State v. Green

810 P.2d 1023, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1991 WL 74589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 10, 1991
DocketA-3236
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 810 P.2d 1023 (State v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Green, 810 P.2d 1023, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1991 WL 74589 (Ala. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

The state appeals Superior Court Judge Karl S. Johnstone’s order dismissing an indictment that charged Kevin Nelson Green with second-degree murder, first-degree assault, and criminal nonsupport. We affirm.

On September 6, 1987, rescue workers responded to a report of a child who had stopped breathing. They found Green’s three-month-old daughter dead. The circumstances were suspicious, since it appeared that Green’s daughter had died several hours before help was summoned. Green was unable to explain his daughter’s death. He indicated that he had taken a shower; upon emerging, he noticed that his daughter had stopped breathing, and he attempted to provide mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Green claimed that he then called his wife, who rushed home from work and telephoned for emergency assistance.

An autopsy performed by Dr. Michael P. Propst revealed evidence of prior physical abuse unrelated to the death of the child but failed to establish a precise cause of death. Dr. Propst diagnosed the cause of death as asphyxia from an unknown source. While Propst suspected that the asphyxia probably resulted from abuse, he could not conclusively rule out other causes, such as sudden infant death syndrome. A military physician, Dr. Arnold R. Josselson, reviewed the autopsy reports and agreed with Propst’s findings.

The grand jury hearing that led to the current indictment against Green occurred approximately fifteen months after the alleged homicide. Propst and Josselson both testified before the grand jury. To bolster their testimony, the prosecution also called numerous friends and relatives of Green, including Green’s parents, his brother, and the third-party custodians who supervised Green during his pretrial release. The state questioned these witnesses at length concerning any explanation Green might have offered for his daughter’s death or for the various injuries the child had suffered before the day she died. Almost without exception, these witnesses testified that Green had failed to explain anything about his daughter’s death or the child’s prior injuries. 1

*1025 Green subsequently moved to dismiss his indictment, arguing, among other things, that the evidence as to cause of death was too inconclusive to support a murder charge and that the state had relied on inadmissible evidence of his silence to obtain the indictment. Judge Johnstone granted Green’s motion to dismiss, relying on both the insufficiency of the evidence as a whole and the impropriety of the testimony relating to Green’s failure to make exculpatory statements. 2

The state appeals, challenging the propriety of Judge Johnstone’s ruling. With respect to the use of Green’s silence as evidence of guilt, both parties devote considerable attention to the issue of whether the disputed evidence was constitutionally prohibited. See, e.g., Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 616-20, 96 S.Ct. 2240, 2243-46, 49 L.Ed.2d 91 (1976); Silvernail v. State, 777 P.2d 1169, 1174-75 (Alaska App.1989). However, we find it unnecessary to decide the constitutional issue, since the admissibility of the challenged evidence can be determined as an ordinary evidentiary matter.

With certain limited exceptions not pertinent here, only “[ejvidence which would be *1026 legally admissible at trial shall be admissible before the grand jury.” Alaska R.Crim.P. 6(r)(l). In this case, the state advances two theories to support the admissibility of the extensive grand jury testimony concerning Green’s failure to make exculpatory statements.

First, relying on its general obligation to present exculpatory evidence to the grand jury, 3 the state attempts to characterize the testimony as a bona fide search for potentially exculpatory statements. The ingenuousness of this argument verges on the disingenuous. The obvious focus of the state’s protracted questioning of numerous witnesses before the grand jury was not on what Green had said to his friends and relatives but rather on what he had not said. In summarizing the evidence to the grand jury, the prosecution emphasized Green’s failure to make exculpatory statements. The prosecutor who presented the case to the grand jury also expressly acknowledged to the trial court that she had relied on the challenged testimony as evidence of an admission by silence. The nature and extent of inquiry into Green’s silence go far beyond anything that could conceivably be justified as a bona fide search for potentially exculpatory statements.

Second, the state attempts to characterize the challenged testimony as falling within the hearsay exception for adoptive admissions, or admissions by silence. See Doisher v. State, 658 P.2d 119, 120-21 (Alaska 1983); Blue v. State, 558 P.2d 636, 645 (Alaska 1977); Watson v. State, 387 P.2d 289, 291 (Alaska 1963). The adoptive admission theory, however, is plainly inapplicable here.

One of the basic foundational requirements of the adoptive admissions theory is a specific showing of a statement or circumstances calling for a reply. Doisher, 658 P.2d at 120. In other words, before seeking to use the challenged evidence in this case as an admission by silence, the state had the burden of showing that Green’s failure to make an exculpatory statement occurred in response to something “to which an innocent man would in the situation and surrounding circumstances naturally respond_” Id. at 121.

No such showing was made or even attempted here. Instead, the disputed testimony appears to have been offered on the mere assumption that an innocent person should feel morally bound to make exculpatory statements to friends and relatives at some point after the unexplained death of a child. Such a broad, generalized and unsupported assumption as to what an innocent person should do at some unspecified time during a fifteen-month period hardly meets the specific evidentiary prerequisites for admission under the adoptive admissions theory. 4

The state hedges on the issue of admissibility by arguing that the disputed evidence was at worst arguably inadmissible. According to the state, the admissibility of the evidence at trial would ultimately have turned on a balancing of probative value *1027 against prejudicial impact. See A.R.E. 403(b). The state contends that, because no judge presides over grand jury testimony to make such balancing decisions, the evidence was properly presented to the grand jury, even if it might have been inadmissible under A.R.E. 403(b). See, e.g., Coleman v. State, 553 P.2d 40, 48 (Alaska 1976); State v. Parks,

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Bluebook (online)
810 P.2d 1023, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1991 WL 74589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-green-alaskactapp-1991.