to
    [the] defendant[] and the strength of the other evidence of [the] defendant’s guilt.” 
    Bartlett, 109 N.M. at 681
    , 789 P.2d at 629. Because the district court granted the motion to dismiss
    and the case did not proceed to trial, we focus on the importance of the missing evidence to
    Defendant’s case. Cf. 
    id. (focusing on
    the importance of the missing evidence to the
    defendant’s case because the jury failed to reach a verdict and therefore the strength of the
    other evidence was not evident).
    {32} This Court has examined the prejudice prong in a similar case involving a similar
    piece of missing evidence. In Bartlett, the state charged the defendant with criminal sexual
    penetration, and the investigating officer interviewed the alleged victim on two occasions.
    
    Id. at 680,
    789 P.2d at 628. The state failed to produce the recording of the first interview,
    10
    and the district court dismissed the charge against the defendant after a first trial resulted in
    a mistrial and the state indicated that it intended to retry the defendant. 
    Id. Although this
    Court characterized the dismissal as a discovery sanction, we applied the Chouinard test for
    lost or missing evidence in determining whether the district court abused its discretion in
    dismissing the charge. Bartlett, 109 N.M. at 
    680, 789 P.2d at 628
    . We held that the
    recording of the interview was “important to [the] defendant[, but not] so important as to
    deprive [the] defendant of a fair trial.” Id. at 
    681, 789 P.2d at 629
    . We concluded that the
    defendant “was still able to vigorously raise and pursue” mistaken identity and fabrication
    defenses by pointing out discrepancies in the description contained in the initial police
    report, testimony at the preliminary hearing, and testimony at the first trial. 
    Id. at 682,
    789
    P.2d at 630. Additionally, the defendant cross-examined the victim and the investigating
    officer at the first trial about the inconsistency and “extensively argued” the issues regarding
    the missing interview. 
    Id. We therefore
    held that the district court abused its discretion in
    dismissing the charge. 
    Id. {33} Similarly,
    in Duarte, 2007-NMCA-012, ¶¶ 1, 4-5, the state lost a videotape showing
    the defendant taking a second set of field sobriety tests, and the defendant moved to suppress
    all evidence that the videotape may have impeached or for dismissal of the charge. Applying
    Chouinard, this Court held that the defendant was not prejudiced by the loss of the
    videotape. Duarte, 2007-NMCA-012, ¶¶ 9-11. We reasoned that (1) the defendant was able
    to cross-examine the officer about the lost video and to argue its significance to the jury,
    including attacking the officer’s credibility and reliability; (2) the defendant had the officer’s
    report at his disposal and the report contained information relating to the field sobriety tests;
    and (3) there was other evidence of the defendant’s guilt including his breath alcohol content
    reading. 
    Id. ¶ 11.
    {34} In this case, the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the charges against
    Defendant due to the lost audio recording of the initial interview because the loss of the
    recording of the initial interview was not prejudicial to Defendant. First, the record reveals
    that Defendant had other means to point out the inconsistencies between the initial interview
    and her later statements and interviews. Investigator Bates testified that his police report on
    the incident contained the contents of the initial interview, that he listened to the initial
    interview several times while preparing his report, and that he would testify that Victim did
    not reveal anal penetration during the initial interview. Defendant initially conceded that
    Investigator Bates took “copious notes” of the initial interview. The actual recording was
    therefore unnecessary for Defendant to prove that particular inconsistency to the jury and
    for Defendant to impeach Victim. See Bartlett, 109 N.M. at 
    682, 789 P.2d at 630
    (holding
    that the defendant suffered no prejudice from the loss of evidence because the defendant
    could use the police reports and cross-examinations of the investigating officer and the
    victim to establish the inconsistency between the victim’s description of the perpetrator).
    Second, the district court should have considered other alternatives to dismissal that would
    have ameliorated any prejudice suffered by Defendant. At the March 7, 2011 hearing, the
    district court suggested that the loss of the initial interview could be resolved by a
    stipulation. At the evidentiary hearing, the State agreed that it would consent to a jury
    11
    instruction explaining the circumstances of the lost recording. However, in its order granting
    the motion to dismiss, the district court did not address either alternative or why they would
    be inadequate given the circumstances of the case. Third, as we stated in Duarte, reversal
    is not mandated unless the lost evidence materially affected a determination of guilt or
    innocence. 2007-NMCA-012, ¶ 11. Given that Defendant only sought to use the initial
    interview as impeachment evidence and because Defendant had other means to introduce the
    contents of the initial interview into evidence, the ultimate remedy of dismissal was not
    appropriate. See Chouinard, 96 N.M at 
    661, 634 P.2d at 683
    (stating that the three-part test
    for a remedy for lost or destroyed evidence is intended to serve the ends of justice). We note
    that it would have been helpful for us to have findings by the district court explaining its
    findings of prejudice for our appellate review.
    {35} Defendant argues that Smith, ___ U.S. ___, 
    132 S. Ct. 627
    is controlling in this case.
    In Smith, the United States Supreme Court held that witness statements made to an
    investigating detective that the state failed to disclose to the defendant were material because
    the defendant could have used the statements to impeach the witness. Id. ___, 132 S. Ct. at
    629-30. However, Smith involved a claim for post-conviction relief, and the defendant was
    convicted without being aware of the statements that he could have used to impeach the
    witness. 
    Id. In this
    case, although evidence regarding Victim’s initial interview is material
    to Defendant in order to impeach Victim, Defendant had alternative means to present
    inconsistencies to the jury, and he will not be deprived of presenting a defense based on the
    loss of the recording. It is on the basis of the absence of prejudice, not materiality, that we
    base our conclusion that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the charges.
    {36} Because we have concluded that the district court abused its discretion in finding
    prejudice against Defendant for the loss of the initial interview to the extent that it dismissed
    the case and, therefore, reverse on this ground, we need not address the State’s argument that
    dismissal is not an available remedy when an issue of lost or destroyed evidence is raised
    pretrial.
    CONCLUSION
    {37} We hold that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the charges against
    Defendant due to the lost audio recording of the initial interview because the loss of the
    recording of the initial interview was not prejudicial to Defendant. Accordingly, we reverse
    the district court’s dismissal of Defendant’s charges.
    {38}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    _____________________________________
    JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    12
    ____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    ____________________________________
    CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
    Topic Index for State v. Redd, No. 31,558
    APPEAL AND ERROR
    Standard of Review
    CRIMINAL LAW
    Child Abuse and Neglect
    Criminal Sexual Penetration
    False Imprisonment
    Sexual Exploitation of Children
    Sexual Offences
    CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
    Dismissal of Charges
    Prejudice
    Sanctions
    EVIDENCE
    Disclosure
    Discovery
    Lost Evidence
    Prejudicial Evidence
    Taped Evidence
    JUDGES
    Abuse of Discretion
    13