State v. DeJesus , 395 P.3d 111 ( 2017 )


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  •                      This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2017 UT 22
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    LISSETTE MARIAN DEJESUS,
    Appellant.
    No. 20150460
    Filed April 21, 2017
    On Direct Appeal
    Third District, West Jordan
    The Honorable Bruce C. Lubeck
    No. 141400093
    Attorneys:
    Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Christopher D. Ballard,
    Asst. Solic. Gen., Salt Lake City, for appellee
    Joan C. Watt, Wesley J. Howard, Alexandra S. McCallum,
    Salt Lake City, for appellant
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court in which
    JUSTICE DURHAM and JUSTICE HIMONAS joined.
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE filed a concurring opinion, in which
    JUSTICE PEARCE joined.
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court:
    Introduction
    ¶ 1 This case, along with State v. Mohamud, 1 requires us to apply
    the due process analysis we set forth in State v. Tiedemann,2 which
    _____________________________________________________________
    1   
    2017 UT 23
    , --- P.3d ---.
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    addresses the due process rights of criminal defendants when
    evidence has been lost or destroyed. On April 23, 2015, defendant
    Lissette DeJesus was sentenced to an indeterminate term of zero to
    five years in prison for assaulting a prison guard. She argues on
    appeal that a video recording of the assault was lost or destroyed by
    the State and that this loss of evidence violated her due process
    rights, requiring the dismissal of her case. She also argues that the
    district court applied the wrong legal standard to her claim by
    imposing a threshold requirement that she demonstrate a reasonable
    probability the evidence would have been exculpatory.
    ¶ 2 We reaffirm today that the due process analysis set forth in
    Tiedemann does encompass a threshold reasonable probability
    requirement. Although the district court correctly recognized this
    threshold requirement, it erred by imposing on Ms. DeJesus an
    overly stringent interpretation of what constitutes a “reasonable
    probability” and concluding that she had failed to satisfy the
    threshold requirement. We also conclude that the court erred in its
    application of the factors set forth in Tiedemann, and upon our
    review of Ms. DeJesus’s circumstances, we conclude that the loss of
    the surveillance footage was sufficiently significant to warrant the
    dismissal of the State’s case against her. We therefore reverse the
    district court’s decision.
    Background
    ¶ 3 On September 27, 2013, Corrections Officer Ronald Hansen
    was escorting inmates Samantha Dash and Fatima Kahn from their
    scheduled recreation time back to their cells at the Utah State
    Prison’s women’s facility. Ms. Dash shared cell 416 with
    Ms. DeJesus. Ms. Kahn occupied cell 415, located adjacent to
    Ms. DeJesus’s cell. When Ms. Dash and Ms. Kahn arrived at their
    cells, Officer Hansen directed Ms. Kahn to stand in front of her cell
    door. She disobeyed the officer’s order, however, stopping instead in
    front of Ms. DeJesus’s cell door. Ms. DeJesus and Ms. Kahn began
    arguing. Officer Hansen’s partner, who controlled the cell doors
    from a remote location, opened both doors before Officer Hansen
    was prepared. With Ms. DeJesus’s door unlocked, Ms. Dash said
    “check this out” to Officer Hansen and pulled Ms. DeJesus’s cell
    door open.
    ¶ 4 After Ms. Dash opened the door, Ms. DeJesus emerged from
    her cell, “swung at [Ms.] Kahn,” and the two engaged in “mutual
    2   
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44, 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    2
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                             Opinion of the Court
    combat.” Officer Hansen pulled Ms. DeJesus off of Ms. Kahn, picked
    Ms. DeJesus up, and carried her back into her cell. But before he
    could close the cell door, Ms. DeJesus moved past him and began
    fighting with Ms. Kahn again. Officer Hansen quickly inserted
    himself between the women, pushing Ms. DeJesus to the floor. While
    on the floor, Ms. DeJesus kicked Officer Hansen twice—once in the
    abdomen and once in the thigh.
    ¶ 5 About thirty minutes after resolving the altercation,
    Officer Hansen reviewed surveillance footage that had captured the
    event. He then filed a written report of the incident and gave a copy
    of the report to his captain. His captain sent the report to the prison
    investigations unit, and Debbie Kemp, an investigator, came to the
    prison about an hour and a half after the incident. She asked if there
    was surveillance footage of the altercation and was told someone in
    the control room had viewed it. She asked to view the footage, but
    the officer who was staffing the control room at the time was new
    and apparently did not know how to replay the footage, preventing
    Ms. Kemp from viewing the recording. After being shown where the
    incident occurred and conducting interviews, she returned to the
    control room and asked that a permanent copy of the footage be
    made.
    ¶ 6 After requesting a copy, Ms. Kemp waited for at least 30
    days to follow up. She testified that during this time, she was asked
    to complete “10 . . . background check investigation[s] . . . [within]
    three weeks.” This unusually heavy workload forced Ms. Kemp to
    “put [many things] on the back burner.” When she eventually
    followed up to see whether the prison had made a physical copy of
    the surveillance footage, she learned that no copy had been made.
    The captain informed her that “after 30 days, it goes off the camera.”
    Accordingly, the footage of the incident was irretrievably lost.
    ¶ 7 On January 14, 2014, the State charged Ms. DeJesus with one
    count of assault under Utah Code section 76-5-102.5, which provides
    that “[a]ny prisoner who commits assault, intending to cause bodily
    injury, is guilty of a felony of the third degree.” Thirteen days later,
    on January 27, 2014, defense counsel entered his appearance and
    filed a general discovery request.3 Two days later, defense counsel
    filed a supplemental discovery request seeking a “copy of any video
    of the alleged incident.” Approximately three months later, on
    _____________________________________________________________
    3 The general discovery request sought all video recordings
    prepared during the investigation or prosecution of the case.
    3
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    May 2, 2014, the State responded that it was “unable to provide any
    video of the incident as none exist[s] as per the Utah State Prison.”
    ¶ 8 On June 17, 2014, the district court held the preliminary
    hearing. At that hearing, Officer Hansen testified about the alleged
    assault. He claimed that after he threw Ms. DeJesus to the ground,
    she “looked directly at [him] and then kicked [him]” “in [the]
    lower . . . abdomen and . . . in [the] . . . right thigh.” On cross-
    examination, Officer Hansen testified about the location of Ms. Kahn,
    noting that she “was on my back, I don’t know exactly where she
    was. . . . [S]he was no longer on my shoulder though, I could not see
    her behind me, she was behind me.” Defense counsel emphasized
    this point, asking, “So she could’ve been as close as inches away but
    you couldn’t see her?” Officer Hansen responded: “But I could not
    see her, no.”
    ¶ 9 Following the preliminary hearing, Ms. DeJesus moved to
    dismiss the charge under State v. Tiedemann, claiming that the loss or
    destruction of the surveillance footage constituted a due process
    violation. She argued that if she kicked Officer Hansen, she did so
    unintentionally, merely seeking to defend herself from Ms. Kahn.
    During oral argument on the motion to dismiss, the district court
    decided it needed additional evidence and scheduled the matter for
    an evidentiary hearing.
    ¶ 10 At the evidentiary hearing, Ms. DeJesus called Ms. Dash to
    testify about the event. The State asked the court to instruct Ms. Dash
    about her right against self-incrimination, noting that “[s]he was
    originally charged in this case,” which charge had been dismissed
    without prejudice. The State informed the court and Ms. Dash that,
    “based on her testimony today, we could refile that case.” In
    response, Ms. Dash invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-
    incrimination and refused to testify.
    ¶ 11 Officer Hansen also testified at the evidentiary hearing. This
    time, he said the surveillance footage showed that Ms. Kahn was
    about four to six feet behind him when he pushed Ms. DeJesus to the
    ground. On cross-examination, defense counsel pressed
    Officer Hansen about the testimony he gave at the preliminary
    hearing that Ms. Kahn “was on his back” and he did not see where
    she was at the time of the assault. Officer Hansen clarified his prior
    testimony, noting that at the time of the altercation he did not know
    precisely where Ms. Kahn was standing. After viewing the
    surveillance footage, however, he could see that Ms. Kahn was
    standing four to six feet behind him.
    4
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                              Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 12 Ms. DeJesus also called Ms. Ataata, who identified herself as
    Ms. DeJesus’s fiancée, to testify. Ms. Ataata was incarcerated in an
    adjacent cell—417—at the time of the altercation and viewed most of
    the incident. She contradicted Officer Hansen’s testimony, claiming
    that Officer Hansen, Ms. DeJesus, and Ms. Kahn “were all on the
    ground.” She also testified that Ms. Kahn did not disengage from
    Officer Hansen, but remained on his back the entire time, attempting
    to “[s]wing” “over [Officer Hansen] to get to [Ms.] DeJesus.” The
    district court, in its memorandum decision, noted that Ms. DeJesus
    was “making facial gestures and expressions of varying sorts to
    [Ms.] Ataata depending on what [Ms.] Ataata was saying in her
    testimony.”
    ¶ 13 After the evidentiary hearing, the court determined that it
    needed a supplemental evidentiary hearing to receive evidence from
    Ms. Kemp, the investigator from the prison investigation unit. It was
    then that Ms. Kemp testified that she attempted to view the
    recording while at the control unit but could not and that the prison
    had not preserved a physical copy of the footage. The district court
    asked her whether “someone has to do anything to make [the
    footage] disappear,” to which she responded that she did not know,
    but that she “wouldn’t think so, no.”
    ¶ 14 The district court subsequently issued a memorandum
    decision denying Ms. DeJesus’s motion to dismiss. Applying State v.
    Tiedemann,4 the court noted that Ms. DeJesus had to show, “as a
    threshold, whether . . . it is reasonably probable that the recording
    would be exculpatory.” The court found that “[h]ere, defendant
    produced a witness, her fiancé[e] [Ms. Ataata], who said [Ms.] Khan
    was engaged in fighting with defendant when defendant struck
    [Officer] Hansen.” But the court “[did] not accept as true the
    testimony of [Ms.] Ataata” for three reasons: (1) the relationship
    between Ms. Ataata and Ms. DeJesus, (2) Ms. DeJesus’s signals to
    Ms. Ataata during her testimony, and (3) the fact that Ms. Ataata
    viewed the events from an angle. Reasoning that because only
    credible evidence can create a reasonable probability, and because
    “the testimony [of Ms. Ataata] was not believable,” the district court
    held that Ms. DeJesus had not satisfied the threshold requirement
    under Tiedemann.
    _____________________________________________________________
    4   
    2007 UT 49
    , 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    5
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 15 Despite this conclusion, the court also considered the two
    factors set out in State v. Tiedemann, 5 reasoning that “[if] the court is
    wrong about the exculpatory nature of the recording, dismissal is
    [still] not appropriate.” The court characterized the first Tiedemann
    factor as concerned with “the reason for the destruction or loss or
    failure of preservation of the evidence, including the degree of
    negligence or culpability on the part of the State.” The court found
    that “the reasons given for the lack of preservation are believable,
    and amount to negligence but not in a high degree.” The court also
    stated that “it is very difficult, if not impossible, for this court to
    understand why prison personnel would not, with full knowledge
    that a claimed assault had occurred by an inmate against a guard,
    maintain a recording of that event.”
    ¶ 16 The court characterized the second Tiedemann factor as
    concerned with “the [degree] of prejudice to the defendant in light of
    the materiality and importance of the missing evidence in the context
    of the case as a whole, including the strength of the remaining
    evidence.” The court then reasoned that “[o]nly if the recording
    shows in essence what defendant claims would there be prejudice by
    its unavailability.” Because the court did “not believe defendant
    [had] shown any reasonable, believable probability the recording
    showed what defendant claims,” it concluded that “it does not
    matter why or how [the footage] was destroyed, or more properly
    not retained.” Ultimately, the district court held that Ms. DeJesus’s
    due process rights were not violated by the destroyed surveillance
    footage and denied the motion to dismiss.
    ¶ 17 Ms. DeJesus filed an interlocutory appeal with the court of
    appeals to review the denial of her motion to dismiss. That court
    denied the petition. Thereafter, she entered a conditional guilty plea
    to one count of assault by a prisoner, a third degree felony, reserving
    her right to appeal the denial of her motion to dismiss. The district
    court, per the prosecution’s recommendation, sentenced Ms. DeJesus
    to serve zero to five years in prison, to run concurrently with her
    _____________________________________________________________
    5See 
    id. ¶ 44
    (“In cases where a defendant has shown a reasonable
    probability that lost or destroyed evidence would be exculpatory, we
    find it necessary to require consideration of the following: (1) the
    reason for the destruction or loss of the evidence, including the
    degree of negligence or culpability on the part of the State; and (2)
    the degree of prejudice to the defendant in light of the materiality
    and importance of the missing evidence in the context of the case as
    a whole, including the strength of the remaining evidence.”).
    6
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                               Opinion of the Court
    other sentences. Ms. DeJesus timely appealed, and the court of
    appeals certified the case to us. We have jurisdiction pursuant to
    Utah Code section 78A-3-102(3)(b).
    Standard of Review
    ¶ 18 Ms. DeJesus raises two overarching issues on appeal. First,
    she argues that the district court incorrectly interpreted State v.
    Tiedemann to require that a defendant demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that the lost evidence would have been exculpatory. This
    question, which requires us to examine the requirements of the due
    process clause of the Utah Constitution, is a question of law that we
    review for correctness. 6 Ms. DeJesus also argues that the district
    court erred in its application of the Tiedemann due process analysis
    and accordingly incorrectly denied her motion to dismiss. “Whether
    the State’s destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence violates
    due process is a question of law that we review for correctness,”
    though we “incorporate a clearly erroneous standard for the
    necessary subsidiary factual determinations.” 7
    Analysis
    ¶ 19 The first issue on appeal focuses on the precise requirements
    of the due process test we announced in State v. Tiedemann. 8 The
    second issue focuses on that test’s proper application in
    Ms. DeJesus’s case. We begin our discussion by reviewing our
    decision in Tiedemann. We reaffirm our earlier conclusion that the
    due process clause of the Utah Constitution requires a defendant to
    first establish as a threshold matter a reasonable probability that the
    lost or destroyed evidence would have been exculpatory. By so
    doing, the defendant establishes that his or her due process rights
    have been violated. Once a defendant has made this threshold
    showing, the court must consider the two factors set forth in
    Tiedemann—the culpability of the State and the prejudice to the
    defendant—in order to both evaluate the seriousness of the violation
    and determine the necessary remedy.
    ¶ 20 After reviewing Tiedemann, we apply the due process
    analysis established therein to Ms. DeJesus’s case. We conclude that
    the district court erred by imposing a higher burden at the threshold
    level than is required under Tiedemann, and that under the proper
    _____________________________________________________________
    6   See State v. Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 12, 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    7   Id.
    8   
    2007 UT 49
    , 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    7
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    standard, Ms. DeJesus met her burden. We also conclude that the
    court erred in its application of the two Tiedemann factors and that
    dismissal was an appropriate remedy for the loss of the surveillance
    footage. Ultimately, we reverse the decision of the district court and
    remand for an entry of dismissal.
    I. The Due Process Clause of the Utah Constitution, as Interpreted in
    State v. Tiedemann, Requires a Threshold Showing that There Is a
    Reasonable Probability that the Lost or Destroyed Evidence Would
    Have Been Exculpatory
    ¶ 21 Ms. DeJesus’s first argument on appeal focuses on the
    correct interpretation of the due process analysis we articulated in
    State v. Tiedemann.9 She argues that the district court erroneously
    interpreted Tiedemann as establishing a threshold requirement that a
    defendant show a reasonable probability that lost evidence would
    have been exculpatory. She claims that the correct due process
    analysis requires district courts “to consider the [factors found in
    rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure,] and the factors
    considered by other states.” Then, when a defendant has shown a
    reasonable probability that the lost evidence would have been
    exculpatory, he or she must show the culpability of the State in the
    loss of the evidence and the degree of prejudice to the defendant
    resulting from the lost evidence. The State responds that our
    articulation of the applicable due process analysis in Tiedemann
    clearly encompassed a threshold requirement, and that such a
    requirement comports with other due process standards. We agree
    with the State.
    ¶ 22 As we discuss below, our decision in Tiedemann came after
    the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the federal Due
    Process Clause’s requirements in lost evidence cases. In Tiedemann,
    we were called on to determine whether the Utah Constitution’s due
    process clause imposed the same requirements as its federal
    counterpart. We ultimately departed from the Supreme Court’s
    approach as a matter of state due process and instead adopted an
    approach consonant with rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal
    Procedure, other state courts’ interpretations of their own
    constitutions, and other due process analyses. This approach
    encompassed a threshold requirement that the defendant
    demonstrate a reasonable probability that the lost evidence would
    have been exculpatory. Only after this threshold showing is met
    _____________________________________________________________
    9   
    2007 UT 49
    , 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    8
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                                  Opinion of the Court
    should courts consider the factors set forth in Tiedemann in order to
    provide an appropriate remedy. Thus, Ms. DeJesus’s argument that
    the Tiedemann analysis does not require a threshold showing
    misapprehends our precedent.
    ¶ 23 Prior to Tiedemann, the United States Supreme Court
    decided Arizona v. Youngblood, 10 holding as a matter of federal
    constitutional law that the “failure to preserve potentially useful
    evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of law” “unless
    a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police.”11
    This “bad faith” standard confined constitutional relief “to that class
    of cases where the interests of justice most clearly require it,” which
    are those cases “in which the police themselves by their [bad faith]
    conduct indicate that the evidence could form a basis for exonerating
    the defendant.” 12
    ¶ 24 In Tiedemann we were called on to decide whether the due
    process clause of the Utah Constitution also required “a defendant
    [to] show bad faith on the part of the State in the loss or destruction
    of evidence before he may seek a remedy.” 13 To answer this
    question, we were guided by rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal
    Procedure and the approaches of other states’ courts. As we
    described in Tiedemann, rule 16 “imposes broad obligations on
    prosecutors” to produce or make available information that can aid
    the defendant. 14 And a prosecutor’s failure to comply with rule 16’s
    disclosure requirements permits a defendant to bring a motion to
    exclude the prosecution’s evidence. 15 Although we recognized the
    “nonexclusive factors” that courts consider when ruling on such
    motions, 16 we reiterated that, under rule 16, “[t]he prosecutor’s good
    _____________________________________________________________
    10   
    488 U.S. 51
    (1988).
    11   
    Id. at 58.
       12   Id.
    13   
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 39.
    14 
    Id. ¶ 40;
    see also UTAH R. CRIM. P. 16(a) (requiring prosecutors to
    “disclose to the defense upon request” several categories of evidence
    or information, including all “evidence known to the prosecutor that
    tends to negate the guilt of the accused, mitigate the guilt of the
    defendant, or mitigate the degree of the offense for reduced
    punishment”).
    15   See Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 41.
    16   
    Id. 9 STATE
    v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    faith should not have . . . any impact on the trial court’s
    determination of whether the prosecutor had violated his discovery
    duties.” 17 We concluded that “[o]ur approach under rule 16 should
    govern the destruction of evidence.” 18 Thus, we rejected Youngblood’s
    bad faith requirement, concluding instead—consonant with rule
    16—that “the culpability or bad faith of the state should be only one
    consideration, not a bright line test, as a matter of due process under
    article 1, section 7 of the Utah Constitution.”19
    ¶ 25 Having rejected the federal constitution’s approach to lost
    evidence cases, we then discussed what the appropriate approach
    should be under the Utah Constitution. We were guided in our
    efforts by looking to our sister jurisdictions. 20 We found the Vermont
    Supreme Court’s analysis, articulated in State v. Delisle, 21 particularly
    persuasive. Under the Vermont court’s approach,
    if a defendant demonstrated “a reasonable possibility
    that the lost evidence would be exculpatory,” then the
    court would determine the proper sanctions by
    balancing “(1) the degree of negligence or bad faith on
    the part of the government; (2) the importance of the
    evidence lost; and (3) other evidence of guilt adduced
    at trial.” 22
    Under this approach, a defendant must first “demonstrate[] ‘a
    reasonable possibility that the lost evidence would be
    exculpatory.”23 Once that threshold is satisfied, the court must
    review and weigh three factors to determine the proper remedy.
    ¶ 26 We adopted a substantially similar analysis:
    In cases where a defendant has shown a reasonable
    probability that lost or destroyed evidence would be
    _____________________________________________________________
    17   
    Id. ¶ 40
    (citation omitted).
    18   
    Id. ¶ 41
    (emphasis added).
    19   
    Id. 20 See
    id. ¶¶ 42–43 
    (citing and discussing cases).
    
    21648 A.2d 632
    , 642–43 (Vt. 1994) (discussed in Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 43).
    22   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 43 (quoting 
    Delisle, 648 A.2d at 642
    –
    43).
    23   
    Id. (citation omitted).
    10
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                              Opinion of the Court
    exculpatory, we find it necessary to require
    consideration of the following: (1) the reason for the
    destruction or loss of the evidence, including the
    degree of negligence or culpability on the part of the
    State; and (2) the degree of prejudice to the defendant
    in light of the materiality and importance of the
    missing evidence in the context of the case as a whole,
    including the strength of the remaining evidence. 24
    This approach encompassed the same threshold showing found in
    the Vermont analysis, requiring defendants to “show[] a reasonable
    probability that [the] lost or destroyed evidence would be
    exculpatory.” 25 It also required a “balancing of factors on a case-by-
    case basis,” which “embrace[d] the basic principles we ha[d]
    adopted under rule 16 and the factors mentioned by other states.”26
    ¶ 27 So, contrary to Ms. DeJesus’s argument, the due process
    analysis we articulated in Tiedemann is not a wide-ranging balancing
    test that encompasses all of the factors applicable to rule 16—most of
    which would be difficult if not impossible to directly apply to cases
    involving lost evidence. 27 Instead, we established a two-step
    analysis. First, the defendant must demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that the lost evidence would have been exculpatory—the
    _____________________________________________________________
    24   
    Id. ¶ 44.
       25   
    Id. 26Id. This
    test encompasses two aspects: first, it encompasses “the
    basic principles” of rule 16, including the principle that “the
    culpability or bad faith of the state should be only one
    consideration” in our due process analysis. 
    Id. ¶ 41
    . Second, it
    encompasses the factors adopted by other states, particularly the
    culpability or bad faith of the State and the prejudice to the
    defendant in light of the remaining evidence. See 
    id. ¶ 43.
       27See 
    id. ¶ 41
    (discussing the “nonexclusive factors we consider
    under rule 16,” which include “(1) the extent to which the
    prosecution’s representation [of the existing evidence] is actually
    inaccurate, (2) the tendency of the omission or misstatement to lead
    defense counsel into tactics or strategy that could prejudice the
    outcome, (3) the culpability of the prosecutor in omitting pertinent
    information or misstating the facts, and (4) the extent to which
    appropriate defense investigation would have discovered the
    omitted or misstated evidence” (alteration in original) (citation
    omitted)).
    11
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    threshold requirement. Once a defendant has done so, the court
    must balance the culpability of the State and the prejudice to the
    defendant in order to gauge the seriousness of the due process
    violation and to determine an appropriate remedy. The purpose for
    this two-part analysis, with its threshold requirement, is to ensure
    that a defendant only obtains a remedy—and that the State is only
    sanctioned—when the defendant’s due process rights have actually
    been violated. Indeed, this approach comports with the due process
    analysis applicable in other circumstances.
    ¶ 28 For example, in Brady v. Maryland, 28 the United States
    Supreme Court held that “the suppression by the prosecution of
    evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process
    where the evidence is material to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of
    the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.” 29 So, to establish a
    due process violation stemming from the non-disclosure of evidence,
    a defendant must show a “reasonable probability that [the evidence]
    would affect the outcome of the trial”30—essentially the same
    threshold requirement we adopted in Tiedemann. If the evidence that
    was wrongfully withheld would have had no bearing on the trial’s
    outcome, a defendant’s due process right to a fundamentally fair
    trial has not been violated. 31 In the same way, the destruction of
    evidence violates a defendant’s due process rights only when there is
    “a reasonable probability that [the] lost or destroyed evidence [was]
    exculpatory.”32 Unless the evidence had some chance of affecting the
    outcome of the trial, a defendant cannot claim a due process
    violation.
    ¶ 29 We accordingly reject Ms. DeJesus’s claim that the due
    process analysis set forth in Tiedemann for use in lost evidence cases
    does not require a threshold showing that there is a reasonable
    _____________________________________________________________
    28   
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963).
    29 
    Id. at 87
    (emphasis added); see also State v. Schreuder, 
    712 P.2d 264
    , 276 (Utah 1985) (“[A] criminal defendant will prevail on a Brady
    claim ‘where the evidence is favorable to the accused and is material
    either to guilt or to punishment.’” (quoting Moore v. Illinois, 
    408 U.S. 786
    , 794 (1972))).
    30   
    Schreuder, 712 P.2d at 276
    .
    31   See Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 45.
    32   
    Id. ¶ 44.
    12
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
                              Opinion of the Court
    probability the lost evidence would have been exculpatory.33 Under
    Tiedemann, a defendant must show as a threshold matter that there is
    “a reasonable probability that [the] lost or destroyed evidence would
    be exculpatory.” 34 Only after the defendant has established this
    point—and accordingly established that there was a due process
    violation resulting from the loss of evidence—should a court
    consider the two Tiedemann factors. And these factors—the
    culpability of the prosecution and the prejudice to the defendant—
    guide the court’s analysis as to both the seriousness of the due
    process violation and the remedy that is necessary to rectify the
    violation.
    ¶ 30 In reaffirming our holding in Tiedemann that the due process
    clause requires the State to preserve exculpatory evidence from loss
    or destruction, we necessarily reject the approach advocated by the
    concurrence. While it agrees with the reasoning of the majority, it
    argues that we should “root” that reasoning and its concomitant
    legal principles in “our inherent power to regulate proceedings in
    our courts,” not “the Due Process Clause of the Utah Constitution.”35
    This proposed adjustment, the concurrence contends, “is a modest
    one,” 36 “counseled by the doctrine of constitutional avoidance”37
    with a profound “practical and theoretical significance”; it affords us
    “the power to refine and adjust the standard set forth in
    Tiedemann.” 38
    ¶ 31 The chief obstacle to this proposal is Tiedemann itself. As we
    noted above, Tiedemann came in response to the United States
    Supreme Court decision of Arizona v. Youngblood and its requirement
    that criminal defendants prove bad faith in the loss or destruction of
    evidence in order to secure a remedy under the federal
    _____________________________________________________________
    33 We note that the court of appeals in State v. Jackson apparently
    interpreted Tiedemann in line with Ms. DeJesus’s argument—i.e.,
    without any threshold requirement. See 
    2010 UT App 328
    , ¶¶ 10, 19–
    21, 
    243 P.3d 902
    . To the extent Jackson suggests that the relevant due
    process analysis does not require a defendant to meet this threshold
    burden, it is overruled.
    34   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44.
    35   Infra ¶ 58.
    36   Infra ¶ 59.
    37   Infra ¶ 58.
    38   Infra ¶ 59.
    13
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    constitution. 39 In rejecting this demanding bad-faith standard, we
    consulted several of our sister jurisdictions that have held that the
    due process clauses of their state constitutions afford defendants
    more robust protections than the federal constitution in consequence
    of lost or destroyed evidence. 40 And after consulting these
    jurisdictions, we elected to join them, identifying the due process
    clause of the Utah Constitution as the source of the Tiedemann test. 41
    ¶ 32 The concurrence rightly observes that in Tiedemann we
    relied on rule 16. 42 But the concurrence relies on this fact to
    recommend that we “hold that the duty and standards set forth in
    Tiedemann are a matter of inherent judicial power and enforcement of
    the terms of rule 16 of our rules of criminal procedure.” 43 This
    misapprehends Tiedemann. In referencing rule 16, we did not ground
    the Tiedemann test in our rules of criminal procedure. We instead
    pointed lower courts to “[o]ur approach under rule 16” where “the
    culpability or bad faith of the state should only be one consideration,
    not a bright line test [unlike Youngblood], as a matter of [state] due
    _____________________________________________________________
    39 
    Youngblood, 488 U.S. at 58
    (holding as a matter of federal
    constitutional law that the “failure to preserve potentially useful
    evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of law” “unless
    a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police”).
    40  Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 42 (collecting cases). Concerning the
    concurrence’s claim that some of the authorities cited by Tiedemann
    “were tied to a large extent to the standards like that set forth in our
    criminal rule 16,” infra ¶ 67, we note that we read these cases
    differently. While each case discussed rules of criminal procedure,
    each holding was ultimately based on its state’s due process clause.
    See, e.g., State v. Delisle, 
    648 A.2d 632
    , 642–43 (Vt. 1994) (“adopt[ing]
    as the state constitutional standard” a three-factor test under the
    state due process clause and concluding that the loss of evidence did
    not violate defendant’s due process rights because he cross-
    examined a medical examiner who provided the defendant favorable
    testimony regarding the missing evidence); Thorne v. Dep’t of Public
    Safety, 
    774 P.2d 1326
    , 1330 (Alaska 1989) (holding that the appellant’s
    “due process rights at the revocation hearing were violated by the
    state’s failure to preserve the videotape”).
    41   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44.
    42   Infra ¶ 67.
    43   Infra ¶ 58.
    14
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                              Opinion of the Court
    process.” 44 Rule 16, therefore, does not govern cases of lost or
    destroyed evidence. It merely provides a helpful framework for
    applying the Tiedemann test. Without question, we planted the
    Tiedemann test in constitutional soil. 45
    ¶ 33 Tiedemann aside, the concurrence supports its proposal by
    relying on the doctrine of constitutional avoidance and on the
    practical benefits secured by a non-constitutional foundation for the
    Tiedemann test. 46 As to constitutional avoidance, it is well established
    that courts “will not pass upon a constitutional question although
    properly presented by the record, if there is also present some other
    ground upon which the case may be disposed of.” 47 But the
    concurrence’s use of this principle is novel. In essence, the
    concurrence contends that we should avoid procedural due process
    questions “properly presented by the record” because we have
    inherent authority to make rules of procedure. Taken to its logical
    extreme, this would prospectively render much procedural due
    process in this jurisdiction dead letter. We think this ill advised. 48
    _____________________________________________________________
    44   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 41.
    45 The concurrence acknowledges “that Tiedemann purported to
    state a requirement of state due process” and concludes that we
    should “leave open the possibility that our Utah Due Process Clause
    may have a role to play in establishing a ‘floor’ or minimum
    standard protecting an accused whose defense is interfered with by
    the destruction of material evidence.” Infra ¶ 68. But the concurrence
    does not attempt to identify this floor. And we can think of no more
    suitable floor concerning the destruction of evidence than the one we
    describe in Tiedemann—when the State loses or destroys evidence,
    the court will impose appropriate sanctions aimed at preserving the
    defendant’s right to a fair trial.
    46   Infra ¶¶ 58–59.
    47Slack v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 485 (2000) (quoting Ashwander v.
    Tenn. Valley Auth., 
    297 U.S. 288
    , 347 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring)).
    48 We recognize in this case that the concurrence does not
    advocate the creation of a new rule but argues that rule 16 governs
    cases dealing with the loss or destruction of evidence. Yet
    encouraging courts to rely on inherent judicial powers to avoid
    constitutional issues will lead to the problem described above. In
    addition, we note that in avoiding certain constitutional issues, the
    concurrence would create new constitutional issues, as new rules
    rooted in our court’s inherent judicial authority or in our rulemaking
    (Continued)
    15
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 34 As to the practical benefits secured by a non-constitutional
    foundation for the Tiedemann test, we agree with the concurrence
    that “[o]ur constitutional decisions are set in relative stone,” in that
    “[t]hey place matters resolved by them beyond the policy reach of
    this or other branches of government, and they establish precedent
    that we ourselves may be bound by under the doctrine of stare
    decisis.”49 But matters resolved by our constitutional decisions often
    concern fundamental rights. In this case, our decision concerns Ms.
    DeJesus’s right to a fair trial when facing the deprivation of her
    liberty. When matters such as this are before us, the proper
    interpretation and application of the constitution is rightly set in
    relative stone to ensure that an individual’s fundamental rights are
    not subject to the ever changing judgments of public policy.
    ¶ 35 In the end, we have not, as the concurrence suggests,
    “distort[ed] the constitution,” 50 but have simply reaffirmed our
    precedent regarding the due process concerns that arise when the
    State is responsible for the loss or destruction of evidence that has a
    reasonable probability of exculpating a criminal defendant. The
    concurrence, by contrast, does not propose a “modest” alteration to
    our precedent but a monumental one. By uprooting the Tiedemann
    test from constitutional soil, the concurrence would significantly
    weaken a fundamental right: Whatever protections a defendant
    receives when faced with lost or destroyed exculpatory evidence
    would turn on the discretion of a particular judge in the exercise of
    his or her inherent judicial authority. And appellate review of that
    exercise would be reviewed for an abuse of discretion. 51 This would
    be a poor substitute for the protections, including more robust
    appellate review, that our interpretation of the due process clause
    power could be subject to constitutional challenge on the ground
    that they provide less protection than constitutionally mandated.
    49   Infra ¶ 70.
    50   Infra ¶ 77.
    51 See State v. Dick, 
    2012 UT App 161
    , ¶ 2, 
    280 P.3d 445
    (“A trial
    court’s ruling on a rule 16 issue is reviewed for an abuse of
    discretion.”); see also Coroles v. State, 
    2015 UT 48
    , ¶ 24, 
    349 P.3d 739
    (concluding that in the civil context, a court’s decision to sanction a
    party for its failure to comply with a discovery deadline is reviewed
    for an abuse of discretion).
    16
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                               Opinion of the Court
    affords criminal defendants. 52 We will not invoke the doctrine of
    constitutional avoidance to essentially erase this court’s previous
    conclusion that government loss or destruction of exculpatory
    evidence directly implicates due process. 53
    ¶ 36 The district court correctly imposed a threshold requirement
    that Ms. DeJesus establish a reasonable probability that the lost
    evidence would have been exculpatory—a requirement established
    under our state due process clause. We now review the district
    court’s conclusion that Ms. DeJesus failed to meet that threshold
    requirement and its alternative determination that, even if she had,
    she was not entitled to a dismissal under the two Tiedemann factors.
    II. The District Court Erred in Its Application of Tiedemann
    ¶ 37 The district court articulated two different bases for its
    denial of Ms. DeJesus’s motion to dismiss, consistent with its
    understanding of the due process analysis set forth in State v.
    Tiedemann 54: first, Ms. DeJesus failed to demonstrate as a threshold
    matter a reasonable probability that the lost footage would have
    been exculpatory; and second, even if she satisfied the threshold
    requirement, she failed to show that the Tiedemann factors required
    _____________________________________________________________
    52  See Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 12 (“Whether the State’s
    destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence violates due process
    is a question of law that we review for correctness.”).
    53 The concurrence argues that our reasoning in this regard is
    circular, in that we assume the Tiedemann standard to be required by
    the Utah Constitution’s due process clause. Infra ¶ 81. But this
    simply highlights our disagreement with the concurrence. The
    concurrence does not view the Tiedemann standard as having been
    dictated by the Utah Constitution. For the reasons explained above,
    we disagree. We view Tiedemann to have held that the standard it
    articulates is required by the Utah Constitution. So we would be
    weakening a fundamental right by avoiding the question of whether
    the Tiedemann standard is required by the Utah Constitution. If we
    were addressing in the first instance whether the Utah Constitution
    requires the Tiedemann standard, then it would indeed be circular to
    claim that we would be weakening a fundamental right if we failed
    to adopt that standard. But because we read Tiedemann as holding
    that the Utah Constitution does indeed require that standard, we can
    say that grounding the Tiedemann standard in a procedural rule,
    rather than the Utah Constitution, would weaken the right.
    54   
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44, 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    17
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    dismissal of her case. We discuss each of these determinations below
    and conclude that the district court erred in its application of the due
    process analysis found in Tiedemann to the facts of the case.
    A. Ms. DeJesus Established a Reasonable Probability that the Lost Footage
    Would Have Been Exculpatory
    ¶ 38 The first basis for the district court’s denial of Ms. DeJesus’s
    motion to dismiss was that she had failed to establish as a threshold
    matter that there was a reasonable probability the lost surveillance
    footage would have been exculpatory. In reviewing the district
    court’s decision on this matter, we reiterate that we accept its factual
    determinations unless clearly erroneous. 55 But the district court’s
    determination of what constitutes a reasonable probability for
    purposes of the Tiedemann analysis is a legal question reviewed for
    correctness. 56 So, though we defer to the court’s conclusions as to the
    facts of Ms. DeJesus’s case, we owe no deference to its determination
    that those facts fail to satisfy her threshold burden under Tiedemann.
    ¶ 39 Of course, in order to analyze whether Ms. DeJesus
    established a reasonable probability that the lost evidence would
    have been exculpatory, we must first determine what constitutes a
    reasonable probability for purposes of a defendant’s due process
    right to exculpatory evidence. Although a “reasonable probability”
    standard defies a precise definition or quantifiable value, we have
    described it as “a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in
    the outcome.” 57 And though it is more than a “mere possibility,” it
    _____________________________________________________________
    55   See 
    id. ¶ 12.
       56   See 
    id. 57State v.
    Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987) (citation omitted).
    The parties have argued at some length over whether a “reasonable
    probability” is a different standard than a “reasonable possibility” or
    a “reasonable likelihood”—standards that have been employed by
    other courts. See, e.g., State v. Delisle, 
    648 A.2d 632
    , 642 (Vt. 1994)
    (employing a “reasonable possibility” standard to a due process
    claim founded on lost or destroyed evidence). But we see little
    substantive difference between any of these articulations. See 
    Knight, 734 P.2d at 920
    (stating that a “reasonable probability” is
    “substantively identical” to a “reasonable likelihood”). Thus, though
    we use the phrase “reasonable probability” to maintain consistency
    with Tiedemann, we believe that the distinctions between these
    various articulations—if any exist—are of no practical effect.
    18
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                               Opinion of the Court
    falls “substantially short of the ‘more probable than not’” standard.58
    Ultimately, in order to satisfy the reasonable probability standard in
    the lost evidence context, a defendant must make some proffer as to
    the lost evidence and its claimed benefit. 59 So long as that proffer is
    not pure speculation or wholly incredible, the standard will be
    satisfied. 60
    ¶ 40 Our review of the district court’s determination that
    Ms. DeJesus failed to satisfy the threshold reasonable probability
    requirement leads us to conclude that the court applied a more
    stringent standard than the one we just articulated. The court stated
    that “[t]here must be something in the evidence before the
    court . . . that shows the court there is some reasonable basis on
    which to believe the recording would show what defendant claims.”
    This standard suggests that defendants must provide evidence that
    the lost or destroyed evidence was in fact exculpatory. This is too
    high of a burden given both the reasonable probability standard
    articulated in Tiedemann and the fact that, in many lost evidence
    cases, there may be little extrinsic, corroborating evidence.
    Defendants will likely never be able to fully establish exactly what
    the evidence would have shown. Instead, all a defendant must show
    is that there is a reasonable probability the evidence would have
    been exculpatory.
    ¶ 41 Applying the correct standard, we conclude that
    Ms. DeJesus established a reasonable probability that the lost footage
    would have been exculpatory. She presented the testimony of her
    fiancée, Ms. Ataata, who testified that Officer Hansen, Ms. DeJesus,
    and Ms. Kahn “were all on the ground” during the altercation, and
    that Ms. Kahn “was right there on [Officer Hansen’s] back the whole
    time,” attempting to “[s]wing . . . over him to get to [Ms.] DeJesus.”
    _____________________________________________________________
    58   
    Knight, 734 P.2d at 920
    .
    59Cf. State v. Nielsen, 
    727 P.2d 188
    , 193 (Utah 1986) (holding that
    in order to establish a due process violation resulting from the
    prosecution’s refusal to disclose the identity of a confidential
    informant, “a defendant must make some showing that disclosure of
    an informant’s identity is material and essential to his defense”
    (emphasis added)).
    60 Cf. State v. Mohamud, 
    2017 UT 23
    , ¶¶ 24, 26, --- P.3d --- (holding
    that a defendant failed to satisfy the reasonable probability standard
    when he provided only speculation as to what the lost evidence
    would have shown).
    19
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    Because the crime with which Ms. DeJesus had been charged—
    assault—requires the prosecution to prove “inten[t] to cause bodily
    injury,” 61 Ms. Ataata’s testimony suggests that Ms. DeJesus may not
    have intended to cause bodily injury to Officer Hansen, but was
    instead attempting to strike Ms. Kahn.
    ¶ 42 The district court found Ms. Ataata’s testimony “not
    believable” based on the close relationship between Ms. Ataata and
    Ms. DeJesus, its finding that Ms. DeJesus appeared to be coaching
    Ms. Ataata’s testimony, and the fact that Ms. Ataata’s view of the
    incident was partially obstructed, as she was viewing it at an angle.
    “The court thus d[id] not accept her testimony at face value as being
    testimony the court can rely on to find the events were as she
    described.” But the court specifically found that the testimony was
    not wholly incredible, stating that it was “not indicating such
    evidence cannot be presented by defendant at a trial” and that “[a]
    jury may well conclude differently.”
    ¶ 43 Ms. DeJesus also argues that the testimony of Ms. Ataata is
    strengthened by the arguably inconsistent testimony offered by
    Officer Hansen. During the preliminary hearing, the officer testified
    that Ms. Kahn “was on my back, I don’t know exactly where she
    was. . . . [S]he was no longer on my shoulder though, I could not see
    her behind me, she was behind me,” and seemed to agree with
    defense counsel’s statement that “she could’ve been as close as
    inches away but you couldn’t see her?” But during the evidentiary
    hearing on Ms. DeJesus’s motion to dismiss, he testified that
    Ms. Kahn was about four to six feet behind him when he pushed
    Ms. DeJesus to the ground. Officer Hansen explained this
    discrepancy by stating that his initial testimony went to what he
    knew of Ms. Kahn’s location during the altercation, but his later
    testimony was based on his review of the surveillance footage, which
    clarified where Ms. Kahn actually was standing.
    ¶ 44 We agree with Ms. DeJesus that this evidence—the
    testimony of Ms. Ataata and the arguably inconsistent testimony of
    Officer Hansen—is sufficient to establish a reasonable probability
    that the lost surveillance footage would have been exculpatory. The
    evidence put on by Ms. DeJesus was not wholly incredible, and it
    established that her claim that she did not intend to attack
    Officer Hansen, but rather was attempting to strike Ms. Kahn, was
    more than speculation. We emphasize that we do not suggest that
    _____________________________________________________________
    61   UTAH CODE § 76-5-102.5.
    20
    Cite as: 
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                             Opinion of the Court
    Ms. DeJesus has actually established what the lost evidence would
    have shown; we simply hold that the testimony of Ms. Ataata, when
    combined with the arguably inconsistent testimony of
    Officer Hansen, crosses the low threshold of “reasonable
    probability.” 62 Together, this testimony provides a reasonably
    probable explanation of both what the lost evidence might have
    shown and how that evidence could have benefitted Ms. DeJesus.
    Accordingly, we hold that the district court erred by imposing too
    stringent a standard on Ms. DeJesus at the threshold inquiry, and
    that, under the proper “reasonable probability” standard described
    above, Ms. DeJesus satisfied her threshold burden. 63 We turn now to
    the district court’s application of the two Tiedemann factors.
    B. The Tiedemann Factors Weigh in Favor of Dismissal
    ¶ 45 As discussed above, once “a defendant has shown a
    reasonable probability that lost or destroyed evidence would be
    exculpatory,” the defendant has established that a due process
    _____________________________________________________________
    62 The State argues that “all credible evidence . . . demonstrated
    that the lost footage would not have been favorable to the defense
    but instead would have conclusively proven the State’s case.” But it
    is usually inappropriate to permit the State to undermine a
    defendant’s claim that there is a reasonable probability that lost
    evidence would have been exculpatory by having the State describe
    what the evidence actually showed. The reasonable probability
    threshold inquiry does not involve a balancing of evidence to
    determine which side’s story about the lost evidence is more
    believable and whether the evidence was in reality inculpatory or
    exculpatory; it focuses entirely and solely on whether the defendant
    can show a reasonable probability that the evidence would have been
    exculpatory. If we were to hold otherwise, the State would be
    incentivized to destroy relevant evidence and later claim that the
    evidence would have only supported its own version of the events. It
    is the State’s duty to preserve relevant evidence, and it cannot escape
    that duty—or the consequences of its breach of that duty—simply by
    putting on evidence as to what the lost evidence would have shown.
    63 By concluding that the district court applied an incorrect
    standard, we do not wish to be critical of that court. The court’s error
    stemmed from the dearth of precedent interpreting and applying
    Tiedemann. Indeed, as the court itself noted, “Just what is ‘reasonably
    probable’ is not as clear as the court would like.”
    21
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    violation occurred. 64 If this determination has been made, courts
    must consider two factors to determine both the seriousness of the
    due process violation and the remedy that is necessary to ensure that
    the defendant receives a fundamentally fair trial:
    (1) the reason for the destruction or loss of the
    evidence, including the degree of negligence or
    culpability on the part of the State; and (2) the degree
    of prejudice to the defendant in light of the materiality
    and importance of the missing evidence in the context
    of the case as a whole, including the strength of the
    remaining evidence. 65
    And as we stated in Tiedemann, though these two factors guide the
    analysis, “[t]he touchstone for the balancing process is fundamental
    fairness.” 66
    ¶ 46 The only remedy sought in this case is dismissal. 67 The
    district court, after considering the two factors discussed above,
    concluded that such a remedy was unnecessary. We discuss the
    district court’s consideration of the two factors in turn and conclude
    _____________________________________________________________
    64   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44.
    65   
    Id. 66 Id.
    ¶ 45.
    67 Both Ms. DeJesus and the defendant in State v. Mohamud sought
    only dismissal as the remedy for lost evidence. See Mohamud, 
    2017 UT 23
    , ¶ 5. We note, however, that Tiedemann speaks in terms of
    “sanctions” and “strik[ing] a balance [to] preserve[] defendants’
    constitutional rights without undue hardship to the prosecution.”
    
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 45. Nowhere is dismissal mandated as the sole
    remedy. Because “[t]he touchstone for the balancing process is
    fundamental fairness,” courts may find that other, less drastic
    remedies may adequately protect the due process rights of criminal
    defendants. 
    Id. These remedies
    may include jury instructions
    requiring the jury to infer that the lost evidence would have
    corroborated the defendant’s version of events, prohibitions on
    witnesses who would testify as to the content or subject of the lost
    evidence, or increased time for discovery. Of course, in cases where
    the State’s culpability and the prejudice to the defendant is
    sufficiently great, dismissal may be the only remedy that can
    adequately protect the due process rights of the defendant.
    22
    Cite as: 
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                             Opinion of the Court
    that, though the court properly analyzed the culpability of the State
    in the loss of the evidence, it incorrectly determined that there was
    no prejudice to the defendant resulting from the lost footage. And
    upon our consideration of these factors, we conclude that dismissal
    was an appropriate remedy.
    1. Culpability of the State
    ¶ 47 The district court engaged in a lengthy analysis of the
    culpability of the State in the loss of the surveillance footage. It
    rejected the State’s argument—an argument the State made again on
    appeal—that the State would have had no motivation to destroy or
    fail to preserve the evidence because the evidence would have
    supported the State’s case against Ms. DeJesus. As the court
    reasoned, “If the recording showed exactly as [Officer] Hansen said,
    certainly it would seem to this court that common sense would
    indicate that recording would be retained . . . . The motivation,
    frankly, to destroy or fail to preserve such a recording would come if
    the recording supported some other factual situation than the one
    [Officer] Hansen describes.” Thus, there may have been some
    motivation by the State to permit the footage to be recorded over and
    lost. Indeed, the court stated that “it is very difficult, if not
    impossible, for this court to understand why prison personnel would
    not, with full knowledge that a claimed assault had occurred by an
    inmate against a guard, maintain a recording of that event.”
    ¶ 48 The court also found, however, “that the lack of the
    evidence . . . is [not] related to any ‘decision’ made by anyone.” The
    facts supporting the court’s decision were that Ms. Kemp, the
    investigator, asked someone—an employee she did not know—to
    make a copy of the recording, followed up over thirty days later, and
    was informed that “if a hard copy had been made, it was lost.” The
    court noted that Ms. Kemp had failed to follow up within a
    timeframe that would have permitted the footage to be saved
    because she was unusually busy at the time and found that “the
    reasons given for the lack of preservation are believable.” Though it
    stated that “[t]he investigator should have . . . conducted her
    investigation in a way that retains relevant evidence,” it concluded
    that “[t]he failure to do so, however, was at most negligence, and not
    gross negligence and certainly not intentional.”
    ¶ 49 The court’s factual findings in this regard have not been
    challenged by either party and do not appear to be clearly erroneous.
    Further, we see no error in the legal standard employed by the court
    in its consideration of the State’s culpability. Accordingly, we agree
    with the district court that the State has shown “negligence but not
    23
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    Opinion of the Court
    in a high degree” by failing to preserve the surveillance footage. We
    turn now to the second Tiedemann factor.
    2. Prejudice to the Defendant
    ¶ 50 The second Tiedemann factor is “the degree of prejudice to
    the defendant in light of the materiality and importance of the
    missing evidence in the context of the case as a whole, including the
    strength of the remaining evidence.” 68 The district court reasoned
    that there could be prejudice to Ms. DeJesus resulting from the loss
    of the evidence “only if the recording shows in essence what
    defendant claims.” And “[b]ecause [the] court d[id] not believe
    defendant ha[d] shown any reasonable, believable probability the
    recording showed what defendant claims,” it concluded that there
    was no prejudice.
    ¶ 51 The court’s analysis is flawed because it relied on its earlier
    conclusion that Ms. DeJesus had failed to establish a reasonable
    probability that the lost evidence would have been exculpatory—a
    conclusion that was itself flawed because it imposed too high a
    burden—to find that there was no prejudice to Ms. DeJesus. This
    circular reasoning improperly required Ms. DeJesus to establish
    what the footage would have shown in order to claim that she was
    prejudiced by its loss. Instead, the court should have focused on the
    importance of having video footage of the altercation, given the
    other evidence available in the case. When viewed in this light, the
    high degree of prejudice to Ms. DeJesus becomes readily apparent.
    ¶ 52 Ms. DeJesus had called two witnesses to testify during the
    evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss as to the events of the
    altercation. The first witness, Ms. Dash, was Ms. DeJesus’s cellmate
    during the altercation. As soon as she took the stand, however, the
    State asked the court to instruct Ms. Dash about her right against
    self-incrimination, noting that “[s]he was originally charged in this
    case,” and that the charge had been dismissed without prejudice.
    The State suggested that, “based on her testimony today, [it] could
    refile that case.” Ms. Dash apparently took the State’s warning to
    heart and refused to testify. This left only Ms. Ataata, a fellow
    inmate and Ms. DeJesus’s fiancée, to testify on behalf of Ms. DeJesus.
    And as the court found, Ms. Ataata’s testimony was less believable
    due to her close relationship with Ms. DeJesus and her partially
    obstructed view of the altercation. The State’s evidence, on the other
    _____________________________________________________________
    68   Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44.
    24
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                             Opinion of the Court
    hand, centered entirely on the testimony of Officer Hansen, the
    officer who was allegedly struck by Ms. DeJesus.
    ¶ 53 Thus the “context of [this] case” 69 is a literal he-said/she-
    said dispute between witnesses that would turn on which side’s
    witnesses were most credible. On the State’s side, we have a peace
    officer, Officer Hansen. On Ms. DeJesus’s side, we have her fiancée, a
    fellow inmate, whose testimony was already determined by the
    district court to be less believable than Officer Hansen’s. It is hard to
    overstate “the materiality and importance of the missing evidence”
    in this context.70 The surveillance footage would have changed the
    entire nature of the case, potentially permitting Ms. DeJesus to show
    actions consistent with her claims without needing to rely on a
    potentially unbelievable witness. Indeed, we can conceive of no
    other evidence that would be as helpful or probative than an actual
    video recording of the events. Nor can we think of other evidence
    that can serve as an adequate replacement.
    ¶ 54 Weighing the two Tiedemann factors, we determine that the
    State’s failure to preserve the footage is a severe violation of
    Ms. DeJesus’s right to a fair trial and that dismissal is an appropriate
    remedy. The State’s negligence forced Ms. DeJesus into a situation
    where the case turned entirely on the believability of each side’s
    witnesses. The State also implicitly encouraged one of Ms. DeJesus’s
    witnesses to not testify, leaving only Ms. Ataata to testify on her
    behalf—a fellow inmate with a close relationship with Ms. DeJesus
    who was already found to be less than credible by the court. Thus,
    Ms. DeJesus was required to attempt to defend against the
    accusations of the State by pitting the credibility of Ms. Ataata—a
    witness likely to be seen as biased and not credible—against
    Officer Hansen. And given the indisputably central role a video
    recording of the incident would play, we cannot say that the loss of
    the evidence had only a negligible impact on Ms. DeJesus’s right to a
    fundamentally fair trial. We accordingly hold that, under Tiedemann,
    dismissal is an appropriate remedy. We therefore reverse the
    decision of the district court and remand for an entry of dismissal.
    Conclusion
    ¶ 55 The district court erred by applying a more stringent
    _____________________________________________________________
    69   
    Id. 70 Id.
    25
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    “reasonable probability” standard than is required under the due
    process analysis articulated in State v. Tiedemann. 71 When the correct
    standard is applied, Ms. DeJesus’s proffer as to what the footage
    may have shown and how the footage would have aided her defense
    meets the threshold by establishing a reasonable probability that the
    footage would have been exculpatory. By so doing, Ms. DeJesus
    established that her due process right to a fair trial was violated. We
    accordingly must weigh the two Tiedemann factors to gauge the
    severity of the due process violation. And based on the negligence of
    the State in failing to preserve the footage and the crucial role that
    footage would have played in the case, we ultimately hold that
    dismissal is an appropriate remedy. We therefore reverse the district
    court’s denial of Ms. DeJesus’s motion to dismiss and remand for
    that court to enter an order of dismissal.
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, concurring in part and concurring
    the judgment:
    ¶ 56 In this case, as in State v. Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44, 
    162 P.3d 1106
    , the court holds that the State has an obligation to preserve
    evidence that is reasonably likely to affect the outcome of trial.
    Further echoing Tiedemann, the majority next concludes that the
    decision on an appropriate remedy for a violation of the duty of
    preservation depends on a “balance” of two factors—“the culpability
    of the state and the prejudice to the defendant.” Supra ¶ 27. And
    finally, applying these standards, the court concludes that the State’s
    failure to preserve the evidence in question in this case justifies
    dismissal of the charges against Ms. DeJesus.
    ¶ 57 I agree with all of these premises and conclusions. The State
    has a duty to preserve evidence in its possession that is of known
    materiality to a criminal case. And the destruction of the video
    recording at issue here is sufficiently troubling that I support the
    decision to dismiss the charges in this case.
    ¶ 58 That said, I write separately because I would identify a
    different basis from the majority for the State’s duty of preservation
    and for the court’s power to impose a sanction for a violation of that
    duty. Unlike the majority, I would not root these principles in the
    Due Process Clause of the Utah Constitution. I would base them on
    our inherent power to regulate proceedings in our courts—as
    reflected in our rules of criminal procedure (specifically, rule 16).
    _____________________________________________________________
    71   
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 44, 
    162 P.3d 1106
    .
    26
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       A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    Thus, I would defer to and leave unaltered the standards set forth in
    Tiedemann. But because those standards are easily sustained without
    reference to the Due Process Clause, I would exercise the restraint
    counseled by the doctrine of constitutional avoidance. I would hold
    that the duty and standards set forth in Tiedemann are a matter of
    inherent judicial power and enforcement of the terms of rule 16 of
    our rules of criminal procedure. And I would reverse on that basis,
    without concluding (one way or another) that the Tiedemann
    principles are required as a matter of constitutional law. 72
    ¶ 59 The adjustment I propose is a modest one on the surface.
    But it has both practical and theoretical significance. If we mean to
    retain the power to refine and adjust the standard set forth in
    Tiedemann (as the majority suggests, see supra ¶¶ 21–29), we should
    avoid rooting that standard in constitutional soil. We should base it
    instead on our inherent power to regulate practice and procedure in
    our courts, under rule 16 or otherwise.
    I
    ¶ 60 For at least a couple of centuries, the courts have adverted to
    the existence of “[c]ertain implied powers” that “necessarily result to
    our Courts of justice from the nature of their institution.” United
    States v. Hudson, 11 U.S. (7 Cranch) 32, 34 (1812). Such powers
    include those the courts deem necessary “to preserve [their] own
    existence and promote the end and object of [their] creation.” 
    Id. at 33.
    To that end, the courts have long asserted the authority to impose
    contempt sanctions in an effort to enforce “the observance of order.”
    
    Id. at 34.
    As a close cousin to the contempt power, the courts have
    also long maintained the power to sanction a party for destroying
    evidence of relevance to the disposition of a case. 73
    _____________________________________________________________
    72 My point is mostly theoretical: I would retain each of the legal
    standards set forth in Tiedemann and reinforced again today, and
    alter only the theoretical basis for those standards. But theory
    matters. It matters most, perhaps, when it comes to our power of
    judicial review under the constitution. A judicial declaration of a
    constitutional requirement is a matter of grave significance. When
    we exercise that power, we remove the matter from further
    adjustment or amendment at the policymaking level. That is a
    significant step. We should not take it lightly.
    73See Bart S. Wilhoit, Comment, Spoliation of Evidence: The Viability
    of Four Emerging Torts, 46 UCLA L. REV. 631, 637–38 (1998)
    (“Although the common law did not recognize an independent
    (Continued)
    27
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    ¶ 61 This power is sometimes framed as a matter of the common
    law. The common law doctrine of relevance to the destruction of
    material evidence is called spoliation. 74 There is a split in the courts
    on whether to recognize a common-law claim for damages for
    spoliation. 75 But most courts have recognized some form of common-
    law or inherent-power-based doctrine that allows for the imposition
    of sanctions against a party who destroys or fails to preserve
    action in tort, common-law courts allowed juries to infer that
    destroyed evidence would have worked against the spoliating party.
    Beginning with Armory v. Delamirie, 93 Eng. Rep. 664 (K.B. 1772) in
    1772, courts began to establish legal precedent to remedy the
    destruction of evidence.”); Jonathan Judge, Reconsidering Spoliation:
    Common-Sense Alternatives to the Spoliation Tort, 2001 WIS. L. REV. 441,
    446–47 (“Courts have tried to fill these gaps [of sanctioning
    spoliation] by relying on the ‘inherent powers’ of the court—powers
    needed for the exercise of all others. Since the court must structure
    its proceedings for the most effective ascertainment of the truth, it
    arguably can punish spoliation of any sort that the court believes is
    intended to hinder its work.” (footnotes omitted)); 61A AM. JUR. 2d
    Pleading § 601 (“[T]he federal courts possess the inherent power to
    manage their own affairs to achieve the orderly and expeditious
    disposition of cases. This includes the inherent power to impose
    reasonable and appropriate sanctions for conduct which abuses the
    judicial process, since the court possesses the power to punish for
    contempt, as well as the power to control admission to its bar,
    discipline attorneys who appear before it, dismiss a lawsuit or enter
    a default judgment, impose fines, and assess attorney’s fees.”
    (footnotes omitted)).
    74  The term looks like a typo—a mistaken attempt to speak of
    spoilation. But the term spoliation has deep roots in the common law.
    See supra ¶ 60, n.73. And it is traced etymologically to the Latin
    spoliationem, meaning “a robbing, plundering, pillaging.” Spoliation,
    ONLINE                      ETYMOLOGY                      DICTIONARY,
    http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&sear
    ch=spoliation (last visited Mar. 27, 2017).
    75 See generally Intentional Spoliation of Evidence, Interfering with
    Prospective Civil Action, As Actionable, 
    70 A.L.R. 4th 984
    (noting that
    some states do not recognize spoliation as a common law tort, while
    setting forth the elements of the tort in other states).
    28
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        A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    evidence in litigation. 76 And, recognizing that not all acts of spoliation
    have the same impact, the common law has carved out room for
    different remedies—ranging from a judgment against the infringing
    party to a mere instruction permitting the jury to draw an adverse
    inference that the missing evidence would have harmed that party’s
    case. 77
    ¶ 62 Our courts have also formulated rules of procedure to
    regulate the practice in this area. Rule 16 of the federal rules of
    criminal procedure requires the government to disclose or permit the
    defendant to inspect and copy evidence in its “possession, custody,
    or control” that it intends to introduce at trial or that is material to
    the preparation of the defense of a case. FED. R. CRIM. P. 16. Covered
    evidence includes “photograph books, papers, documents, data,
    photographs, tangible objects, [and] buildings or places.” 
    Id. 16(a)(1)(E). In
    light of the duty to disclose, the federal courts have
    held that the government bears a duty to preserve discoverable
    _____________________________________________________________
    76  See, e.g., In re Evans, 
    130 P. 217
    , 224 (Utah 1913) (“It is
    undoubtedly true that courts of general and superior jurisdiction
    possess certain inherent powers not derived from any statute.
    Among these are the power to punish for contempt, to make,
    modify, and enforce rules for the regulation of the business before
    the court . . . . Such inherent powers of courts are necessary to the
    proper discharge of their duties.”); Restaurant Mgmt. Co. v. Kidde-
    Fenwal, Inc., 
    986 P.2d 504
    , 507–08 (N.M. Ct. App. 1999) (“A remedy
    for the destruction of evidence may be available pursuant to the
    inherent power of the courts ‘to impose sanctions on both litigants
    and attorneys in order to regulate their docket[s], promote judicial
    efficiency, and deter frivolous claims.’ . . . The rationale underlying
    the existence of the inherent power of the courts is that ‘a court must
    be able to command the obedience of litigants and their attorneys if
    it is to perform its judicial functions.’” (alteration in original)
    (citations omitted)).
    77 See, e.g., Fines v. Ressler Enters., Inc., 
    820 N.W.2d 688
    , 694 (N.D.
    2012) (affirming the district court’s dismissal of a case where the
    plaintiff was found to have destroyed evidence); Stender v. Vincent,
    
    992 P.2d 50
    , 60 (Haw. 2000) (holding that it was not an abuse of
    discretion for a trial court to give an “adverse inference instruction”
    against a party that destroyed evidence).
    29
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    evidence. 78 And when that duty is breached, the federal courts have
    exercised their discretion under the rules to impose a sanction—to
    enter “any . . . order that is just under the circumstances.” 
    Id. 16(d)(2)(D). The
    sanction orders imposed for failure to preserve have
    included an adverse inference instruction 79 and dismissal of criminal
    charges. 80 In deciding on the appropriate sanction, moreover, the
    courts have articulated a number of factors to be considered. Those
    factors include the reasons for the government’s nondisclosure, the
    extent of the prejudice to the defense, and the feasibility of rectifying
    the prejudice through a continuance or otherwise. 81
    _____________________________________________________________
    78See 3C CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT ET AL., FEDERAL PRACTICE AND
    PROCEDURE 189 (2008) (citing Advisory Committee Notes to Federal
    Rules of Criminal Procedure).
    79 See Kronisch v. United States, 
    150 F.3d 112
    , 126 (2d Cir. 1998) (“In
    order for an adverse inference to arise from the destruction of
    evidence, the party having control over the evidence must have had
    an obligation to preserve it at the time it was destroyed.”); People v.
    Kelly, 
    467 N.E.2d 498
    , 501 (N.Y. 1984) (applying New York rule,
    which parallels federal rule; concluding that dismissal was an abuse
    of discretion where adverse inference instruction would have
    adequately remedied prejudice caused by government’s destruction
    of evidence).
    80 See United States v. Zaragoza-Moreira, 
    780 F.3d 971
    , 982 (9th Cir.
    2015) (directing the district court on remand to dismiss the
    indictment against the defendant because the government had the
    duty to preserve evidence but failed to do so); People v. Howard, 
    469 N.Y.S.2d 871
    , 874 (Crim. Ct. 1983) (applying New York rule;
    concluding that sanction of dismissal was appropriate).
    81 See, e.g., Jordan F. Miller Corp. v. Mid-Continent Aircraft Serv.,
    Inc., No. 97-5089, 
    1998 WL 68879
    , at *4 (10th Cir. Feb. 20, 1998)
    (“When deciding whether to sanction a party for the spoliation of
    evidence, courts have considered a variety of factors, two of which
    generally carry the most weight: (1) the degree of culpability of the
    party who lost or destroyed the evidence, and (2) the degree of
    actual prejudice to the other party.”); Flury v. Daimler Chrysler Corp.,
    
    427 F.3d 939
    , 946 (11th Cir. 2005) (considering culpability of the
    spoliator and prejudice to the opposing party in assessing whether
    dismissal is warranted or an adverse inference instruction is
    appropriate).
    30
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       A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    ¶ 63 Our Utah rule is a general parallel of the federal provision.
    Like the federal rule, our criminal rule 16 requires the government to
    “disclose to the defense” certain information in its possession. UTAH
    R. CRIM. P. 16(a). Under the Utah rule, the information to be
    disclosed includes “evidence which the court determines on good
    cause shown should be made available to the defendant in order for
    the defendant to adequately prepare his defense.” 
    Id. 16(a)(5). And
    our rule also recognizes the authority of the court to enter sanctions
    for any failure “to comply with this rule.” 
    Id. 16(g). Like
    the federal
    rule, our rule spells out specific sanctions that may be entered, but
    also states that the court “may enter such other order as it deems just
    under the circumstances.” 
    Id. 16(g). II
        ¶ 64 The Tiedemann case was decided against the above
    backdrop. Mr. Tiedemann’s case came before us on an interlocutory
    appeal. Tiedemann stood charged with aggravated murder,
    aggravated kidnapping, and aggravated sexual assault. He was
    initially declared incompetent to stand trial. 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 7. And the
    charges against him were dismissed after he was subjected to civil
    commitment. 
    Id. At that
    point Tiedemann was deemed “unlikely to
    ever be found competent to stand trial.” 
    Id. And “the
    state evidence
    custodian notified the investigating officer that physical evidence
    from the case would be destroyed unless an objection was filed
    within thirty days.” 
    Id. ¶ 8.
    Absent any objection, certain physical
    evidence was destroyed. When Tiedemann was released from the
    state hospital many years later, the State refiled charges against him.
    Tiedemann, now deemed competent to stand trial, moved “to
    dismiss the case due to destruction of evidence.” 
    Id. ¶ 10.
        ¶ 65 The district court denied Tiedemann’s motion, and this
    court agreed to consider that decision on interlocutory appeal. 
    Id. In challenging
    the denial of the motion to dismiss, Tiedemann asserted
    a federal due process argument. Citing Arizona v. Youngblood, 
    488 U.S. 51
    (1988), Tiedemann argued that his right to due process was
    infringed because “the evidence may have been exculpatory, no
    comparable evidence still exists, and the destruction was done in bad
    faith.” Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 30. But Tiedemann also asserted
    alternative grounds for his motion to dismiss. He cited rule 16 of our
    rules of criminal procedure 82 as well as the Due Process Clause of the
    _____________________________________________________________
    82Brief for Tiedemann at 50, State v. Tiedemann, 
    2007 UT 49
    , 
    162 P.3d 1106
    (arguing that the prosecution has a duty to preserve
    evidence and that the evidence in this case “would have been
    (Continued)
    31
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    Utah Constitution. And he urged the court to dismiss the charges
    against him even if it did not find the “bad faith” required as a
    matter of federal due process under 
    Youngblood, 488 U.S. at 58
    . 83
    ¶ 66 The Tiedemann majority found a lack of “any degree of
    culpability or bad faith on the part of the State.” 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 46. So
    it rejected Tiedemann’s federal due process claim. But the court
    accepted his invitation to establish a standard that could protect a
    defendant even absent such a showing. In articulating such a
    standard, the Tiedemann court cited rule 16 of our criminal rules,
    noting that this rule “imposes broad obligations on prosecutors to
    produce” evidence material to a defense “or make it available to a
    defendant.” 
    Id. ¶ 40
    . Citing prior cases interpreting this rule,
    Tiedemann held that “‘[t]he prosecutor’s good faith should not have
    . . . any impact on the trial court’s determination of whether the
    prosecutor had violated his discovery duties.’” 
    Id. (quoting State
    v.
    Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 918 n.5 (Utah 1987)). And, in further reliance on
    our rule 16 precedents, the Tiedemann majority listed factors of
    relevance to the determination whether the State is in violation of its
    duties under the rule, including “the culpability of the prosecutor”
    and the impact of the violation on the defense (or likely “prejudice”
    to the outcome). 
    Id. ¶ 41
    (quoting State v. Kallin, 
    877 P.2d 128
    , 143
    (Utah 1994)).
    ¶ 67 The holding in Tiedemann was expressly tied to some degree
    to rule 16. The majority stated that “[o]ur approach under rule 16
    should govern the destruction of evidence,” holding that “the
    culpability or bad faith of the state should be only one consideration,
    not a bright line test.” 
    Id. Elsewhere, the
    Tiedemann court also
    attributed its standard to the Due Process Clause of our Utah
    Constitution. 
    Id. ¶ 44
    (citing UTAH CONST. art. I, § 7). But the
    authorities it cited were tied to a large extent to standards like that
    set forth in our criminal rule 16.84 Even the Vermont case from which
    discoverable under Utah law” under rule 16 of the Utah Rules of
    Criminal Procedure).
    83Brief for Tiedemann at 46–47 (requesting that the court “not
    now require . . . a showing [of bad faith] under a due process
    analysis for the state constitution,” and urging the court to instead
    consider other factors, including “the degree of prejudice to the
    defendant”).
    84See Thorne v. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 
    774 P.2d 1326
    , 1330 & n.8
    (Alaska 1989); Hammond v. State, 
    569 A.2d 81
    , 88 (Del. 1989); State v.
    (Continued)
    32
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        A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    Tiedemann drew its standard, State v. Delisle, 
    648 A.2d 632
    (Vt. 1994),
    is along these lines. The Delisle decision is admittedly based on the
    Vermont Constitution. But the holding in Delisle is ultimately based
    not on a general right to due process but on that state constitution’s
    guarantee of a right of a criminal defendant “‘to call for evidence in
    his favor.’” See 
    Delisle, 648 A.2d at 642
    (quoting VT. CONST. ch. 1, art.
    10). In light of that right, the Delisle court found a duty of the
    government to preserve evidence, and held that dismissal may be
    appropriate depending on the importance of the evidence in
    question and the strength of other evidence of guilt. 
    Id. at 642–43.
        ¶ 68 I would interpret Tiedemann as resting on our inherent
    power to regulate practice and procedure in criminal litigation in our
    courts as reflected in our criminal rule 16 and the extensive
    authorities cited above. In so doing, I would acknowledge the fact
    that Tiedemann purported to state a requirement of state due process.
    And I would leave open the possibility that our Utah Due Process
    Clause may have a role to play in establishing a “floor” or minimum
    standard protecting an accused whose defense is interfered with by
    the destruction of material evidence. But I would not “double down”
    on the constitutional basis for the standard we have articulated in
    this area. Instead, in the spirit of constitutional avoidance, and in
    light of the settled, alternative grounds for our authority in this area,
    I would root the Tiedemann standards in our inherent power and
    rulemaking power under criminal rule 16.
    III
    ¶ 69 The proposed reformation of Tiedemann is a simple one. I
    would not alter any of the standards set forth in that opinion. I
    would simply recast the legal basis for our holding, tying it to our
    inherent power as reflected in rule 16. To do so, we need to say only
    what the federal courts have long said under the counterpart federal
    rule—that the government’s duty to disclose material evidence
    encompasses a duty to preserve such evidence. See supra ¶ 62.
    Tiedemann, as noted above, effectively did that. I would make that
    more explicit here. And I would state this as the basis (going
    forward) for the standards that we have articulated in this area.
    ¶ 70 This adjustment is subtle. But it is hardly without
    consequence. The doctrine of constitutional avoidance wisely
    counsels against resolving cases on constitutional grounds when a
    Matafeo, 
    787 P.2d 671
    , 673 (Haw. 1990); State v. Osakalumi, 
    461 S.E.2d 504
    , 511 n.10 (W. Va. 1995).
    33
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    non-constitutional ground is available. See Nevares v. M.L.S., 
    2015 UT 34
    , ¶¶ 38–39, 
    345 P.3d 719
    . For good reasons. Our constitutional
    decisions are set in relative stone: They place matters resolved by
    them beyond the policy reach of this or other branches of
    government, and they establish precedent that we ourselves may be
    bound by under the doctrine of stare decisis. For these and other
    sound reasons, our courts have long deemed constitutional grounds a
    matter of last resort.
    ¶ 71 Our cases have stated this principle in the specific context of
    the Due Process Clause. We have warned of the perils of treating this
    provision as a “free-wheeling constitutional license for courts to
    assure fairness on a case-by-case basis.” In re Discipline of Steffensen,
    
    2016 UT 18
    , ¶ 7, 
    373 P.3d 186
    . We have indicated that “[w]e retain
    discretionary license to assure fair procedure in the cases that
    proceed through our justice system.” 
    Id. But we
    have explained that
    “our usual course for doing so is by promulgating rules of
    procedure.” Id.; see also Ownbey v. Morgan, 
    256 U.S. 94
    , 110–11 (1921)
    (“The due process clause does not impose upon the states a duty to
    establish ideal systems for the administration of justice, with every
    modern improvement and with provision against every possible
    hardship that may befall.”).
    ¶ 72 This is a sound, practical reason for reformulating the
    theoretical basis for the framework set forth in Tiedemann. 85 By
    relocating the Tiedemann standard to rule 16 and our inherent power,
    we avoid the entrenchment inherent in a constitutional decision.
    And instead we tap into the process we have put in place for the
    promulgation and amendment of the rules governing practice and
    procedure in our courts.
    _____________________________________________________________
    85 We could identify additional reasons—in the premises for the
    interpretive methodology of originalism, for example. In re K.A.S.,
    
    2016 UT 55
    , ¶ 46 (Lee, J., dissenting) (advocating an originalist basis
    for our interpretation of the Utah Due Process Clause—a
    “historically driven test ‘measured by reference to “traditional
    notions of fair play and substantial justice”’”—while noting that our
    “usual course” for assuring “fair procedure” is to promulgate “rules
    of procedure”). But we need not do so to decide this case. We can
    save for another day the question whether there may also be a
    constitutional basis for the standards in Tiedemann—a minimum
    constitutional guarantee in this area. I would take that approach
    here.
    34
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        A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    ¶ 73 That seemingly minor adjustment is a significant one. Our
    rules process is set up in a manner that facilitates both ready
    decision-making and wide-ranging input from the bar. Through our
    advisory committees and public comment process, we receive input
    on proposed amendments from a wide range of interested parties.
    And through the rules process, we can make ready adjustments to
    our rules on the fly—as soon as we are convinced of the need to
    make a change.
    ¶ 74 None of this holds in the context of the decisions we make in
    the exercise of our appellate jurisdiction. When we exercise that
    power we maintain a passive posture. We maintain neither “FORCE
    nor WILL, but merely judgment.” THE FEDERALIST No. 78 (Alexander
    Hamilton). We “can take no active resolution whatever,” 
    id., in that
    we do not set our own agenda, but must await a judicial case that
    presents a live, disputed issue before we have the authority to tackle
    it. That is as it should be in the exercise of our appellate jurisdiction.
    When we endeavor to set rules to assure fair procedure in our courts,
    however, we need greater flexibility.
    ¶ 75 This case illustrates the point. Because the “touchstone” of
    the Tiedemann standard is “fundamental fairness,” the court goes out
    of its way to emphasize that the standards we set forth in that case
    are not the be-all-end-all of the matter. Supra ¶ 46 n.67. It notes, in
    particular, that we may yet find new “less drastic” remedies than the
    one identified in Tiedemann. 
    Id. And presumably
    the court is opening
    the door to the possibility of further adjustments to the Tiedemann
    standard on other points. I assume that’s the point of reiterating a
    “touchstone” as broad as “fundamental fairness.”
    ¶ 76 I’m all for fundamental fairness. But if that is our goal, we
    should root our power in a ground that is better suited to vindicating
    it. When we make rules of practice and procedure we need to be able
    to set our own agenda. We need the flexibility to make adjustments
    to our law as we see fit and as new policies and procedures come to
    our attention. Yet that highlights a defect in the majority’s approach.
    The constitution is not a charter for the promulgation of ever-
    evolving standards of practice. Its premise is the opposite—of the
    need for the establishment of “certain limits not to be transcended”
    and “designed to be permanent.” Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1
    Cranch) 137, 176 (1803).
    ¶ 77 We distort the constitution when we press it into the sort of
    service for which our rules process is designed. I would avoid that
    distortion here. I would do so through the doctrine of constitutional
    avoidance—by reconceptualizing the legal foundation of Tiedemann
    while still retaining its doctrinal elements.
    35
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    IV
    ¶ 78 I see no barrier to my approach in any of the majority’s
    objections. First, there is nothing “novel” about resolving a case on
    non-constitutional grounds when a constitutional decision is
    unnecessary. See supra ¶ 33 (criticizing my approach as somehow
    “novel”). And that is all that I am proposing. My point is not that
    “we should avoid procedural due process questions ‘properly
    presented by the record’ because we have inherent authority to make
    rules of procedure.” Supra ¶ 33 (emphasis added). It is that we already
    have an applicable rule of procedure (rule 16) that can stand as a
    basis for our articulation of standards regulating the spoliation of
    evidence by the prosecution. Because Tiedemann can be understood
    to be rooted in our interpretation of rule 16 (and the exercise of the
    inherent power recognized in that rule), we need not conclude that
    the Due Process Clause requires the standards we articulated in
    Tiedemann.
    ¶ 79 I recognize that the Tiedemann opinion purported to
    “plant[]” its “test in constitutional soil.” Supra ¶ 32. But it also cited
    rule 16, as have the courts in other jurisdictions that have adopted
    similar tests. And that fact renders this a straightforward application
    of the doctrine of constitutional avoidance: Because we have a rule of
    procedure that regulates spoliation of evidence and reflects our
    inherent power in this field, we can easily deem the standards set
    forth in Tiedemann a reflection of our inherent power in this field—
    without deciding whether the Due Process Clause demands the
    same standard. Thus, we can construe Tiedemann as declaring that
    this court has satisfied the Due Process Clause by promulgating rule
    16. We need not deem Tiedemann to establish the rule 16 standard as
    the constitutional floor under the Due Process Clause.
    ¶ 80 Second, the court is wrong to insist that my approach only
    avoids “certain constitutional issues” while giving rise to other “new
    constitutional issues,” such as those implicated in a constitutional
    challenge to the application of rule 16. Supra ¶ 33 n.48. The tradeoff
    identified by the majority is illusory. At most, the court is observing
    that my approach leaves open the possibility that a court’s application
    of a standard rooted in rule 16 “could be subject to constitutional
    challenge.” Supra ¶ 33 n.48. Yet the majority’s approach makes
    constitutional analysis not just possible but required; if the Tiedemann
    standard is rooted in due process, then a court is engaged in
    constitutional decision-making in every case in which there is an
    allegation of prosecutorial spoliation of evidence.
    ¶ 81 It is no answer to assert that a rules-based approach “would
    be a poor substitute for the protections, including more robust
    36
    Cite as: 
    2017 UT 22
       A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    appellate review, that our interpretation of the due process clause
    affords criminal defendants,” 86 or that a due process conception of
    Tiedemann is necessary to preserve “this court’s previous conclusion
    that government loss or destruction of exculpatory evidence directly
    implicates due process.” Supra ¶ 35. The majority’s critiques along
    these lines are circular. They assume that the Tiedemann standard is
    in fact required by the terms of the Due Process Clause. That is the
    question that I would avoid here. I see nothing in the Tiedemann
    opinion that supports the conclusion that the constitutional
    guarantee of “due process of law” was understood at the time of the
    framing of the constitution to guarantee the standards announced in
    that opinion. Tiedemann, in fact, professed a prerogative of making
    state constitutional law on the basis of “sister state law” and “policy
    arguments.” 
    2007 UT 49
    , ¶ 37. And it repudiated the originalist
    approach to constitutional interpretation announced in some of this
    court’s decisions. See 
    id. (noting the
    originalist approach to
    constitutional interpretation but deeming it only “persuasive in
    some cases” and not required). Those are reasons alone to question
    the constitutional foundation of the Tiedemann standard. Yet we need
    not reach that issue here. We can decide this case by recognizing
    only a non-constitutional basis for the Tiedemann approach.
    ¶ 82 Neither Tiedemann nor the briefing presented in this case
    tells us anything of relevance to whether the standard we apply
    today is a “suitable floor concerning the destruction of evidence.”
    Supra ¶ 32 n.45. That question, in my view, turns entirely on material
    not yet examined by this court—on whether the guarantee of “due
    process of law” would have been understood in 1896 to encompass
    the protections we recognized in Tiedemann. The majority offers no
    historical or textual support for its conclusion, and without it I
    cannot see how the court can insist that Tiedemann is a “suitable
    floor,” much less that it is the protection guaranteed by the founders
    of this state. I would reserve that analysis for a different case in
    _____________________________________________________________
    86 I have no problem with the court’s aspiration for more robust
    appellate review in cases involving allegations of prosecutorial
    spoliation of evidence. See supra ¶ 35. But we can achieve that
    outcome without attributing our preferences to the dictates of the
    Utah Constitution. We can provide for more searching appellate
    review by rule. And on this and all points of policy, I far prefer the
    rulemaking route to a decision to open the door to “reinterpreting”
    the constitution each time we wish to add to the protections
    prescribed in prior cases.
    37
    STATE v. DEJESUS
    A.C.J. Lee, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    which we have briefing and argument of relevance to this inquiry.
    And I would conclude that Tiedemann simply dictates that rule 16
    does not fall below the floor of the Due Process Clause, whatever that
    floor may ultimately be.
    38
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Case No. 20150460

Citation Numbers: 2017 UT 22, 395 P.3d 111

Filed Date: 4/21/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (23)

Thorne v. Department of Public Safety , 774 P.2d 1326 ( 1989 )

Bryant Flury v. DaimlerChrysler Corp. , 427 F.3d 939 ( 2005 )

Stender v. Vincent , 92 Haw. 355 ( 2000 )

State v. Matafeo , 71 Haw. 183 ( 1990 )

gloria-kronisch-of-the-estate-of-stanley-milton-glickman-v-united-states , 150 F.3d 112 ( 1998 )

Hammond v. State , 569 A.2d 81 ( 1989 )

State v. Knight , 734 P.2d 913 ( 1987 )

State v. Tiedemann , 162 P.3d 1106 ( 2007 )

Restaurant Management Co. v. Kidde-Fenwal, Inc. , 127 N.M. 708 ( 1999 )

Ownbey v. Morgan , 41 S. Ct. 433 ( 1921 )

Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority , 56 S. Ct. 466 ( 1936 )

Moore v. Illinois , 92 S. Ct. 2562 ( 1972 )

Brady v. Maryland , 83 S. Ct. 1194 ( 1963 )

Slack v. McDaniel , 120 S. Ct. 1595 ( 2000 )

State v. Nielsen , 727 P.2d 188 ( 1986 )

State v. Schreuder , 712 P.2d 264 ( 1985 )

Nevares v. M.L.S. , 345 P.3d 719 ( 2015 )

Coroles v. State , 2015 UT 48 ( 2015 )

In re K.A.S. , 2016 UT 55 ( 2016 )

State v. Mohamud , 395 P.3d 133 ( 2017 )

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