State v. Tomas Jaymitchell Hoyle ( 2023 )


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    2023 WI 24
    SUPREME COURT            OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2020AP1876-CR
    COMPLETE TITLE:        State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner,
    v.
    Tomas Jaymitchell Hoyle,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    402 Wis. 2d 308
    , 
    974 N.W.2d 893
    (2022 – unpublished)
    OPINION FILED:         March 31, 2023
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         December 13, 2022
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Chippewa
    JUDGE:              James M. Isaacson
    JUSTICES:
    ZIEGLER, C.J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court, in
    which   ROGGENSACK,  REBECCA    GRASSL BRADLEY,  HAGEDORN,   and
    KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.       HAGEDORN, J., filed a concurring
    opinion, in which REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., joined.    DALLET,
    J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY, J.,
    joined.
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the plaintiff-respondent-petitioner, there were briefs
    filed by Jennifer L. Vandermeuse, assistant attorney general,
    with whom on the briefs was Joshua L. Kaul, attorney general.
    There was an oral argument by Jennifer L. Vandermeuse, assistant
    attorney general.
    For the defendant-appellant, there was a brief filed by
    Thomas B. Aquino, assistant state public defender. There was an
    oral   argument   by   Thomas   B.   Aquino,   assistant   state   public
    defender.
    2
    
    2023 WI 24
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.       2020AP1876-CR
    (L.C. No.    2015CF1159)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                       :            IN SUPREME COURT
    State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner,
    FILED
    v.                                                   MAR 31, 2023
    Tomas Jaymitchell Hoyle,                                      Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ZIEGLER, C.J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court, in
    which   ROGGENSACK,  REBECCA    GRASSL BRADLEY,  HAGEDORN,   and
    KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.       HAGEDORN, J., filed a concurring
    opinion, in which REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., joined.    DALLET,
    J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY, J.,
    joined.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.           Reversed.
    ¶1     ANNETTE KINGSLAND ZIEGLER, C.J.        This is a review of
    an unpublished decision of the court of appeals, State v. Hoyle,
    No. 2020AP1876-CR, unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. Apr. 26,
    2022), reversing the Chippewa County circuit court's1 judgment of
    conviction against Tomas Jaymitchell Hoyle for two counts each
    of second-degree sexual assault and second-degree sexual assault
    1   The Honorable James M. Isaacson presided.
    No.       2020AP1876-CR
    of a child, and also reversing the circuit court's order denying
    Hoyle's motion for postconviction relief.                         We reverse.
    ¶2      Hoyle      argues    that    he       is    entitled       to        a    new   trial
    because       the   prosecutor       at    Hoyle's         trial     violated            his   Fifth
    Amendment       right      against    self-incrimination                 under          Griffin    v.
    California, 
    380 U.S. 609
     (1965), by adversely commenting on his
    decision not to testify.                  According to Hoyle, the prosecutor
    argued      "that    Hoyle    should       be       convicted      because           the    alleged
    victim's testimony was 'uncontroverted'" and that this was a
    comment on Hoyle's decision not to testify because "[o]nly Hoyle
    could have contradicted [the alleged victim's] sexual assault
    allegations."
    ¶3      We    conclude        that        Hoyle       is         not         entitled       to
    postconviction relief.              The prosecutor at Hoyle's criminal trial
    did not violate Hoyle's Fifth Amendment rights under Griffin
    because the prosecutor did not comment on Hoyle's silence.                                        The
    prosecutor          instead        described          the      State's              evidence       as
    "uncontroverted" to remind the jury that they could evaluate
    only the evidence presented at trial and not speculate about
    other possible evidence.                  Additionally, the jury likely would
    not have thought only Hoyle could have controverted the State's
    evidence      because      defense     counsel         explicitly         identified           other
    kinds    of    evidence      not    presented         at    trial.        In        context,      the
    prosecutor's           remarks       that           the     State's            evidence           was
    "uncontroverted" were neither "manifestly intended to be" nor
    "of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily
    take     [them]      to    be"     adverse          comments       on    Hoyle's           silence.
    2
    No.   2020AP1876-CR
    Morrison v. United States, 
    6 F.2d 809
    , 811 (8th Cir. 1925).                           The
    prosecutor therefore did not comment on Hoyle's silence, and the
    circuit      court     was    correct        to      deny    Hoyle's      motion   for
    postconviction relief.             We reverse the court of appeals.
    I.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE
    ¶4     On March 14, 2017, Hannah,2 then a 15-year-old minor,
    disclosed to her school resource officer, Officer Joseph Nelson
    of the Chippewa Falls Police Department, that she was sexually
    assaulted in February 2017.               Officer Nelson emailed Investigator
    Kari Szotkowski, Chippewa County Sheriff's Department, that same
    day    reporting      the    sexual       assault.      Investigator       Szotkowski
    interviewed Hannah at Hannah's school on March 15, during which
    Hannah reported her account of the sexual assault but did not
    say who assaulted her.             Hannah later disclosed to Officer Nelson
    in    May    2017    that    she    was    assaulted        by   Hoyle,   who   was    a
    stepbrother to one of Hannah's friends and 20 years old at the
    time of the alleged assault.                 Hoyle was subsequently arrested
    and charged with two counts each of second-degree sexual assault
    contrary to 
    Wis. Stat. § 940.225
    (2) (2021-22)3 and second-degree
    sexual assault of a child less than 16 years of age contrary to
    
    Wis. Stat. § 948.02
    (2).
    ¶5     The trial took place over two days in December, 2018.
    According to pretrial filings, Hoyle did not plan to call any
    2   "Hannah" is a pseudonym used in place of the victim's
    name.      See Wis. Stat. (Rule) § 809.86(4).
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    3
    the 2021-22 version unless otherwise indicated.
    3
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    witnesses during trial.                Prior to the start of Hoyle's trial
    while discussing motions in limine, the prosecutor asked the
    circuit court if he would be permitted to refer to the State's
    case    as    "uncontroverted"         during   his    closing      argument         should
    Hoyle invoke his right not to testify.                The prosecutor argued,
    So should the defendant not testify, I think the State
    is   allowed   to   argue    that   the   evidence   is
    uncontroverted, meaning that you only have heard from
    [Hannah].   That's not commenting upon the defense's
    right to silence but commenting upon the evidence in
    front of the jurors at that time.     I can't say it's
    uncontroverted because the defendant didn't testify,
    but I can say that her testimony is uncontroverted and
    that you haven't heard any testimony to the contrary.
    The    court        granted    the     prosecutor's         request     over        defense
    counsel's objection.
    ¶6      The State presented two witnesses at trial:                           Hannah
    and Investigator Szotkowski.               Hannah testified that the day of
    the assault she "had taken some Vicodin and drank some alcohol"
    and that she "obviously was high" but "still had a sense of what
    was going on."          Hoyle drove up to Hannah while she was walking
    to a friend's house and asked if she "wanted to hang out," to
    which Hannah agreed.           Hannah said that Hoyle "kept poking [her]
    legs" during the drive.              At one point, Hoyle drove down a dead-
    end road and stopped in the middle of the road.                             Hannah exited
    the    car,    and    Hoyle    "told    [her]   to    get    back     into     the    car."
    Hannah got into the "back seat passenger side" because she "was
    scared"       and    "didn't   want     [Hoyle]   touching       [her]        any    more."
    Hoyle then climbed into the back seat, pulled down Hannah's
    pants and underwear, and sexually assaulted her.                             Hoyle drove
    4
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    Hannah     back   home,   dropped   her   off    at   "the   bar    across     the
    street," and said to Hannah, "if anyone finds out about this,
    someone is going to end up dead."
    ¶7     Investigator Szotkowski testified that she determined
    the   location      of    the   sexual    assault       based      on     Hannah's
    description.      She otherwise had difficulty investigating because
    she "didn't know who the suspect was" at the time.
    ¶8     Hoyle exercised his right under the Fifth Amendment
    not   to    testify.      The   defense    did    not    present        any   other
    witnesses.
    ¶9     Before closing arguments, the court read instructions
    to the jury.        As relevant to this case, the court gave the
    following standard jury instructions:
    The burden of establishing every fact necessary
    to constitute guilt is upon the State. Before you can
    return a verdict of guilty, the evidence must satisfy
    you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is
    guilty.   If you can reconcile the evidence upon any
    reasonable hypothesis consistent with the defendant's
    innocence, you should do so and return a verdict of
    not guilty. [Wis. JI——Criminal 140 (2019).]
    . . . .
    A reasonable doubt is not a doubt which is based
    upon mere guesswork or speculation. . . . While it is
    your duty to give the defendant the benefit of every
    reasonable doubt, you are not to search for doubt.
    You are to search for the truth. [Id.]
    . . . .
    . . . [E]vidence is   the   sworn  testimony   of
    witnesses   both   on direct   and   cross-examination
    regardless of who called that witness. . . .     [T]he
    evidence in this case to be considered is the
    5
    No.   2020AP1876-CR
    testimony of witnesses only.   [Wis. JI——Criminal 103
    (2000).]
    . . . .
    . . . In weighing the evidence, you may take into
    account matters of your own common knowledge and your
    observations and experiences in the affairs of life.
    [Wis. JI——Criminal 195 (2000).]
    . . . .
    It is the duty of the jury to scrutinize and to
    weigh the testimony of witnesses and determine the
    effect of the evidence as a whole.    You are the sole
    judges of the credibility, that is, the believability
    of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their
    testimony.   In determining the credibility of each
    witness and the weight you give to the testimony of
    each witness, consider these factors:
    Whether the witness has an interest or lack of
    interest in the result of the trial; the witness'
    conduct, appearance, and demeanor on the witness
    stand; the clearness or lack of clearness of the
    witness' recollections; the opportunity the witness
    had for observing and for knowing the matters about
    which she testified about; the reasonableness of the
    witness' testimony; the apparent intelligence of the
    witness; bias or prejudice, if any has been shown;
    possible motives for falsifying testimony, and all
    other facts and circumstances during a trial which
    tend either to support or to discredit the testimony.
    Then give to the testimony of each witness the weight
    you believe it should receive. [Wis. JI——Criminal 300
    (2000).]
    . . . .
    In this case the defendant has elected not to
    testify.   In a criminal case, he has the absolute
    constitutional right not to testify.   The defendant's
    decision not to testify must not be considered by you
    in any way and must not influence your verdict in any
    manner. [Wis. JI——Criminal 315 (2001).]
    6
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    ¶10   The prosecutor began his closing argument immediately
    after the court finished reading the jury instructions.               He
    began by restating and emphasizing certain instructions:
    [Y]ou are to decide this case solely, solely on the
    evidence offered and received at the trial. What that
    means is you're only to base it upon what you heard
    yesterday when the evidence was coming in at trial.
    You're not to speculate about other things that may be
    out there.   You're not to think about other things.
    You're to focus solely on the evidence that was
    presented to you yesterday in this trial.
    In fact, in order to reemphasize that, it's
    mentioned again in another instruction where it says,
    you are to consider only the evidence received during
    the trial. Once again, not to consider anything else.
    You're supposed to just focus on what you heard
    yesterday with the testimony.    [Hannah's] testimony
    that she gave here yesterday is uncontroverted.   You
    have heard no evidence disputing her account of that
    sexual assault.   You heard nothing. . . . You heard
    her testify[, and] . . . [t]hat is what the testimony
    is.
    The prosecutor summarized Hannah's testimony and described it as
    "uncontroverted"   because   "[t]here   is   absolutely    no   evidence
    disputing her account of what occurred."        He further explained
    that the jury could not "speculate":
    I can pretty much guarantee that the defense is going
    to get up here and say, what about this?    What about
    this in the investigation? What about that in the
    investigation?   Why didn't they do this?   Why didn't
    they do that?   Once again, the Judge instructed you,
    and you need to read that in the jury instructions,
    that you're not to base your decision, you're not to
    base doubt on guesswork or speculation. In fact, the
    Judge instructed you, you are not to search for doubt.
    You are to search for the truth.
    You are not to sit there and say, what if I had
    this information, what if I had that information, what
    7
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    if this was different, what if that was different?
    You're not to speculate. You're not to guess. You're
    to focus on what you heard yesterday, and what you
    heard yesterday was this young lady testifying about
    how she was assaulted by this defendant. . . .
    . . . None of that was controverted, meaning it
    was all uncontroverted, meaning there was nothing
    controverting    her  statements  about   what   had
    occurred . . . .
    They will want you to speculate about what you
    could know, what they think you should have known, but
    it's not about speculation.      It's about what you
    heard.   In this case, because you only heard from
    [Hannah] about it, you didn't hear from any of her
    friends or anyone else testifying about it, it all
    comes down to her credibility.
    He then argued that the jury should evaluate Hannah's testimony
    based on their "common experiences of life" and that Hannah was
    a credible witness based on her demeanor, lack of testimony
    establishing     a    motive     to   lie,   and    the   clarity     of     her
    recollections.       On rebuttal, the prosecutor told the jury,
    You need to make the decision based upon the
    uncontroverted testimony of what she says occurred.
    They don't disagree it's uncontroverted.    They just
    say you should ask for more. It's not my job to give
    you information I don't have. I'm not going to argue
    and say this is why you don't have it or that is why
    you don't have it. You don't have it. I will agree
    to that, you don't have that additional information,
    but the jury instruction says you are not to speculate
    about that.
    ¶11   The jury found Hoyle guilty on all counts.                The court
    sentenced Hoyle to eight years of initial confinement and 10
    years of extended supervision.
    ¶12   Hoyle      filed   a   motion    for   postconviction     relief   on
    August 11, 2020, arguing, among other things, that he should
    8
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    receive a new trial because "the [S]tate repeatedly stated in
    its closing argument that the evidence is 'uncontroverted'" in
    violation of Hoyle's right not to testify.4                               The circuit court
    orally denied Hoyle's motion during a hearing, concluding, "I
    don't think that was a comment on the defendant's failure to
    testify" because the prosecutor was arguing, "the only result
    that       could   be   reached       from   what         the    testimony        was,    if   you
    believed      [Hannah],        was    that   the          defendant    raped       her."       The
    circuit       court     later    issued      a       written      order     denying      Hoyle's
    motion for postconviction relief.
    ¶13     Hoyle     appealed      the       circuit        court's     order,       and   the
    court of       appeals      reversed.        The court of appeals concluded,
    "[T]he       State's       repeated        argument          that     the     evidence         was
    'uncontroverted' was improper under the circumstances of this
    case, where the only person who could controvert the alleged
    victim's testimony was Hoyle" and "thus violated Hoyle's Fifth
    Amendment          right    not       to     testify             at   trial."              Hoyle,
    No. 2020AP1876-CR, ¶2.
    ¶14     The State petitioned this court for review, which we
    granted.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶15     This     case     requires            us    to     "determine        whether      a
    defendant's         Fifth       Amendment            privilege        against       compulsory
    incrimination [has been] violated."                             State v. Ernst, 2005 WI
    Hoyle raised six additional bases for postconviction
    4
    relief. None of these additional claims were raised before this
    court.
    9
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    107, ¶11, 
    283 Wis. 2d 300
    , 
    699 N.W.2d 92
    .                               This involves "the
    application      of   constitutional         principles            to    facts,"     which      we
    review de novo as questions of law.                       State v. Spaeth, 
    2012 WI 95
    , ¶30, 
    343 Wis. 2d 220
    , 
    819 N.W.2d 769
    .
    III.     ANALYSIS
    ¶16     We begin with an overview of United States Supreme
    Court cases developing the right against adverse comment on a
    defendant's      decision      not     to    testify.              We    then      proceed      by
    reviewing      how    the     federal       circuit       courts           of     appeals      and
    Wisconsin courts have applied the Supreme Court's precedent in
    the area of indirect comment on a defendant's silence.                                   Finally,
    we analyze Hoyle's claim that the prosecutor violated his rights
    under    Griffin       by     referring          to     the     State's          evidence       as
    "uncontroverted"        and    conclude          that     the       prosecutor           did   not
    comment on Hoyle's silence.
    A.   Text And United States Supreme Court Cases
    ¶17     Under      the     Fifth       Amendment          to     the        United     States
    Constitution,         "No    person . . . shall               be        compelled        in    any
    criminal case to be a witness against himself."                                   U.S. Const.
    amend.    V;     accord       Malloy        v.    Hogan,           
    378 U.S. 1
          (1964)
    (incorporating the Fifth Amendment against the states).
    ¶18     In Griffin, 
    380 U.S. 609
    , the United States Supreme
    Court    interpreted          the     Fifth           Amendment          as      providing       a
    constitutional right for defendants to remain silent at trial
    without the jury drawing an adverse inference from that silence.
    The defendant in Griffin was on trial for first-degree murder
    and invoked his right not to testify.                     
    Id. at 609-10
    .             The court
    10
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    instructed the jury, "As to any evidence or facts against him
    which   the    defendant      can    reasonably            be   expected        to    deny    or
    explain . . . if       he   does     not    testify . . . the             jury       may    take
    that failure into consideration as tending to indicate the truth
    of such evidence . . . ."             
    Id. at 610
    .                 The prosecutor acted
    accordingly in closing argument:                  "These things he has not seen
    fit to take the stand and deny or explain"; "[the victim] is
    dead, she can't tell you her side of the story.                                The defendant
    won't."    
    Id. at 611
    .
    ¶19      The Supreme Court concluded both the court's and the
    prosecutor's actions were unconstitutional, holding the Fifth
    Amendment     "forbids      either    comment         by    the    prosecution         on    the
    accused's silence or instructions by the court that such silence
    is   evidence    of    guilt."         
    Id. at 614
    .         In     reaching         this
    conclusion,      the     Court      first        noted      the     federal          statutory
    prohibition      against      drawing       an        adverse       inference         from     a
    defendant's silence.         
    Id. at 612-13
    .            It then reasoned,
    If the words "fifth Amendment" are substituted for
    "act" and for "statute" [in Wilson, which held that
    adverse comment on silence was statutorily prohibited]
    the spirit of the Self-Incrimination         Clause is
    reflected. For comment on the refusal to testify is a
    remnant of the "inquisitorial system of criminal
    justice," which the Fifth Amendment outlaws. It is a
    penalty   imposed   by   courts    for   exercising  a
    constitutional privilege.      It cuts down on the
    privilege by making its assertion costly.
    
    Id. at 614
     (citation and footnote omitted).
    ¶20      The Court clarified the rule against adverse comment
    on a defendant's silence in Lakeside v. Oregon, 
    435 U.S. 333
    11
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    (1978).     There, the Court held a trial court could instruct a
    jury,     over     a     defendant's        objection,          not     to     consider      a
    defendant's silence.             
    Id. at 338
    .            Examining its decision in
    Griffin, the Court observed, "It is clear from even a cursory
    review of the facts and the square holding of the Griffin case
    that the Court was there concerned only with adverse comment,"
    which is comment "that such silence is evidence of guilt."                                 
    Id.
    at 338–39 (quoting Griffin, 
    380 U.S. at 615
    ).
    ¶21   Accordingly,          "[a]lthough           Griffin       can     be   read     to
    prohibit    any        direct    reference        to    a    defendant's       failure      to
    testify," the Supreme Court "has declined to adopt such a broad
    reading of Griffin."             United States v. Wing, 
    104 F.3d 986
    , 990
    (7th Cir. 1997) (citing Lakeside, 
    435 U.S. 333
    ).                               The Griffin
    rule is concerned only with adverse comment——that is, comment on
    "the evil to which Griffin addressed itself:                           the invitation to
    infer guilt from a defendant's decision not to take the stand."
    
    Id.
    ¶22   The case before us does not involve a direct comment
    on a defendant's silence but rather an alleged indirect comment.
    "[T]he    Supreme       Court     has     never    clearly        established       that     a
    prosecutor       may    not     comment    on     the       evidence    in    a    way    that
    indirectly       refers    to    the    defendant's          silence."         Edwards      v.
    12
    No.      2020AP1876-CR
    Roper, 
    688 F.3d 449
    , 460 (8th Cir. 2012).                  However, it has come
    close.5
    ¶23       In United States v. Hastings, 
    461 U.S. 499
     (1983), a
    prosecutor stated during closing argument, "Let's look at the
    evidence the defendant[s] put on here for you so that we can put
    that       in     perspective.       I'm   going     to    tell      you      what   the
    defendant[s] did not do. . . .              The defendants at no time ever
    challenged any of the rapes . . . ."                
    Id. at 502
    .         Resolving the
    case on harmless error, the Court did not decide whether the
    prosecutor's          remarks     constituted      adverse     comments        on    the
    defendant's silence.             
    Id. at 509
    .        In a concurring opinion,
    Justice Stevens took the view that there was no constitutional
    error because, "[i]n reviewing the evidence adduced at the 5-day
    trial,          the   prosecutor    identified      the      weaknesses        in    the
    defendants' presentations and invited inferences from the main
    focus of the evidence presented by the five defendants."                         
    Id. at 514
     (Stevens, J., concurring).              In other words, Justice Stevens
    explained         that   the    prosecutor's    comments      were      not    improper
    because "the protective shield of the Fifth Amendment should
    The Supreme Court addressed a factual scenario similar to
    5
    this case in Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
     (1978). In Lockett,
    the Court "quickly dismissed the argument that the prosecutor
    had violated the defendant's right to remain silent when he
    repeatedly remarked that the evidence was uncontradicted."
    United States v. Robinson, 
    485 U.S. 25
    , 33 (1988) (citing
    Lockett, 
    438 U.S. 586
    ).    However, the Court "did not need to
    decide whether such comment was generally improper, because in
    that case 'Lockett's own counsel had clearly focused the jury's
    attention on her silence.'"   
    Id.
     (quoting Lockett, 
    438 U.S. at 595
    ). Hoyle's trial counsel did not make any similar statement
    in this case.
    13
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    [not] be converted into a sword that cuts back on the area of
    legitimate comment by the prosecutor on the weaknesses in the
    defense case."6           Id. at 515 (Stevens, J., concurring).
    ¶24    Though these cases make clear that the Griffin rule
    prohibits adverse comment on a defendant's silence, the Supreme
    Court     has       not    established     a        framework      for    deciding      if    a
    statement is a comment on a defendant's silence and whether such
    comment is adverse.
    B.    Federal Circuit Courts Of Appeals And Wisconsin Cases
    ¶25    The       prevailing       standard        among    the      federal     circuit
    courts of appeals for determining whether a prosecutor violates
    the Fifth Amendment by adversely commenting on a defendant's
    silence    first          appeared    in   the      Eighth     Circuit's       decision      in
    Morrison,       
    6 F.2d 809
    .      Morrison        did   not    analyze      the    Fifth
    Amendment but rather the federal statutory prohibition against
    adverse    comment          on   a   defendant's       silence.          See   
    id.
         at    811
    (citing Act of March 16, 1878, ch. 37, 
    20 Stat. 30
     (codified at
    
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    )).              The prosecutor made the following comments
    to the jury in closing argument:
    6 The Supreme Court later favorably cited Justice Stevens'
    Hastings concurrence in Robinson, 
    485 U.S. 25
    .        That case
    involved a prosecutor's comment on a defendant's silence in
    response to defense counsel's assertion that the government did
    not permit the defendant to explain his side of the story. 
    485 U.S. at 27-28
    .    The Court held that the prosecutor's comments
    did not violate the Fifth Amendment, explaining that in some
    cases "the prosecutor's reference to the defendant's opportunity
    to testify is a fair response to a claim made by defendant or
    his counsel." 
    Id. at 32
    .
    14
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    While you are the sole judges of the facts in the
    case, you would not be at liberty, of course, to
    arbitrarily disregard or reject testimony in the case,
    and especially where it is not contradicted, unless in
    the consideration of that testimony in some way you
    find it necessary in the performance of your duty to
    discredit or reject it.    Then, of course, you should
    give it the weight and consideration you think it
    should receive at your hands.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added).               The Eighth Circuit first concluded, "It
    is clear that this language contained no direct comment on the
    failure of accused to testify."                      
    Id.
         The court then considered
    whether      it    was    an   "indirect             comment"         using     the     following
    test:      "Was the language used manifestly intended to be, or was
    it    of    such    character        that       the        jury       would    naturally        and
    necessarily        take   it   to    be     a   comment          on    the    failure      of   the
    accused to testify?"                
    Id.
     (emphases added).                      Employing this
    test, the court concluded the prosecutor did not comment on the
    defendant's silence because "[t]estimony by the defendant was
    not   the    only    method     of    contradicting              the    story       told   by   the
    government's witnesses, if untrue."                        
    Id.
            The court also noted,
    "Comment      by    court      and        counsel      that       certain           testimony    is
    uncontradicted is common, oftentimes helpful, and very generally
    held to be without error."                 
    Id.
     (collecting sources).
    ¶26    Since the Eighth Circuit's decision in Morrison, every
    federal      circuit      court      has     applied         a    substantially            similar
    version     of     this   test       in    Fifth       Amendment         comment-on-silence
    15
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    cases.7    The Wisconsin Court of Appeals likewise has applied the
    Morrison    test.    It   first   did     so    in    State     v.       Johnson,   
    121 Wis. 2d 237
    , 
    358 N.W.2d 824
     (Ct. App. 1984), where a pro se
    defendant delivered an opening statement to the jury but did not
    testify.     Id. at 242.     The prosecutor cautioned the jury that
    the defendant's "statements were not evidence and were not given
    under oath or subject to cross-examination."                   Id.       The court of
    appeals    cited    the   Morrison   formulation          as       the     "test    for
    determining    whether    remarks    are       directed       to     a    defendant's
    failure to testify."       Id. at 246 (quoting Bontempo v. Fenton,
    
    692 F.2d 954
    , 959 (3d Cir. 1982)).                   The court concluded the
    prosecutor did not indirectly comment on the defendant's failure
    to testify, reasoning,
    While   the   prosecutor's  remarks  might  have
    prompted the jury to recall and reflect upon [the
    defendant's] failure to testify, we do not conclude
    that the remarks highlighted such a failure to
    testify.   The remarks were directed at the manner in
    which the jury should consider the opening statement
    and did not address [the defendant's] failure to take
    the stand. . . . [T]hese remarks were not manifestly
    intended or of such a character that the jury would
    7   See, e.g., Taylor v. Medeiros, 
    983 F.3d 566
    , 576 (1st Cir.
    2020);    United States v. Daugerdas, 
    837 F.3d 212
    , 227 (2d Cir.
    2016);     United States v. Savage, 
    970 F.3d 217
    , 308 (3d Cir.
    2020);   United States v. Rand, 
    835 F.3d 451
    , 466 (4th Cir. 2016);
    United     States v. Perry, 
    35 F.4th 293
    , 341 (5th Cir. 2022);
    United   States v. Gonzalez, 
    512 F.3d 285
    , 292-93 (6th Cir. 2008);
    United    States v. Phillips, 
    745 F.3d 829
    , 834 (7th Cir. 2014);
    United    States v. LaFontaine, 
    847 F.3d 974
    , 979 (8th Cir. 2017);
    United    States v. Mikhel, 
    889 F.3d 1003
    , 1060 (9th Cir. 2018);
    United    States v. Christy, 
    916 F.3d 814
    , 830 (10th Cir. 2019);
    United    States v. Hano, 
    922 F.3d 1272
    , 1295 (11th Cir. 2019);
    United   States v. Brown, 
    508 F.3d 1066
    , 1071 (D.C. Cir. 2007).
    16
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    naturally and necessarily take them to be a comment on
    the failure of the accused to testify.
    Id. at 248.
    ¶27   The court of appeals later applied the Morrison test
    again in State v. Jaimes, 
    2006 WI App 93
    , 
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , 
    715 N.W.2d 669
    .        There, a prosecutor commented that other alleged
    collaborators were not "going to walk into court . . . and waive
    [their] Fifth Amendment rights . . . .                             My God, they have the
    same rights that [the defendant] does."                            Id., ¶22.         The court of
    appeals,     based        on     United       States           Supreme       Court     precedent,
    identified three factors which "must be present" to demonstrate
    a     Griffin   violation:         "(1)        the           comment     must       constitute      a
    reference to the defendant's failure to testify; (2) the comment
    must propose that the failure to testify demonstrates guilt; and
    (3)    the   comment      must     not     be       a    fair      response     to     a    defense
    argument."         Id.,    ¶21.         The     court         first     concluded         under   the
    Morrison     test      that      this     was       a        comment    on    the     defendant's
    decision     not    to     testify,       but           it    nonetheless       concluded         the
    prosecutor's       statement       was        not       improper        because      it    was    not
    "adverse"——"the prosecutor did not state or intimate that [the
    defendant's] failure to testify indicated guilt."8                                        Id., ¶23.
    Though it is possible that the jury could have interpreted the
    prosecutor's comment in an adverse manner, the court of appeals
    recognized      that      mere    possibility                is   not   enough:       "[A]    court
    The court of appeals also concluded that the prosecutor's
    8
    comment was "a fair response to a defense argument" regarding
    why the alleged collaborators did not testify. State v. Jaimes,
    
    2006 WI App 93
    , ¶24, 
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , 
    715 N.W.2d 669
    .
    17
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    should not lightly infer that a prosecutor intends an ambiguous
    remark to have its most damaging meaning or that a jury, sitting
    through lengthy exhortation, will draw that meaning from the
    plethora of less damaging interpretations."                      Id., ¶23 (quoting
    Donnelly v. DeChristoforo, 
    416 U.S. 637
    , 647 (1974)).
    ¶28     Accordingly, the mere possibility that a jury could
    understand a prosecutor as adversely commenting on a defendant's
    silence does not demonstrate a violation of Griffin.                          See 
    id.
    Rather,    the    prosecutor's       language    must     have    been    "manifestly
    intended to be" or was "of such character that the jury would
    naturally and necessarily take it to be" an adverse comment on
    the defendant's silence for there to be a Griffin violation.
    Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
     (emphases added); see also Clark v.
    Lashbrook, 
    906 F.3d 660
    , 665 (7th Cir. 2018) (rejecting the
    argument     that     a      prosecutor      violated      Griffin       because     it
    "assumes . . . that           the    prosecution's         statement        is     only
    susceptible to one meaning"); United States v. Rand, 
    835 F.3d 451
    , 466 (4th Cir. 2016) (holding there was no Griffin violation
    because,    though     the    jury   could     understand    the     prosecutor      as
    commenting       on   the    defendant's       silence,     this    was     not    "the
    'necessar[y]' conclusion the jury would draw"); United States v.
    LaFontaine, 
    847 F.3d 974
    , 980 (8th Cir. 2017) (emphasis added)
    (holding "the jury would not have necessarily understood the
    government's statement as an attempt to call attention to [the
    defendant's] failure to testify").
    ¶29     Based on the Supreme Court's precedent and the test
    from Morrison, unanimously adopted by all federal circuits and
    18
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    applied by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, we hold that three
    elements    must    be     present   for    a     prosecutor     to   violate
    Griffin:   First,    the     prosecutor's   language      must    have      been
    "manifestly intended to be" or was "of such character that the
    jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be" a "comment
    on the failure of the [defendant] to testify."             Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    ; Griffin, 
    380 U.S. at 611
    .                Second, the prosecutor's
    language must also have been "manifestly intended to be" or was
    "of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily
    take it to be" "adverse," meaning comment "that such silence is
    evidence of guilt."        Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    ; Lakeside, 
    435 U.S. at
    338–39 (quoting Griffin, 
    380 U.S. at 615
    ); Donnelly, 
    416 U.S. at 647
    .    Finally, the prosecutor's comments must not have been
    "a fair response to a claim made by defendant or his counsel."
    United States v. Robinson, 
    485 U.S. 25
    , 32 (1988).
    C.   Comments That Evidence Is "Uncontroverted."
    ¶30   Hoyle claims that the prosecutor in this case violated
    Griffin    by   repeatedly     describing       the   State's    evidence    as
    "uncontroverted"9 during closing argument.             We conclude that the
    prosecutor's comments, taken in context, were not comments on
    Hoyle's silence and therefore did not violate Griffin.                Because
    9 The prosecutor in this case used the term "uncontroverted"
    during his closing arguments.     Though most cases have reviewed
    prosecutors'   use   of   "uncontradicted"   instead,   the   terms
    "'uncontradicted,'    'undenied,'    'unrebutted,'    'undisputed,'
    'unchallenged,' [and] 'uncontroverted'" are often treated the
    same.   United States v. McClellan, 
    165 F.3d 535
    , 548 (7th Cir.
    1999).
    19
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    we   conclude      that       the     prosecutor        did    not    comment        on    Hoyle's
    silence, there is no need for us to analyze whether such comment
    was adverse or a fair response to a defense argument.
    ¶31    We first note that there is no per se rule that a
    prosecutor's description of evidence as "uncontroverted" is a
    comment      on    a    defendant's          silence.            "Generally,         it    is    not
    improper for the prosecuting attorney to remark that testimony
    for the prosecution is unexplained or uncontradicted, especially
    [as here] where the jury is instructed to disregard such comment
    as bearing on the accused's failure to testify."                                        23A C.J.S.
    Criminal      Procedure          &    Rights       of    the     Accused       § 1762       (2022)
    (footnote omitted).              It is notable that the Eighth Circuit in
    Morrison——the case that first announced the test for an indirect
    comment      on    a    defendant's          failure      to     testify——approved              of    a
    prosecutor's           comment       that    testimony         was    "not     contradicted."
    Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    .                    It reasoned that the "[t]estimony by
    the defendant was not the only method of contradicting the story
    told    by   the       government's          witnesses,        if    untrue,"        and    noted,
    "[c]omment        by    court        and    counsel       that      certain        testimony         is
    uncontradicted is common, oftentimes helpful, and very generally
    held to be without error."                        
    Id.
        Similarly, we recognized in
    Bies v. State, 
    53 Wis. 2d 322
    , 48-49, 
    193 N.W.2d 47
     (1972),
    "that   it    is       proper    for       the     district      attorney      to       point    out
    generally     that       no    evidence          has    been   introduced          to     show   the
    innocence of the defendant."                      A prosecutor may refer to evidence
    as   "uncontroverted"            when       the    comment     was    neither        "manifestly
    intended to be" nor was "of such character that the jury would
    20
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    naturally     and    necessarily      take    it   to    be"   a   comment    on   the
    defendant's silence.         Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    .
    ¶32    Some courts have held that a prosecutor's statement
    that evidence is "uncontroverted" is a comment on a defendant's
    silence "if the only person who could have contradicted, denied,
    rebutted or disputed the government's evidence was the defendant
    himself."      United States v. Cotnam, 
    88 F.3d 487
    , 497 (7th Cir.
    1996).       For example, the Seventh Circuit in Cotnam concluded
    that a prosecutor's description of testimony as "uncontroverted"
    was manifestly intended as a comment on the defendant's silence
    because the prosecutor focused attention on the defendant by
    asking   a    witness,      "When    these    discussions      were      taking   place
    between the defendant and yourself, did you keep the discussions
    basically to yourself or were other people around the house?"
    
    Id. at 499
    .         Similarly, in United States v. Triplett, 
    195 F.3d 990
     (8th Cir. 1999), the Eighth Circuit concluded a prosecutor's
    statement, "What you didn't hear was evidence that the defendant
    didn't possess the drugs," was a comment on the defendant's
    silence "because, according to the government's own theory of
    the   case,    no     one    other    than    Triplett      himself       could    have
    testified about his possession of the drugs.                       Triplett 'alone
    had the information to do so.'"               
    Id. at 995
     (quoting Sidebottom
    v. Delo, 
    46 F.3d 744
    , 759 (8th Cir. 1995)).
    ¶33    Analyzing      the     prosecutor's        remarks    during     Hoyle's
    trial in context reveals that his statements that the State's
    evidence was "uncontroverted" were neither "manifestly intended
    to be" nor "of such character that the jury would naturally and
    21
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    necessarily          take   [them]    to   be"      comments          on   the     defendant's
    silence.     Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    .
    ¶34   The main issue at Hoyle's trial was the credibility of
    the    State's        witnesses.        Defense          counsel      began       his    opening
    statement by noting, "There is no burden on the defense to put
    witnesses up.              There is no burden on the defense to provide
    testimony.       The State has to provide you with every single thing
    that they're alleging."                He told the jury, "you will not be
    given     any    scientific,          physical,          or   medical          evidence       that
    connects Mr. Hoyle to [Hannah] whatsoever.                                 You will not be
    given any corroborating witnesses in this case. . . .                                  What that
    comes down to is you have to determine [Hannah's] credibility."
    ¶35   During the State's closing argument, the                                 prosecutor
    anticipated defense counsel would argue reasonable doubt based
    on a lack of corroborating evidence and chose to lean on the
    jury    instructions.           The    prosecutor         made      all    statements         that
    Hannah's     testimony         was    "uncontroverted"              in     the    context       of
    explaining       to     the    jury    what    evidence          it      was     permitted      to
    consider.            The    prosecutor        reminded        the      jury,      "the       judge
    instructed you that you are to decide this case solely, solely
    on the evidence offered and received at the trial. . . .                                     You're
    not to speculate about other things that may be out there."
    "You're supposed to just focus on what you heard yesterday with
    the     testimony.            [Hannah's]      testimony          that       she       gave    here
    yesterday       is    uncontroverted."             The    prosecutor           then     recounted
    Hannah's testimony and said, "All of that is uncontroverted."
    He further explained, "There is absolutely no evidence disputing
    22
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    her account of what occurred.                 I can pretty much guarantee that
    the    defense     is    going    to    get    up     here       and    say,    what      about
    this? . . .           You're not to speculate.                   You're not to guess.
    You're    to    focus     on   what     you    heard       yesterday . . . ."               One
    portion summarizes his argument particularly well:
    They will want you to speculate about what you
    could know, what they think you should have known, but
    it's not about speculation.      It's about what you
    heard.   In this case, because you only heard from
    [Hannah] about it, you didn't hear from any of her
    friends or anyone else testifying about it, it all
    comes down to her credibility.
    ¶36     This     context     makes      clear        that        the    prosecutor's
    description        of    Hannah's       testimony          as     "uncontroverted"         was
    entirely meant to focus the jury's attention on what evidence it
    was permitted to consider.              The jury could consider only whether
    the    evidence       presented   by     the       State    was    credible,        and    that
    evidence     was      "uncontroverted,"        meaning          there    was   no   contrary
    evidence for the jury to also evaluate.                            The jury could not
    "speculate" that there was some other evidence not presented
    that    might    exonerate       Hoyle.        They    were       to    focus    solely     on
    whether the State's witnesses were credible.                              The prosecutor
    never argued that the lack of a defense case made the State's
    witnesses more credible.               He instead walked through the court's
    instruction on credibility and told the jury to evaluate the
    testimony they heard based on their "own experiences in life";
    "the victim's conduct, appearance, and demeanor"; "the clearness
    or lack of clearness of her recollection"; "[t]he reasonableness
    of her testimony"; "[t]he apparent intelligence of the witness";
    23
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    and     "possible      motives       for     falsifying          testimony."           The
    prosecutor's       description       of    the   evidence       as    "uncontroverted"
    was, in context, comment on the evidence the jury was permitted
    to consider, not on Hoyle's silence.
    ¶37   It is also not the case that "the only person who
    could    have    contradicted,        denied,         rebutted       or     disputed   the
    government's evidence was the defendant himself" and, therefore,
    the jury would have "naturally and necessarily" understood the
    prosecutor as commenting on Hoyle's silence.                       Cotnam, 
    88 F.3d at 497
    .    It is possible that other evidence might exist that would
    controvert      the   State's    witnesses.            In    fact,    defense     counsel
    identified several types of evidence that, if presented, might
    controvert them.        Defense counsel told the jury:                    "We heard from
    the investigator yesterday.                She did not go talk to [Hannah's]
    mother at all.         That's important. . . . What was her demeanor
    when she came back?"            "We heard that [Hannah] also lived with
    her stepfather and her two sisters."                        "[Hannah] tells us that
    she was going to go and see a friend. . . .                               That avenue is
    ignored."       "We heard that the police never went to canvas the
    neighborhood."        "We heard from [Hannah] that she was dropped off
    at this gas station or bar.               The investigator says she had never
    went to those to find out if they had surveillance . . . ."                             "I
    think we all agree when two people engage in sex, their bodies
    are    touching.      There     is   going       to   be    some     sort    of   physical
    evidence . . . .        We know that she didn't go through a medical
    24
    No.    2020AP1876-CR
    evaluation or physical evaluation."           It is possible that some of
    this evidence could have controverted the State's witnesses.10
    ¶38    Read in context, the prosecutor described the evidence
    as "uncontroverted" in order to keep the jury from speculating
    about any other evidence, including the evidence defense counsel
    mentioned in his opening statement and closing argument, and to
    instead focus on whether the State's witnesses were credible.
    He argued that defense counsel was asking the jury to speculate
    about other evidence, which the jury could not do.                   Even if it
    is possible that the jury could have understood the prosecutor
    as commenting on Hoyle's decision not to testify, the jury would
    not   have   "necessarily"     done    so,   and   we   "should     not   lightly
    infer"     that   the   jury   would   have    drawn    the   "most       damaging
    meaning"     from   the   prosecutor's       statements.11          Jaimes,    
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , ¶23 (quoting Donnelly, 
    416 U.S. at 647
    ).
    We consider defense counsel's argument in this case only
    10
    because it provides context as to how the jury would understand
    the prosecutor's argument, not because the prosecutor's argument
    was a "fair response to a defense argument."        Jaimes, 
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , ¶21.
    Assuming arguendo that the jury would have naturally and
    11
    necessarily understood the prosecutor to be commenting on
    Hoyle's silence, there would still be no error.    The argument
    was never adverse because the prosecutor never asked or
    intimated that the jury should interpret Hoyle's silence as an
    admission of guilt.    Had the prosecutor commented on Hoyle's
    silence——which he did not——such comment only directed the jury
    away from speculation regarding the evidence they did not hear
    and toward the evidence they did hear.     Any mere possibility
    that the jury could instead have made the prohibited inference
    is insufficient.
    25
    No.       2020AP1876-CR
    ¶39    We therefore conclude the prosecutor did not violate
    Griffin because, taking the prosecutor's remarks in context, the
    description        of     the    State's        evidence         as    "uncontroverted"            was
    neither "manifestly intended to be" nor "of such character that
    the jury would naturally and necessarily take [them] to be" a
    comment on Hoyle's silence.                     Morrison, 
    6 F.2d at 811
    .                       Because
    we conclude the prosecutor did not comment at all on Hoyle's
    silence,      it    is        unnecessary       for       us     to    analyze       whether      such
    comment      "propose[d]         that     the       failure       to    testify       demonstrates
    guilt"       or    whether       it     was     a        "fair    response       to      a     defense
    argument."         Jaimes, 
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , ¶21.
    ¶40    Because we conclude the prosecution's description of
    the evidence as "uncontroverted" was not an error under Griffin,
    there is no need for us to engage in a harmless error analysis.
    See Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 22 (1967).
    IV.     CONCLUSION
    ¶41    Hoyle       argues      that      he       is    entitled     to       a    new    trial
    because      the    prosecutor          at    Hoyle's          trial     violated         his   Fifth
    Amendment         right       against    self-incrimination               under          Griffin    by
    adversely commenting on his decision not to testify.                                         According
    to Hoyle, the prosecutor argued "that Hoyle should be convicted
    because the alleged victim's testimony was 'uncontroverted'" and
    that   this       was     a    comment    on     Hoyle's         decision      not       to    testify
    because      "[o]nly          Hoyle   could         have       contradicted          [the      alleged
    victim's] sexual assault allegations."
    ¶42    We        conclude         that        Hoyle        is     not         entitled       to
    postconviction relief.                The prosecutor at Hoyle's criminal trial
    26
    No.     2020AP1876-CR
    did not violate his Fifth Amendment rights under Griffin because
    the     prosecutor        did    not    comment           on    Hoyle's      silence.           The
    prosecutor          instead       described           the        State's           evidence     as
    "uncontroverted" to remind the jury that they could evaluate
    only the evidence presented at trial and not speculate about
    other possible evidence.                Additionally, the jury likely would
    not have thought only Hoyle could have controverted the State's
    evidence       because     defense      counsel        explicitly          identified         other
    kinds    of    evidence     not    presented          at       trial.      In      context,     the
    prosecutor's          remarks          that         the         State's       evidence         was
    "uncontroverted" were neither "manifestly intended to be" nor
    "of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily
    take     [them]      to    be"    adverse           comments         on    Hoyle's      silence.
    Morrison,      
    6 F.2d at 811
    .         The    prosecutor           therefore     did    not
    comment on Hoyle's silence, and the circuit court was correct to
    deny Hoyle's motion for postconviction relief.                                We reverse the
    court of appeals.
    By     the   Court.—The      decision         of        the   court    of     appeals     is
    reversed.
    27
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    ¶43     BRIAN     HAGEDORN,    J.       (concurring).               The      Fifth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, "No person
    shall be . . . compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
    against     himself."        U.S.   Const.     amend.    V.         In    Griffin     v.
    California, the United States Supreme Court arguably went beyond
    the original meaning of this clause and held that it forbids
    "comment by the prosecution on the accused's silence."                               
    380 U.S. 609
    , 615 (1965).         Hoyle's claim before us is premised on
    the   Fifth    Amendment    alone;    no      argument   is    made        under    the
    Wisconsin Constitution.         We are therefore duty-bound to apply
    the precedent of the United States Supreme Court.                        The majority
    opinion does so, and I join it.
    ¶44     I write separately, however, to discuss the original
    meaning of the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment,
    and to consider how that meaning might inform our approach in
    cases such as this.         The short story is that the right to not
    accuse oneself was widely understood to be one of our natural,
    God-given, inalienable rights.            And our founders were cognizant
    of the historical abuse of this right during the Inquisition and
    later by ecclesiastical and English prerogative courts.                         Little
    to nothing in the historical record suggests that this right
    protected those accused of crimes——who were not even allowed to
    testify in their own defense at the time——against comments on
    and adverse inferences from their decision not to testify.
    ¶45     So how did Griffin arise?           In brief, criminal trials
    in America evolved to give those accused of crimes the statutory
    right to testify.        And as jurisdictions moved in this direction,
    1
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    some    states       and    the   federal       government      enacted       laws    that
    protected      defendants         against       adverse       inferences      from      the
    decision not to testify——although this policy choice was not
    universal.       Soon       enough,    a    body   of       cases     interpreting     and
    applying     these     principles      arose,      yielding      Griffin-type         rules
    rooted in both statute and common law.                    As we shall see, Griffin
    then incorporated this body of law at least in part and rooted
    it in the Fifth Amendment.
    ¶46    This    history      reveals,      at     the    very       least,     strong
    arguments that Griffin and its progeny go beyond the original
    meaning of the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
    Given this, how should courts that must apply Griffin respond
    when faced with cases asking us to extend precedent that has a
    weak foundation in the original meaning of the Constitution?                             In
    my view, we should tread cautiously.                    Where possible, we should
    aim to "resolve questions about the scope of those precedents in
    light of and in the direction of the constitutional text and
    constitutional history."              Free Enter. Fund v. Public Co. Acct.
    Oversight Bd., 
    537 F.3d 667
    , 698 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (Kavanaugh,
    J., dissenting).           Being mindful of the text and history of the
    Fifth   Amendment          provides   further      support       to    the    majority's
    decision not to extend Griffin to the facts of the case before
    us.     For    these       reasons,    I    join      the     majority      opinion    and
    respectfully concur.
    2
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    I.    GRIFFIN & THE SELF-INCRIMINATION CLAUSE
    A.    Nemo Tenetur & the Ex Officio Oath
    ¶47     In      the     twelfth         century,        Bolognese      monk       Gratian
    authored the Decretum——a compilation of the body of Catholic
    rules and pronouncements that had circulated in collections of
    "canons."      J.H. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History
    110 (2d ed. 1979).              The Decretum systematized these canons "in
    accordance with a hierarchical scheme of authority with the pope
    at the earthly summit."               
    Id.
         Study of "Canon law became all the
    rage" as European universities picked it up, and a new system of
    courts applying these canons——known as ecclesiastical courts——
    soon developed.          
    Id.
    ¶48     We      begin      the    story    of   the     Fifth    Amendment's       Self-
    Incrimination Clause here because one of the enduring maxims
    recognized     in    canon      law    was    known    in    Latin    as    nemo      tenetur
    prodere seipsum——that is, "No one is bound to betray oneself."
    Richard   H.     Helmholz,       Origins       of   the     Privilege      against      Self-
    Incrimination:           The Role of the European Ius Commune, 
    65 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 962
    , 962 (1990).                 The maxim's origins are a bit of a
    mystery, but by the Middle Ages it was widely referenced and
    widely    accepted.1            Leonard       W.    Levy,    Origins       of   the     Fifth
    1  A prominent fourth-century Church Father, St. John
    Chrysostom, referenced the idea when discussing St. Paul's
    letter to the Hebrews.     Richard H. Helmholz, Origins of the
    Privilege against Self-Incrimination:   The Role of the European
    Ius Commune, 
    65 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 962
    , 982 (1990).    St. Augustine
    did as well around the same time.    Leonard W. Levy, Origins of
    the Fifth Amendment and its Critics, 
    19 Cardozo L. Rev. 821
    , 831
    (1997) [hereinafter Levy, Critics].        The maxim made more
    concrete appearances as a legal concept during the Middle Ages,
    first in Gratian's Decretum (twelfth century) and then in the
    3
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    Amendment and its Critics, 
    19 Cardozo L. Rev. 821
    , 831 (1997).
    The theological driver behind this principle was that "men and
    women should confess their sins to God, but they should not be
    compelled to make their crimes known to anyone else."                     Helmholz,
    supra at 982.         Eventually, the maxim would mean much more as
    government power was seen as transgressing its command.
    ¶49    That    brings    us    to    the   Inquisition——a    period       during
    early medieval times in which the Catholic Church sought to
    protect itself from widespread heresy.                 Leonard W. Levy, Origins
    of   the    Fifth    Amendment      20-21    (Oxford   University    Press      1968)
    [hereinafter Levy, Origins].                While the ancient maxim against
    self-betrayal was accepted as such, it had its limits.                            St.
    Thomas Aquinas reflected and reinforced the thinking at the time
    that in order to protect the theological purity of the church,
    "truthful answers to incriminating questions" must be demanded,
    and those embracing heresy should be put to death.                     Id. at 21.
    Even torture was an authorized tool to root out heresy.                    Id.
    ¶50    In     1215,   Pope    Innocent     III   remodeled    the    criminal
    procedures of canon law, permitting three modes of prosecution.
    Id. at 22.        The first was accusatio——accusation from a private
    person.       Id.     This mode came with a catch; it exposed the
    accuser     to    punishment   if    his    prosecution    failed.        Id.     The
    second      was   denunciatio——a          private   accusation     allowing      "the
    private accuser to avoid the danger and burden of accusatio."
    Id. at 22-23.        In denunciatio the judge proceeded "ex officio"——
    glossa ordinaria to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX (thirteenth
    century). Helmholz, supra at 967; Levy, Critics, supra at 831.
    4
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    "by   virtue      of      his   office"——and           became      a    party   to     the   suit,
    conducting the prosecution for the secret accuser.                                   Id. at 23.
    The third was inquisitio——a mode "by which the judge combined in
    his person all roles."                      Id.   He sat as accuser, prosecutor,
    judge, and jury.            Id.
    ¶51      The        common      procedure         employed         by     ecclesiastical
    courts, by which they implemented these types of prosecution,
    was the oath de veritate dicenda.                            Id.       This oath required a
    party to swear to tell the truth to all questions that might be
    asked.      Id.      The oath, however, could become an "an inescapable
    trap" because an accused had to either take the oath (and risk
    being condemned for perjury if the court didn't believe the
    answers)     or      be    condemned         as   guilty      for      refusing      to   answer.
    Id. at 23-24.             As such, it operated in all respects as a self-
    incriminatory oath.               Id. at 24.          And because the oath took place
    during inquisitorial procedures in which the judge operated ex
    officio, the oath became known as the ex officio oath.                                 Id.
    ¶52      By the early fourteenth century, English monarchs had
    created the king's council, a political body made up of the most
    powerful state officers, nobles, bishops, and judges.                                        Id. at
    49.   This council eventually "developed into the House of Lords
    and the central courts of the common law"——"the Court of Common
    Pleas (civil) and the Court of King's Bench (criminal)."                                       Id.
    But it also spun off what were called conciliar or prerogative
    courts,     supplementing             the    general     jurisdiction           of     the   other
    courts    at      the      time.       Baker,         supra    at      101.      The      original
    justification           for     the    creation         of    these      courts      "was     that
    5
    No.       2020AP1876-CR.bh
    extraordinary action by the king and his magnates offered the
    only escape from the kind of undue influence which could corrupt
    sheriffs and juries."             Id.
    ¶53    Because many of the chancellors serving on the king's
    council were assisted by bishops and doctors of canon law, its
    procedures     largely       emulated       those    used   in   the    ecclesiastical
    courts.      Levy, Origins, supra at 50.                For example, they had no
    juries.       Id.        The common criminal procedure involved                     secret
    accusations         by      informers        (called        an   "information"           or
    "suggestion") instead of the typical grand jury process of the
    common law.          Id.     After the court commanded attendance of a
    person through a writ of citation, it would require them to take
    the ex officio oath.              Id.     "The defendant was required to swear
    the    oath        and     then     was     confronted       with       a      series    of
    interrogatories which were based on the information obtained by
    suggestions and the examination of witnesses."                      Id. at 51.          "Any
    discrepancies or contradictions in his answers were used against
    him in an effort to break him down and force a confession of
    guilt."      Id.
    ¶54    The prerogative courts changed dramatically during the
    Elizabethan (1558-1603) and early Stuart (1603-1640s) periods.
    John   H.     Langbein,      The        Historical    Origins    of     the      Privilege
    Against Self-Incrimination at Common Law, 
    92 Mich. L. Rev. 1047
    ,
    1073 (1994).         As those monarchies began imposing Anglican forms
    of worship on the British people, they enlarged the jurisdiction
    of the prerogative courts to "suppress religious and political
    heterodoxy."        United States v. Gecas, 
    120 F.3d 1419
    , 1436 (11th
    6
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    Cir.       1997).       The   oath    became     "especially       problematic          for
    religious        dissenters,    as    they   were     'typically      guilty       of   the
    nonconformist         religious      practices    for   which   they        were    being
    investigated.'"         In re Flint Water Cases, 
    53 F.4th 176
    , 214 (6th
    Cir. 2022) (Thapar, J., concurring in part) (quoting another
    source).         "Anyone who refused this 'inquisitional oath' could be
    held in contempt, imprisoned, and even tortured."                       
    Id.
     (quoting
    another source); Langbein, supra at 1073.
    ¶55       So, by the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, both
    the prerogative courts and ecclesiastical courts used the ex
    officio oath to impose their political and religious will upon
    the people.          Many pushed back and resented what they saw as a
    grand abuse of power.             Levy, Origins, supra at 268-69.                  The ex
    officio oath, they argued, violated the laws of God, drawing
    upon       the   ancient    principle    that    no   one   should     be    forced      to
    accuse oneself.2           Helmholz, supra at 967-68.
    ¶56       In 1637, tensions boiled over.             Levy, Origins, supra
    at 271-72.          That year, the Star Chamber, probably the most well-
    known of the prerogative courts, brought charges against English
    activist John Lilburne for shipping seditious books into England
    from Holland (among other charges).                     Id. at 273.           The Star
    Chamber found him guilty of contempt for refusing to take the
    oath.       Lilburne's Case, 3 How. St. Tr. 1315 (Star Chamber 1637).
    He condemned the oath as "against the law of God; for that law
    In addition to the nemo tenetur maxim, some historians
    2
    also point to the "rights of conscience" as an additional basis
    for rejecting forced self-accusations. Levy, Critics, supra at
    836.
    7
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    requires no man to accuse himself."                          Levy, Origins, supra at
    277.        Lilburne's trial was likely the final nail in the coffin
    for     England's          prerogative          courts.            Reflecting         popular
    objections, Parliament abolished the Star Chamber in 1641, and
    forbade use of the ex officio oath procedure in the English
    ecclesiastical courts.              Langbein, supra at 1073-74.
    B.    Impact on Founders & Ratification of Fifth Amendment
    ¶57        The experience of our English forebears in their fight
    against the inquisition-style persecutions had a profound effect
    on the founders.              In 1735, a Presbyterian special commission in
    Philadelphia           investigated       the       unorthodox      beliefs      of     local
    minister Samuel Hemphill because of his deistic ideas.                                  Levy,
    Origins, supra at 382-83.                 Hemphill reportedly refused a demand
    to give the commission his sermons because it was "contrary to
    the common Rights of Mankind, no Man being obligated to furnish
    Matter       of    Accusation       against      himself."          Id. at      383.      The
    commission took his refusal as a "virtual confession of guilt,"
    and suspended him for "Unsound and Dangerous" beliefs.                            Id.     But
    a young Benjamin Franklin came to Hemphill's defense, writing
    that     the       commission       resembled        "that    hellish       Tribunal      the
    Inquisition."           Id.
    ¶58        In   1788,    during    the       debate    in   Massachusetts        over
    ratifying the newly proposed federal Constitution, one delegate
    objected to the charter because nothing prevented "Congress from
    passing       laws     which    shall     compel      a   man,     who     is   accused    or
    suspected         of   a   crime,    to   furnish      evidence      against     himself."
    8
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    Remarks by Abraham Holmes in the Massachusetts Debates, in 2 The
    Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the
    Federal Constitution 111 (Jonathan Elliot ed., 1836).                 He warned
    that the Constitution as proposed gave Congress the power to
    create judicial bodies resembling "that diabolical institution,
    the Inquisition."      Id.
    ¶59    This widespread acceptance of the ancient right to not
    accuse oneself was reflected in the first constitutions in the
    new American states.         Virginia led the way, establishing that no
    one    may    "be   compelled    to   give     evidence   against     himself."
    Virginia Declaration of Rights § 8 (1776).                Seven other states
    included similar provisions, granting rights against compulsion
    "to give evidence" or "to furnish evidence" against oneself.
    United States v. Hubbell, 
    530 U.S. 27
    , 52 (2000) (Thomas, J.,
    concurring); Flint Water Cases, 53 F.4th at 215 (Thapar, J.,
    concurring).
    ¶60    And when James Madison drafted the Fifth Amendment to
    the United States Constitution, he used language similar to that
    in    state   constitutions     and   wrote,    "No   person . . . shall      be
    compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself."3
    Hubbell, 
    530 U.S. at 53
     (Thomas, J., concurring); U.S. Const.
    amend. V.       Historians generally believe Madison's use of the
    phrase "to be a witness" was synonymous with the "giving" or
    The Wisconsin Constitution uses substantially the same
    3
    language. See Wis. Const. art. I, § 8(1) ("No person . . . may
    be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against
    himself or herself.").
    9
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    "furnishing" of evidence as phrased in many state constitutions.
    Hubbell, 
    530 U.S. at 53
     (Thomas, J., concurring).
    ¶61    In sum, although scholars debate the precise weight
    different historical practices may have had in forming their
    convictions,     the   general     consensus         is   that      the   people    who
    adopted our Constitution had in mind the inquisitorial practices
    of the ecclesiastical and prerogative courts along with their
    forerunners.      Ullmann v. United States, 350 U.S 422, 446 (1956)
    (Douglas, J., dissenting); Flint Water Cases, 53 F.4th at 215
    (Thapar,   J.,    concurring      in       part);    Sharon    R.      Gromer,     Fifth
    Amendment——The      Right    to        a    no      "Adverse     Inference"         Jury
    Instruction, 
    72 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 1307
    , 1307-08 (1981).
    Moreover, they believed that this kind of violation of the basic
    rights of mankind should be protected against, and did so in
    their constitutions.
    ¶62    The text of the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth
    Amendment, therefore, invokes the pre-existing God-given right
    of all persons to not be compelled to be a witness against
    themselves.      The word "compelled" at the time the amendment was
    ratified   meant    forced   or    constrained.            Compelled,        New    and
    Complete Dictionary of the English Language (Edward & Charles
    Dilly, eds. 1775).       And the amendment gives this protection to
    all persons "in any criminal case."                 U.S. Const. amend. V.           The
    text of the amendment does not say anything about what a jury
    might permissibly infer from a failure to testify, or whether
    attorneys may comment upon the failure to testify.                        And as the
    next part of the story reveals, our founders would not have had
    10
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    the testimony of criminal defendants in mind when enshrining the
    right against self-incrimination in the Constitution.
    C.     The Common Law Rule of Disqualification
    ¶63      During the Founding Era, common law rules disqualified
    criminal     defendants           from        testifying        under     oath     in    their      own
    trials.        Ferguson          v.      Georgia,        
    365 U.S. 570
    ,         573-74     (1961).
    While     this       may      seem        foreign         to     us     today,      the      central
    justification for this rule at the time was that a party to a
    case could not be trusted.                     
    Id. at 573
    .            The theory was that the
    witness stand should be open only to "those presumably honest,
    appreciating the sanctity of an oath, unaffected as a party by
    the result, and free from any of the temptations of interest."
    Benson v. United States, 
    146 U.S. 325
    , 336 (1892).
    ¶64      To be sure, defendants still often spoke at trial.
    But   they     did      so    pro        se    in   their       own     defense     since         legal
    representation          for      the     accused         was    uncommon     (and       in   earlier
    times, not even permitted).                     John Henry Wigmore, Treatise on the
    System    of     Evidence         in      Trials     at        Common    Law:     Including        the
    Statutes     and      Judicial           Decisions        of    All     Jurisdictions         of    the
    United States 697 (1904).                      Thus, defendants often had to argue
    their    own     case      and      on    occasion        give     their     account         of    what
    happened.       
    Id.
         But their unsworn statements were not considered
    testimony, and therefore were not viewed as evidence for the
    jury to consider.             
    Id.
    ¶65      Moreover, the historical record supports the notion
    that juries could draw adverse inferences from a defendant's
    11
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    silence even though his statements weren't technically evidence.
    Mitchell v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 314
    , 333-34 (1999) (Scalia,
    J., dissenting).                If a defendant did not defend himself, the
    assumption was "that could only be because he was unable to deny
    the truth of the evidence."                      
    Id. at 334
     (quoting J. Beattie,
    Crime     and    the      Courts      in    England:      1660–1800        348–349          (1986)).
    Fact finders "did not hesitate to draw inferences of guilt when
    defendants remained silent."                     Albert W. Alschuler, A Peculiar
    Privilege       in     Historical           Perspective:            The   Right        to    Remain
    Silent, 
    94 Mich. L. Rev. 2625
    , 2631 (1996).
    ¶66       Some evidence also suggests that a defendant's silence
    was   directly        commented        upon.        A    typical     process          was    that   a
    magistrate       would          examine     a   defendant       pre-trial,         getting      the
    defendant's          story.4          And   while       the   defendant         was    unable       to
    testify     himself,            the   magistrate        could    and      would       report    the
    defendant's answers to the jury as testimonial evidence.                                       John
    H. Langbein, The Privilege and Common Law Criminal Procedure:
    the   Sixteenth           to    the   Eighteenth         Centuries,       in     The    Privilege
    Against     Self–Incrimination:                  Its     Origins      and       Development         92
    (1997).         If    a    defendant        refused      to   answer      the     magistrate's
    questions, the magistrate would report as much to the jury.                                     
    Id.
    Therefore, in this way, a defendant's decision not to answer
    questions       would          be   commented    on      to   the    jury,       with       negative
    inferences from that front and center.
    4This process was dictated by the Marian Committal Statute.
    John H. Langbein, The Privilege and Common Law Criminal
    Procedure:   The Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Centuries, in The
    Privilege   Against   Self–Incrimination:     Its   Origins   and
    Development 91-92 (1997).
    12
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    ¶67    When    the        Fifth     Amendment          was   adopted,        the    rule
    disqualifying         parties        from        testifying——including                  criminal
    defendants——was ubiquitous.                 Ferguson, 
    365 U.S. at 574
    ; Richard
    A. Nagareda, Reconceiving the Right to Present Witnesses, 
    97 Mich. L. Rev. 1063
    , 1113 (1999).                           Thus, the historical record
    strongly weighs against any notion that the Fifth Amendment at
    the time of its adoption was meant to prohibit comment upon or
    adverse inferences regarding the failure of a criminal defendant
    to testify in his trial——because that kind of testimony did not
    happen,      and    comment       upon    and    inferences         from       a   defendant's
    refusal to defend himself was commonplace.
    D.    Abolition of the Common Law Rule of Disqualification
    ¶68    This approach to criminal prosecutions, however, did
    not    hold.         By    the    turn     of        the    nineteenth         century,    some
    dissenters began to voice concern with the status quo.                                     John
    Fabian Witt, Making the Fifth:                         The Constitutionalization of
    American Self-Incrimination Doctrine, 1791-1903, 
    77 Tex. L. Rev. 825
    , 864 (1999).           In 1805, a passionate Philadelphian circulated
    a pamphlet calling the practice of disqualifying parties from
    testifying (including criminal defendants) the "prodigious evil
    of our jurisprudence."              
    Id.
         Serious public debate about these
    rules began to take place in the 1830s, starting in England.
    Id.;    Ferguson,         
    365 U.S. at 575
    .            Englishman         Jeremy   Bentham
    assailed      the    practice       of    excluding          a   party    from      testifying
    because, he argued, it effectively excluded truth.                                 Witt, supra
    at 863-64.         He insisted that evidence "is the basis of justice;
    13
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    exclude evidence, you exclude justice."                     Id. (quoting 5 Jeremy
    Bentham, Rationale of Judicial Evidence 1 (London, Hunt & Clarke
    1827)).        Bentham's arguments caught on across the Atlantic, with
    American contemporaries similarly maintaining that exclusion of
    relevant witnesses "obstructed the 'discovery of the truth.'"
    Id.       at   865   (quoting        another     source);     id. at    864    n.    147
    (collecting sources).
    ¶69      By the dawn of the Civil War, the stage was set for
    change.        Maine led the way in 1859 by permitting defendants to
    testify in some circumstances.                 Ferguson, 
    365 U.S. at 577
    .           When
    the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified in 1868, nine states had
    followed       suit.5        Mitchell,    526     U.S at    335-36      (Scalia,    J.,
    dissenting).            In   1869,     Wisconsin     joined     in     and    qualified
    defendants for all trials.              § 1, ch. 72, Laws of 1869.             And the
    federal government passed its own qualification statute in 1878.
    See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    .             By the end of the nineteenth century,
    5The United States Supreme Court has interpreted the
    Fourteenth Amendment as rendering the Fifth Amendment applicable
    against the states. Malloy v. Hogan, 
    378 U.S. 1
    , 10-11 (1964).
    Thus, some scholars believe that the period surrounding the
    adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment should also be examined
    when a state action is challenged.    See, e.g., New York State
    Rifle & Pistol Assoc., Inc. v. Bruen, 
    142 S. Ct. 2111
    , 2138
    (2022) (describing the debate). Here, the evidence from either
    time period cuts the same way. By the time Congress adopted the
    Fourteenth Amendment in 1868, only nine states qualified
    defendants to testify. Mitchell v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 314
    ,
    335-36 & n.1 (1999) (Scalia, J., dissenting).    Of those nine,
    six prohibited adverse inferences while three didn't.     
    Id. at 335-36
    . Thus, since so few states prohibited adverse inferences
    in 1868, it cannot "reasonably be argued that the new statutes
    somehow created a 'revised' understanding of the Fifth Amendment
    that was incorporated into . . . the Fourteenth Amendment."
    
    Id. at 335
    .
    14
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    nearly every state made provision for criminal defendants to
    testify in their own defense.                   See Ferguson, 
    365 U.S. at
    577 &
    n.6.
    ¶70     This change naturally led to new policy debates.                           If a
    defendant could testify, how should prosecutors and juries be
    permitted to characterize this decision?                         
    Id. at 579-80
    ; Gromer,
    supra     at    1308.      The        answer        was    not    uniform.          But   many
    jurisdictions enacted laws along the lines of that adopted by
    the     federal       government          in   1878,        which       provided     that    a
    defendant's          "failure        to    [testify]        shall       not      create     any
    presumption against him."                 
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    .
    ¶71     In 1893, the United States Supreme Court was asked
    whether a prosecutor's reference to a defendant's failure to
    testify violated the no-presumption proscription in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    .        In Wilson v. United States, the Court said yes.                              
    149 U.S. 60
    ,       66-67    (1893).           It   reasoned          that    the    prosecutor's
    comment induced the jury "to disregard entirely the presumption
    of innocence to which by the law he was entitled."                                
    Id. at 66
    .
    The thinking reflected in Wilson——rooted in a mix of statutory
    and    common    law——began          to   proliferate        around      the    country     and
    embed itself into American law over the next half century.                                  See
    J.     Evans,    Comment        or    Argument        by    Court       or     Counsel    that
    Prosecution Evidence is Uncontradicted as Amounting to Improper
    Reference       to    Accused's       Failure       to     Testify,      
    14 A.L.R.3d 723
    (originally published in 1967) (collecting pre-Griffin cases).
    ¶72     With time, courts built out analytical frameworks for
    how to analyze whether a prosecutor actually commented on a
    15
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    defendant's failure to testify.     The most well-known and oft-
    cited of these cases is the Eighth Circuit's opinion in Morrison
    v. United States, which is discussed extensively in the court's
    opinion today.   
    6 F.2d 809
     (8th Cir. 1925).      In Morrison, the
    court was asked to interpret and apply the same federal law
    interpreted in Wilson (
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    ).        Id. at 811.       The
    Eighth Circuit framed the following test for analyzing whether a
    prosecutor crossed over the line:     whether "the language used
    manifestly intended to be, or was it of such character that the
    jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on
    the failure of the accused to testify?"   Id.
    ¶73   It is important to emphasize that even well into the
    twentieth century, however, not every jurisdiction adopted this
    approach or even forbade comments on an accused's silence.         For
    example, in 1934, California adopted a constitutional provision
    that made entirely the opposite policy choice:
    No person shall . . . be compelled in any criminal
    case, to be a witness against himself; nor be deprived
    of life, liberty, or property without due process of
    law; but in any criminal case, whether the defendant
    testifies or not, his failure to explain or to deny by
    his testimony any evidence or facts in the case
    against him may be commented upon by the court and by
    counsel, and may be considered by the court or the
    jury.
    Cal. Const. art. I, § 13 (1938); see 1934 Enacted Proposition 5
    (amending Art. I, § 13 of the California Constitution).
    ¶74   Therefore, before the United States Supreme Court's
    decision in Griffin in 1965, most jurisdictions, including the
    federal government, had a legal framework rooted in statutes and
    cases that protected defendants from comments upon or adverse
    16
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    inferences      based        on   a   criminal     defendant's    decision        not    to
    testify.       But this was not a universally shared approach.
    D.   Griffin & Its Aftermath
    ¶75    After     initially       rejecting     the    incorporation        of    the
    Self-Incrimination Clause via the Fourteenth Amendment in 1908,6
    the Supreme Court reversed course in 1964.7                      That paved the way
    for Griffin, decided the very next year.                     In Griffin, the State
    of California tried the defendant for first degree murder.                              
    380 U.S. at 609
    .          When the trial court instructed the jury on the
    issue of guilt, it told them that they could infer guilt from
    the    defendant's       failure       to     testify.      
    Id. at 609-10
    .         The
    prosecutor made hay, telling the jury that the defendant "has
    not seen fit to take the stand and deny or explain."                              
    Id. at 611
    .       The jury convicted the defendant and he appealed.                  
    Id.
    ¶76    The United States Supreme Court acknowledged that the
    Wilson decision——which forbade comment by the prosecution on a
    defendant's failure to take the stand——"rested not on the Fifth
    Amendment, but on an Act of Congress, now 18 U.S.C. [§] 3481."
    Id. at      612.       But    the     court    nonetheless    concluded      that       the
    "comment       rule"    approved        by     California     violated     the     Fifth
    Amendment.         Id. at 613.
    ¶77    The Court quoted the following excerpt from Wilson,
    which described the reasoning behind 
    18 U.S.C. § 3481
    :
    6   Twining v. New Jersey, 
    211 U.S. 78
     (1908).
    7   Malloy, 
    378 U.S. at 10-11
    .
    17
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    [T]he act was framed with a due regard also to those
    who might prefer to rely upon the presumption of
    innocence which the law gives to everyone . . . . The
    statute, in tenderness to the weakness of those who
    from the causes mentioned might refuse to ask to be a
    witness . . . declares that the failure of a defendant
    in a criminal action to request to be a witness shall
    not create any presumption against him.
    Id. at       613        (quoting       Wilson,       
    149 U.S. at 66
    ).           Griffin
    extrapolated            that      if     "the     words          'fifth     Amendment'         are
    substituted for 'act' and for 'statute' the spirit of the Self-
    Incrimination            Clause     is     reflected"       because       "comment        on   the
    refusal to testify is a remnant of the 'inquisitorial system of
    criminal justice.'"               Id. at 613-14.           Accordingly, the Court held
    that     the     Fifth         Amendment       forbids      "either        comment        by   the
    prosecution         on    the     accused's      silence         or    instructions       by   the
    court that such silence is evidence of guilt."                            Id. at 615.
    ¶78     This      constitutional          rule      has    not     been       without   its
    critics.           In    Mitchell,       the    Supreme      Court       was    asked     whether
    Griffin        prohibits        a      trial    court      from        drawing       an   adverse
    inference        from      a     defendant's         silence          during     a    sentencing
    hearing.        Mitchell, 
    526 U.S. at 316-17, 327-28
    .                           The Court said
    it did.         
    Id. at 328-29
    .              Justice Scalia dissented, observing
    that "Griffin is out of sync with the historical understanding
    of the Fifth Amendment."                   
    Id. at 332
     (Scalia, J., dissenting).
    However, he cautioned that he would not overrule Griffin because
    of the rule's widespread acceptance.                        
    Id.
           Justice Thomas agreed
    with   Justice          Scalia      that    Griffin        lacked      "foundation        in   the
    Constitution's text, history, or logic."                               
    Id. at 341
     (Thomas,
    J., dissenting).               But he wrote that he would reconsider Griffin
    in the appropriate case.                 
    Id. at 343
    .
    18
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    ¶79    Critiques aside, much of the application of Griffin
    has been left to lower courts.                   If a prosecutor made an explicit
    comment about the defendant's failure to testify, then a court
    easily found a Griffin violation.                    But what if a prosecutor made
    an    indirect       or   implicit      comment?           This        gave        "lower   federal
    courts problems."            Butler v. Rose, 
    686 F.2d 1163
    , 1170 (6th Cir.
    1982) (en banc).             All lower federal courts——and most states——
    eventually responded by adopting the test created by the Eighth
    Circuit in       Morrison.           
    Id.
     at 1170 & n.6 (collecting cases);
    Moore    v.     State,    
    669 N.E.2d 733
    ,             738    (Ind.        1996)     (collecting
    cases).       Even though Morrison was premised on interpretation of
    the   federal        statute,    Griffin       has        been       understood        as     largely
    incorporating         this     preexisting          body        of     law      into    the    Fifth
    Amendment.
    E.    Historical Summary
    ¶80    The     bottom         line   is      this.              Griffin         holds     that
    commenting on a criminal defendant's failure to testify violates
    the     Fifth    Amendment.            There        is    precious           little      evidence,
    however,      that    the    original       meaning        of        the     Self-Incrimination
    Clause of the Fifth Amendment extends this far.                                     The text does
    not say this, and the history does not bear this out.                                       Rather,
    Griffin appears aimed at fulfilling the "spirit" of the Fifth
    Amendment       by    adding     an     additional             layer       of   protection       for
    defendants above and beyond the text.                          It enshrines the right to
    remain silent enumerated in the text, and functionally prohibits
    19
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    improper     inferences       against     defendants       who        exercise       this
    constitutional right.
    II.   ORIGINAL MEANING & BINDING PRECEDENT
    ¶81    In this case, our obligation as a lower court is to
    faithfully apply United States Supreme Court precedent.                           State
    v. Jennings, 
    2002 WI 44
    , ¶18, 
    252 Wis. 2d 228
    , 
    647 N.W.2d 142
    ;
    United States v. Johnson, 
    921 F.3d 991
    , 1001 (11th Cir. 2019)
    (en banc).      But Hoyle asks us to protect defendants even further
    by applying Griffin in a more robust way to cover the comments
    made by the prosecutor here.              I do not believe Griffin or its
    progeny require us to do so for the reasons explained in the
    majority opinion, and I therefore join it.                      But the original
    meaning and historical record provide additional support for the
    decision not to extend Griffin further.
    ¶82    Justice Thomas has remarked that when there is little
    evidence suggesting a legal doctrine is grounded in the original
    meaning of the Constitution, "the Court should tread carefully
    before     extending    our     precedents."            Garza     v.     Idaho,       
    139 S. Ct. 738
    , 756 (2019) (Thomas, dissenting).                      I agree.           When
    faced    with     the     choice     to        extend    precedent         in     these
    circumstances, we should "resolve questions about the scope of
    those    precedents     in   light   of    and     in   the     direction       of    the
    constitutional text and constitutional history."                         Free Enter.
    Fund, 
    537 F.3d at 698
     (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting).8
    8 See also Josh Blackman, Originalism and Stare Decisis in
    the Lower Courts, 13 NYU J. L. & Liberty 44 (2019).
    20
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    ¶83    The dissent rejects this approach, largely because it
    rejects originalism as a methodology.                Several reasons underlie
    its     objections.       First,      the     dissent     proclaims    originalism
    insufficiently determinate.             In the dissent's view, originalism
    wrongly     "assumes     that    each       constitutional     provision       had   a
    single,     accepted     original       understanding."             Dissent,     ¶106
    (quoting Erwin Chemerinsky, Worse Than Nothing:                      The Dangerous
    Fallacy of Originalism 56 (2022)).                  And in a case like this,
    reasonable judges will disagree about what constitutes extending
    precedent and what constitutes faithfully applying it.                           Id.,
    ¶105.       Therefore,    my    approach,      as   the    dissent    sees   it,     is
    susceptible to judges using originalism selectively to achieve
    their     preferred    results.          Second,     the    dissent     says     that
    originalism     will     lead    to     unacceptable       results,    potentially
    undermining certain currently-accepted constitutional principles
    it thinks should not be up for debate.                  Id., ¶106.    Finally, the
    dissent suggests the original meaning is just one tool among
    many in the task of interpreting legal texts.                 Id., ¶109.
    ¶84    I will not endeavor in this concurrence to provide a
    comprehensive response to these arguments, but I offer several
    brief points.     First, in the abstract, the dissent is not wrong
    that originalism fails to give clear answers to every question,
    and is therefore vulnerable to manipulation.                  But originalism is
    not preferable simply for its clarity or ability to restrain
    judges (although in the main I believe it offers these virtues
    as well).      The foremost reason judges must discern and follow
    the original meaning is because a written constitution is the
    21
    No.       2020AP1876-CR.bh
    law, and all written laws should be construed to mean what they
    meant when they were written.                 District of Columbia v. Heller,
    
    554 U.S. 570
    , 592 (2008); Gibbons v. Ogden, 
    22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 1
    , 188 (1824); Serv. Emps. Int'l Union, Local 1 v. Vos, 
    2020 WI 67
    , ¶28, 
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    , 
    946 N.W.2d 35
    ; State v. Roundtree,
    
    2021 WI 1
    , ¶112, 
    395 Wis. 2d 94
    , 
    952 N.W.2d 765
     (Hagedorn, J.,
    dissenting).          Originalism,        like      textualism,        flows      from    the
    conviction that the text is the law, and our obligation is to be
    faithful to the meaning of the text.                      Vos, 
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    , ¶28;
    State ex rel. Bond v. French, 
    2 Pin. 181
    , 184 (Wis. 1849).
    ¶85    It is true that other considerations may impact how we
    decide cases.         Precedent, for example, has an important role to
    play   in    disputes       over   legal      issues      that    have       already     been
    decided.         It    is     also     true        that    sometimes          fidelity    to
    constitutional         commands       calls        for     judicial          judgment——for
    example, upholding the right of the people against "unreasonable
    searches and seizures."              See U.S. Const. amend. IV; Wis. Const.
    art. I, § 11.         The dissent's objections on these grounds mistake
    originalism as a methodology for discerning the meaning of the
    Constitution     with       originalism       as    the    only   component        of    case
    adjudication.         The divergent approaches of Justice Scalia and
    Justice      Thomas    on   how    they    would      respond     to     a    hypothetical
    request to overrule Griffin are a prime example of this.
    ¶86    Yes, constitutional language can be hard to interpret
    in the first instance, and even harder to apply in practice.
    22
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    The same is true for statutes.9                But difficult cases do not
    change    our    obligation    or   goal.      A   textual   puzzle       is    not   a
    license to impose our own take on what the law should be.                           Our
    job when facing an unclear law is still to get as close as we
    can to what the text actually means.               The dissent points to the
    competing history-filled opinions in Heller as a reason to doubt
    the   utility     of   originalism.          Dissent,   ¶106       n.4.        On   the
    contrary, Heller is a fine example of what judges should do when
    confronted with a hard-to-understand law:                 comb the evidence,
    debate it, and try to get it right.                  Smart judges doing this
    well will disagree sometimes.           That's okay.     Indeterminacy is an
    inherent feature of law written by people.               Thus, the dissent's
    criticism "isn't an attack against originalism so much as it is
    an attack on written law."           Neil Gorsuch, A Republic, If You Can
    Keep It 113 (2019).            And yes, some judges may exploit legal
    uncertainty or be inconsistent in their professed methodology.
    But   the       judiciary     is    filled    with    imperfect       people        who
    nonetheless swear an oath to faithfully read and apply the law
    impartially in every case.             The fallibility of judges is the
    price we must pay for an independent judiciary.                      This reality
    says nothing about how judges should endeavor to carry out their
    9 See e.g., Becker v. Dane County, 
    2022 WI 63
    , ¶¶9-22, 
    403 Wis. 2d 424
    , 
    977 N.W.2d 390
     (interpreting the meaning of
    "reasonable and necessary" in 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    ); Friends of
    Frame Park, U.A. v. City of Waukesha, 
    2022 WI 57
    , ¶¶13-25, 
    403 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    976 N.W.2d 263
     (lead op.) (interpreting the meaning
    of "prevails in whole or in substantial part" in 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a)); State v. Perez, 
    2001 WI 79
    , ¶¶15-60, 
    244 Wis. 2d 582
    , 
    628 N.W.2d 820
     (interpreting the meaning of "a
    crime involving the use of the dangerous weapon" in 
    Wis. Stat. § 968.20
    (1m)(b)).
    23
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.bh
    responsibility to say what the law is, not what they wish the
    law to be.
    ¶87      Finally, the dissent fails to offer a competing vision
    for how to read the law accurately.                  Rather, the dissent lists a
    series    of    legal    tools   judges     can      consider:          text,   history,
    precedent, context, historical practice and tradition, and the
    "need to balance 'the majority's values against the values that
    should be protected from society's majorities.'"                         Dissent, ¶109
    (quoting Chemerinsky, supra at 207).                 What the dissent misses is
    the end goal of these legal tools.                   They are not an a la carte
    menu from which judges can cherry-pick their preferred legal
    rationale.          Rather,        legal    evidence        and         authority    are
    legitimately and appropriately deployed when used in service of
    getting     the    law    right.       Several        of   these——text,         history,
    context, historical practice, and even some precedent——can be
    relevant to discerning the original meaning of the Constitution.
    But where the meaning of the law comes into view, as it usually
    does even in hard cases, we do not have a license to override it
    by   balancing     competing       values       or   any   other    outcome-focused
    concern.
    ¶88      At the end of the day, the dissent's method of picking
    the legal tools you like——what the text meant when written being
    merely one data point to consider——is a subtle invitation for
    judges to decide what the Constitution should mean, rather than
    to keep the focus on what it does mean.                    This must not be.         Our
    founders did not establish a system of government where judges
    in our highest courts are unconstrained by the meaning of the
    24
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.bh
    law the people have enacted, free to import their own values
    into    the       Constitution.             Originalism          may    not   answer      every
    question.         Originalist judges may not always be consistent.                          But
    we can be sure of this:                    A choose-your-own-adventure judicial
    methodology poses an even greater danger because it offers no
    rubric to grade one's fidelity to the law.
    ¶89    As        I    see   it,     where     United       States      Supreme     Court
    precedent is on point, we must apply it faithfully.                                But where
    we are asked to extend the logic of precedent into new areas,
    the original meaning ought to serve as the North Star toward
    which     unresolved           questions        regarding         the    scope     of     those
    precedents should aim.                  In this case, I believe Griffin does not
    prohibit the prosecutor's comments.                        Furthermore, not extending
    Griffin      to    this       factual     scenario        appropriately       resolves     this
    case    in        the       direction      of   the        original      meaning     of     the
    constitutional              text   as    best   as    I    can    discern.        For     these
    reasons, I respectfully concur.
    ¶90    I am authorized to state that Justice REBECCA GRASSL
    BRADLEY joins this concurrence.
    25
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    ¶91     REBECCA FRANK DALLET,            J.     (dissenting).          The Fifth
    Amendment      provides    that     no    one    "shall    be    compelled       in   any
    criminal case to be a witness against himself."                        U.S. Const. am.
    V.     For that constitutional privilege to be meaningful, it must
    also prohibit the prosecutor or the court from telling the jury
    that the defendant's decision not to testify is evidence of
    guilt.       See Griffin v. California, 
    380 U.S. 609
    , 615 (1965).
    Otherwise, such direct commentary on the defendant's exercise of
    his constitutional rights would "cut[] down on the privilege by
    making its assertion costly" and allow the prosecution or the
    court to penalize the defendant for holding the government to
    its burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.                          See 
    id. at 613-14
    .
    ¶92     But a defendant can also be penalized by an indirect
    comment on the failure to testify.                    That is because an oblique
    reference to the defendant's decision not to take the stand
    might nevertheless invite the jury to draw the natural, but
    impermissible          inference         that        the   defendant's           silence
    demonstrates guilt.           See Lakeside v. Oregon, 
    435 U.S. 333
    , 345
    (1978) (Stevens, J., dissenting) ("Even if jurors try faithfully
    to obey their instructions, the connection between silence and
    guilt is often too direct and too natural to be resisted.").
    For that reason, federal and state courts across the country
    have    held    that   even    an   indirect         comment    on     the   defendant's
    decision not to testify violates the Fifth Amendment if it is
    "manifestly intended to be or [is] of such a character that the
    1
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on
    the failure of the accused to testify."                       See Butler v. Rose, 
    686 F.2d 1163
    ,     1170     (6th       Cir.    1982)    (en   banc);     see    also    United
    States v. Cotnam, 
    88 F.3d 487
    , 497 (7th Cir. 1996) ("We have
    repeatedly recognized that indirect commentary on a defendant's
    failure to take the stand can also constitute a violation of the
    defendant's Fifth Amendment privilege not to testify."); State
    v.    Johnson,      
    121 Wis. 2d 237
    ,         248,     
    358 N.W.2d 824
           (Ct.    App.
    1984).
    ¶93    One    type       of     indirect       comment     that       juries     would
    "naturally and necessarily" understand as a reference to the
    decision not to testify occurs when the prosecutor repeatedly
    characterizes evidence as "undisputed" or "uncontradicted" and
    the    only   person      who    could       reasonably       have   contradicted        that
    evidence is the defendant.                  See, e.g., Freeman v. Lane, 
    962 F.2d 1252
    , 1254-55, 1261 (7th Cir. 1992) (repeated statements that
    evidence only the defendant could dispute was "unrebutted" and
    "uncontradicted" violated the Fifth Amendment); Lent v. Wells,
    
    861 F.2d 972
    , 974-77 (6th Cir. 1988) (prosecutor's comments in a
    sexual assault case that evidence only the defendant could rebut
    was "uncontradicted," and "unrebutted" were improper commentary
    on the defendant's decision not to testify).                               Statements like
    these "naturally and necessarily" refer to the decision not to
    testify because they "'can only cause the jury to naturally look
    to    the    only   other    evidence         there    is——the       defendant.'"         See
    United States v. Preston, 
    873 F.3d 829
    , 842 (9th Cir. 2017)
    (quoting Lincoln v. Sunn, 
    807 F.2d 805
    , 809 (9th Cir. 1987)).
    2
    No.      2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    ¶94        Applying these cases, it is clear that the prosecutor
    violated          Hoyle's         Fifth           Amendment        rights        by        repeatedly
    characterizing             as   "uncontroverted"             evidence       only       Hoyle       could
    dispute.           Hoyle        was    prosecuted         for      a    sexual       assault       that
    occurred when he and the victim were alone in a car on a dead-
    end road in a rural area.                         There was no physical evidence, and
    accordingly, just Hoyle and the victim could have testified to
    what happened in that car.                        And because the jury heard only from
    the     victim,        her       testimony          about       the     sexual        assault       was
    uncontroverted.
    ¶95        Rather than focusing solely on the credibility of the
    victim's          testimony,          the    prosecutor         made     the     fact       that    her
    statements          were        uncontroverted            the    theme         of     his     closing
    argument.             In   fact,       this       theme    was     so    important          that    the
    prosecutor asked the circuit court to rule before trial that it
    was    permissible.1              In        his    closing      argument,        the       prosecutor
    hammered        his    point      relentlessly,           repeatedly        telling         the     jury
    that the victim's testimony was uncontroverted.                                       In just nine
    pages      of     transcript,          he    described       the       victim's       testimony      as
    uncontroverted four times, and twice told the jury there was "no
    evidence disputing" her account.                          On rebuttal, he returned to
    that       same    theme,       telling       the     jury      "[y]ou     need       to    make    the
    decision based on the uncontroverted testimony of what she says
    In support of his motion, the prosecutor stated "I can't
    1
    say [the evidence] is uncontroverted because the defendant
    didn't   testify,  but  I   can  say  that   her  testimony  is
    uncontroverted and that [the jury] ha[sn't] heard any testimony
    to the contrary." The circuit court granted the motion.
    3
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    occurred.            They     [the        defense]        don't         disagree     it's
    uncontroverted."        But only Hoyle could have controverted the
    victim's testimony about what happened in his car that day.                            And
    for that reason, the jury would naturally and necessarily have
    taken the prosecutor's repeated characterization of the victim's
    testimony as "uncontroverted" as a comment on Hoyle's decision
    to exercise his Fifth Amendment right not to testify at trial.
    See Williams v. Lane, 
    826 F.2d 654
    , 665 (7th Cir. 1987) ("Only
    [the defendant] could possibly have rebutted both [the victim's]
    version of what happened after he pulled his car over . . . and
    her testimony that she did not consent.").
    ¶96     According       to    the     majority,       that    is    not   enough    to
    establish a Fifth Amendment violation, since the prosecutor's
    comments weren't "adverse" to Hoyle.                      See majority op., ¶38,
    n.11.     In   other        words,      the   prosecutor         did    not   "ask[]    or
    intimate[] that the jury should interpret Hoyle's silence as an
    admission of guilt."             
    Id.
        The majority cites no authority for
    the supposed requirement, but it appears to be drawing on State
    v. Jaimes, 
    2006 WI App 93
    , ¶22, 
    292 Wis. 2d 656
    , 
    715 N.W.2d 669
    ,
    which said that a "comment must propose that the failure to
    testify   demonstrates           guilt"    in     order    to    violate      the   Fifth
    Amendment.     
    Id.
         The problem is that none of the other federal
    cases discussed earlier contain such a requirement, and the case
    Jaimes cites as support, United States v. Robinson, 
    485 U.S. 25
    ,
    4
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    34 (1988), doesn't say that either.2                                That makes sense.          "Given
    the prosecutor's institutional role, when the prosecutor merely
    'comments'            on    the    failure          of       an    accused    to     testify,    the
    reference is in all likelihood calculated to encourage the jury
    to equate silence with guilt."                              United States v. Mena, 
    863 F.2d 1522
    , 1534 (11th Cir. 1989).                         And that is especially true when
    the    comment             references        the     defendant's         failure       to    dispute
    evidence that only he could rebut.                                Indeed, I can't imagine how
    such       a    comment      could      be    taken          as   anything    but    "adverse"     or
    "intimat[ing] that the jury should interpret Hoyle's silence as
    an admission of guilt."                  See majority op., ¶38 n.11.
    ¶97          Setting aside the majority's supposed requirement that
    the    prosecutor's               comments         be       "adverse,"       it     concedes    that
    repeatedly           calling      evidence         only       the    defendant      could     dispute
    "uncontroverted"              violates        the       Fifth      Amendment.        See     majority
    op., ¶37.            Nevertheless, the majority asserts that Hoyle's Fifth
    Amendment rights weren't violated here because "other evidence
    might exist that would controvert the State's witnesses."                                         See
    
    id.
                In   support,      the    majority             points   to    defense        counsel's
    statements in his closing argument about hypothetical evidence
    the police did not gather, namely statements from the victim's
    family members that they did not interview, physical evidence
    Lakeside v. Oregon, 
    435 U.S. 333
    , 338 (1978) does suggest
    2
    that Griffin is "concerned only with adverse comment" on the
    defendant's decision not to testify. Nevertheless, Lakeside is
    distinguishable because it dealt with an instruction to the jury
    that it could not infer guilt from the defendant's failure to
    testify.   See 
    id.
        By contrast, the prosecutor's comments in
    this case drew negative attention to Hoyle's decision not to
    testify.
    5
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    they did not collect, and surveillance footage from the place
    where the victim was dropped off after the assault that they did
    not obtain.       See 
    id.
              But the prosecutor's refrain throughout
    his   closing    argument         was    that       the   victim's       account         of    what
    happened in Hoyle's car was undisputed.                            None of this other
    evidence,    even      if    it    existed,         could    have       contradicted          that
    account——only Hoyle could have done so.                          See Freeman, 
    962 F.2d at 1261
     ("The only witness to this crime who was available to
    testify was [the victim], who identified [the defendant] as his
    assailant.            Realistically,            the       only      person         who        could
    satisfactorily         rebut       this        testimony         was     [the       defendant]
    himself." (citing Williams, 
    826 F.2d at 665
    )).                               Moreover, "[a]
    speculative     possibility             that    some      third        party       could      have
    testified for the defense is not enough" to demonstrate that
    someone "'other than the defendant could rebut the evidence.'"
    United   States       v.    Tanner,      
    628 F.3d 890
    ,    899    (7th      Cir.       2010)
    (quoting Freeman, 
    962 F.2d at 1260
    ).       Despite         the    majority's
    speculation about other possible evidence, the jury knew that
    only the victim and Hoyle could testify as to what happened in
    his   car.      For    that       reason,      repeatedly        calling       the    victim's
    testimony uncontroverted "impermissibly focus[ed] attention on
    the defendant's decision not to testify," and violated Hoyle's
    Fifth Amendment rights.             See Freeman, 
    962 F.2d at 1260
    ; see also
    Commonwealth v. Robertson, 
    431 S.W.3d 430
    , 437 (Ky. Ct. App.
    2013) (concluding that comments in closing argument about the
    victims' "un-refuted" testimony were improper where "only one
    6
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    person     possessed      the   knowledge       to    conclusively       rebut     the
    testimony of the [victims]," the defendant).
    ¶98     The      majority's        alternative        argument——that            the
    prosecutor's       comments     were   simply        references    to     the      jury
    instructions, which properly told jurors to evaluate only the
    evidence in reaching its verdict——is similarly unavailing.                          See
    majority    op.,    ¶¶34-36.      To    begin    with,    only     a    few   of    the
    prosecutor's comments can fairly be read as references to the
    jury instructions, rather than Hoyle's decision not to testify.
    Before   closing     arguments    began,      the     circuit    court    correctly
    instructed the jury that its job was to weigh the evidence,
    including the credibility of witnesses, and not to engage in
    speculation or to consider "in any manner" Hoyle's decision not
    to testify.        And the prosecutor began his closing argument by
    referring back to those same instructions, noting that the jury
    was "supposed to just focus on what you heard yesterday with the
    testimony.         [The    victim's]    testimony        that     she    gave      here
    yesterday is uncontroverted."                Likewise, after summarizing the
    victim's testimony, the prosecutor again returned to the jury
    instructions, reminding jurors "[y]ou are not to sit there and
    say, what if I had this information, what if this was different,
    what if that was different?             You're not to speculate . . . .
    You're to focus on what you heard yesterday . . . about how [the
    victim] was assaulted by this defendant."                If the prosecutor had
    stopped there, I might agree with the majority that his comments
    did not cross the line.          After all, the majority is right that
    there is no categorical prohibition on characterizing evidence
    7
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    as uncontroverted, especially in the context of reminding jurors
    that their verdict must be based on the evidence presented at
    trial and not on speculation.                   See 
    id.,
     ¶31
    ¶99    But the prosecutor didn't stop there, or merely "lean
    on the jury instructions."                   Id., ¶35.        Instead, he all but told
    the   jury   that     it        had    to    convict     Hoyle     because     "[t]here       is
    absolutely no evidence disputing" the victim's account of the
    sexual assault.            The prosecutor emphasized that the victim's
    statements      to        law     enforcement          were       "uncontroverted,"          her
    testimony    at    trial         was    "uncontroverted,"           the     jury   "heard     no
    evidence disputing her account of that sexual assault,"                                    "You
    heard nothing," and most troublingly, that they "didn't hear
    from . . . anyone else testifying about" the assault.                                Then, on
    rebuttal, he tied the victim's undisputed testimony even more
    directly to the Hoyle's failure to testify, telling jurors that
    the defense did not "disagree [that the victim's testimony was]
    uncontroverted."            His        point,    which       he   reiterated       again     and
    again, was that the victim's testimony about the sexual assault
    was   uncontroverted,            not     that    the    jury      should     focus    on     the
    evidence and the court's instructions.
    ¶100 As      many     other           courts    have    concluded,       the    more     a
    prosecutor repeats statements like these, the more likely they
    are to be perceived by the jury as comments on the defendant's
    decision     not     to    testify.            See,    e.g.,      Rodriguez-Sandoval          v.
    United   States,      
    409 F.2d 529
    ,    531    (1st      Cir.    1969);     State    v.
    McMurry, 
    143 P.3d 400
    , 404 (Idaho Ct. App. 2006); People v.
    Johnson, 
    429 N.E.2d 905
    , 910-11 (Ill. Ct. App. 1981).                                And that
    8
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    is    particularly          true    when,      as       here,   those     repeated        comments
    occurred during a short closing argument and referred to the
    defense directly.                Compare Rodriguez-Sandoval, 
    409 F.2d at 531
    (describing        a    prosecutor's           five      references       to     uncontradicted
    testimony in his closing argument as "extremely aggravated from
    the quantitative standpoint"), with Webb v. Mitchell, 
    586 F.3d 383
    , 397 (6th Cir. 2009) (noting that an isolated comment did
    not    "establish           an   extensive       pattern        in      the     context    of    the
    prosecutor's           summation,        which          spanned      ninety-four        pages.").
    Accordingly, the jury in this case would not have perceived the
    prosecutor's           statements         as     mere       commentary           on    the      jury
    instructions or the evidence the jury should consider.                                    Rather,
    the jury would "naturally and necessarily" understand them as a
    repeated reminder that Hoyle——the only person who could have
    disputed the victim's account of what happened——did not testify.
    See Butler, 
    686 F.2d at 1170
    .
    ¶101 Additionally, the circuit court's decision to allow
    these comments was not a harmless error.                              An error is harmless
    if the State proves "beyond a reasonable doubt that the error
    complained     of       did      not    contribute         to     the    verdict      obtained."
    Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967).                                    The State did
    not argue that allowing the prosecutor's comments was harmless.
    But    even   if       it    had,      such    an       argument     would      be    unavailing.
    Although the evidence presented at trial was certainly enough to
    support a guilty verdict, the prosecutor's repeated statements
    might have led the jury to give the victim's testimony too much
    weight or, worse yet, to treat Hoyle's decision not to testify
    9
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    as a reason to find him guilty.                   The State therefore cannot
    demonstrate   beyond       a    reasonable      doubt   that    the    violation    of
    Hoyle's Fifth Amendment rights was harmless.                   See 
    id.
    ¶102 In    sum,    a       faithful    application    of     Griffin     and   the
    principles    it   announced       leads    to   just   one     conclusion:        The
    prosecutor's comments violated Hoyle's Fifth Amendment rights.
    Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    ¶103 In closing, I want to address several points made by
    the concurrence about the supposed original public meaning of
    the Fifth Amendment and the role that meaning should play in
    this case and others.             For starters, it's not clear what——if
    anything——the history of the Fifth Amendment can tell us about
    how its protections should apply today.                 If, as the concurrence
    asserts, defendants were not permitted to testify at the time of
    the founding,3 then of course the framers of the Fifth Amendment
    weren't concerned with prosecutors commenting on the defendant's
    failure to testify.            There would be no point in making such a
    comment since all defendants were required to remain silent.
    And for that reason, a jury obviously wouldn't draw any negative
    inferences from a defendant's silence either.                        But our courts
    have thankfully moved a long way from the practices of the Star
    Chamber and its ex officio oath, and legislatures across the
    country eliminated most prohibitions on defendants testifying
    3  State laws enacted shortly after the founding also
    prohibited slaves or people of color from testifying at trial if
    a white person was a party. See, e.g., Amanda Carlin, Comment,
    The   Courtroom   As   White   Space:   Racial   Performance  As
    Noncredibility, 
    63 UCLA L. Rev. 450
    , 454-58 (2016).
    10
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    more than a century ago.                   See concurrence, ¶¶57-74.                   Yet the
    concurrence simply assumes that, because the Fifth Amendment was
    adopted      in        a       radically     different         context       than       today,
    contemporary courts must stand silent when prosecutors use a
    defendant's decision not to testify against him.
    ¶104 I disagree.               Griffin and the cases addressing indirect
    commentary        on       a    defendant's    decision        not     to     testify       all
    recognize that comments suggesting that a defendant's silence is
    indicative of guilt are the functional equivalent of compelling
    a defendant to testify.                See, e.g., Griffin, 
    380 U.S. at 614-15
    ;
    Butler, 
    686 F.2d at 1170
    .                  Such comments penalize the defendant
    for exercising his constitutional right to remain silent——little
    different than the Star Chamber holding Lilburne in contempt for
    his silence.           See concurrence, ¶56.              If the Fifth Amendment's
    privilege against self-incrimination is to mean anything today,
    it   must    protect           against     prosecutors     who    invite         the    jury——
    directly or indirectly——to penalize the defendant for exercising
    his constitutional right to remain silent.
    ¶105 More            fundamentally     though,     there       are    at    least     two
    reasons to reject the concurrence's proposal that "when there is
    little evidence suggesting a legal doctrine is grounded in the
    original     meaning            of   the    Constitution,        '[we]       should      tread
    carefully before extending [that] precedent[].'"                                 Concurrence
    ¶82 (quoting Garza v. Idaho, 
    139 S. Ct. 738
    , 756 (2019) (Thomas,
    J., dissenting)).                First, we are bound by all United States
    Supreme     Court          decisions——not      just      the    ones       any   individual
    justice     feels      are      "grounded     in   the    original         meaning     of   the
    11
    No.    2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    Constitution."       Concurrence, ¶82.          And although the concurrence
    concedes this point, it fails to acknowledge that reasonable
    judges    can      disagree     about     whether       a       particular        decision
    "extends"    or    merely     faithfully      applies       existing      precedent       to
    different facts or circumstances.              See United States v. Johnson,
    
    921 F.3d 991
    , 1001 (11th Cir. 2019) (en banc) ("[W]e must apply
    Supreme   Court     precedent     neither      narrowly         nor     liberally——only
    faithfully.").       There is no objective test for deciding whether
    or not we are "extending" a prior precedent.                             Accordingly, a
    results-oriented judge could use the concurrence's approach to
    distinguish existing precedent on superficial grounds, and then
    decline to "extend" that precedent in order to achieve their
    desired result.       See, e.g., Caroline Mala Corbin, Opportunistic
    Originalism and the Establishment Clause, 
    54 Wake Forest L. Rev. 617
    , 618 (2018) (describing the United States Supreme Court's
    use of originalism as "opportunistic because sometimes the Court
    relies on it, and sometimes it does not.").
    ¶106 Second,       but     more     importantly,        I    disagree         with   the
    concurrence's       conclusion        that    constitutional             interpretation
    should always be guided by the original public meaning of the
    provision    at     issue.      "[T]he       search     for      'original        meaning'
    assumes     that    each     constitutional       provision             had   a    single,
    accepted original understanding."               See Erwin Chemerinsky, Worse
    Than Nothing: The Dangerous Fallacy of Originalism 56 (2022).
    12
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    But in reality, that consensus often didn't exist.4                               See 
    id.
    Given that originalism bills itself as a determinate and value-
    neutral          alternative     to         other     methods     of     constitutional
    interpretation, this is a problem.                         See Frank B. Cross, The
    Failed Promises of Originalism 13 (2013) ("The best functional
    case       for    originalism        lies    in     its    claimed     objectivity     and
    neutrality.")              Because    a     single,       objective    original    public
    meaning      often    doesn't        exist,    originalism       cannot      deliver   the
    objective answers that it promises, let alone constrain judges
    who might want to decide cases in ways that fit with their
    preferences.          See Chermerinsky, supra at 56-58.                      And in that
    respect, originalism is no different than any other interpretive
    methodology, only it allows its adherents to hide their lack of
    constraints behind a false patina of objectivity.                         Worse yet, if
    originalism is taken to its logical conclusion, it would result
    in     the       radical     rejection         of     long-settled       constitutional
    principles.         Indeed, one of the opinions the concurrence cites
    argues       that    the    Sixth     Amendment's         guarantee     of   counsel    to
    indigent criminal defendants is at odds with the Constitution's
    original public meaning.               See Garza, 
    139 S. Ct. at 757
     (Thomas,
    J., dissenting).             That's not all though.               Brown v. Board of
    This point is illustrated by the United States Supreme
    4
    Court's decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    (2008). Justice Scalia's majority opinion argued that the text
    and history of the Second Amendment supported a constitutional
    right to possess a gun for self-defense in the home. See 
    id. at 595
    .    But Justice Stevens' dissent contended that text and
    history supported the opposite result.         See 
    id. at 640
    (Stevens, J., dissenting).   In short, history is often in the
    eye of the beholder.
    13
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    Education,5 same sex marriage, virtually all rights of women6 and
    racial minorities, and any number of other fundamental rights
    are    difficult,        if   not      impossible,             to    justify      on    originalist
    grounds.       See Chemerinsky, supra at 92-114.                            As one scholar put
    it,     "[t]he       only     kind         of    originalism              that    is    reasonably
    determinate         leads       to     conclusions             that       practically      no     one
    accepts.           But   less    determinate               forms     of    originalism      can    be
    enlisted to support pretty much anything."                                    David A. Strauss,
    Can Originalism Be Saved?, 
    92 B.U. L. Rev. 1161
    , 1162 (2012).
    ¶107 The concurrence concedes that "originalism fails to
    give       clear     answers         to     every          question,        and    is    therefore
    vulnerable to manipulation," but nonetheless argues that we must
    adopt it because "a written constitution is the law, and all
    written laws should be construed to mean what they meant when
    they were written."                  Concurrence, ¶84.                 But this argument for
    originalism         is   circular.              It    simply        defines      "interpretation"
    "as synonymous with originalist interpretation" and then uses
    that definition as evidence that only originalist interpretation
    is     permissible.             See       Andrew          B.   Coan,      The     Irrelevance      of
    Writtenness in Constitutional Interpretation, 
    158 U. Pa. L. Rev. 5
       
    347 U.S. 483
     (1954).
    Indeed, just last year, the United States Supreme Court
    6
    concluded that "history and tradition" led to the "clear
    answer . . . that the Fourteenth Amendment does not protect the
    right to an abortion."    Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Org.,
    
    142 S. Ct. 2228
    , 2248 (2022). But as in Heller, the history on
    which the majority relied is contested.        See id. at 2324
    (Breyer,     Sotomayor,    and     Kagan,    JJ.,    dissenting)
    ("[E]mbarrassingly for the majority . . . early law in fact does
    provide some support for abortion rights.").
    14
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    1025,     1030    (2010);    see      also    Cherminsky,        supra       at     26
    ("[A]rguments from definition aren't arguments at all; they do
    not   defend     their   conclusion    but    assume    it.").         There      are,
    however, any number of non-originalist ways of interpreting the
    Constitution that nevertheless give effect to its text.                            See
    Coan, supra at 1047 (identifying, for example, an approach that
    treats the text as "one of many legitimate ingredients in a
    pluralistic practice of constitutional adjudication.").                      Simply
    observing that the Constitution was written down isn't enough to
    demonstrate that originalism is required.
    ¶108 No matter our approach, however, it is important to
    emphasize that constitutional interpretation is rarely as simple
    as merely reading the words and applying them.                        Most of the
    Constitution's     key   provisions,     like     the   guarantees      of   "equal
    protection of the laws" and "due process," or the protections
    against    "unreasonable     searches       and   seizures"      or   "cruel       and
    unusual    punishment"      are    vague——and      deliberately        so.         See
    generally U.S. Const. am. IV, V, VIII, XIV.                   In writing these
    open-ended clauses, the Framers weren't trying to settle every
    legal question that might arise under these provisions for all
    time.7    They were instead trying to create a document that would
    7Moreover, even when the Constitution uses more precise
    language, like the First Amendment's statement that "Congress
    shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion . . .
    or abridging the freedom of speech," it often doesn't mean what
    it says. See U.S. Const. am. I. Nobody would say, for example,
    that "[b]oth the President and the federal courts could abridge
    the freedom of speech and prohibit the free exercise of
    religion, because the First Amendment, by its terms, applies
    only to 'Congress.'"   See David A. Strauss, Foreword: Does the
    Constitution Mean What It Says?, 
    129 Harv. L. Rev. 1
    , 3 (2015).
    15
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    endure by "provid[ing] a political platform wide enough to allow
    for considerable latitude within which future generations could
    make    their    own    decisions."           Joseph     J.   Ellis,    The   Quartet:
    Orchestrating the Second American Revolution, 1783-1789, at 219
    (2015); see also Jack M. Balkin, Living Originalism 27 (2011)
    ("[C]onstitutional framers and ratifiers very often use open-
    ended     language        that      deliberately         delegates     questions         of
    application      to       future     interpreters.").             In   making       those
    decisions, the Framers did not expect their views would govern
    over those of future generations either.                      Indeed, James Madison
    himself said that his notes from the Constitutional Convention
    "could never be regarded as the oracular guide in expounding the
    Constitution."         Boris I. Bittker, Interpreting the Constitution:
    Is the Intent of the Framers Controlling? If Not, What Is?, 
    19 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 9
    , 32 (1995) (quoting 5 Annals of Cong.
    776     (1796)).            And     Thomas        Jefferson     cautioned         that   a
    "sanctimonious         reverence"       for        the    Framers      was    akin       to
    "requir[ing] a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when
    a boy."    Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Samuel Kercheval (July
    12,    1816),    in    10    Paul    Leicester        Ford,     Writings     of    Thomas
    Jefferson 42-43 (1899).
    ¶109 In     sum,     constitutional         interpretation      nearly      always
    requires more than merely construing the text "to mean what [it]
    meant when [it] w[as] written."                   See concurrence, ¶84.       And that
    is true whether one is an originalist or not.                           No method of
    constitutional         interpretation        can      provide    objective,        value-
    neutral decisions in all cases.                    But that doesn't mean that we
    16
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    are engaged in a "choose-your-own-adventure" exercise, deciding
    cases based on what we think "the Constitution should mean,
    rather than . . . what it does mean."              See concurrence, ¶88.        In
    my view, interpreting the Constitution faithfully requires us to
    read   its   text    and   history    carefully,     but    also     to   consider
    precedent, context, historical practice and tradition, and the
    need to balance "the majority's values against the values that
    should be protected from society's majorities."                    Chemerinsky,
    supra, at 207.       That, after all, is what the Constitution is all
    about.
    ¶110 I   am   authorized      to    state   that    Justice    ANN    WALSH
    BRADLEY joins this opinion.
    17
    No.   2020AP1876-CR.rfd
    1