Court Opinion

ID: 1043657
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-08 00:24:47.237899+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:07:24.820737
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2012 VT 105

State v. Tribble 2010-021
 
2012 VT 105
 
[Filed 21-Dec-2012]
 
NOTICE:  This opinion is
subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision
before publication in the Vermont Reports.  Readers are requested to notify
the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@state.vt.us or by mail at:
Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any
errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.
 
 

2012 VT 105

 

No. 2010-021

 

State of Vermont

Supreme Court

 

 

 

On Appeal from

     v.

District Court of Vermont, 
Unit No. 3, Lamoille Circuit

 

 

Dennis P. Tribble

March Term, 2012

 

 

 

 

Brian
  J. Grearson, J.

 

Christopher C. Moll, Lamoille County Deputy State’s
Attorney, Hyde Park, for 
  Plaintiff-Appellee.
 
Allison N. Fulcher of Martin & Associates, Barre, and
Dennis P. Tribble, Pro Se, Beattyville,
  Kentucky, for Defendant-Appellant.
 
 
PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Burgess and
Robinson, JJ.
 
 
¶ 1.            
ROBINSON, J.   The main issue in this case is whether
the trial court’s admission of a videotaped deposition of a key state witness
who was out of the country but willing to travel to the trial violated
defendant’s constitutional right to confrontation where defendant personally
objected to admission of the testimony on the record, but his counsel
stipulated to the videotape’s admission.  We conclude that defendant’s
rights were violated by the admission of the hearsay testimony and,
accordingly, reverse.  Because the issue is very likely to arise on
remand, we also consider defendant’s claim that the trial court erred in
permitting defense counsel to raise a diminished capacity defense over
defendant’s objection, concluding that the decision should have been left to
defendant.  
¶ 2.            
Defendant Dennis Tribble was charged with first-degree murder for
killing Michael Borello and was convicted of second-degree murder.  He
appeals that conviction.[1] 

¶ 3.            
That defendant killed Mr. Borello is not in dispute.  After the
shooting, defendant drove to the Sheriff’s office and told the dispatcher
working the desk that he “shot [his] neighbor.”  The circumstances
surrounding that killing are very much in dispute.
¶ 4.            
Defendant’s case can be summarized as follows.  In 1992, defendant
purchased a parcel of land on Jones Lane, a dirt road in a secluded, sparsely
populated, off-the-grid area in Wolcott.  He did not move there until late
1998 or early 1999.  Defendant developed a host of grievances against
others in the very rural neighborhood, including, Mr. Borello and his family in
particular.  He alleged they were involved with drugs; they were loud;
they were rude to him; Mr. Borello’s son drove too fast on their road, doing
gravel spins; they burned large quantities of trash; and they were polluting
the underground water on his lawn.  Defendant claimed Mr. Borello was
particularly hostile to him, and on two occasions Mr. Borello fired multiple
pistol shots while in defendant’s vicinity to intimidate defendant.  One
of those times, Mr. Borello drove his car by defendant and gave him the finger
with both hands.  Not long before their final confrontation, Mr.
Borello “got in [his] face” because defendant stopped waving at the
Borellos.  Mr. Borello had confronted defendant a number of times like
that—with increasing frequency and severity in the months leading up to their
final confrontation.  Defendant complained repeatedly about various
offenses to Mr. Borello directly, to the Lamoille County Sheriff’s Department
on multiple occasions, and to environmental authorities, but the
problems persisted, and he felt like nobody was doing anything about them.
¶ 5.            
According to defendant, the issues came to a head on September 26,
2000.  Hostilities had escalated, and Mr. Borello had threatened defendant
several times over the preceding twenty-four hours, including telling him that
defendant was “dead meat.”  In general, defendant had come to
believe that his life was in danger living on Jones Lane.  So when
he went to chop wood by the road that day, he took his pistol with him in
addition to his shotgun because he was worried about his safety.  While
defendant was splitting wood near the back of his truck by the side of the
road, Mr. Borello drove slowly past him and stopped his car.  Defendant
got his pistol from the truck when he realized Mr. Borello was stopping. 
Mr. Borello got out of his car and came toward him, screaming.  Defendant
described Mr. Borello as angry and “purple in the face.”  Defendant moved
backwards down a short embankment; as Mr. Borello pursued, defendant drew his
gun.  Defendant brandished his pistol, and when Mr. Borello looked like he
was about to continue down the embankment, from about six feet away defendant
shot Mr. Borello in the buttock in the hope that Mr. Borello would leave.
 Not knowing whether he had hit Mr. Borello, and given that Mr. Borello
started to lunge again, defendant tried to fire a second shot, but his pistol
jammed.  
¶ 6.            
Mr. Borello then turned and ran quickly back to his car, and defendant
retrieved his shotgun from his own truck.  As Mr. Borello approached his
own car, defendant feared that Mr. Borello was retrieving a weapon.  When
Mr. Borello did not heed defendant’s instruction not to approach Mr. Borello’s
car door, defendant shot him in the hip with his shotgun.  At that point,
defendant allowed Mr. Borello to leave the scene.  Mr. Borello ran
away without difficulty, but bypassed the best route to his house and instead
went around the curve and stepped on the running board of an abandoned dump
truck body on another neighbor’s property.  Because he thought Mr. Borello
was still a threat, defendant followed, instructing him to get away from the
truck and shooting again with the shotgun when he did not.  When Mr.
Borello squared up to defendant and started to come at him, defendant shot him
in the chest from a distance of six or seven feet.  Mr. Borello
fell at that point.  Throughout the entire encounter, defendant felt
threatened by Mr. Borello.  
¶ 7.            
Although defendant wanted to focus his case solely on his self-defense
claim, over his objection, defense counsel presented testimony of diminished
capacity.  Two different psychiatric experts for the defense testified
that defendant suffered from a type of delusional disorder that included a
fixed belief that someone wants to harm him, with an additional diagnosis of
paranoid personality disorder.  Because of his condition, defendant
believed he needed to shoot and possibly kill Mr. Borello in order to protect
himself.  Defendant’s delusional disorder accounts for defendant’s belief
that when Mr. Borello tried to go to his car, and when he then went to the
abandoned dump truck, he was going to get a weapon.  People who are
delusional see a threat when there is no threat.  Mr. Tribble himself
testified that he did not suffer from a delusional disorder and was vigilant
but not paranoid; defense experts testified that his belief that he was not
delusional was not surprising given his disorder.  
¶ 8.            
Defendant was the only surviving witness to the event, although one
neighbor heard gun shots, and, from a distance, through a break in the trees,
very briefly saw someone run up the road toward the dump truck, shouting, “Get
out of here.”  Moments later, the person ran back the other way.  
¶ 9.            
The State’s witnesses portrayed defendant as more of an aggressor
relative to Mr. Borello and others.  Various neighbors testified that they
had never seen Mr. Borello threaten or disrespect defendant or anyone else, but
that they had heard defendant complain many times about the Borellos.  One
neighbor described an incident in 2000 in which defendant initiated a verbal
exchange of obscenities as Mr. Borello drove by, a time when defendant
brandished a club and remarked to the neighbor that he, defendant, was taller
than Mr. Borello, and an occasion when defendant showed his new shotgun and
made a remark about the ease of killing someone.  Another neighbor
testified that shortly before the killing, defendant complained to her about
the Borellos and told her he wanted to kill Mr. Borello’s son, and that it
would be easy to hide a body in the swamp.  A state environmental officer
testified that once when he was driving on Jones Lane, in street clothes and a
Jeep Cherokee, a man, whom he later came to know as Mr. Tribble, walked into the
road, stopped his car, and questioned him about who he was and why he was there
in a way that made him uncomfortable.
¶ 10.        
Mr. Borello’s son testified that defendant frequently stopped them on
the road, swore a lot, and complained about one thing or another.  It was
normal for defendant to be “mouthy, upset, enraged, [and] hot off the handle,”
but at some point defendant turned his rage toward Mr. Borello and his
son.  On the day of the killing, the son was driving down the road in his
father’s truck, and defendant pulled into the road right in front of him,
forcing him to begin to stop.  After making eye contact, defendant pulled
back into his driveway and allowed the son to pass.  
¶ 11.        
A young man who was visiting a family, the Manoshes, on Jones Lane the
day of the killing testified that as he was driving down the road, defendant
was standing in the middle of the road waving his hand; when the young man
pulled over, defendant asked him why the Manoshes were not doing anything about
Mr. Borello’s throwing trash on their and defendant’s property.  Defendant
got progressively angrier, and said that if Mr. Borello kept on throwing trash
on his property, defendant was going to kill him.  Shortly thereafter, the
young man encountered Mr. Borello’s daughter on the road and relayed the
threat.  She saw her father, Mr. Borello, moments after, but does not
recall with confidence whether she passed the information about Mr. Tribble’s
threat on to her father.  
¶ 12.        
The State introduced physical evidence and observations from the scene
to undermine defendant’s account.  The shell casing linked to defendant’s
first pistol shot was found at the edge of the road.  Given ballistics
testimony that defendant’s pistol discharged cartridges to the rear and right
of the shooter, the location of the shell casing undermined defendant’s
testimony that he had backed down the embankment away from the road before
firing his pistol at Mr. Borello.  Likewise, direct observations by
one witness contradicted defendant’s report immediately after the incident
that, as he backed away from the road and down the embankment, he found himself
in standing water, overtopping his boot.  And no weapons of any sort were
found in Mr. Borello’s car or the abandoned dump truck.  
¶ 13.        
Dr. Morrow, a forensic pathologist and Vermont’s Chief Medical Examiner
at the time of the killing, testified that Mr. Borello’s wounds signaled that
he had been shot once with a pistol and four times with a shotgun.  In
particular, Mr. Borello was shot in the hip with a pistol, with an exit wound
through his buttocks.  Mr. Borello was shot once in the back of the head
and neck area with a shotgun; once in the shoulder and arm with a shotgun; once
in the side and stomach with a shotgun; and once in the chest with a
shotgun.  Dr. Morrow testified that the pellet wounds from a shotgun were
scattered over surfaces of the body, predominantly the back of the head and
neck, on the right shoulder and arm, and on the back of the body from the
shoulder blades to the back of the thigh.  The trajectory of the pellets
that grazed or hit Mr. Borello’s torso was back to front.  The pistol shot
and first three shotgun shots likely caused Mr. Borello considerable pain, but
would not likely have been fatal.  The final shotgun shot to Mr. Borello’s
chest injured his heart and likely killed him immediately.  The fatal
shotgun blast was likely shot from an intermediate range, from five to twelve
feet away, and hit Mr. Borello on a trajectory that would have been essentially
level relative to a position in which Mr. Borello was standing erect.  The
pellets were two different colors, meaning the shotgun had been reloaded
between shots.  Among other things, Dr. Morrow’s testimony undermined defendant’s
claim that he acted in self-defense, and that Mr. Borello was lunging at him
during the altercation.
¶ 14.        
The State also relied on defendant’s description of the confrontation to
police officers shortly after the shooting; the prior statements were arguably
inconsistent with his trial testimony in meaningful ways, including his
description of the initial encounter with Mr. Borello.  And the State
argued that defendant’s pursuit of Mr. Borello when Mr. Borello retreated down
the road defeated the self-defense claim and supported the State’s assertion
that defendant intentionally killed Mr. Borello. 
¶ 15.        
With respect to the diminished capacity defense, the State presented two
expert witnesses who testified that defendant was not delusional and had the
ability to form the various levels of intent to support conviction for first-
or second-degree murder.  The State’s experts testified that defendant had
a paranoid personality disorder, but was not delusional, and that defendant had
the capacity to act willfully and to premeditate.  
I.
¶ 16.        
We first address defendant’s Confrontation Clause claim.  Over
defendant’s objection, defense counsel and the State stipulated to allow the
State to take a preservation deposition of a critical witness for use in lieu
of live testimony at trial.  In November 2008, the State filed a “Notice
of Intent to Use Deposition to Preserve Testimony” of the former Chief Medical
Examiner who performed Mr. Borello’s autopsy.  In the notice, the State asserted
that “Dr. Morrow will be unavailable for trial as he will be working and
residing in New Zealand from February 2009 through June 2009.”  The State
proposed to conduct a preservation deposition before Dr. Morrow’s departure or,
in the alternative, to present live testimony during trial via
video-conferencing.  The State appended to its notice an e-mail from Dr.
Morrow describing his constraints:  
  As
we discussed, I will be working . . . in Auckland, NZ at the time of
trial. . . . It would be immensely inconvenient for my employer
. . . and me, as well as inconvenient and potentially quite expensive
for the State . . . to require me to appear in person at the
trial. . . . I will be instate [sic] and available until Dec 30
to provide video taped preservation testimony at any mutually convenient time
. . . Alternatively, I would make myself available for a live video
or telephonic link to the Vermont court from Auckland . . . .
 
. . .
 
  If
required to fly from New Zealand, I would require a business class ticket in
order to be appropriately articulate in my testimony . . . .
These were the arrangements used in State vs Godfrey . . . . 
 
Defendant personally filed a
memorandum in opposition and asked the court to disallow a preservation
deposition and either compel Dr. Morrow’s presence at court or prohibit the
introduction of his testimony.  
¶ 17.        
At a hearing on the issue, defense counsel confirmed his agreement to
the State’s motion, saying the motion was not unreasonable.  Counsel noted
defendant’s displeasure with counsel’s stipulation to allow Dr. Morrow’s
testimony by videotape.  At that same hearing, defendant personally
addressed the court and objected to his attorney’s stipulation to the taking of
Dr. Morrow’s deposition in lieu of being present at trial, stating that the
witness’s presence at trial was his “Constitutional Right.”  Defendant
insisted, “I have a right to confront this man . . . . At the trial,
he should be present at the trial.”  
¶ 18.        
The trial court allowed the preservation deposition and introduction of
the videotaped testimony, noting that in light of Dr. Morrow’s absence from the
country, “with or without the stipulation, the court would approve the
deposition for preservation.”  In its written order, the trial court found
that the witness would be absent from the country at the time the case was
scheduled for trial, and overruled defendant’s Confrontation Clause objection
noting that defendant would be transported to be present for the deposition,
the court would be available to rule on objections, and the deposition would be
video recorded for playback at trial.  
¶ 19.        
At trial, the State played Dr. Morrow’s pre-recorded video testimony before
the jury.  The exhibits about which Dr. Morrow testified were shown on a
screen for the jury to view as Dr. Morrow testified about each in the
video.  
¶ 20.        
The question on appeal is whether the trial court’s decision to admit
Dr. Morrow’s videotaped preservation deposition testimony over defendant’s
objection was reversible error.  We review the factual findings underlying
the trial court’s analysis for clear error, and review de novo the court’s
legal conclusions concerning defendant’s Confrontation Clause challenge.
 See State v. Shea, 2008 VT 114, ¶ 8, 184 Vt. 453, 965 A.2d
504. 
¶ 21.        
The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States
Constitution provides that, “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy
the right . . . to be confronted
with the witnesses against him.”  U.S. Const. amend. VI.  The
Confrontation Clause guarantees criminal defendants the right to confront those
who “bear testimony” against them.  Crawford v. Washington, 541
U.S. 36, 51 (2004) (quotation omitted).  The United States Supreme Court
has reiterated that “[a] witness’s testimony against a defendant is thus
inadmissible unless the witness appears at trial or, if the witness is
unavailable, the defendant had a prior opportunity for
cross-examination.”  Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 557 U.S. 305,
309 (2009).  This Confrontation Clause requirement applies to out-of-court
statements introduced at trial as well as in-court statements, Crawford,
541 U.S. at 50-51, and it applies to testimonial statements “made under
circumstances which would lead an objective witness reasonably to believe that
the statement would be available for use at a later trial,” including prior
deposition testimony.  Id. at 51-52.[2]  In Crawford, the Court
expressly abrogated its own prior ruling that had allowed admission of
out-of-court statements not subject to confrontation, even if they were
testimonial, if they bore sufficient indicia of reliability.  541 U.S. at
60-69. 
¶ 22.        
The Supreme Court has declined to make an exception to this rule for
expert scientific testimony.  In Melendez-Diaz, the Court
considered a case in which the trial court had admitted reports, prepared by
state lab analysts, certifying that a specific substance was cocaine.  The
state argued that the above requirements did not apply because (1) the analysts
were not “accusatory” witnesses in that they did not directly accuse the
defendant of wrongdoing, 557 U.S. at 313; (2) their analyses were not the sort
of conventional out-of-court testimony with which the Confrontation Clause is
concerned, id. at 315-16; and (3) their testimony was not offered in
response to interrogation, id. at 316-17.  The Court rejected these
arguments, and expressly declined to view scientific testimony as different
from other testimony subject to the confrontation requirement, explaining:
 “Like the eyewitness who has fabricated his account to the police, the
analyst who provides false results may, under oath in open court, reconsider
his false testimony.”  Id. at 319.  Moreover, the Court
emphasized that the right of confrontation does not arise only when the
reliability of testimony is in question: “[W]e would reach the same conclusion
if all analysts always possessed the scientific acumen of Mme. Curie and the
veracity of Mother Theresa.”  Id. at 319 n.6; accord Bullcoming
v. New Mexico, 131 S. Ct. 2705 (2011) (surrogate analyst from lab that
performed blood alcohol content testing not adequate substitute for analyst who
prepared report because “the accused’s right is to be confronted with the
analyst who made the certification, unless that analyst is unavailable at
trial, and the accused had an opportunity, pretrial, to cross-examine that
particular scientist”).[3]

¶ 23.        
Although in Crawford and Melendez-Diaz, the Court
considered out-of-court testimony that had not been subjected to
cross-examination, the Court’s discussions in both cases make it clear that,
when a witness is available for trial, the Confrontation Clause requires live
testimony at trial, even when a defendant did have a prior opportunity
to cross-examine the witness.  In Melendez-Diaz, the court required
that the defendant be confronted “at trial” and held that both the prior
opportunity to cross-examine and unavailability at trial were necessary
conditions for escaping the in-trial confrontation requirement.  Id.
at 311; see also id. at 311 n.1 (“[W]hat testimony [regarding chain of
custody] is introduced must (if the defendant objects) be introduced
live.”); Crawford, 541 U.S. at 59 (“Our cases have thus remained
faithful to the Framers’ understanding: Testimonial statements of witnesses
absent from trial have been admitted only where the declarant is unavailable,
and only where the defendant has had a prior opportunity to
cross-examine.”)  
¶ 24.        
The Court’s conclusion that even out-of-court testimony previously
subject to cross-examination by defendant may be considered at trial only if
the witness is unavailable is consistent with its recognition that the significance of “confrontation”
is not limited to the interaction between, and effect on, the witness and
defendant; the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that the
presence of the factfinder is part and parcel of an effective exercise of the
Confrontation Clause right.  See, e.g.,  Mattox v. United States,
156 U.S. 237, 242-43 (1895) (Sixth Amendment was designed to prevent use of
“depositions or ex parte affidavits . . . against [a] prisoner in
lieu of a personal examination and cross-examination of the witness, in which
the accused has an opportunity, not only of testing the recollection and
sifting the conscience of the witness, but of compelling him to stand face to
face with the jury in order that they may look at him, and judge by his
demeanor upon the stand and the manner in which he gives his testimony whether
he is worthy of belief”). Accordingly,
the United States Supreme Court has held that it would not allow admission of
the transcript of a preliminary hearing of an accused’s codefendant, even if
accused’s counsel had cross-examined the codefendant at that hearing, where
there was no showing that the codefendant was unavailable to testify.  Barber
v. Page, 390 U.S. 719, 725 (1968) (“The right to confrontation is basically
a trial right.  It includes both the opportunity to cross-examine and the
occasion for the jury to weigh the demeanor of the witness.”)
¶ 25.        
 In Coy v. Iowa, the Supreme Court emphasized that “the
Confrontation Clause guarantees the defendant a face-to-face meeting with
witnesses appearing before the trier of fact.”  487 U.S. 1012, 1016
(1988).  In that case, the Court explained:
It is always more difficult to tell a lie
about a person “to his face” than “behind his back.” In the former context,
even if the lie is told, it will often be told less convincingly. The
Confrontation Clause does not, of course, compel the witness to fix his eyes
upon the defendant; he may studiously look elsewhere, but the trier of fact
will draw its own conclusions. Thus the right to face-to-face confrontation
serves much the same purpose as a less explicit component of the Confrontation
Clause that we have had more frequent occasion to discuss—the right to
cross-examine the accuser; both “ensur[e] the integrity of the fact-finding
process.”
 
487 U.S. 1019-20 (quoting Kentucky v.
Stincer, 482 U.S. 730, 736 (1987)).  Two years later the Court
reinforced this view, explaining, “The combined effect of these elements of
confrontation—physical presence, oath, cross-examination, and observation of
demeanor by the trier of fact—serves the purposes of the Confrontation Clause
by ensuring that evidence admitted against an accused is reliable and subject
to the rigorous adversarial testing that is the norm of Anglo-American criminal
proceedings.”  Maryland v. Craig,  497 U.S. 836, 846 (1990). 
¶ 26.        
In light of these principles,
other courts facing circumstances similar to this case have declined to admit
at trial prior deposition testimony, even if it was subject to
cross-examination by defendant, absent a showing that the witness is
unavailable to testify at trial.  For example, the United States Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit concluded that the district court had committed
plain error in admitting at trial depositions that had been taken pursuant to
court order to preserve the testimony of witnesses who were expected to be
unavailable for trial without first requiring the government to establish that
the witnesses were in fact unavailable.  United States v. Matus-Zayas,
655 F.3d 1092, 1101 (9th Cir. 2011).   
¶ 27.        
Likewise, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed a grant of habeas relief to a
defendant convicted based, in part, on the videotaped testimony of a witness
who was incarcerated out of state at the time of trial; although defendant
cross-examined the witness in the pretrial deposition, the state failed to
establish at trial that the witness was unavailable in the constitutional
sense.  Brumley v. Wingard, 269 F.3d 629, 641 (6th Cir.
2001).  The court explained, “[I]n conformance with the Framers’
preference for face-to-face accusation, the Sixth Amendment establishes a rule
of necessity.  In the usual case (including cases where prior
cross-examination has occurred), the prosecution must either produce, or
demonstrate the unavailability of, the declarant whose statement it wishes to
use against the defendant.”  Id. at 639.  The court
acknowledged that the videotaped testimony—taken under oath and subject to
cross-examination, with a court available to rule on objections—did not
implicate many of the concerns underlying the Confrontation Clause, but
recognized that even the videotape could not satisfy the Confrontation Clause’s
“preference for face-to-face confrontation at trial.”  Id.
at 642 (quotation omitted).  Accordingly, the court concluded, “[T]he knowing
preparation of a videotaped deposition as a substitute for the trial
testimony of a constitutionally available witness is inconsistent with
the values of the Confrontation Clause, despite reduced concerns with
reliability.”  Id.
¶ 28.        
For these reasons, we conclude that absent a valid waiver, the
Constitution does not except “preservation deposition” testimony from the
requirements of the Confrontation Clause.[4] 
Accordingly, we consider three questions: (1) whether Dr. Morrow was
“unavailable”; (2) if not, whether defense counsel’s stipulation to allow Dr.
Morrow’s preservation deposition to be admitted at trial in lieu of his actual
presence, over defendant’s objection, was an effective waiver of defendant’s
Confrontation Clause rights; and (3) if not, whether the error was
constitutionally harmless.
A.
¶ 29.        
The United States Supreme Court held that a witness is not “unavailable”
for purposes of the exception to the confrontation requirement “unless the
prosecutorial authorities have made a good-faith effort” to secure the
witness’s presence at trial.  Barber, 390 U.S. at 724-25.  In
the Barber case, a defendant was convicted after an Oklahoma trial court
admitted the transcript of a critical witness’s testimony from a preliminary
hearing in the case because that witness was incarcerated in Texas at the time
of trial.  The Supreme Court reversed the lower federal court’s denial of
habeas corpus relief, noting that the “the sole reason why [the witness] was
not present to testify in person was because the state did not attempt to seek
his presence.”  Id. at 725.  The Court admonished, “The right
of confrontation may not be dispensed with so lightly.”  Id.
¶ 30.        
The Court further elaborated on the “unavailability” requirement in Ohio
v. Roberts:
The law does not require the doing of a
futile act. Thus, if no possibility of procuring the witness exists (as, for
example, the witness' intervening death), “good faith” demands nothing of the
prosecution. But if there is a possibility, albeit remote, that affirmative
measures might produce the declarant, the obligation of good faith may
demand their effectuation.  The lengths to which the prosecution must go
to produce a witness . . . is a question of reasonableness.  The ultimate
question is whether the witness is unavailable despite good-faith efforts
undertaken prior to trial to locate and present that witness. As with other
evidentiary proponents, the prosecution bears the burden of establishing this
predicate.
 
448 U.S. 56, 74 (1980) (quotations
omitted), overruled on other grounds by Crawford, 541 U.S. at
60-69.  In Roberts, the Court concluded that the prosecutor’s
multiple attempts to serve subpoenas on the witness at her last known address,
its outreach to the witness’s parents well in advance of the trial, and its
voir dire of the parents who testified that they had not been able to locate
their daughter for over a year, all supported the conclusion that the
prosecutor had undertaken a good-faith effort to bring the witness to court so
that the witness was unavailable for the purpose of the Confrontation Clause
analysis.  Id. at 76-77.
¶ 31.        
We have decided several cases raising the issue of whether a witness is
unavailable for Confrontation Clause purposes.  In  State v. Lynds,
the State wrote a letter to its expert in a child sexual abuse case informing
her of the trial date six weeks before the trial.  158 Vt. 37, 40, 605
A.2d 501, 502 (1991).  Two weeks before the trial, and again five days
before the trial, prosecutors left the expert phone messages.  Id.
 The State finally reached its expert witness two days before trial, only
to learn that she would be out of state on the day of trial and would not
return until nearly a week after the trial.  Id.  The trial
court granted the State’s motion, over the defendant’s Confrontation Clause
objection, to admit the expert’s deposition testimony in the trial.  We
reversed.  Noting that “a witness who will be inconvenienced by appearing
. . . is not unavailable,” we concluded that “[t]he State’s effort
was not sufficiently diligent to satisfy the unavailability requirement.” Id.
at 41-42, 605 A.2d at 503 (citations omitted).  
¶ 32.        
In State v. Carroll the State used the Uniform Act to Secure the
Attendance of Witnesses from Without the State in Criminal Cases, 13 V.S.A.
§ 6646, to ensure its key witness’s presence at trial.  147 Vt. 108,
110, 513 A.2d 1159, 1160 (1986).  However, due to a failure of
communication between defendant and his lawyer regarding the trial date,
defendant was not present in court on the initial trial date.  Before the
witness left to return to Colorado, the State moved to take the witness’s
deposition “ ‘in order to preserve necessary testimony in the event the
State cannot afford to fly ‘the witness’ back to Bennington a second
time.’ ”  Id.  The court granted the motion and admitted
the deposition testimony at the rescheduled trial.  We reversed. 
Noting the United States Supreme Court’s admonition that “[w]here a witness is
absent from the jurisdiction, ‘the government must show that it has engaged in
a diligent effort to locate and procure the witness’ return,’ ” we
concluded that the State had made no effort to secure the witness’s presence at
the rescheduled, actual trial.  Id. at 112-13, 513 A.2d at 1161
(quoting Roberts, 448 U.S. at 79). 
¶ 33.        
Considering these cases, we cannot conclude based on the evidence in the
record that Dr. Morrow was unavailable.  Dr. Morrow indicated that
attending the trial in person “would be immensely inconvenient” for him and his
employer, but also undisputedly indicated his willingness to return from New
Zealand for the trial and that he would require a business class ticket. 
The State knew where Dr. Morrow was, and Dr. Morrow was willing to testify at
the trial if the State made the necessary arrangements.  There is no
evidence that Dr. Morrow required the State to invoke any formal process to
secure his attendance.  The only two impediments to Dr. Morrow’s
testifying at the trial were inconvenience and cost.  We have expressly
rejected both of these as factors sufficient to support a finding of
unavailability.  See Lynds, 158 Vt. at 41, 605 A.2d at 503
(inconvenience is not tantamount to unavailability), Carroll, 147 Vt. at
110-11, 513 A.2d at 1160-61 (admission of preservation deposition undertaken to
avoid cost of flying witness back to Vermont was error).[5]  Accordingly, we conclude that the
trial court’s determination that Dr. Morrow was unavailable is unsupported by
the record and erroneous as a matter of law.[6]   For that reason, admission of
Dr. Morrow’s out-of-court testimony violated defendant’s Confrontation Clause
rights absent an effective waiver of those rights.
B.
¶ 34.        
We next consider defense counsel’s stipulation, over defendant’s
objection, to admit the preservation testimony of Dr. Morrow in lieu of his
presence at trial.  We must decide whether a defendant’s attorney can
waive a defendant’s Confrontation Clause rights in the face of a defendant’s
objection to such a waiver.  
¶ 35.        
The right to confrontation is a fundamental constitutional right.  Pointer
v. Texas, 380 U.S. 400, 403 (1965).  Fundamental constitutional
rights, including the right to confrontation, can undoubtedly be waived. 
See, e.g., Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238, 243 (1969) (valid guilty
plea entails waiver of three constitutional rights: privilege against
self-incrimination, right to jury trial, and right to confront one’s accusers);
Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 465 (1938) (criminal defendant may
waive Sixth Amendment right to counsel); see also State v. Koveos, 169
Vt. 62, 67-68, 732 A.2d 722, 726 (1999) (defendant could not argue that he was
denied his right to confront witness when he specifically agreed to procedure
that allowed admission of pretrial deposition without live testimony of
witness).  Like any waiver of a constitutional right, a defendant’s waiver
of the right to confrontation must be an “intentional relinquishment or
abandonment of a known right or privilege.”  Johnson, 304 U.S. at
464.
¶ 36.        
Most courts have recognized the validity of an attorney’s waiver of the
right to confrontation on a defendant’s behalf.  See, e.g., People v.
Campbell, 802 N.E.2d 1205, 1210 (Ill. 2003) (“[A] majority of the
courts that have addressed the issue have held that counsel in a criminal case
may waive [a] client's sixth amendment right of confrontation
by stipulating to the admission of evidence.”).[7] 

¶ 37.        
However, courts that have recognized the validity of an attorney’s
waiver of a defendant’s right to confrontation have consistently held that the
waiver is ineffective where the defendant dissents from or objects to the
attorney’s decision.  See, e.g., United States v. Williams, 632
F.3d 129, 133 (4th Cir. 2011) (“We can find no reasoning or case law that would
uphold a waiver of a Sixth Amendment right by defense counsel over a
defendant’s objection.”); United States v. Williams, 403 F. App’x 707,
708 (3d Cir. 2010) (“The validity of counsel’s waiver depends on whether the
defendant dissented from his counsel’s decision and whether counsel’s decision
was a legitimate trial tactic or part of a prudent trial strategy.”); Holmes,
620 F.3d at 843; Hawkins v. Hannigan, 185 F.3d 1146, 1155-56 (10th Cir.
1999) (where defense counsel’s decision to enter stipulation to allow admission
of hearsay testimony was prudent trial decision and the record reflected no
dissent from defendant, waiver of confrontation rights was effective); United
States v. Stephens, 609 F.2d 230, 232-33 (5th Cir. 1980),
(“[C]ounsel in a criminal case may waive [the] client's Sixth Amendment right
of confrontation by stipulating to the admission of evidence, so long as the
defendant does not dissent from [the] attorney’s decision, and so long as it
can be said that the attorney’s decision was a legitimate trial tactic or part
of a prudent trial strategy.”); Wilson v. Gray, 345 F.2d 282,
287-88 (9th Cir. 1965) (where defendant’s attorney stipulated to introduction
of transcript of preliminary hearing at trial in the presence of defendant,
defendant did not object, and decision to stipulate was deliberately made as a
matter of trial tactics and strategy, attorney’s stipulation on behalf of
defendant was valid); United States v. Joseph, 333 F.2d 1012, 1013 (6th
Cir. 1964) (“[Confrontation] right may be effectively waived by counsel in open
court in the presence of [a defendant] who indicates no dissent.”); Cruzado
v. People of Puerto Rico, 210 F.2d 789, 791 (1st Cir. 1954) (upholding
counsel’s waiver of confrontation rights through stipulation to admit testimony
from other court hearings, and explaining, “If the accused, being present,
manifests no dissent, it is usually fair to assume that [the accused] approves of,
or at least acquiesces in, the decisions taken in open court in [defendant’s]
behalf by [defense] counsel.”); People v. Clendenin, 939 N.E.2d 310, 324
(Ill. 2010) (defense counsel may waive defendant’s confrontation right where
“(1) the defendant does not object to the stipulation; and (2) the
decision to stipulate is a matter of trial tactics and strategy.”); People
v. Buie, 817 N.W.2d 33, 44 (Mich. 2012) (“[W]here the decision constitutes
reasonable trial strategy . . . the right of confrontation may be waived by
defense counsel as long as the defendant does not object on the
record.”).  We have found no authority to support the proposition that
counsel can stipulate to the admission of out-of-court testimony thereby
waiving defendant’s Confrontation Clause rights in the face of defendant’s
express objection.[8]

¶ 38.        
This record leaves no doubt that defendant dissented from his attorney’s
decision to stipulate to the admission of pretrial deposition testimony of Dr.
Morrow in lieu of the expert’s actual presence at trial—in effect waiving
defendant’s right to confront Dr. Morrow at trial.  Assuming, without
deciding, that counsel can in some circumstances stipulate to a waiver of
defendant’s Confrontation Clause rights pursuant to a prudent trial strategy,
in this case, where defendant timely objected to such a waiver on the record,
the purported waiver is invalid.  Accordingly, the trial court erred in
admitting the out-of-court testimony of Dr. Morrow over defendant’s objection. 
C.
¶ 39.        
The remaining question in the Confrontation Clause analysis is whether
the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.  See State v. Carter,
164 Vt. 545, 553-55, 674 A.2d 1258, 1264-65 (1996) (constitutional error
“may be found harmless only if the appellate court can
state ‘a belief that it was harmless beyond
a reasonable doubt.’ ”
(quoting Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18, 24 (1967))); State
v. Oscarson, 2004 VT 4, ¶ 30,
176 Vt. 176, 845 A.2d 337 (“For the error to be harmless, the
reviewing court must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have
returned a guilty verdict regardless of the error.”). 
¶ 40.        
We have recognized that when the error involves improper admission of
evidence, the error cannot be harmless if “ ‘there is a reasonable
possibility that the evidence complained of might have contributed to the
conviction.’ ”[9] 
Carter, 164 Vt. at 553, 674 A.2d at 1264 (quoting Fahy v. Connecticut,
375 U.S. 85, 86-87 (1963)).  We thus review the record for harmlessness by
analyzing whether, beyond a reasonable doubt, the jury would have convicted
defendant of second-degree murder in the absence of Dr. Morrow’s testimony. 
See Coy, 487 U.S. at 1022 (“[H]armlessness must . . . be
determined on the basis of the remaining evidence.”); Oscarson, 2004 VT
4, ¶ 31
(“[W]e must assess harmlessness by considering the likelihood of the conviction
in the absence of the offending testimony.”); State v. Lipka, 174 Vt.
377, 384, 817 A.2d 27, 34 (2002) (“To determine whether the error is
harmless, we must posit a trial without any evidence by the witness who
testified in violation of defendant’s confrontation rights.” (quotation and
alterations omitted)).  “The issue before us is what the jury might have
done without the offending evidence, not what we would do if we were the
factfinder.”  Lipka, 174 Vt. at 385, 817 A.2d at 34.
¶ 41.        
Our harm calculus is guided by a host of factors including: “the
importance of the witness’ testimony in the prosecution’s case, whether the
testimony was cumulative, the presence or absence of
evidence corroborating or contradicting the testimony of the witness on
material points, the extent of the cross-examination otherwise permitted, and,
of course, the overall strength of the prosecution’s case.”  Oscarson,
2004 VT 4, ¶ 32 (quotation omitted).  The two most important of these
factors are “the overall strength of the State’s case without the offending
evidence and the strength of the offending evidence.”  Id.; see
also Lipka, 174 Vt. at 385, 817 A.2d at 34.  
¶ 42.        
A review of the State’s closing argument confirms that Dr. Morrow’s
testimony was important to the State’s case.  The State relied on Dr.
Morrow’s testimony about the trajectory of the pistol shot through Mr.
Borello’s hip and out his buttock to challenge defendant’s claim that he fired
that first shot as an angry Mr. Borello lunged toward him while defendant was
backing down an embankment by the roadside.  The State utilized Dr.
Morrow’s testimony on the superficial nature of most of the shotgun wounds, and
his testimony that the bullet that went through Mr. Borello’s body would have
caused more heavy bleeding, to interpret the blood trail at the scene. 
And based on Dr. Morrow’s testimony, the State called into question defendant’s
testimony that his first pistol shot did not seem to have any effect at all on
Mr. Borello.  The State reviewed in detail an exhibit admitted in
connection with Dr. Morrow’s testimony that identified the locations and
trajectories of the bullet and pellet shots that hit Mr. Borello, and noted
that most of the pellet wounds were in the back.  The State also
highlighted for the jury an x-ray, also admitted through Dr. Morrow, that
depicted the pellets in Mr. Borello’s head.  The State pointed to Dr.
Morrow’s testimony about the trajectory of the final, fatal shotgun blast to
argue that, when Mr. Tribble shot him at close range, Mr. Borello was upright, not
running toward defendant in a “football stance” as defendant testified. 
Dr. Morrow’s testimony was an important part of the State’s case, especially
insofar as it provided substantial support to the State’s rebuttal of
defendant’s own account of his confrontation with Mr. Borello.
¶ 43.        
Dr. Morrow’s testimony was not cumulative; although the fact that Mr.
Borello died as a result of defendant’s shots was not in dispute, nobody else
testified in detail about the physical evidence in Mr. Borello’s body and its
significance relative to the crime scene.  Defense counsel did conduct a
thorough cross-examination of Dr. Morrow—the one factor that weighs in favor of
a harmless error finding.  The State’s case was largely circumstantial.
 The jury heard Dr. Morrow’s testimony that the final shotgun blast to the
chest—after defendant said he followed Mr. Borello—was the cause of death; that
the earlier shots, including the pistol shot that defendant described as his
initial response to Mr. Borello’s advances, were injurious but not deadly; that
the pistol shot traveled into the side of Mr. Borello’s hip and out his
buttock—suggesting that Mr. Borello was not squarely advancing on defendant at
the time defendant fired; and that the initial bullet shot and subsequent
shotgun shots would likely have caused Mr. Borello considerable pain—calling
into question defendant’s testimony that Mr. Borello appeared unimpaired after
the first shot.  Had the jury not heard this testimony, it may have
reached different conclusions about what actually happened in the altercation
between defendant and Mr. Borello and may well have reached a different
conclusion as to Mr. Borello’s state of mind and criminal responsibility. 
For these reasons, we cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that in the
absence of that testimony the jury would have convicted defendant of
second-degree murder.  Lynds, 158 Vt. at 42, 605 A.2d at 503 (“[A]n
error cannot be harmless if there remains a possibility that the
constitutionally-proscribed evidence impacted on the ultimate decisional
process of the jury and the beneficiary of the error cannot refute that
possibility beyond all reasonable doubt.” (quotations and alterations
omitted)).  Accordingly, we must reverse defendant’s conviction.  
II.
¶ 44.        
Conflict between defendant and his various lawyers regarding the
assertion of mental-illness defenses has dogged this case from the
outset.  See Tribble, 2005 VT 132, ¶¶ 21-24 (reversing
defendant’s first-degree murder conviction based, in part, on trial court’s
decision to allow defense counsel to withdraw rather than defer to defendant’s
refusal to present insanity defense).   The issue is likely to recur
on retrial.  For that reason, although we reverse on the basis of the
Confrontation Clause violation, in the interest of judicial economy, we address
defendant’s claim that the trial court erred in allowing defense counsel to
present a case of diminished capacity over defendant’s objection.  See State
v. Hazelton, 2006 VT 121, ¶ 22, 181 Vt. 118, 915 A.2d 224 (addressing
remaining legal claim, despite reversal on other grounds, because it was likely
to arise in new trial).[10] 

¶ 45.        
Although defendant was found competent at his first trial, following our
remand defense counsel moved for an updated psychiatric evaluation and
competency determination.  The court granted the motion.  Based on a
subsequent evaluation and report by Dr. Paul Cotton, defendant stipulated that
he was competent to stand trial, and the trial court, based on the stipulation
and report, issued an order, dated October 8, 2008, so finding.  
¶ 46.        
In the period leading up to defendant’s trial, defendant waffled on
whether to present a diminished-capacity case at trial.  On June 13, 2006,
defendant personally filed a Rule 12.1 notice, stating his intent to “raise the
issue of diminished capacity and offer expert testimony relating to a mental
disease, defect, and other conditions bearing upon the issue of whether the
defendant had the mens rea required for the offense charged.”  The notice
indicated that defendant would offer the expert testimony of two mental health
experts: Dr. Jonathan Weker and Dr. Albert Drukteinis, both of whom had
previously evaluated defendant and determined that he suffered from paranoid
delusions.  Later, however, on January 27, 2009, six days before jury
draw, defendant personally filed a “Withdrawal of Rule 12.1 Notice” with the
trial court, stating, in part, that “[i]t makes no sense whatsoever for the
Doctor to be telling the jury that the defendant suffers from delusions when
the defense attorney is pursuing a self-defense claim and is attempting to
convince the jury that the defendant’s actions were reasonable.”  
¶ 47.        
Shortly thereafter, defense counsel filed a memorandum of law with the
trial court objecting to defendant’s withdrawal of his
Rule 12.1 Notice and arguing that defense counsel controls whether or not to
present a defense of diminished capacity, even where defendant objects to the
use of such a defense at trial.  On February 2, 2009, the first day of
jury draw, the court and the parties, including defendant himself, engaged in
an extended discussion about the issue.  Defense counsel reiterated his
view that the decision was a tactical one that was his to make, opined that the
self-defense argument was defendant’s weakest option, and expressed concern
that in the absence of a diminished-capacity issue, counsel might be precluded
from calling Drs. Weker and Drukteinis concerning defendant’s paranoia because
self-defense is predicated on what a reasonable person, not a delusional one,
would believe to be a threat.  See State v. Shaw, 168 Vt. 412, 418,
721 A.2d 486, 491 (1998) (“Both lawful self-defense and manslaughter
. . . require that the defendant perceive a situation in a reasonable
manner.”).  
¶ 48.        
The State, in contrast, argued that diminished capacity was akin to an
insanity defense or an instruction on lesser-included offenses, both decisions
within the defendant’s control.  See State v. Bean, 171 Vt. 290,
302, 762 A.2d 1259, 1267 (2000); In re Trombly, 160 Vt. 215, 218, 627
A.2d 855, 857 (1993).  Allowing defense counsel to present evidence of
diminished capacity, the State asserted, would improperly undermine defendant’s
claim of innocence and interpose lesser-included offenses, in contravention of
his right to control these decisions.  
¶ 49.        
The trial court appeared to recognize the tension between allowing
defense counsel to present evidence of diminished capacity while preserving
defendant’s right to decide whether to request charges on lesser-included
offenses, observing: “What if we get to the end of trial, and I allow the
testimony, because it’s a decision for the Defense attorney to make as opposed
to the defendant, and at the end of trial Mr. Tribble decides he does not want
lesser included instruction, then we’re left with testimony was there [sic],
but it’s [defendant’s] decision with respect to the lesser included offenses.” 
Throughout the court’s various discussions of the issue, defendant continued to
object clearly and on the record to presentation of diminished-capacity
evidence.  
¶ 50.        
Before the trial began, the trial court ruled that defense counsel could
decide whether to present the diminished capacity evidence, explaining as
follows:  
[T]he
issue of diminished capacity . . . is one for the attorneys
. . . . [Y]ou can go ahead with a diminished capacity defense
and call witnesses . . . . with the understanding that at the
end of trial [defendant] still controls the decision as to whether or not to
seek the lesser included offense instruction based on the testimony.
 
¶ 51.        
Accordingly, in the trial defense counsel called Drs. Weker and
Drukteinis and elicited testimony regarding defendant’s mental capacity.
 Dr. Weker testified that he had diagnosed defendant primarily with a
“delusional disorder persecutory type” and secondarily with a “paranoid
personality disorder.”  He stated that defendant was suffering from a
delusional disorder at the time of the offense, which led him to believe that
he was going to be attacked.  He acknowledged that defendant was capable
of forming an intent to kill, but that “his read” of the circumstances “would
have been different from anybody else’s” due to his belief that he was “in
danger [and] under attack” and required to defend himself with deadly
force.  On cross-examination, Dr. Weker opined that defendant’s belief
that Mr. Borello intended to kill him was delusional and baseless, and agreed
that defendant “was not acting as a reasonable, ordinary, prudent person would
act under the circumstances.”  Dr. Drukteinis offered similar testimony
concerning defendant’s paranoid personality disorder and delusional beliefs on
the date of the incident.  
¶ 52.        
The State submitted proposed instructions that included a charge on the
lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter.  Defense counsel’s
comments at the charge conference indicate that defendant believed the lesser-included
charge to be relevant to the element of “provocation,” and apparently for this
reason defendant raised no objection.  The voluntary manslaughter
instruction set forth two alternative grounds for the jury to mitigate murder
to manslaughter: (1) that defendant’s mental state was influenced by
extenuating circumstances, such as sudden passion or great provocation that
would cause a reasonable person to lose self-control; or (2) diminished
capacity due to a mental condition.  The jury found defendant guilty of
second degree murder.
¶ 53.        
Defendant contends that the court erred in allowing defense counsel to
raise the diminished-capacity defense over defendant’s express objection. 
The claim presents a basic question of law that we review de novo.  See State
v. Valyou, 2006 VT 105, ¶ 4, 180 Vt. 627, 910 A.2d 922.  
¶ 54.        
The United States Supreme Court has recognized a criminal defendant’s
right—implicit in the Sixth Amendment—to decline the assistance of counsel and
proceed pro se.  Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 819 (1975)
(“The Sixth Amendment does not provide merely that a defense shall be made for
the accused; it grants to the accused personally the right to make [that]
defense”).  Concomitant with that right, the Supreme Court has “also
recognized that the accused has the ultimate authority to make certain
fundamental decisions regarding the case, as to whether to plead guilty, waive
a jury, testify in his or her own behalf, or take an appeal.”  Jones v.
Barnes, 463 U.S. 745, 751 (1983); see also Gonzalez v. United States,
553 U.S. 242, 250 (2008) (reaffirming principle “that some basic choices are so
important that an attorney must seek the client’s consent in order to waive the
right”).[11] 
At the same time, the Court has cautioned that the adversarial system “could
not function effectively if every tactical decision required client
approval.”  Id. at 249 (quotation omitted).  Many choices
affecting the conduct of trial, “including the objections to make, the
witnesses to call, and the arguments to advance, depend not only upon what is
permissible under the rules of evidence and procedure but also upon tactical
considerations of the moment” and trial strategy.  Id.  The
defendant, therefore, must generally defer to the attorney’s exercise of
professional judgment concerning most of the everyday decisions at trial. 
No precise test separates fundamental decisions within defendants’ control from
strategic decisions left to counsel.  3 W. LaFave et al., Criminal
Procedure § 11.6(c), at 796 (3d ed. 2007).
¶ 55.        
We have not had occasion to apply these principles to the specific type
of decision at issue here—whether to present a diminished-capacity
defense.  In analyzing the question, we consider other closely related,
but distinct issues that we and other courts have addressed.  First, we
have joined a majority of courts in concluding that the defendant retains
ultimate authority over the decision to assert an insanity defense.  In Bean,
we considered “whether defense counsel had the right to try the case
exclusively on an insanity defense theory over defendant’s objection.” 171 Vt.
at 299, 762 A.2d at 1265.  Stated more generally, the question was
“whether the decision to raise an insanity defense is one involving the
objectives of representation, left to the client, or the means of
representation, properly exercised by the lawyer.”  Id.  We
held that it was improper for defense counsel to assert an insanity defense
over defendant’s objection, noting that the decision to assert an insanity
defense was essentially a decision on “what plea to enter,” id. at 300,
762 A.2d at 1266, a choice implicating fundamental trial “objectives”
determined by the defendant.  Id. at 299, 762 A.2d at 1265. 
Further supporting our conclusion was a recognition of the personal “stigma
that an adjudication of mental illness entails,” id. at 301, 762 A.2d at
1266, as well as the fact that an insanity defense may be fundamentally
incompatible with a defense “on the merits.”  Id. at 301, 762 A.2d
at 1267.
¶ 56.        
Our holding in Bean relied, in turn, on Trombly, where the
question concerned the submission of a lesser-included-offense instruction to
the jury. While acknowledging that “many trial tactics are ultimately defense
counsel’s call,” we nevertheless concluded that “those that directly relate to
the ultimate crime upon which the jury may rest its verdict generally are
within the defendant’s decisional control.” Trombly, 160 Vt. at 218, 627
A.2d at 857.   Thus, the defendant retains the final word on whether
to submit lesser-included offenses to the jury.  “Indeed, because this
decision is so important as well as so similar to the defendant’s decision about
the charges to which to plead, the defendant should be the one to decide
. . . .”  Id. at 219, 627 A.2d at 856 (quotation
omitted).  We cautioned, however, that when a defendant’s decision “is so
ill-advised that it undermines a fair trial, the trial court may instruct the
jury according to its considered view.”  Id. at 219, 627 A.2d at
857.
¶ 57.        
Finally, many courts have concluded that the decision to forgo an
innocence-based defense, such as self-defense, in favor of seeking a less
serious conviction based on diminished capacity is a choice implicating
fundamental trial objectives that cannot be made by trial counsel over a
defendant’s express objection.  In State v. Lafferty, 749 P.2d 1239
(Utah 1988), aff’d on reh’g, 776 P.2d 631 (1989), for example, the trial
court rejected defense counsel’s attempt to introduce evidence of defendant’s
mental state in an effort to reduce first-degree murder to manslaughter because
the defendant “strongly objected” based on his belief that the evidence carried
an implication of guilt inconsistent with his preferred defense of complete
innocence.  Rejecting the defendant’s claim on appeal that the trial court
erred in deferring to his wishes, the Lafferty court held that the
defendant was entitled “to control the substance of his defense,” and found no
error, therefore, in the trial court’s allowing him “to rely solely on the
defense of innocence [and] blocking his attorney’s attempts to present a
manslaughter defense.”  Id. at 1249.  Other decisions are to
similar effect.  See, e.g., People v. Bergerud, 223 P.3d 686, 697
(Colo. 2010) (recognizing that, if defendant’s attorneys had effectively
pleaded him guilty to lesser homicide offenses “by focusing on his mental
state,” they “would have overstepped their bounds and appropriated fundamental
choices committed to the defendant’s decision alone”); Commonwealth v.
Weaver, 457 A.2d 505, 506 (Pa. 1983) (explaining that “an accused offering
evidence under the theory of diminished capacity concedes general criminal
liability, and the authority to make such a concession is solely that of the
accused,” and determining, therefore, that defense counsel was without
authority to ignore defendant’s insistence on presenting an innocence defense
(citations omitted)); State v. Woodland, 945 P.2d 665, 668 (Utah 1997)
(recognizing that defendant has the right to forgo “any defense based on
insanity or diminished capacity”); see generally C. Slobogin et al., The
Criminal Defense Lawyer’s Fiduciary Duty to Clients with Mental Disability,
68 Fordham L. Rev. 1581, 1635 (2000) (observing that, “like the insanity
defense, the diminished capacity defense is stigmatizing,” and concluding that
“the decision whether to present evidence of mental state should generally be
left up to the client”).    
¶ 58.        
For similar reasons we conclude that defendant here—having been found
competent to assist in his own defense—retained final authority over the
decision to present a diminished capacity case.  Plainly, as other courts
have recognized, the fundamental right to maintain a plea of complete innocence
would be impaired, if not eviscerated, if counsel were allowed, over
defendant’s objection, to assert a defense seeking a less serious
conviction.  Indeed, as the parties here clearly understood, evidence of defendant’s
delusional disorder directly undermined the self-defense theory that defendant
preferred by discrediting the claim that his perception of the threat was a
reasonable one.  The basic right to contend for outright acquittal that
bars defense counsel from overriding a defendant’s objection to instructing the
jury as to lesser-included offenses applies with equal force to preclude the
assertion of a theory, such as diminished capacity, that supports conviction on
a lesser-included charge contrary to a defendant’s express wishes. 
Moreover, like insanity, a defense of diminished capacity based on mental
impairment is a highly personal and potentially stigmatizing one, and should
remain the prerogative of an otherwise competent defendant in the final analysis. 
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court here erred in authorizing defense
counsel to assert the defense contrary to defendant’s wishes. 
      
Reversed and remanded.   
 

 

 

FOR THE COURT:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Associate
  Justice

 

[1] 
This was defendant’s second jury trial in connection with the same
events.  Defendant was initially charged with first-degree murder. In
the lead-up to trial, defendant asserted irreconcilable conflicts with each of
the respective lawyers the court appointed to represent him; the trial court ultimately
concluded that defendant had waived his right to counsel and tried defendant
without counsel.  Defendant declined to participate in the proceedings,
and was tried and convicted of first-degree murder.  In 2005, we reversed
defendant’s conviction on the ground that the trial court’s decision to proceed
without counsel was error.  See State v. Tribble, 2005 VT 132, 179
Vt. 235, 892 A.2d 232.  The retrial on remand led to the second-degree
murder conviction at issue here. 
 

[2] 
The Court has not extended the Confrontation Clause requirements to nontestimonial
out-of-court statements or to testimonial statements offered for a purpose
other than the truth of the matter asserted.  See, e.g., Davis v.
Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 822 (2006) (“Statements are nontestimonial when
made in the course of police interrogation under circumstances objectively
indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police
assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.”); Williams v. Illinois, 132 S.
Ct. 2221, 2235-41 (2012) (DNA expert’s testimony that DNA profile from semen
sample conducted by lab matched defendant’s DNA profile that was properly in
evidence did not violate defendant’s right to confront lab that prepared profile
of semen sample because profile itself was not admitted for truth of matter
asserted therein but, rather, constituted hypothetical data that formed basis
for expert’s opinion regarding match).
 

[3] 
Distinguishing its holdings in Melendez-Diaz and Bullcoming and
providing an additional rationale for its decision in Williams, the
Supreme Court, has recently carved out a limited exception that would allow for
admission without confrontation of a report of a DNA profile drawn from semen
found on a rape victim where the profile was generated for the purpose of
catching an at-large perpetrator, not to accuse the defendant or to create
evidence for use at trial.  Williams, 132 S. Ct. at 2227-28. 
The Court noted that at the time the lab generated the profile, the defendant
was neither in custody nor under suspicion and no one at the lab could possibly
have known the profile would inculpate defendant or any other particular
person.  Id. at 2243-44.  
 

[4] 
In the civil context, we have noted that there is no meaningful distinction
between an ordinary deposition and one characterized as a deposition for
“preservation” purposes.  See Nichols v. Brattleboro Retreat, 2009
VT 4, ¶ 4 n. 1, 185 Vt. 313, 970 A.2d 1249.  

[5] 
Even if Dr. Morrow had balked at attending, the State received notice of his
planned travel to New Zealand well before Dr. Morrow left the country, and well
before trial.  In its brief, the State acknowledges “without question”
there is a mechanism and ability for Vermont to engage in a procedure to have
New Zealand compel Dr. Morrow’s attendance, but asserts that “in light of the
time frames involved, it was a paper tiger.”  This bare assertion would be
insufficient to satisfy the State’s burden to demonstrate a good faith effort.
 

[6] 
We have relied on case law applying constitutional principles in analyzing
whether the witness was unavailable.  We note that Vermont Rule of
Criminal Procedure 15(j) supports the same conclusion.  Under that rule, a
witness who is absent from the hearing is unavailable when the inability to be
present is due to death or physical or mental illness, or when the proponent of
the deposition has been “unable to procure [the witness’s] attendance by
process or other reasonable means.”  In this case, the State did not
establish unavailability under this standard.

[7] 
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit once suggested that
counsel could not waive the confrontation right.  Clemmons v. Delo,
124 F.3d 944, 955 (8th Cir. 1997) (“[T]he law seems to be clear that the right
of confrontation is personal and fundamental and cannot be waived by
counsel.”).  However, since that time, that court has held
otherwise.  See, e.g., United States v. Holmes, 620 F.3d 836, 843
(8th Cir. 2010) (“Counsel can waive a defendant’s right to confrontation as
long as the decision is made for tactical reasons and the defendant is aware of
the waiver and does not object.”); see also Hatley v. State, 722 S.E.2d
67, 71 (Ga. 2012) (“The trial court should take reasonable steps to ascertain,
and put on the record, whether the defendant waives his right to confront the
child witness.”).

[8] 
One possible outlier is the United States Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit, which held, “We therefore join the majority of circuit courts of
appeals and hold that defense counsel may waive a defendant’s Sixth Amendment
right to confrontation where the decision is one of trial tactics or strategy
that might be considered sound.”  United States v. Plitman, 194
F.3d 59, 64 (2d Cir. 1999).  Although that court did not expressly
condition the effectiveness of the waiver on the defendant’s assent, or lack of
dissent, that court does not appear to have intended to allow counsel to waive
the confrontation right over defendant’s express objection.  The cases
embraced by the Second Circuit, representing, in that court’s words, “the
majority of circuit courts of appeals,” all included the proviso that a
defendant’s lack-of-objection was essential to an effective waiver.  Id. 
Moreover, in Plitman, the court noted that the defendant was present at
the pretrial hearing in which his counsel stipulated to the admission of
certain hearsay testimony in lieu of a live witness, and did not object to his
counsel’s decision.  Id. at 64.
 

[9] 
We note that in order for defendant to prevail on his reversible error claim,
he need not demonstrate any prejudice in fact resulting from the Confrontation
Clause violation.  

[10] 
Appellant identifies several other errors on appeal.  Because we reverse
on the basis of the Confrontation Clause violation, we do not address the
remaining issues.

[11] 
As discussed in Part I, above, the final authority to waive one’s Confrontation
Clause rights is the defendant’s, as well.