State v. Buttars , 2020 UT App 87 ( 2020 )


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    2020 UT App 87
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    DAVID BRUCE BUTTARS,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20170436-CA
    Filed June 4, 2020
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Vernice S. Trease
    No. 131901512
    Alexandra S. McCallum, Attorney for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey D. Mann,
    Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and DIANA HAGEN
    concurred.
    ORME, Judge:
    ¶1     David Bruce Buttars appeals his convictions on four
    counts of securities fraud and one count of pattern of unlawful
    activity. Among other things, Buttars argues that the district
    court erred in admitting his bank records under the residual
    exception of rule 807 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. We reverse
    and remand for a new trial.
    State v. Buttars
    BACKGROUND 1
    Ellipse and MovieBlitz
    ¶2     In 2005, Buttars and a business partner (Partner) created
    a company called Ellipse Technology (Ellipse). Ellipse was a
    “startup” that attempted to create kiosks where customers could
    “take a memory key similar to a USB . . . and download . . .
    movie[s] or any other media content,” “take it home, watch it
    on a playback device, and then never have to return it
    again.” Buttars and Partner each owned 50% of the company,
    with Buttars acting as CEO and Partner as president. For about
    two years, both Buttars and Partner worked for Ellipse full
    time and drew a salary. Other individuals were subsequently
    brought in to assist with research and development, fundraising,
    and other corporate responsibilities, but Buttars remained in
    control.
    ¶3     Buttars, an electrical engineer, was the “brains” behind
    the project. He was “in charge of fundraising,” managing the
    finances, establishing “relationship[s] with the investors,” and
    developing the kiosk and USB technology. As CEO, Buttars was
    essentially “over everything,” and from the start it “was made
    very clear” that he was the “top decision maker” and “in
    charge.”
    ¶4     Buttars’s home served as Ellipse’s corporate headquarters.
    It was equipped with an email server and a phone system, and it
    contained a room in the basement that was used for weekly
    meetings. It was also common for visitors on Ellipse-related
    business trips to stay at the home.
    1. “On appeal, we recite the facts from the record in the light
    most favorable to the jury’s verdict and present conflicting
    evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on
    appeal.” State v. Daniels, 
    2002 UT 2
    , ¶ 2, 
    40 P.3d 611
    .
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    ¶5     In 2007, after Ellipse raised more than $600,000 from
    approximately 50 individual investors, Ellipse’s legal counsel
    advised the company that it “had too many individual,
    non-accredited investors” and that it should instead focus its
    fundraising efforts “on accredited or institutional investors”
    with “significant financial reserves.” Buttars discussed this
    advice with Partner and others in the company, “[a]nd it was
    understood that money could no longer be raised . . . the way it
    had been.” Subsequently, from 2007 to 2008, a number of
    interested institutional investors made offers in the
    millions-of-dollars range in exchange for significant shares of the
    company. Partner and others involved with Ellipse wanted to
    accept the offers, which would have provided sufficient funding
    to have gotten Ellipse “to a true product, one that was actually
    functional and that [they] could go beta with.” 2 Ultimately,
    however, the offers “were all rejected” because Buttars, as the
    one “in charge,” “said he didn’t want to do it.”
    ¶6      Late in 2008, Buttars involved his friend (Friend) in
    Ellipse because Friend “claimed to have access to large amounts
    of institutional funding overseas,” which claim turned out to be
    false. Friend was made a board member and executive of Ellipse.
    Ellipse then funded a trip to Switzerland for Friend to secure
    funding, but the funding did not materialize.
    ¶7     With no institutional investors on board, Ellipse was soon
    in need of funding and, at this point, Partner discovered that
    Buttars was again soliciting investments from individual
    investors “at the micro level,” against the advice of counsel. In
    early 2009, Ellipse had “no money” and Partner and three other
    individuals on the board filed a lawsuit against Buttars in an
    attempt to “get control of the company so that [they] could try
    2. The beta version of a product “is a nearly complete prototype
    of a product.” Beta, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/beta [https://perma.cc/CPP7-DTQX].
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    and find another way to get [the technology] to completion so
    that [they] could pay back . . . all of the investors.”
    ¶8     In response, Buttars resigned as Ellipse’s CEO, but “he
    would not relinquish his shares or his voting rights” and would
    not allow Ellipse to “go forward because it was his technology.”
    Due to Partner’s and Buttars’s dispute, the patents for the
    technology, registered in both their names, became encumbered
    and were of “no value to the company.” Ellipse’s bank account
    was closed on May 1, 2009, and the company “ultimately just
    dissolved.”
    ¶9     At some point in 2009, before Ellipse’s demise, board
    members discovered that Ellipse funds were being used to make
    mortgage payments on Friend’s home, and they generally
    “suspected that funds were being misused.” Another individual
    tasked with fundraising for the company said that during this
    time, Buttars called him and was angry he had not raised more
    funds, asking, “[H]ow do you expect me to support two families
    on what you’ve brought in?”
    ¶10 During the collapse of Ellipse, Buttars and Friend formed
    a new company, MovieBlitz, to develop the same technology,
    and they began raising money anew from individual investors.
    From approximately 2007 to 2010, Buttars raised over $815,000
    on behalf of the two companies.
    Investors
    ¶11 The mother of an Ellipse employee (Mother) initially
    invested $10,000 in Ellipse in 2007. Buttars informed Mother that
    her money “would be used in producing the [kiosk] product and
    getting it to market.” In March 2009, Mother invested another
    $5,000 after being told that Ellipse “needed just a little bit more
    money so they could get [the kiosk] to market.” Mother stated
    that the “general tone of the conversation with” Buttars “was
    positive in that . . . this was going to be a great thing that they
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    had going.” Mother was never informed that her “investment
    funds might be used for any other purpose.”
    ¶12 In late May and early June of 2009, Buttars’s neighbor
    (Neighbor) and her boyfriend (Boyfriend) each invested $2,000
    in MovieBlitz. Before investing, they met with Buttars and
    Friend, who showed them “that [they] had patents and . . . they
    were ready to roll.” Buttars and Friend explained the investment
    opportunity in “fabulous terms” that “seemed to be so close . . .
    to com[ing] to fruition.” The “overall tone of the meeting” was
    “[p]ositive” with “[n]o risks involved.”
    ¶13 But there were risks involved, of which Buttars failed to
    inform the two investors. Buttars also informed them that their
    money would be used to incorporate the company in Nevada
    and “to produce this [memory] key [and] the kiosk.” Buttars did
    not inform Neighbor and Boyfriend about the predecessor
    company, Ellipse, and its ultimate failure to bring the same
    technology to market. In January 2010, Boyfriend invested
    another $7,000 in MovieBlitz because Buttars and Friend
    “painted such a pretty picture that this [was] . . . really going to
    be something” that “sounded too good to be true.” 3
    ¶14 In February 2010, Neighbor introduced her ex-husband
    (Ex-husband) to Buttars, and Ex-husband invested $10,000 in
    MovieBlitz that same month. Before making the investment,
    Ex-husband met with Buttars, Friend, and other investors. This
    was “a positive meeting,” in which Buttars told Ex-husband that
    his investment “would be used to develop the [memory] key and
    the kiosks.” There was no discussion that his investment “would
    be used for any other purpose.” Buttars did not inform
    Ex-husband about Ellipse and its collapse or about previously
    invested money being used for nonbusiness purposes.
    3. Boyfriend apparently forgot the other half of this cautionary
    adage: “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”
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    State v. Buttars
    Investigation
    ¶15 In early 2011, an agent with the State Bureau of
    Investigation (Agent) began investigating Buttars for his actions
    regarding Ellipse and MovieBlitz. Agent obtained multiple
    investigative subpoenas—which a magistrate approved
    following a review of Agent’s good cause statement—for the
    bank records of Buttars, Friend, Ellipse, and MovieBlitz. The
    banks involved were Frontier Community Bank (Frontier) and JP
    Morgan Chase Bank (Chase). The first subpoena was issued on
    April 21, 2011, for Buttars’s and Ellipse’s Frontier records from
    January 1, 2007, through April 1, 2011. A second subpoena was
    issued on March 5, 2012, for Buttars’s and Ellipse’s Chase
    records from January 1, 2007, through April 1, 2011. A third and
    final subpoena was issued, again to Frontier, on August 20, 2012,
    for the account records of MovieBlitz and Friend ranging from
    June 1, 2008, through December 31, 2010. Frontier produced the
    requested records in “three or four” batches but failed to attach
    custodial certificates to any of the batches. 4 Instead, Frontier
    4. The rule of evidence that allows records such as these to be
    admitted into evidence is known as the business records
    exception to the hearsay rule. See Utah R. Evid. 803(6). This rule
    requires that (1) “the record was made at or near the time by . . .
    someone with knowledge”; (2) “the record was kept in the
    course of a regularly conducted activity of a business [or]
    organization”; and (3) “making the record was a regular practice
    of that activity.” 
    Id.
     R. 803(6)(A)–(C). The party seeking
    admission of these records through this rule must show that
    these conditions are met through either “the testimony of the
    custodian or another qualified witness, or by a certification that
    complies with Rule 902(11).” 
    Id.
     R. 803(6)(D). In short, the party
    must provide foundation for the records through a witness or a
    certificate from the custodian “that must be signed in a manner
    that, if falsely made, would subject the signer to criminal
    (continued…)
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    provided only two free-standing custodial certificates to Agent.
    Chase, however, produced the records requested of it with an
    adequate custodial certificate.
    ¶16 Each subpoena directed the banks “that pursuant to
    § 77-22a-1(4), Utah Code, . . . you are not to disclose to any
    person the existence or service of the subpoena, the information
    being sought, or the existence of an investigation, as it could
    impede this ongoing criminal investigation.” The district court
    later found that because “[t]he State did not seek or obtain a
    secrecy order from the Court [as required by section
    77-22-2(6)(a)(i) of the Utah Code] 5 to keep the investigation or
    material obtained through the subpoenas secret,” “[t]he
    inclusion of [the secrecy] language was in error.” The banks
    adhered to these instructions, however, and Buttars did not
    receive notice from the banks of the subpoenas or of the
    subsequent disclosure of his bank records to Agent.
    ¶17 After interviewing the investors and reviewing the bank
    records, Agent discovered that Buttars had not informed the
    investors of Ellipse’s and MovieBlitz’s low account balances at
    the time they invested and that Buttars had been using investor
    funds from the companies’ business accounts for illegitimate
    purposes. He further discovered that investor money had been
    (…continued)
    penalty.” See id. R. 902(11). Otherwise, the records do not qualify
    for admission under the exception.
    5. The statute requires that before a subpoena with the
    complained-of secrecy language can be issued, the State must
    show that there is “a reasonable likelihood that publicly
    releasing information about . . . the substance of the evidence
    resulting from a subpoena or interrogation would pose a threat
    of harm to a person or otherwise impede the investigation.”
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 77-22-2
    (6)(a)(i) (LexisNexis 2017).
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    directly deposited into Buttars’s personal checking account on
    multiple occasions and that Buttars had initiated a number of
    transfers from Ellipse’s and MovieBlitz’s accounts to his own
    personal account, from which questionable payments had been
    made.
    ¶18     Agent found that at the time Mother invested her $5,000,
    Ellipse had only $1,299 in its account, and within six weeks, all
    of Mother’s investment had been spent. The records showed that
    Buttars used that money, along with $10,000 from another
    investor, to pay his ex-wife for legal fees, purportedly for patent
    work she performed months earlier; to pay a private
    investigator; and for personal expenses such as groceries,
    restaurant tabs, and gas. Buttars also transferred some of that
    money to his own personal checking account to pay for personal
    items such as a phone bill, insurance, and a satellite television
    bill.
    ¶19 The records also revealed that at the times Buttars
    convinced Neighbor and Boyfriend to invest in MovieBlitz, its
    account balance ranged between $0 and $597. Overall, Neighbor
    and Boyfriend invested $11,000, of which $8,500 was directly
    deposited into MovieBlitz’s account and $2,500 was directly
    deposited into Buttars’s personal checking account. Soon after
    these deposits were made, $5,715 of the amount deposited into
    MovieBlitz’s account was transferred to Buttars’s personal
    account and $500 was transferred to Friend’s personal account.
    In general terms, the records showed that Neighbor’s and
    Boyfriend’s investment money—found in both MovieBlitz’s
    business account and Buttars’s personal checking account—was
    used to pay another investor; make a debt settlement payment;
    and pay for restaurant tabs, a talent agency, gas, groceries,
    natural gas bills, child support, electric bills, clothing, and other
    personal expenses. Only $859 was used toward MovieBlitz’s
    incorporation in Nevada—one of the uses to which Buttars told
    Neighbor and Boyfriend he would be putting their money. Not
    long after Neighbor and Boyfriend invested with Buttars, the
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    account balances in the MovieBlitz account and Buttars’s
    personal checking account were either zero, close to zero, or in
    the negative.
    ¶20 Finally, at the time of Ex-husband’s $10,000 investment,
    MovieBlitz’s account had a balance of only $294 and, within a
    month, all but $5 of his investment had been spent. The records
    showed that Ex-husband’s $10,000 was initially deposited into
    MovieBlitz’s account, but nearly $6,000 was soon transferred to
    Buttars’s personal account while another $3,000 was transferred
    to Friend’s personal account. The money transferred to Buttars’s
    personal account was first used to make up a negative balance in
    the account and then to pay for gas, groceries, restaurant tabs,
    music, debt settlement, bail bonds, child support, and other
    personal expenses. Agent also discovered that at the time the
    investors invested in either Ellipse or MovieBlitz, those company
    accounts were significantly underfunded, ranging from $0 at the
    lowest to about $1,300 at the highest.
    ¶21 As a result of Agent’s investigation, the State charged
    Buttars with four counts of securities fraud and four counts of
    theft—one count each for his dealings with the four investors
    previously discussed—and one count of engaging in a pattern of
    unlawful activity.
    Bank Records, Summaries, and Cover Sheets
    ¶22 Before proceeding to trial, Buttars moved to suppress the
    Frontier and Chase bank records. Buttars argued that Agent
    obtained the records in violation of “the Fourth Amendment to
    the United States Constitution and Article I, § 12 of the Utah
    State Constitution.” Specifically, he claimed that the subpoenas
    issued to the banks “were unlawful” because “the State
    inexplicably demanded that the subpoenaed parties not disclose
    the existence of the subpoenas, [improperly] relying up[on] 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -22a-1” and that “[t]his erroneous demand for
    secrecy violated [Buttars’s] constitutionally protected rights to
    privacy in [his] bank records.” Later, Buttars opposed the
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    admission of the records on the additional ground that “the
    affidavits of the record custodians are either entirely missing or
    otherwise fatally flawed,” rendering the records “inadmissible
    hearsay [that] do not fall within the business records exception”
    of rule 803(6) of the Utah Rules of Evidence.
    ¶23 The district court denied Buttars’s motion to suppress the
    records, ruling that (1) under the Subpoena Powers Act, the State
    is not required “to provide notice to the subject of a criminal
    investigation when the State initiates an investigation or issues
    subpoenas”; (2) the improper the “inclusion of the secrecy
    language . . . did not make the subpoenas unlawful or
    unreasonable under” the United States or Utah constitutions
    because “[t]he state met all the requirements of obtaining a
    lawful subpoena”; and (3) even if the subpoenas were unlawful,
    the good faith exception would apply because “the State
    obtained judicial review of the investigative subpoenas and
    reasonably relied on the Court’s approval of the subpoenas.”
    The court did not address Buttars’s rule 803(6) argument in its
    order.
    ¶24 Following the court’s ruling, the State had an expert
    (Expert) prepare summaries of the bank records, with detailed
    cover sheets containing Expert’s notations and opinions on
    certain transactions, which gave an overview of the financial
    information previously discussed. See supra ¶¶ 17–20. The cover
    sheets also tracked Buttars’s use of the investment money from
    the four investors. The State then sought a pretrial ruling on the
    admissibility of the summaries and the underlying bank records
    under rules 703, 803(6), 807, and 1006 of the Utah Rules of
    Evidence.
    ¶25 The district court ruled that the underlying bank records
    were not admissible as business records under rule 803(6)
    because the State was not “able to establish the necessary
    foundation” under rule 902(11) due to the missing and
    untethered custodial certificates. But it ruled that both “the bank
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    records and bank summaries [were] admissible under the
    residual hearsay exception” of rule 807 because the bank records
    and summaries met the rule’s admissibility criteria. 6 Finally, the
    court ruled that because the bank records were admissible, the
    summaries of the bank records were also admissible under rule
    1006. And “[b]ecause the bank records and summaries [were]
    admissible for their substance under Rule 807, the Court [did]
    not address whether the records or summaries [were] also
    admissible under Rule 703.” The court did not distinguish
    between the summaries and cover sheets, apparently
    considering the cover sheets to be part of the summaries.
    Trial
    ¶26 The State called Expert to testify and had the summaries
    and the attached cover sheets admitted through him, but the
    actual bank records were not admitted. Expert testified that the
    summaries he compiled were based on the bank records he
    examined and that they “fairly and accurately reflect[ed]” those
    records. The cover sheets contained Expert’s commentary and
    opinions labeling certain transactions, such as the payments for a
    private investigator, groceries, a talent agency, and phone bills
    as “questionable” or “potentially legitimate,” and money in
    Buttars’s personal checking as being “commingled” with
    “investor money.” Over the course of his direct examination,
    Expert went through a detailed explanation of the cover sheets
    6. Rule 807 requires that for hearsay to be admissible under the
    residual exception it must (1) have “equivalent circumstantial
    guarantees of trustworthiness,” (2) be “offered as evidence of a
    material fact,” (3) be “more probative on the point for which it is
    offered than any other evidence that the proponent can obtain
    through reasonable efforts,” and (4) be such that “admitting it
    will best serve the purposes of these rules and the interests of
    justice.” Utah R. Evid. 807(a)(1)–(4). The district court found that
    the bank records satisfied these four requirements.
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    and, to a lesser extent, the summaries themselves, explaining
    why he labeled certain transactions as questionable and money
    in the bank accounts as commingled. Overall, Expert’s testimony
    was tied to the cover sheets he created, and the State used these
    cover sheets and the summaries as the primary evidence to show
    how Buttars misused investor funds.
    ¶27 After hearing testimony from Expert, the four investors,
    Partner, and other board members and corporate officers of
    Ellipse, the jury found Buttars, who did not testify, guilty on all
    counts of securities fraud and one count of pattern of unlawful
    activity, but it acquitted him of the four theft charges. Buttars
    appeals.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶28 Buttars primarily argues that “[t]he Frontier bank records
    were inadmissible hearsay” and thus the summaries that “relied
    either solely or mostly on the Frontier records” were likewise
    inadmissible. Conversely, the State asserts that the bank records
    and the summaries were properly admitted by the district court
    under the residual exception to the hearsay rule found in rule
    807 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. 7 “In reviewing hearsay
    7. The State also asserts that even though the court ruled that the
    Frontier records were not admissible under the business records
    exception to the hearsay rule, “the majority of the records were
    properly certified and should have been ruled admissible under
    that exception.” The State claims that the bank records received
    from Frontier in response to the first subpoena “were produced
    in two distributions, each with its own custodial certification,”
    and that the records received as a result of the second subpoena
    “were produced via a secure email . . . with[out] a custodial
    certificate,” resulting in Agent receiving only three batches of
    records from Frontier.
    (continued…)
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    rulings, we review legal questions for correctness, factual
    questions for clear error, and the final ruling on admissibility for
    abuse of discretion.” State v. McNeil, 
    2013 UT App 134
    , ¶ 14, 
    302 P.3d 844
    , aff'd, 
    2016 UT 3
    , 
    365 P.3d 699
    .
    (…continued)
    The record on appeal is fairly confusing on this point. There
    are two custodial certificates in the record from Frontier dated
    after the first subpoena and before the second subpoena,
    seeming to indicate that the certificates were for the two batches
    that were produced as a result of the first subpoena issued to
    Frontier. But we cannot conclusively state that this is the case
    because the batches are not part of the record on appeal and
    there was confusion below as to whether there were only two
    batches delivered before the second subpoena was issued and
    only three batches in total. Agent testified that he obtained
    records from Frontier “three or four times.” Agent also said that
    he “probably picked up physical[] records twice” and then
    Frontier “mail[ed] [him] a duplicate copy of one of the sets of
    records” and then he received the last batch through “a secure
    email with those records attached.”
    The district court subsequently found that “[t]he testimony is
    that there were three or four batches of records from Frontier
    Bank [and] [t]here are two certificates of authentication or
    declaration.” It continued, however, that “[i]t is unclear from the
    testimony and evidence what certificates go with which batch”
    because “there was no testimony to support where these
    certificates of authentication went, and with what records.”
    In considering an alternative ground for affirmance, we are
    “limited to the findings of fact made by the trial court and may
    not find new facts or reweigh the evidence in light of the new
    legal theory or alternate ground.” Bailey v. Bayles, 
    2002 UT 58
    ,
    ¶ 20, 
    52 P.3d 1158
    . Because the State’s alternative theory of
    admissibility is contrary to the district court’s findings, it does
    not provide an alternative ground for affirmance.
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    ¶29 Second, Buttars asserts that the district court erred in
    denying his motion to suppress the bank records because they
    were “unconstitutionally seized” due to the subpoenas’
    inclusion of the secrecy language contained in Utah Code section
    77-22a-1(4). “We review a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a
    motion to suppress for an alleged [constitutional] violation as a
    mixed question of law and fact.” State v. Fuller, 
    2014 UT 29
    , ¶ 17,
    
    332 P.3d 937
    . “[T]he court’s factual findings are reviewed for
    clear error [while] its legal conclusions, . . . including its
    application of law to the facts of the case,” are reviewed for
    correctness. 
    Id.
     Even though we reverse Buttars’s convictions on
    another ground, we address this issue because it will likely arise
    again on remand. See generally State v. Low, 
    2008 UT 58
    , ¶ 61, 
    192 P.3d 867
     (recognizing an appellate court’s ability to address
    “other issues presented on appeal that will likely arise during
    retrial”). 8
    ANALYSIS
    I. Admissibility of Bank Records
    ¶30 Hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered “to prove the
    truth of the matter asserted in the statement,” Utah R. Evid.
    801(c), and is ordinarily inadmissible at trial, 9 
    id.
     R. 802. But the
    Utah Rules of Evidence provide certain exceptions to the general
    8. Buttars also contends that the district court erred in allowing
    Expert to give “testimony that violated rules 702, 704, and 403”
    of the Utah Rules of Evidence and that his trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance in three respects. Because we reverse
    Buttars’s conviction on the ground that the court erred in
    admitting his bank records and the summaries, we do not
    consider these further assertions of error.
    9. It is undisputed in this case that the bank records are hearsay.
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    prohibition on the admission of hearsay evidence. Pertinent to
    the issue at hand are two exceptions. The first is what is known
    as the business records exception, found in rule 803(6). This rule
    allows records of a regularly conducted activity to be admitted if
    (A) the record was made at or near the time by—or
    from information transmitted by—someone with
    knowledge;
    (B) the record was kept in the course of a regularly
    conducted activity of a business, organization,
    occupation, or calling, whether or not for profit;
    (C) making the record was a regular practice of
    that activity;
    (D) all these conditions are shown by the testimony
    of the custodian or another qualified witness, or by
    a certification that complies with Rule 902(11) or
    (12) or with a statute permitting certification; and
    (E) neither the source of information nor the
    method or circumstances of preparation indicate a
    lack of trustworthiness.
    
    Id.
     R. 803(6).
    ¶31 The party seeking the admission of business records
    under rule 803(6) must show that these conditions are met
    through either “the testimony of the custodian or another
    qualified witness, or by a certification that complies with
    Rule 902(11).” 
    Id.
     R. 803(6)(D). Under rule 902(11), a party
    must provide foundation for the relevant records through a
    certificate from the custodian “that must be signed in a manner
    that, if falsely made, would subject the signer to criminal
    penalty.” 
    Id.
     R. 902(11). And regarding summaries of these
    types of records and their admissibility, we have previously
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    State v. Buttars
    held that “a summary cannot be used as a cover for
    bringing inadmissible hearsay evidence into the courtroom.” 10
    Sunridge Dev. Corp. v. RB & G Eng'g, Inc., 
    2013 UT App 146
    , ¶ 20,
    
    305 P.3d 171
     (quotation simplified). “Thus, the proponent of
    a summary must also show that the underlying records
    are admissible, which typically requires a showing that
    the records qualify under the business records exception to
    the hearsay rule.” 
    Id.
     See also International Harvester Credit Corp.
    v. Pioneer Tractor & Implement, Inc., 
    626 P.2d 418
    , 422 (Utah 1981)
    10. Buttars argues that the summaries were inadmissible in
    their own right because they “did not prove the content of
    the underlying bank records.” But because we ultimately hold
    that the underlying Frontier records were inadmissible and
    reverse on this basis, we do not need to address the presentation
    of the summaries to the jury. This issue may arise again
    on remand, however, so we note that the cover sheets
    themselves—not necessarily the summaries—are concerning.
    See generally State v. Low, 
    2008 UT 58
    , ¶ 61, 
    192 P.3d 867
    .
    Under rule 1006 of the Utah Rules of Evidence, a party may
    present “a summary, chart, or calculation to prove the content
    of voluminous writings, recordings, or photographs that cannot
    be conveniently examined in court.” Utah R. Evid. 1006
    (emphasis added). These summaries can only “prove the
    content” of what they are summarizing, and Expert’s notations
    on the cover sheets, characterizing certain transactions as
    “questionable” and that money was “commingled” was an
    inappropriate use of this rule, because these notations are
    Expert’s opinion and not part of the content of the actual
    underlying records. Although the cover sheets may well be
    admissible as demonstrative evidence illustrating Expert’s
    testimony, they do not constitute substantive evidence under
    rule 1006. See generally State v. Perea, 
    2013 UT 68
    , ¶¶ 45–46, 
    322 P.3d 624
     (explaining the distinction between substantive and
    demonstrative evidence).
    20170436-CA                     16                
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    State v. Buttars
    (“Rules governing the admissibility of documentary summaries
    and of hearsay evidence must both be complied with.”). 11
    ¶32 The second pertinent rule is the residual hearsay
    exception found in rule 807 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. That
    rule provides:
    Under the following circumstances, a hearsay
    statement is not excluded by the rule against
    hearsay even if the statement is not specifically
    covered by a hearsay exception in Rule 803 or 804:
    (1)   the    statement     has     equivalent
    circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness;
    (2) it is offered as evidence of a material fact;
    (3) it is more probative on the point for which
    it is offered than any other evidence that the
    proponent can obtain through reasonable
    efforts; and
    (4) admitting it will best serve the purposes
    of these rules and the interests of justice.
    Utah R. Evid. R. 807(a).
    11. In the present case, the court deemed all the underlying bank
    records admissible under the residual exception, but the State
    did not seek to admit those records directly. Instead, it had
    Expert prepare summaries of the records pursuant to rule 1006
    and succeeded in having the summaries admitted. Therefore,
    because the summaries were created from the underlying bank
    records, if the bank records were inadmissible hearsay, then the
    summaries are on no stronger footing and would likewise
    constitute inadmissible hearsay.
    20170436-CA                      17                 
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    State v. Buttars
    ¶33 “The residual exception is a catchall provision that may
    be applied when a hearsay statement ‘is not specifically covered
    by a hearsay exception in Rule 803 or 804.’”
    State v. Clopten, 
    2015 UT 82
    , ¶ 23, 
    362 P.3d 1216
     (quoting Utah R.
    Evid. 807(a)). This exception “was intended for use in those rare
    cases where, although the out-of-court statement does not fit into
    a recognized exception, its admission is justified by the inherent
    reliability of the statement and the need for its admission,” State
    v. Nelson, 
    777 P.2d 479
    , 482 (Utah 1989), and is therefore “to be
    used rarely and construed strictly,” State v. Workman, 
    2005 UT 66
    , ¶ 12, 
    122 P.3d 639
    . “Furthermore, several federal circuit
    courts have said that [the residual exception] is to be ‘used very
    rarely, and only in exceptional circumstances.’” State v. Webster,
    
    2001 UT App 238
    , ¶ 26, 
    32 P.3d 976
     (emphasis in original)
    (quoting United States v. Trujillo, 
    136 F.3d 1388
    , 1395 (10th Cir.
    1998)).
    ¶34 We interpret our rules of evidence “like statutes, . . .
    according to their plain language.” Burns v. Boyden, 
    2006 UT 14
    ,
    ¶ 19, 
    133 P.3d 370
    . And when confronted with two potentially
    applicable provisions, the “more specific in application governs
    over the more general provision.” Carter v. University of Utah
    Med. Center, 
    2006 UT 78
    , ¶ 12, 
    150 P.3d 467
     (quotation
    simplified). In the present case, this means that the bank records
    should not have been admitted on the strength of the residual
    rule given the precise applicability and primacy of the business
    records exception.
    ¶35 Here, the business records exception is the specific rule
    dealing with the bank records, and it therefore governs over the
    more general, less favored residual exception. The business
    records exception is in place so that parties can, in a regularized
    and predictable way, seek to have these exact types of records
    admitted into evidence. Parties are therefore required to comply
    with this rule if they wish to seek admission of such records
    because the residual exception was only intended to be used
    when the records “do[] not fit into a recognized exception.”
    20170436-CA                     18               
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    State v. Buttars
    Nelson, 777 P.2d at 482. The bank records in question absolutely
    “fit” within the scope of the business records exception.
    ¶36 We are not necessarily prepared to say that parties could
    never seek to have business records admitted under the residual
    rule, as we can envision scenarios in which a custodian of
    business records has long since passed away or a company has
    gone out of business and cannot produce the necessary
    documentation to authenticate them under rule 902(11). In such
    scenarios, parties might be able to have the business records
    admitted under the residual exception, provided that they make
    a compelling showing explaining why, even though the business
    records do not satisfy the business records exception, the records
    should nevertheless come in under the residual rule.
    ¶37 But in the present case, it was error to admit the bank
    records under the residual rule without a more compelling
    explanation for why the business records exception would not
    suffice. On appeal, the State concedes that “nothing in the record
    . . . suggest[s]” that it could not have called a witness to testify or
    obtained certification as required by rules 803(6) and 902(11).
    Therefore, there is nothing to indicate that this case would be
    one of those “rare cases,” Nelson, 777 P.2d at 482, featuring
    “exceptional circumstances” that would warrant the use of the
    residual exception, Trujillo, 
    136 F.3d at 1395
     (quotation
    simplified). See Clopten, 
    2015 UT 82
    , ¶ 23; Webster, 
    2001 UT App 238
    , ¶ 26. Thus, the bank records were not admissible under the
    residual rule and, by extension, the summaries of those records,
    which is one step removed from the business records
    themselves, was also inadmissible.
    II. Prejudice from Admission of the Frontier Records
    ¶38 Having determined that the district court erroneously
    admitted the bank records under the residual rule, we must now
    consider whether the error prejudiced Buttars. See Utah R. Crim.
    P. 30(a) (“Any error, defect, irregularity or variance which does
    not affect the substantial rights of a party shall be disregarded.”).
    20170436-CA                      19                 
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    State v. Buttars
    To do this, “we must determine whether there is a reasonable
    likelihood that the outcome of [Buttars’s] trial would have been
    more favorable to him” had the court not erred in admitting the
    bank records. See State v. Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987).
    “This determination . . . is based upon a review of the record . . .
    [and] require[s] us to determine from the record what evidence
    would have been before the jury absent the error.” 
    Id.
    ¶39 While the district court ruled that all the bank records
    were inadmissible under the business records exception and
    admitted them under the residual rule, it is clear that the Chase
    records had the proper custodial certificates and were readily
    admissible under the business records exception. Thus, we
    analyze whether Buttars was prejudiced by the court’s error in
    admitting the Frontier records, which lacked such certificates.
    See supra note 7.
    ¶40 The State asserts that Buttars has not suffered prejudice
    from this error, arguing that the State could have simply called a
    witness to testify or obtained certification as required by rules
    803(6) and 902(11) of the Utah Rules of Evidence to authenticate
    the Frontier records, thereby allowing their admission. But
    nothing in the record suggests that this was actually the case. In
    fact, the opposite is more likely. One assumes that if the State
    could have so easily called a witness to vouch for the records or
    obtained the necessary certification, it would have done so.
    Instead, the State and Buttars litigated the admissibility of these
    records at some length, and the State put all its eggs in the
    residual rule basket. In April 2016, after the State moved for the
    records to be admitted under rule 70312 or 803(6), the district
    12. Rule 703 states that
    [a]n expert may base an opinion on facts or data in
    the case that the expert has been made aware of or
    personally observed. If experts in the particular
    field would reasonably rely on those kinds of facts
    (continued…)
    20170436-CA                     20                
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    State v. Buttars
    court ruled that the records were not admissible under rule
    803(6) because the State “need[ed] to provide foundation in
    support of the bank records to establish an indicia of reliability.”
    It did not rule on the rule 703 portion of the State’s motion
    because neither party fully briefed the issue, and it asked for
    further briefing so that it could more fully consider that
    rationale. In the requested briefing, the State strengthened its
    rule 703 analysis but alternatively asked the court to admit the
    records under the residual exception. Nearly two months after
    its initial ruling, the court granted the State’s motion,
    disregarding the rule 703 portion of the State’s analysis and
    concluding that the bank records were admissible under the
    residual rule.
    ¶41 This procedural history appears to contradict the State’s
    position on appeal that it could have easily called a witness to
    testify and provide authentication or obtained certification for
    the Frontier records under rules 803(6) and 902(11). 13 As
    (…continued)
    or data in forming an opinion on the subject, they
    need not be admissible for the opinion to be
    admitted. But if the facts or data would otherwise
    be inadmissible, the proponent of the opinion may
    disclose them to the jury only if their probative
    value in helping the jury evaluate the opinion
    substantially outweighs their prejudicial effect.
    Utah R. Evid. 703.
    13. Rule 803(6) requires that the party seeking the admission of
    records through the business records exception provide
    foundation for the records through “the testimony of the
    custodian or another qualified witness, or by a certification that
    complies with Rule 902(11).” Utah R. Evid. 803(6)(D). Rule
    902(11) provides that for business records to be admitted, the
    foundation of the records must be “shown by a certification of
    (continued…)
    20170436-CA                     21                
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    State v. Buttars
    indicated, if it was such a simple task, we fail to see why the
    State did not undertake it in the two-month period after the
    court’s first ruling in April when it informed the State of the
    problem with the records’ authentication. Rather than
    continuing to try and get the records admitted under a different
    rule—which result was less assured than if the State had simply
    attempted to get them admitted under rule 803(6)—calling upon
    the custodian to testify or furnish the required certification in
    compliance with rule 803(6) would have been a much more
    sensible way to proceed. And if, contrary to its position on
    appeal, the State could not have done this, then it should have
    made a more compelling showing of the problems with
    authenticating the records in the usual way and then moved to
    admit them under the residual exception. But the State did not
    do so. Therefore, in analyzing prejudice, we are unwilling to
    conclude that the State could have simply called the custodian as
    a witness or obtained certification for the records to be admitted
    under the business records exception.
    ¶42 This is not the end of the prejudice inquiry, however,
    because we must also determine whether, without these
    inadmissible records, Buttars would have been likely to receive a
    more favorable result at trial. To convict Buttars of securities
    fraud, the State had to prove that he, “in connection with the
    offer, sale, or purchase of any security, . . . [made] any untrue
    statement of a material fact or . . . omit[ted] to state a material
    fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light
    of the circumstances under which they are made, not
    misleading.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 61-1-1
    (2) (LexisNexis 2018). And
    to convict him of a pattern of unlawful activity, the State was
    required to prove that Buttars “engag[ed] in conduct which
    (…continued)
    the custodian or another qualified person that must be signed in
    a manner that, if falsely made, would subject the signer to
    criminal penalty.”
    20170436-CA                     22               
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    State v. Buttars
    constitute[d] the commission of at least three episodes of
    unlawful activity, which episodes [were] not isolated, but have
    the same or similar purposes, results, participants, victims, or
    methods of commission, or otherwise are interrelated by
    distinguishing characteristics.” 
    Id.
     § 76-10-1602(2).
    ¶43 The cover sheets and the underlying summaries provided
    the jury with a detailed explanation of how much money was in
    the business accounts when Buttars solicited the investor money,
    where the investor money was deposited, and how Buttars used
    that money. The majority of the evidentiary backing for these
    summaries and the cover sheets came directly from the
    inadmissible Frontier records, and our review of the record on
    appeal shows that it is not reasonably likely that Buttars would
    have been convicted based on the Chase records alone. Indeed,
    the summaries and cover sheets contained only fleeting
    references to the Chase account, indicating that the State
    understood that if it were to get a conviction, the Frontier
    records were vital to its case.
    ¶44 The State’s case hinged on the Frontier records, and
    without those records, the State would have had an extremely
    difficult task of proving that Buttars made misleading statements
    that amounted to a pattern of unlawful activity. The Frontier
    records were tied directly to testimony from the investors, who
    explained what Buttars had told them regarding how he was
    going to use their money and the great shape the companies
    were in. The Frontier records showed that he did not use the
    money in the manner which he told the investors he would and
    that the companies were actually severely underfunded at the
    time he solicited the investors’ money, thus making his
    statements to the investors misleading or untrue. In conjunction
    with the investors’ testimony, then, the Frontier records gave the
    jury an adequate basis on which to find Buttars guilty on four
    counts of securities fraud and one count of a pattern of unlawful
    activity. But without these records, it is reasonably likely that the
    jury would not have found that Buttars committed securities
    20170436-CA                     23                 
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    State v. Buttars
    fraud, much less that he perpetrated a pattern of unlawful
    activity.
    ¶45 The district court’s error in admitting the Frontier records
    under the residual exception prejudiced Buttars because nothing
    in the record on appeal establishes that the State could have
    actually called a witness to authenticate the Frontier records or
    obtained certification, and without the Frontier records there is a
    “reasonable likelihood that the outcome of [Buttars’s] trial
    would have been more favorable to him.” See State v. Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987).
    III. Suppression of the Bank Records
    ¶46 Buttars asserts that the district court erred in denying his
    motion to suppress the Frontier and Chase records, arguing that
    the erroneous inclusion of the secrecy language from Utah Code
    section 77-22a-1(4) rendered the subpoenas illegal, resulting in
    the bank records being “unconstitutionally seized.” While the
    statute was violated in a technical manner, mere violations of
    statutes do not automatically rise to the level of a constitutional
    violation. See Screws v. United States, 
    325 U.S. 91
    , 108 (1945)
    (“Violation of local law does not necessarily mean that federal
    rights have been invaded.”); Creative Env’ts, Inc. v. Estabrook, 
    680 F.2d 822
    , 833 (1st Cir. 1982) (“The violation of a state statute does
    not automatically give rise to a violation of rights secured by the
    Constitution.”) (quotation simplified). Buttars has not met his
    burden of showing that the mere inclusion of the erroneous
    secrecy language, which resulted in Buttars not receiving notice
    of subpoenas he could not have quashed in any event, renders
    the seizure of the bank records unreasonable and violative of his
    Utah and United States constitutional rights.
    ¶47 Insofar as Buttars asserts that he was entitled under the
    statute to suppression of the bank records, his argument is
    unavailing because he fails to demonstrate prejudice in that
    regard. Rule 30(a) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure
    “foreclose[s] reversal of a conviction unless the error is
    20170436-CA                     24                 
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    State v. Buttars
    substantial and prejudicial in the sense that there is a reasonable
    likelihood that in its absence there would have been a more
    favorable result for the defendant.” State v. Dominguez, 
    2011 UT 11
    , ¶ 22, 
    248 P.3d 473
     (quotation simplified). Buttars has not
    shown that had the complained-of language not been included
    in the subpoena and had he received notice of the subpoenas
    that he would have been able to quash them. He argues that he
    “was entitled to a pre-compliance opportunity to object [to the
    subpoenas] regardless of whether he would ultimately succeed
    in quashing them.” This is incorrect. Buttars must show that
    “there is a reasonable likelihood that [absent the error] the
    outcome . . . would have been more favorable to him.” State v.
    Knight, 
    734 P.2d 913
    , 920 (Utah 1987). See Utah R. Crim. P. 30(a)
    (“Any error, defect, irregularity or variance which does not
    affect the substantial rights of a party shall be disregarded.”).
    Buttars has not attempted to show that he would have
    succeeded in quashing the subpoena and therefore has not
    shown prejudice on this claim.
    ¶48 Thus, we agree with the district court that “even if the
    secrecy provision was not included in the subpoena[s], there is
    no evidence that [Buttars] would have . . . successfully moved to
    quash them” and thus that absent the error there is a reasonable
    likelihood that he would have received a more favorable result.
    “We therefore conclude that the [secrecy language] constituted
    nothing more than [a technical error] which did not affect the
    validity of the [subpoenas] and the search conducted
    thereunder.” State v. Anderton, 
    668 P.2d 1258
    , 1262 (Utah 1983).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶49 Absent a showing by the State that the circumstances
    required it to seek admission under rule 807 rather than under
    the usual business records exception found in rule 803(6), the
    district court erred in admitting the Frontier bank records under
    the residual exception found in rule 807 of the Utah Rules of
    Evidence. This error prejudiced Buttars because those records
    20170436-CA                     25               
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    State v. Buttars
    constituted the bulk of the critical evidence presented, on which
    the jury found Buttars guilty on four counts of securities fraud
    and one count of pattern of unlawful activity. Without those
    records, there is a reasonable likelihood that Buttars would have
    received a more favorable result at trial. Accordingly, Buttars is
    entitled to the new trial he requests, and we reverse and remand
    for that trial or for such other proceedings as may now be
    appropriate.
    20170436-CA                    26               
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