State v. Barthelme

2007 OK CR 40, 172 P.3d 201, 2007 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 3110336
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 25, 2007
DocketS-2007-145
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2007 OK CR 40 (State v. Barthelme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barthelme, 2007 OK CR 40, 172 P.3d 201, 2007 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 3110336 (Okla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

[202]*202OPINION

A. JOHNSON, Judge.

T1 Appellee, Delmer Frank Barthelme, was charged by Information in the District Court of Grady County, Case No. CF-2006-409, with Count 1, Peace Officer Engaging in Illegal Gambling, a felony (21 O0.8.2001, § 948), and with Count 2, Willful Neglect of Duty, a misdemeanor (21 0.8.2001, § 976). Following presentation of the State's evidence at preliminary hearing on the felony charge, the Honorable Kenny D. Harris, Special Judge, sitting as Magistrate, sustained a demurrer by Barthelme and declined to bind him over for trial on Count 1. The State thereupon initiated an appeal under the authority of 22 0.98.2001, § 1089.1. The Honorable C. Allen McCall, District Judge, was duly appointed to hear the appeal. On February 8, 2007, Judge McCall upheld the Magistrate's order.

T2 The State now appeals to this Court. The appeal was regularly assigned to this Court's Accelerated Docket under Section XI of the Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2007). After hearing oral argument on July 19, 2007, and considering the State's propositions of error, the Court announced that it was reversing the orders below and that this written Opinion would follow.

1.

Facts and Magistrate's Order

¶ 3 According to the evidence presented at Barthelme's preliminary hearing, members of the Grady County District Attorney's Office and the Alcoholic Beverage Law En-foreement Commission (ABLE) conducted undercover video surveillance inside an Elks Lodge in Chickasha, Oklahoma. Based on evidence discovered from this one-year period of surveillance and other investigative information, a warrant was obtained for a search of the Elks Lodge. On September 6, 2006, the search warrant was executed, financial records seized, and several computer video machines from a game room impounded. The machines presented games of video poker and the like which the State contends were being used for unlawful gambling.1 Investigating authorities discovered that several city and county law enforcement personnel (and in some instances, their spouses) were members at the Elks Lodge and that they had been engaged in playing these video games.

T4 The day after execution of the search warrant, Barthelme, a deputy for the Grady County Sheriff's Office, voluntarily agreed to be interviewed by Dusty Dowdle, an investigator for the Office of the District Attorney for Grady County. During this interview, Barthelme acknowledged that he was a member of the Elks Lodge and had played their machines. He told Dowdle that he had never won any money from the machines and had lost only $10.00. This statement was the extent of the State's proof at preliminary hearing that Barthelme had actually played the lodge's video machines.

15 At the conclusion of the State's evidence, Barthelme demurred and the Magistrate sustained that demurrer by finding that his statements to Dowdle were inadmissible. The Magistrate based his finding of inadmissibility upon the provisions of 21 0.8.2001, § 961. The reviewing District Judge affirmed that holding.

IL.

The State's Arguments on Appeal and Court's Analysis

T6 In its appeal of these rulings, the State asserts first that Section 961 has been "repealed and/or nullified" by a 1971 amendment to Article II, Section 27, of the Oklahoma Constitution,2 and, second, in the alternative, that if Section 961 is still viable, the magistrate misapplied that statute in this [203]*203case. Because we agree Section 961 was not applicable here, we do not reach the question of whether the statute survived the 1971 amendment to the constitution.

1 7 The statute at issue provides:

No person shall be excused from giving any testimony or evidence upon any investigation or prosecution for violation of this article, upon the ground that such testimony would tend to convict him of a crime, but such testimony or evidence shall not be received against him upon any eriminal investigation or prosecution, except in a prosecution against him for perjury committed in giving such testimony.

21 0.8.2001, § 961. As the parties, the Magistrate, and the reviewing District Judge have all noted, there is no published authority construing this statute.

18 By its plain language, Section 961 is a typical immunity statute: a statute that provides protection from prosecution to an individual compelled to surrender his privilege against self-incrimination.3 Such a statute makes "immunity"4 the legislatively sance-tioned compensation for an individual's forfeiture of his privilege against self-incrimination when he has been compelled to deliver up self-incriminating testimony or evidence.5

T 9 In most jurisdictions, immunity is governed by statutory or constitutional provision.6 Although this Court has not construed Section 961 in a published decision, we have [204]*204construed the immunity provisions within the State Constitution:

In order for a person to secure immunity under the above section of Constitution on account of incriminating evidence given by him as a witness in any court, he must have testified under an agreement made with the prosecuting attorney, approved by the court, or he must have claimed the privilege of silence which must have been denied by the court and such person must have been compelled by the court to testify.

Cortes v. State, 1966 OK CR 17, ¶ 4, 415 P.2d 196, 199 (emphasis omitted).7

110 The point that was missed by the court below in the instant case is that a defendant in Barthelme's position cannot claim immunity from prosecution by showing he volunteered a statement which incriminated him.8 Compulsion is a condition precedent for immunity. Seribner v. State, 9 OK. Cr. 465, 484, 182 P. 983, 940 (1913).

¶ 11 Similarly, authorities in other jurisdictions have made clear that their statutes also assume compulsion as a prerequisite.9 These jurisdictions (depending on the particular wording of their immunity statute), differ as to the form the compulsion must take,10 as well as whether the statute is "self-execut[205]*205ing" or requires invocation of the Fifth Amendment privilege before immunity can apply.11 Nevertheless, despite such variations, we have found no jurisdiction that allows immunity to attach without the presence of some type of compulsion. Consequently, were we to follow the dissent's interpretation of Section 961 and abrogate any requirement for compulsion, we would place a construction upon this immunity statute wholly unique in American jurisprudence.12

¶ 12 We therefore find that Section 961 (like the many other immunity provisions we have examined) requires the statement or testimony at issue (1) be protected by the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination and (2) be given under compulsion before its protection attaches. Absent a showing that Barthelme's statements here were in any manner compelled, he is ineligible for any immunity protection offered by Section 961.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

ASHTON v. STATE
2017 OK CR 15 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2017)
Murphy v. Commonwealth
659 S.E.2d 538 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2008)
State v. Barthelme
2007 OK CR 40 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 OK CR 40, 172 P.3d 201, 2007 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38, 2007 WL 3110336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barthelme-oklacrimapp-2007.