State v. Kehoe ( 2024 )


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  • 722                  October 30, 2024             No. 765
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    MATTHEW N. KEHOE,
    aka Matthew Nicholas Kehoe,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Multnomah County Circuit Court
    22CR15496; A179616
    Christopher A. Ramras, Judge.
    Submitted September 25, 2024.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate
    Section, and Peter G. Klym, Deputy Public Defender, Office
    of Public Defense Services, filed the brief for appellant.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Kate E. Morrow, Assistant Attorney
    General, filed the brief for respondent.
    Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, Powers, Judge, and Pagán,
    Judge.
    PAGÁN, J.
    Affirmed.
    Cite as 
    335 Or App 722
     (2024)                             723
    PAGÁN, J.
    A jury found defendant guilty of fourth-degree
    assault, ORS 163.160. At trial, there was no dispute that
    defendant struck the complaining witness, but defendant
    argued that he did so in self-defense. On appeal, in two
    assignments of error, defendant argues that the trial court
    plainly erred in failing to intervene when both the arresting
    officer and the prosecutor repeatedly referred to the com-
    plaining witness, T, as a victim. We conclude that the trial
    court did not plainly err. When considered in context, nei-
    ther the officer nor the prosecutor engaged in unambiguous
    vouching. Their uses of the term “victim” to describe the
    complaining witness occurred in the context of explaining
    that there was physical evidence and other witnesses to cor-
    roborate the complaining witness’s account of what occurred.
    And even if some of the police officer’s statements could be
    construed as vouching for the complaining witness’s cred-
    ibility, we decline to exercise our discretion to correct the
    errors, if any, because the jury was instructed about vouch-
    ing and, if defendant had objected, then the trial court could
    have easily corrected any misimpression created by use of
    the term “victim.” We therefore affirm.
    We briefly summarize the relevant facts. Defendant,
    T, and T’s cousin lived in separate units in the same apart-
    ment complex in Portland. In March 2022, T, his cousin, and
    some others were tie-dying t-shirts outside the apartment
    complex. Defendant came out of his apartment, complaining
    about cigarette smoke. Defendant yelled at T and the others.
    Defendant asked, “Where’s your piece?” T and his cousin
    interpreted the phrase as a reference to a gun. Defendant
    claimed he was referring to Buddhist practices, and to a
    book that T had given him, called “Being Peace.”
    Based on what he perceived as defendant’s threaten-
    ing behavior, T called the police. While on the call, defendant
    reached for T’s phone, and T told defendant to “[g]et away
    from me.” Defendant struck T in the face with his hand. On
    the recording of the call, T can be heard shouting, “He just
    hit me!” and defendant shouts, “You head-butted me.” When
    the police arrived, Officer McDonald noticed “some redness
    along [T’s] brow.” The police took a photograph of the injury.
    724                                            State v. Kehoe
    McDonald spoke with defendant, who initially insisted that
    the altercation was merely verbal. McDonald did not observe
    that defendant had any injuries. After speaking with wit-
    nesses, she arrested defendant for assault. While transport-
    ing defendant to jail, defendant told McDonald that T had
    head-butted him and that he had slapped T in self-defense.
    The state charged defendant with one count of
    fourth-degree assault. At defendant’s jury trial, the state
    called a number of witnesses, including T, his cousin, and
    McDonald. The jury listened to the audio recording of
    the 9-1-1 call and viewed photographs of T’s injury, which
    showed redness or bruising around his left eye. After
    the state rested, defendant and his wife took the stand.
    Defendant testified that he wanted to confront T about an
    earlier incident that occurred at the apartment complex,
    but T ignored him. Defendant followed T around the corner
    of the building, where T and the others began laughing at
    defendant and “instigating” him. When T called the police,
    defendant wanted T to give him the phone. Defendant and
    his wife testified that T lunged at defendant and attempted
    to head-butt him, and that defendant acted in self-defense.
    Although defendant had told the police officer that T had
    head-butted him, defendant testified at trial that T merely
    attempted to do so.
    The jury found defendant guilty. On appeal, defen-
    dant argues that McDonald and the prosecutor engaged in
    impermissible vouching when they repeatedly referred to T
    as a “victim.” At trial, defendant did not object, and because
    he did not preserve his argument, he requests plain-error
    review on appeal. An error is plain when it is an error of
    law, the legal point is obvious and not reasonably in dispute,
    and the error is apparent on the record without our having
    to choose among competing inferences. State v. Vanornum,
    
    354 Or 614
    , 629, 317 P3d 889 (2013). If the trial court plainly
    erred, it is a matter of discretion whether we will correct it.
    State v. Gornick, 
    340 Or 160
    , 166-67, 130 P3d 780 (2006).
    “Vouching refers to the expression of one’s per-
    sonal opinion about the credibility of a witness.” State v.
    Sperou, 
    365 Or 121
    , 128, 442 P3d 581 (2019). “In Oregon,
    witnesses are categorically prohibited from giving vouching
    Cite as 
    335 Or App 722
     (2024)                                  725
    testimony.” 
    Id.
     Vouching is prohibited because it creates “a
    risk that jurors would rely on witnesses’ opinions about the
    credibility of an alleged victim to avoid their independent
    obligation to determine whether the complainant’s allega-
    tions were truthful.” State v. Corkill, 
    262 Or App 543
    , 553,
    325 P3d 796, rev den, 
    355 Or 751
     (2014). “Whether a wit-
    ness’s statement constitutes impermissible vouching is a
    legal question.” Sperou, 
    365 Or at 128
    .
    “When faced with an unpreserved claim of error regarding
    vouching, our first task is to assess the challenged testi-
    mony to determine whether the witness unambiguously
    vouched, may or may not have vouched (ambiguous), or
    unambiguously did not vouch. If a witness unambiguously
    vouched, it is plain error not to have stricken the testimony,
    even absent an objection.”
    State v. Murphy, 
    319 Or App 330
    , 335, 510 P3d 269 (2022).
    In Sperou, the Supreme Court drew a distinction
    between use of the term “victim” by prosecutors and wit-
    nesses, explaining that prosecutors have wide latitude to
    make arguments from the evidence, but that a witness’s
    description of the complaining witness as a “victim” con-
    veys an opinion that the complaining witness is telling the
    truth. Id. at 130-37; see also State v. McConnell, 
    308 Or App 29
    , 34-36, 479 P3d 1082 (2020) (emphasizing the difference
    between the prosecutor’s and a witness’s use of the term
    “victim”). However, the Supreme Court also observed that
    a witness’s use of the word “victim” may not raise vouch-
    ing concerns “in a case where there is physical evidence
    corroborating the complaining witness’s claims of victim-
    hood,” because, in that circumstance, the description of the
    complaining witness as a “victim” may be based on evidence
    other than the complaining witness’s allegations. Sperou,
    
    365 Or at 131
    . To date, no case has held that it was plain
    error for the trial court not to strike references to the com-
    plaining witness as a “victim” in circumstances where there
    is physical evidence or other witnesses corroborating the
    complaining witness’s account of what occurred.
    With that framework in mind, we consider the
    challenged statements. At trial, during direct examination,
    726                                               State v. Kehoe
    McDonald referred to T as a “victim” six times. McDonald
    testified:
    “I responded to the location, I called the complainant,
    the victim, to get more information before my arrival, and
    then responded to that location and started interviewing
    witnesses.
    “* * * * *
    “When I arrived, I saw the victim, I spoke with him,
    saw some redness on his face and inquired about what had
    occurred, and started to talk with him.
    “* * * * *
    “My understanding was that [defendant] had punched
    the victim in the face after an argument in front of their
    apartment building.
    “* * * * *
    “I placed [defendant] under arrest. I believed I had prob-
    able cause for Assault IV after interviewing the victim and
    a couple [of] witnesses.
    “* * * * *
    “As I was transferring [defendant] to jail, he stated that
    the event where he slapped the victim was in self-defense.
    He stated that he was head-butted prior to slapping the
    victim.”
    (Emphases added.)
    Because vouching by a witness is categorically pro-
    hibited, McDonald’s references to T as a “victim” are trou-
    bling. When the witness is a police officer, use of the term
    “victim” is even more concerning, because it may signal to
    the jury that a person with expertise in identifying victims
    believes the complaining witness. See State v. Avdeyev, 
    309 Or App 205
    , 216, 482 P3d 115 (2021) (holding that the trial
    court erred when it denied defendant’s pretrial motion to
    prevent witnesses, including investigating officers, from
    referring to complaining witnesses as “victims”). Typically,
    then, defendants should object, and trial judges should be
    prepared to intervene whenever a witness, but especially
    when a police officer or an expert witness, refers to a com-
    plaining witness as a “victim.”
    Cite as 
    335 Or App 722
     (2024)                                                   727
    Nevertheless, a police officer’s description of the
    complaining witness as a “victim” is less likely to mislead
    the jury where there is physical evidence of a crime, and
    when the officer is not relying solely on the complaining wit-
    ness’s allegations. See Sperou, 
    365 Or at 131-32
     (use of the
    word “victim” may not be problematic where the testimony
    is “based on evidence other than the complaining witness’s
    allegations”). Here, considering the context of McDonald’s
    testimony, her first four descriptions of T as a “victim” sug-
    gest that she was relying at least in part on her interviews
    of other witnesses and her observation of T’s injury. And
    her fifth and sixth uses of the term “victim” occurred in the
    context of describing how defendant told her that he acted
    in self-defense. Furthermore, in deciding whether a crime
    occurred, the jury listened to an audio recording of the
    altercation, which tended to corroborate the complaining
    witness’s account of what occurred. Thus, unlike in Avdeyev,
    
    309 Or App at 208
    , where there was no physical evidence to
    corroborate the charged crimes, here there was both phys-
    ical evidence and other witnesses to corroborate the com-
    plaining witness’s account of what occurred.
    Based on that context, we conclude that the police
    officer may or may not have vouched for the complaining
    witness’s credibility, but her testimony did not consist of
    unambiguous vouching. Accordingly, the trial court did
    not plainly err in failing to sue sponte strike McDonald’s
    references to the complaining witness as a victim. See
    Murphy, 
    319 Or App at 335
     (“[I]f a witness’s testimony was
    ambiguous—such that the witness may or may not have been
    vouching—there is no plain error in not having stricken the
    testimony sua sponte, in part because the lack of objection
    prevented clarification of the testimony.”).1
    1
    Admittedly, the line between unambiguous vouching and ambiguous vouching
    is a fine one. In a post-conviction case, Curry v. Highberger, 
    326 Or App 259
    , 531 P3d
    702, rev den, 
    371 Or 511
     (2023), we addressed facts similar to those at issue here,
    albeit in a different procedural posture. As explained in the concurring opinion, “two
    adult men had a physical altercation, and the one charged with a crime claimed that
    he had acted in self-defense. In that context, referring to the complainant as ‘the
    victim’ necessarily cast him as the victim of a crime committed by [the] defendant,
    counter to [the] defendant’s theory that no crime occurred * * *.” Id. at 272 (Aoyagi,
    J., concurring). But here, there was also an audio recording of the 9-1-1 call, which
    tended to corroborate the complaining witness’s version of events. When that evi-
    dence is considered alongside the fact that only the complaining witness was injured,
    728                                                           State v. Kehoe
    Next, we consider the prosecutor’s statements.
    During the state’s closing argument, the prosecutor referred
    to T as a “victim” five times. The prosecutor stated:
    “So, what are the allegations in this case? That the
    [d]efendant * * * caused physical injury to the victim, [T].
    “* * * * *
    “On March 27th, 2022, [d]efendant * * * saw the vic-
    tim, [T], walking outside, decided he was going to confront
    him, confront him about an incident that happened a week
    earlier.
    “* * * * *
    “[Defendant is] getting furious, he’s upset, right? First
    he’s ignored, and now he’s laughed at. He will not let this
    stand, he’s furious. So he starts talking—turns his aggres-
    sion to the victim, [T].
    “* * * * *
    “But throughout that phone call you hear for about the
    next 15, 20 seconds, [T] consistently saying, ‘Step away
    from me. I’m trying to separate myself like the officer says.’
    You can hear in the background the defendant * * * also
    talking. Right? All of a sudden you hear the victim say,
    ‘He’s coming at me again. He’s coming at me again.’
    “* * * * *
    “So, again, the elements of the case. On March 27th,
    2022, [d]efendant * * * caused physical injury to the victim,
    [T], right?”
    (Emphases added).
    The prosecutor’s use of the term “victim” is less
    troubling in this instance than the police officer’s use of the
    term. “ ‘[I]t is permissible for a prosecutor to argue that the
    jury should infer that a witness is credible based on the evi-
    dence in the record, so long as the prosecutor does not vouch
    for the witness by interjecting his or her personal opinion of
    the witness’s credibility.’ ” Behrle v. Taylor, 
    307 Or App 126
    ,
    and the information provided by other witnesses, we conclude that McDonald may or
    may not have vouched for the complaining witness’s credibility, but that any vouch-
    ing was not unambiguous. In any event, as we explain below, even if there was plain
    error, we would not exercise our discretion to correct the error.
    Cite as 
    335 Or App 722
     (2024)                             729
    137, 476 P3d 475 (2020), rev den, 
    367 Or 709
     (2021) (quot-
    ing Heroff v. Coursey, 
    280 Or App 177
    , 194, 380 P3d 1032
    (2016), rev den, 
    360 Or 851
     (2017)). Prosecutors cross the
    line from acceptable arguments about witness credibility to
    impermissible vouching when their arguments are “in the
    nature of ‘take my word for it,’ not ‘let me show you.’ ” Davis
    v. Cain, 
    304 Or App 356
    , 364, 467 P3d 816 (2020). In Sperou,
    the Supreme Court pointed out that if a prosecutor were to
    argue that “ ‘we will prove that [the] defendant committed
    this crime and that [the witness] was his victim,’ ” then that
    statement would be a fair comment on the evidence. 
    365 Or at 135-36
    . Here, the prosecutor’s first and fifth uses of the
    term “victim” fall neatly into that category because, in those
    instances, the prosecutor was describing the allegations or
    the elements of the charge against defendant.
    The prosecutor’s second, third, and fourth use of the
    term “victim” did not consist of vouching because, in those
    instances, the prosecutor referred to and relied on the evi-
    dence in the record to try to persuade the jury regarding the
    state’s view of the evidence. Defendant himself testified that
    he sought to confront T about a prior incident at the apart-
    ment complex and that he became more agitated when T
    and his associates began laughing at him. The audio record-
    ing of T’s telephone call to the police supported T’s account
    of what occurred. Thus, when describing the complaining
    witness as a “victim,” the prosecutor was not asking the jury
    to take the prosecutor’s word for it; instead, the prosecu-
    tor’s descriptions relied on evidence in the record. We con-
    clude that the prosecutor did not engage in vouching, and
    the trial court did not plainly err in failing to strike those
    parts of the prosecutor’s closing argument. See McConnell,
    
    308 Or App at 33-35
     (determining that the trial court did
    not err in denying a pretrial motion to prohibit the prose-
    cutor’s use of the word “victim” because the motion failed to
    appreciate the considerations distinguishing a prosecutor’s
    legitimate use of the term from uses that are improper).
    In the context of vouching testimony, when a case
    boils down to a credibility contest, use of the term “victim,”
    and especially repeated use of the term, is considered preju-
    dicial. Sperou, 
    365 Or at 140
    . This case, however, was not a
    730                                            State v. Kehoe
    pure credibility contest. Instead, there was testimony from
    a witness who observed the incident, and the jury observed
    photographs of the injury and listened to an audio recording
    of the altercation. In addition, the jury was instructed on
    vouching, and we presume that jurors follow their instruc-
    tions absent an overwhelming probability that they would
    have been unable to do so. State v. Shinnick, 
    288 Or App 847
    , 848-49, 407 P3d 877 (2017). As a result, even if we were
    to conclude that the trial court erred in failing to strike all
    uses of the term “victim,” and that the error was harmful, in
    this context it was not a grave error because given the jury
    instruction on vouching, the error would have had a very low
    likelihood of affecting the verdict. See State v. Horton, 
    327 Or App 256
    , 266, 535 P3d 338 (2023) (declining to exercise
    discretion to correct a plain error where the likelihood that
    the verdict would have been different was extremely low).
    For those reasons, the ends of justice would not be served
    by reversing defendant’s conviction based on use of the term
    “victim” to describe the complaining witness.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A179616

Judges: Pag?n

Filed Date: 10/30/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024