Court Opinion

ID: 4693022
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-04 18:04:21.618809+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:20.102656
License: Public Domain

The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
                 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

                                   2021 CO 35

                       Supreme Court Case No. 20SC6
                    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
                     Court of Appeals Case No. 16CA152

                                   Petitioner:

                      The People of the State of Colorado,

                                        v.

                                  Respondent:

                              Elmo Jesse Johnson.

                              Judgment Affirmed
                                   en banc
                                 May 24, 2021

Attorneys for Petitioner:
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
William G. Kozeliski, Senior Assistant Attorney General
      Denver, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent:
Megan A. Ring, Public Defender
Stephen C. Arvin, Deputy State Public Defender
      Denver, Colorado

JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER delivered the Opinion of the Court.
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ dissents.
¶1       We review the court of appeals’ split decision in People v. Johnson, 2019 COA

159, __ P.3d __, reversing Elmo Johnson’s conviction for first degree murder and

remanding the case for a new trial based on the division’s determination that the

trial court violated Johnson’s right to present a complete defense. We consider, as

a matter of first impression, whether the impeachment exception to the

exclusionary rule extends to a defendant’s truthful testimony that could mislead a

jury.1 We hold that a defendant may offer truthful, albeit potentially incomplete,

evidence without opening the door to previously suppressed evidence.

Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

                          I. Facts and Procedural History

¶2       Johnson lived in an apartment with his sister, Toni Carrethers, and

Carrethers’s husband. One night, Johnson’s girlfriend, Danielle Griego, stayed at

the apartment and was shot and killed.

¶3       The next day, Griego’s mother discovered Griego’s body on a couch in the

apartment.      Johnson was laying next to Griego, unconscious due to his

1   We granted certiorari to consider the following issue:
         1. Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that the
            exclusionary rule precludes the prosecution from offering
            constitutionally   suppressed    evidence  in   response to
            defense-elicited truthful, yet incomplete evidence that may
            mislead the jury.

                                           2
consumption of alcohol and drugs. Griego’s mother called 911. Before police

officers arrived, Carrethers picked up two shell casings that were near Griego’s

body, rinsed them, returned them to where she had found them, and then washed

her hands.

¶4    Johnson was transported to the hospital, where officers collected swabs

from his hands and face while he remained unconscious. These swabs tested

positive for gunshot residue (“GSR”), as did swabs the police subsequently

collected from Carrethers and Griego’s mother. After he regained consciousness,

Johnson denied killing Griego.

¶5    As pertinent here, the prosecution charged Johnson with first degree

murder. Before trial, Johnson moved to suppress the GSR evidence that the

officers collected from his hands and face at the hospital without a warrant. The

trial court granted Johnson’s motion concerning the GSR evidence. In ruling, the

trial court noted that it would not allow Johnson “to use the Fourth Amendment

as both a shield and a sword.” Concerned that Johnson may “mislead[] the jury

into believing that . . . [he] was never tested or he was not positive” for GSR, the

court indicated that if Johnson offered evidence regarding Carrethers’s positive

GSR test, he would open the door for the prosecution to admit his suppressed

positive test results.

                                         3
¶6    At trial, the court asked whether Johnson intended to introduce evidence

that Carrethers tested positive for GSR. Johnson’s counsel responded that he

planned to do so as part of Johnson’s alternate suspect defense. He explained that

he would lay the proper foundation through two of the prosecution’s witnesses:

the crime scene investigator, who swabbed Carrethers for GSR, and the GSR

analyst, who tested Carrethers’s swabs.

¶7    The trial court ruled that if Johnson elected to introduce evidence of

Carrethers’s positive GSR test results, then the prosecution would be allowed,

under CRE 403, to introduce evidence with respect to all the GSR test results,

including Johnson’s, notwithstanding the court’s previous suppression order. The

court reasoned that Johnson’s introduction of Carrethers’s positive GSR test

results could mislead the jury into thinking that Johnson did not test positive for

GSR or that he wasn’t tested at all and the investigation into Griego’s death was

“subpar.” Johnson’s counsel objected, asserting that the court’s ruling put him “in

a position of having to make a Hobson [sic] choice of either deciding to present a

defense and render ineffective assistance of counsel or to have this

unconstitutionally obtained evidence come in against Mr. Johnson.”

¶8    Johnson elected not to inquire into Carrethers’s GSR test results. The jury

ultimately found Johnson guilty of first degree murder.

                                          4
¶9    Johnson appealed his judgment of conviction, contending that the trial court

erred by forcing him to choose between exercising two constitutional rights: his

right to present a complete defense and his right to exclude constitutionally

inadmissible evidence at trial. In a published, split decision, a division of the court

of appeals agreed, holding as a matter of first impression that a defendant may

offer truthful evidence that may nevertheless mislead the jury without opening

the door to constitutionally inadmissible evidence. Johnson, ¶ 1.

¶10   The division majority primarily based its reasoning on the holdings from

two United States Supreme Court cases: Walder v. United States, 347 U.S. 62, 65

(1954) (recognizing the impeachment exception to the exclusionary rule by

holding that evidence unconstitutionally seized under the Fourth Amendment is

admissible to impeach a defendant’s untruthful testimony), and James v. Illinois,

493 U.S. 307, 320 (1990) (holding that illegally obtained evidence may not be used

to impeach a defense witness’s testimony). Johnson, ¶¶ 17–25. Applying these

holdings, the majority determined that the impeachment exception “cannot

possibly permit the use of [suppressed] evidence to counter truthful testimony.”

Id. at ¶ 27. The majority held that the trial court erred in its CRE 403 ruling because

“the effect of [that] ruling was to chill Johnson’s presentation of truthful and

favorable evidence.” Id. at ¶ 27. And because Carrethers’s GSR test results could

support an inference that she fired a gun around the time that Griego was killed,

                                          5
thus furthering Johnson’s alternate suspect theory, the majority concluded that the

error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.            The division majority

accordingly reversed Johnson’s first degree murder conviction and remanded the

case for a new trial. Id. at ¶¶ 31–32.

¶11   Judge Taubman dissented in relevant part, noting that he would have

affirmed Johnson’s conviction because, in his view, the isolated presentation of

Carrethers’s GSR evidence would have prompted the jury to believe something

that both parties and the trial court knew was not true—that Johnson either was

not tested, or tested negative, for GSR. Id. at ¶¶ 79, 84, 89 (Taubman, J., concurring

in part and dissenting in part). Thus, according to Judge Taubman, “the court’s

truth-seeking function tilts the scale toward permitting the prosecution to

introduce [Johnson’s] GSR evidence that had been previously excluded by the trial

court to avoid misleading the jury.” Id. at ¶ 79. Judge Taubman concluded that

the trial court’s CRE 403 ruling did not deprive Johnson of his right to exclude

unconstitutionally seized evidence or his right to present a complete defense. Id.

at ¶ 84. Rather, the trial court’s ruling presented Johnson with a permissible, albeit

difficult, tactical decision that defendants often face when determining how to best

present a defense. Id. at ¶ 82.

¶12   We granted certiorari and now affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

                                          6
                                    II. Analysis

¶13   We begin by outlining the controlling standards of review. We then detail

the applicable law concerning the impeachment exception to the exclusionary rule.

Finally, we apply those principles to the facts presented here.

¶14   Like the division majority in this case, we draw guidance from Walder, James,

and other relevant caselaw, as well as the United States and Colorado

Constitutions, and conclude that a defendant may offer truthful, albeit potentially

incomplete, evidence without opening the door to previously suppressed

evidence. This is because the important truth-seeking rationale that prohibits a

defendant from turning the exclusion of illegally obtained evidence into a shield

for perjury does not apply with equal force to truthful but potentially misleading

testimony. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

                             A. Standards of Review

¶15   We review a trial court’s interpretation of the law governing the

admissibility of evidence de novo. People v. Salas, 2017 COA 63, ¶ 30, 405 P.3d 446,

453; see People v. Smith, 40 P.3d 1287, 1290 (Colo. 2002) (stating that a trial court’s

application of legal standards in a suppression ruling is a question of law that we

review de novo). This review encompasses the broader legal question of whether

a defendant can open the door for the admission of evidence otherwise barred by

the exclusionary rule. See People v. Melillo, 25 P.3d 769, 777 (Colo. 2001).

                                          7
¶16   However, we review a trial court’s determination of whether a party opened

the door to otherwise inadmissible evidence for an abuse of discretion. People v.

Lesney, 855 P.2d 1364, 1366–67 (Colo. 1993). A trial court abuses its discretion when

its ruling is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair, People v. Campbell,

2019 CO 66, ¶ 21, 443 P.3d 72, 76, or when it misapplies the law, People v. Jefferson,

2017 CO 35, ¶ 25, 393 P.3d 493, 499.

¶17   If we conclude that the trial court erred in its evidentiary ruling, we must

then determine whether such error necessitates reversal of Johnson’s conviction.

Hagos v. People, 2012 CO 63, ¶ 9, 288 P.3d 116, 118. Because Johnson preserved this

issue through a contemporaneous objection, and because the issue implicates

Johnson’s Sixth Amendment right to present a complete defense, we review for

constitutional harmless error. Id. at ¶ 11, 288 P.3d at 119; see Krutsinger v. People,

219 P.3d 1054, 1061 (Colo. 2009) (discussing a defendant’s right to present a

complete defense).     Under that standard, “errors require reversal unless the

reviewing court is ‘able to declare a belief that [the error] was harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt.’” Hagos, ¶ 11, 288 P.3d at 119 (quoting Chapman v. California,

386 U.S. 18, 24 (1967)). That is, we must reverse if “there is a reasonable possibility

that the [error] might have contributed to the conviction.” Chapman, 386 U.S. at 23

(quoting Fahy v. Connecticut, 375 U.S. 85, 86–87 (1963)). The State bears the burden

                                          8
of proving that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Hagos, ¶ 11,

288 P.3d at 119.

¶18   With these standards in mind, we turn to the applicable law.

          B. The Impeachment Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
¶19   The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article II,

section 7 of the Colorado Constitution protect against “unreasonable searches and

seizures.” However, because the Fourth Amendment is silent regarding how this

right is to be enforced, the Supreme Court adopted the “exclusionary rule,” which

serves as a “deterrent sanction that bars the prosecution from introducing

evidence obtained by way of a Fourth Amendment violation.” Davis v. United

States, 564 U.S. 229, 231–32 (2011); see Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643, 660 (1961). The

exclusionary rule’s purpose is to deter future Fourth Amendment violations “by

removing the incentive to disregard” the Amendment’s constitutional guarantee.

Elkins v. United States, 364 U.S. 206, 217 (1960).

¶20   Because the exclusionary rule bars the prosecution from introducing

evidence obtained through a Fourth Amendment violation, there is tension

between the Fourth Amendment rights the exclusionary rule protects and the

future search and seizure violations it seeks to deter, on the one hand, and the

courts’ truth-seeking function, on the other. See United States v. Havens, 446 U.S.

620, 626 (1980) (“There is no gainsaying that arriving at the truth is a fundamental

                                           9
goal of our legal system.”); Davis, 564 U.S. at 237 (discussing the social costs

generated by the exclusionary rule, including that its “bottom-line effect, in many

cases, is to suppress the truth”); see also James, 493 U.S. at 311–12 (explaining that

the Court has “carved out exceptions to the exclusionary rule . . . where the

introduction of reliable and probative evidence would significantly further the

truthseeking function of a criminal trial and the likelihood that admissibility of

such evidence would encourage police misconduct is but a ‘speculative

possibility’” (quoting Harris v. New York, 401 U.S. 222, 225 (1971))).

¶21   It is that tension that led the Supreme Court to adopt the impeachment

exception in Walder. During his direct examination in a narcotics distribution case,

the defendant testified untruthfully that he had never sold or possessed narcotics.

Walder, 347 U.S. at 63. On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked the defendant

about a prior drug possession charge, despite the fact that the charge was

ultimately dismissed after evidence of the defendant’s heroin possession was

suppressed. In response, the defendant untruthfully testified that the prior case

never happened. Id. at 64. The trial court then permitted the prosecution to

impeach the defendant’s credibility by presenting testimony from one of the

officers who conducted the unlawful search in the prior possession case and the

chemist who analyzed the heroin. Id. The defendant was ultimately convicted of

distributing narcotics. Id.

                                         10
¶22   The defendant appealed, asserting that the admission of the previously

suppressed evidence violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from

unreasonable searches and seizures. Id. The Walder Court disagreed, noting,

      It is one thing to say that the Government cannot make an affirmative
      use of evidence unlawfully obtained. It is quite another to say that
      the defendant can turn the illegal method by which evidence in the
      Government’s possession was obtained to his own advantage, and
      provide himself with a shield against contradiction of his untruths.
      Such [practice] would be a perversion of the Fourth Amendment.

Id. at 65. The Court held that the protection of the defendant’s Fourth Amendment

right did not provide “justification for letting the defendant affirmatively resort to

perjurious testimony in reliance on the Government’s disability to challenge his

credibility.” Id.

¶23   The Supreme Court revisited the impeachment exception in Havens. After

stressing the “importance of arriving at the truth in criminal trials, as well as the

defendant’s obligation to speak the truth in response to proper questions,” Havens,

446 U.S. at 626, the Court held that “a defendant’s statements made in response to

proper cross-examination reasonably suggested by the defendant’s direct

examination are subject to otherwise proper impeachment by the government,

albeit by evidence that has been illegally obtained and that is inadmissible on the

government’s direct case, or otherwise, as substantive evidence of guilt,” id. at

627–28.

                                         11
¶24   While Havens undoubtedly expanded the scope of the impeachment

exception, the question became how far? In other words, to what degree must a

defendant “reasonably suggest” an untruth in his or her direct examination before

it may be contradicted by the prosecution with suppressed evidence?                 We

answered that question in LeMasters v. People, 678 P.2d 538 (Colo. 1984).

¶25   In LeMasters, the prosecution argued that the defendant opened the door to

the admission of certain suppressed evidence for impeachment purposes “because

on the direct examination by the defendant there has been a denial of his involvement in

this crime.” Id. at 541. The trial court permitted the prosecution to introduce and

inquire into certain physical evidence that was previously suppressed. Id. at

541–42.

¶26   On appeal, we overturned the defendant’s conviction because “the requisite

inconsistency between the suppressed physical evidence and the defendant’s

statement is not present.” Id. at 543. Specifically, we observed,

      In our view, the United States Supreme Court did not intend that its
      decisions in Walder and its progeny be extended to the extreme
      asserted in this case. To [permit the prosecution to introduce the
      suppressed evidence] under the facts of this case would substantially
      burden a defendant’s right to take the stand in his own defense by
      sanctioning the use of unconstitutionally obtained evidence to
      establish guilt.

Id. at 544. Our decision in LeMasters makes it clear that the impeachment exception

to the exclusionary rule permits the prosecution to admit previously suppressed

                                          12
evidence on cross-examination to impeach a defendant’s untruthful testimony on

direct examination, but only when there is an apparent nexus between the

defendant’s testimony and the suppressed evidence that contradicts the

untruthful testimony.

¶27   Finally, in James, the United States Supreme Court addressed whether the

impeachment exception allowed the use of suppressed evidence to impeach the

testimony of defense witnesses in order to deter the defendant from engaging in

perjury “by proxy.” 493 U.S. at 311. The Court concluded that the impeachment

exception does not permit the prosecution to introduce illegally obtained evidence

to impeach the credibility of a defense witness. Id. at 320. The Court explained

that “[e]xpanding the class of impeachable witnesses from the defendant alone . . .

would not promote the truthseeking function to the same extent as did creation of

the original exception, and yet it would significantly undermine the deterrent

effect of the general exclusionary rule” for two reasons. Id. at 313–14. First, “the

mere threat of a subsequent criminal prosecution for perjury is far more likely to

deter a witness from intentionally lying on a defendant’s behalf than to deter a

defendant, already facing conviction for the underlying offense, from lying on his

own behalf.” Id. at 314. Second, because “[d]efendants might reasonably fear that

one or more of their witnesses, in a position to offer truthful and favorable

testimony, would also make some statement in sufficient tension with the tainted

                                        13
evidence to allow the prosecutor to introduce that evidence for impeachment,” id.

at 315, expanding the impeachment exception to all defense witnesses “likely

would chill some defendants from presenting their best defense and sometimes

any defense at all—through the testimony of others,” id. at 314–15.

¶28   The Court additionally explained that the exception “leaves defendants free

to testify truthfully on their own behalf; they can offer probative and exculpatory

evidence to the jury without opening the door to impeachment by carefully

avoiding any statements that directly contradict the suppressed evidence. The

exception thus generally discourages perjured testimony without discouraging

truthful testimony.” Id. at 314.

                                   C. Application

¶29   This case requires us to resolve the tension among the deterrent purpose

animating the exclusionary rule, Johnson’s right to present a complete defense,

and the court’s truth-seeking function.       The trial court, applying CRE 403,

concluded that the admission of Carrethers’s positive GSR test results was

misleading because it could imply that Johnson did not test positive for GSR or

that he was not tested and the investigation was “subpar.” Thus, if Johnson

introduced such evidence, it would open the door for the prosecution to admit his

previously suppressed positive GSR test results.

                                         14
¶30     Judge Taubman concluded that the trial court’s ruling was correct because

Johnson sought to use his suppressed GSR evidence to “obfuscate the court’s

truth-seeking function.”    Johnson, ¶ 73 (Taubman, J., concurring in part and

dissenting in part). The People ask, for the same reason, that we expand the

impeachment exception to the exclusionary rule to reach truthful testimony

elicited by the defense that could mislead the jury. For the reasons detailed below,

we decline to expand the impeachment exception to truthful testimony.

¶31     The Supreme Court outlined the contours of the impeachment exception in

Walder and James. While the facts presented here do not perfectly align with those

of Walder or James, the relevant language from those cases convince us that the

division majority got it right: “[T]he [impeachment] exception cannot possibly

permit the use of [suppressed] evidence to counter truthful testimony.” Johnson,

¶ 27.   We reach this conclusion because the expansion of the impeachment

exception sought by the People would undermine the purpose of the exclusionary

rule and chill defendants’ rights to present a complete defense through truthful

testimony.

¶32     Permitting the prosecution to introduce Johnson’s GSR evidence could

undermine the exclusionary rule’s “sole purpose,” which is “to deter future Fourth

Amendment violations.” Davis, 564 U.S. at 236–37. As the division majority

observed, such practice would “arguably encourage[] future violations” by

                                        15
“effectively shield[ing] potentially exculpatory evidence from use by the defense.”

Johnson, ¶ 28. If we expand the impeachment exception to include a defendant’s

truthful testimony, the expected value of illegally obtained evidence would be

enhanced, and an uptick in police misconduct may occur. See James, 493 U.S. at

318 (explaining that it is “far more than a ‘speculative possibility’ that police

misconduct will be encouraged by permitting such use of illegally obtained

evidence” because “police officers and their superiors would recognize that

obtaining evidence through illegal means stacks the deck heavily in the

prosecution’s favor” (quoting Harris, 401 U.S. at 225)).

¶33   More significantly, expanding the impeachment exception to encompass

defendants’ truthful testimony “likely would chill some defendants from

presenting their best defense and sometimes any defense at all.” Id. at 314–15.

That is precisely what occurred here. In effect, the trial court, through its CRE 403

ruling, expanded the impeachment exception to preclude Johnson from presenting

truthful testimony that supported his alternate suspect theory. And in so doing,

Johnson’s constitutional right to present a complete defense was violated. See

Walder, 347 U.S. at 65 (“[T]he Constitution guarantees a defendant the fullest

opportunity to meet the accusation against him. He must be free to deny all the

elements of the case against him without thereby giving leave to the Government

to introduce by way of rebuttal evidence illegally secured by it . . . .”).

                                          16
¶34   Moreover, Carrethers’s positive GSR test results would have been admitted

not through Johnson or another defense witness, but rather through two of the

prosecution’s witnesses. And if the fear of “perjury by proxy” is insufficient

grounds to expand the impeachment exception to a defense witness who

ostensibly has an incentive to lie on behalf of the defendant, James, 493 U.S. at 310,

314, there is absolutely no reason to expand the exception to reach truthful

testimony elicited by the defense through the prosecution’s witnesses.

¶35   The trial court’s and Judge Taubman’s concerns regarding the courts’

truth-seeking function are laudable. We affirm the importance of that principle

here by emphasizing that it would not be proper for Johnson to ask the jury to

infer that he was not tested for GSR, that he did not test positive for GSR, or that

the investigation into Griego’s death was subpar based on the GSR testing.

However, there is no indication that Johnson planned to do so. Rather, defense

counsel expressly stated to the trial court that he would avoid asking any questions

involving Johnson’s GSR evidence or the nature of the investigation, thereby

diminishing the concern that the court’s truth-seeking function would be

undermined by the introduction of Carrethers’s positive GSR test results. Under

these circumstances, we agree with the division majority that the “effect of the trial

court’s ruling was to chill Johnson’s presentation of truthful and favorable

evidence,” id. at ¶ 27, by “expand[ing] the impeachment exception even further

                                         17
than . . . [the rejected expansion] in James,” id. at ¶ 26. The court’s evidentiary

ruling under CRE 403 presented Johnson with the quintessential Hobson’s choice:

he could either rely on the trial court’s ruling excluding his unconstitutionally

seized GSR evidence at trial, or he could protect his right to present a complete

defense, by introducing Carrethers’s GSR test results, which supported his

alternate suspect theory. Johnson could not do both. By forcing Johnson to make

this choice, the trial court necessarily violated Johnson’s right to present a

complete defense.

¶36   We, accordingly, agree with the division majority and conclude that the trial

court abused its discretion. See Jefferson, ¶ 25, 393 P.3d at 499.

¶37   Having found that the trial court erred, we will reverse if “there is a

reasonable possibility that the [error] might have contributed to the conviction.”

Chapman, 386 U.S. at 23 (quoting Fahy, 375 U.S. at 86–87). As we alluded to above,

the error might have contributed to Johnson’s first degree murder conviction

because it prevented him from presenting a complete defense, which included

advancing the theory that Carrethers killed Griego.          In fact, the trial court’s

evidentiary ruling effectively barred Johnson from introducing the evidence that

was most probative of this theory—Carrethers’s positive GSR test results—and

limited the arguments defense counsel could make in closing. Had Johnson been

able to fully explore Carrethers’s GSR evidence, the jury could have believed that

                                          18
she fired a gun around the time of Griego’s murder, and such belief could have

supported an inference that Johnson was not responsible for the murder.

Accordingly, the trial court’s error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.

See Hagos, ¶ 9, 288 P.3d at 118.

                                   III. Conclusion

¶38   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ dissents.

                                         19
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ, dissenting.

¶39    I respectfully dissent. The majority effectively holds today that a defendant

can exploit the exclusionary rule to present evidence to a jury in a manner that is

affirmatively misleading. See Maj. op. ¶¶ 1, 14. It does so by allowing a defendant

to introduce incomplete evidence without opening the door to previously

suppressed information that is necessary to contextualize such evidence and

prevent the jury from drawing a false inference. The majority’s ruling not only

hinders the fundamental truthseeking function of trial but also allows a defendant

to seek a verdict based in part on an inference that everyone in the courtroom,

except the jury, knows to be untrue. Moreover, by inaccurately characterizing the

suppressed evidence here as “impeachment,” I believe both the court of appeals

and the majority misapply Walder v. United States, 347 U.S. 62 (1954), and James v.

Illinois, 493 U.S. 307 (1990).

¶40    Elmo Johnson sought to introduce evidence of Toni Carrethers’s positive

test results for gunshot residue (“GSR”) to support an alternate suspect theory.

But the value of this evidence to the defense lay in presenting it in isolation because

doing so would give rise to an inference that Johnson did not test positive for

GSR—an inference that the parties and the trial court knew was false. It does not

matter that defense counsel pledged not to argue that inference or expressly ask

the jury to draw it.        The inference was natural, obvious, helpful to the

                                          1
defense—and indisputably untrue. The trial court correctly recognized that, by

presenting an incomplete picture of the GSR testing (that is, by introducing

evidence that Carrethers tested positive for GSR knowing the jury was prevented

from hearing about Johnson’s suppressed GSR test results), Johnson sought to use

the exclusionary rule both as a sword and a shield and to exploit the protection of

that rule in a manner that undermined the truthseeking function of trial. To avoid

misleading the jury, the trial court properly precluded Johnson from introducing

evidence of Carrethers’s GSR testing in isolation and instead conditioned his

choice to introduce such evidence on allowing the prosecution to also introduce

testimony regarding Johnson’s GSR test results so that the jury would have a

complete picture from which to draw any conclusions. In short, the trial court

properly sought to prevent the jury from reaching a verdict based on an inference

that the parties and the court knew to be false. In so doing, the trial court did not

abuse its discretion or violate Johnson’s constitutional rights.

¶41   Importantly, the trial court never characterized the suppressed evidence as

“impeachment” evidence, nor did it purport to apply the specific impeachment

exception to the exclusionary rule from Walder and James. This is because the

suppressed evidence regarding Johnson’s GSR testing would not somehow

“impeach” or otherwise contradict testimony regarding Carrethers’s GSR testing.

Rather, allowing the defense to introduce evidence of Carrethers’s results in

                                          2
isolation created an incomplete and misleading picture—presenting an

“opening-the-door” or doctrine of completeness problem, not an impeachment

issue. For this reason, both the court of appeals’ and the majority’s reliance on the

Walder/James impeachment analysis is inapt and makes little sense on these facts.

                                 I. Walder/James

¶42   The majority frames the issue here as whether the impeachment exception

to the exclusionary rule from Walder and James should extend to the circumstances

of this case. Because it asks the wrong question, the majority arrives at the wrong

conclusion.

¶43   At the outset, I note two things. First, “[w]hile fundamental, the right to

present defense evidence is not absolute.” People v. Melendez, 102 P.3d 315, 320

(Colo. 2004). Indeed, “the right to present a defense is generally subject to, and

constrained by, familiar and well-established limits on the admissibility of

evidence.” People v. Elmarr, 2015 CO 53, ¶ 27, 351 P.3d 431, 438. Second, under the

Fourth Amendment, “[e]xclusion [of illegally obtained evidence] is ‘not a personal

constitutional right,’ nor is it designed to ‘redress the injury’ occasioned by an

unconstitutional search.” Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229, 236 (2011) (quoting

Stone v. Powell, 428 U.S. 465, 486 (1976)).   Instead, the “sole purpose” of the

exclusionary rule “is to deter future Fourth Amendment violations.” Id. at 236–37.

                                         3
¶44   As the majority correctly recognizes, the U.S. Supreme Court has “carved

out exceptions to the exclusionary rule . . . where the introduction of reliable and

probative evidence would significantly further the truthseeking function of a

criminal trial and the likelihood that admissibility of such evidence would

encourage police misconduct is but a ‘speculative possibility.’” Maj. op. at ¶ 20

(quoting James, 493 U.S. at 311).

¶45   One such exception to the rule—recognized in Walder and James—“permits

prosecutors to introduce illegally obtained evidence for the limited purpose of

impeaching the credibility of the defendant’s own testimony.” James, 493 U.S. at 312, 320

(emphasis added) (holding that the impeachment exception to the exclusionary

rule would not be expanded to permit the prosecution to use illegally obtained

evidence to impeach the testimony of defense witnesses other than the defendant);

see also Walder, 347 U.S. at 65–66 (holding that the prosecution could impeach a

defendant’s credibility using suppressed evidence of unlawfully seized heroin

where a defendant asserted that he never possessed any narcotics).

¶46   The majority reasons that this “impeachment exception” does not apply to

the facts here. Maj. op. ¶ 31. Of course it doesn’t—because the suppressed

evidence here is not impeachment evidence. See People v. Johnson, 183 Cal. App.

4th 253, 283 (2010) (“James is inapposite here. The trial court did not authorize use

of [the defendant’s] confession to impeach a witness. Rather, the court considered

                                           4
the confession in order to prevent [the defendant] from extrapolating a false

argument from truthful testimony.”).

¶47   “The sine qua non of impeaching a witness’[s] testimony is that the evidence

contradicts his previous statements.” LeMasters v. People, 678 P.2d 538, 543 (Colo.

1984) (emphasis added). Here, evidence of Johnson’s positive GSR results would

not have contradicted truthful witness testimony regarding Carrethers’s positive

GSR results. Nor would it have contradicted any testimony by Johnson himself,

untruthful or not.   In short, the suppressed evidence is not “impeachment”

evidence, and the majority’s treatment of it as such leads it to miss the broader

point of Walder and James and the case law on which they are founded.

¶48   That broader point is this: A defendant may not use the exclusionary rule as

both a shield and a sword. While the exclusionary rule serves a deterrent function

by requiring illegally obtained evidence to be suppressed in a prosecution’s

case-in-chief, the protection it offers a defendant must give way when the

defendant seeks to exploit the rule to frustrate or undermine the truthseeking

function of a criminal trial. As the U.S. Supreme Court has explained:

      It is one thing to say that the Government cannot make an affirmative
      use of evidence unlawfully obtained. It is quite another to say that
      the defendant can turn the illegal method by which evidence in the
      Government’s possession was obtained to his own advantage, and
      provide himself with a shield against contradiction of his untruths.
      Such an extension . . . would be a perversion of the Fourth
      Amendment.

                                        5
Walder, 347 U.S. at 65.

¶49   Ultimately, courts must balance the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule

with “the costs of withholding reliable information from the truth-seeking

process.” Illinois v. Krull, 480 U.S. 340, 347 (1987). Where, as here, a defendant

seeks to introduce evidence that invites a jury to draw an indisputably false

inference—specifically, a false inference that relies on the continued suppression

of the illegally obtained evidence—the protection of the exclusionary rule must

yield to the truthseeking goals of our legal system.

              II. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion

            A. The Trial Court’s Ruling was Consistent with the
                         Doctrine of Completeness

¶50   The trial court did not abuse its discretion under the circumstances of this

case. Under the concept of “opening the door,” this court has admitted evidence

to “prevent [the defendant or the prosecution] in a criminal trial from gaining and

maintaining an unfair advantage by the selective presentation of facts that,

without being elaborated [upon] or placed in context, create an incorrect or

misleading impression.” Golob v. People, 180 P.3d 1006, 1012 (Colo. 2008) (holding

that the trial court erred in limiting the scope of the defense expert’s testimony

because he should have been allowed to contextualize the prosecution expert’s

testimony that their conclusions were consistent); People v. Miller, 890 P.2d 84,

98–99 (Colo. 1995) (allowing the prosecution to introduce other crimes evidence

                                         6
where defense counsel had “questioned [a witness] in a manner that took selective

advantage of evidence regarding [the witness’s] relationship with [the defendant]

and sought to exclude the inadmissible [other crimes] evidence that would place

that relationship in its proper context”); see also People v. Sams, 685 P.2d 157, 164

(Colo. 1984) (“[O]nce the defendant opens the door by eliciting testimony

about . . . suppressed identifications, the prosecution should not be foreclosed

from eliciting additional testimony about these same procedures.”).

¶51   Similarly, the doctrine of completeness, codified in part in CRE 106, favors

admission of evidence that contextualizes incomplete information that would

otherwise be misleading to the jury. See People v. Manyik, 2016 COA 42, ¶ 85,

383 P.3d 77, 91 (“If admitting only one part of a written or recorded statement

would be unfair or misleading, the rule of completeness favors admission of other

parts of the statement.”); see also United States v. Lopez-Medina, 596 F.3d 716, 735

(10th Cir. 2010) (holding that the purpose of the identical federal version of the

rule “is to prevent a party from misleading the jury by allowing into the record

relevant portions of [evidence] which clarify or explain the part already received”

(quoting United States v. Moussaoui, 382 F.3d 453, 481 (4th Cir. 2004))).

¶52   Under the identical federal version of the rule, see Fed. R. Evid. 106, federal

courts have admitted otherwise inadmissible evidence to correct a false

impression created by incomplete testimony even where counsel did not

                                          7
affirmatively make a false argument. For example, in United States v. Womochil,

778 F.2d 1311, 1315 (8th Cir. 1985), a witness testified out of the presence of the

jury that the defendant’s alleged co-conspirator obtained cocaine from the

defendant and another individual, Gilbert.         On cross-examination, however,

defense counsel asked the witness if he obtained cocaine from Gilbert, leaving the

false impression that the witness obtained cocaine only from Gilbert. Id. Although

defense counsel did not expressly argue that the witness did not obtain cocaine

from the defendant, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that the

prosecution was properly allowed on redirect to correct this false impression by

introducing the co-conspirator’s complete statement that he obtained cocaine from

both Gilbert and the defendant. Id.; see also Gov’t. of V.I. v. Archibald, 987 F.2d 180,

188 (3d Cir. 1993) (noting that Womochil involved the “principle of completeness”).

¶53   Here, the trial court’s ruling properly recognized that Johnson’s effort to

introduce evidence of Carrethers’s GSR test results would “open the door” to

evidence of GSR testing and, under the doctrine of completeness, would require

the jury to also hear evidence of Johnson’s own test results. In its initial order, the

court ruled that it would “not permit inquiry by [Johnson] that elicits the fact that

Toni Carrethers was positive for gunshot residue which also then misleads the jury

into believing either [Johnson] was never tested for gunshot residue or he was not

positive for gunshot residue.” (Emphasis added.) Later, when ruling on the

                                           8
motion in limine regarding the same evidence, the court further explained that the

jury would be left with the notion that only Carrethers, and not Johnson, was in

an environment where a gun was fired, which is “flat out contrary to what the true

evidence is” and is “tantamount to just being a half[-]truth” that “is completely

misleading to the jury under the facts of this particular case.” (Emphasis added.)

The trial court thus properly concluded that the “jurors best get at the truth if they

either hear that [Carrethers], [Johnson,] and [the victim’s] mother were all positive

and in an environment where a gun was fired or none of it.” The court’s ruling

was consistent with the purposes of the doctrine of completeness.1

          B. The Trial Court’s Ruling Is Consistent with CRE 403

¶54   The trial court’s ruling is also consistent with CRE 403. It found “on a

[CRE] 403 analysis [that] not to permit the People to rebut [Carrethers’s positive

GSR test results] with the true facts [that Johnson also tested positively] would be

completely misleading to the jury.” It thus ruled that if Johnson introduced

1Importantly, to determine whether evidence must be admitted under the rule of
completeness, a “district court considers whether (1) it explains the admitted
evidence, (2) places the admitted evidence in context, (3) avoids misleading the jury,
and (4) insures fair and impartial understanding of the evidence.” United States v.
Li, 55 F.3d 325, 330 (7th Cir. 1995) (emphasis added). In other words, it is not
enough that the introduced evidence is merely incomplete; the evidence must also
have been introduced without the context necessary to avoid misleading the jury.

                                          9
Carrethers’s positive GSR test results, the prosecution could also reveal Johnson’s

positive GSR test results. In so doing, the court did not abuse its discretion.

¶55    CRE 403 allows relevant evidence to be excluded “if its probative value is

substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the

issues, or misleading the jury.” (Emphasis added.)

¶56   Here, the jury was already aware that Carrethers had handled the shell

casings. Thus, the probative value of evidence that Carrethers tested positive for

GSR is arguably minimal.       However, introducing that evidence in isolation

without informing the jury about Johnson’s results also would have been

affirmatively misleading because it invited the jury to draw the false inference that

Johnson either tested negatively for GSR or was not tested at all (perhaps due to a

“subpar” investigation). The trial court therefore did not abuse its discretion when

it concluded that the minimal probative value of introducing Carrethers’s GSR

results in isolation was substantially outweighed by the risk of misleading the jury.

See United States v. Morel, 751 F. Supp. 2d 423, 431 (E.D.N.Y. 2010) (holding that,

under the identical Fed. R. Evid. 403, a defendant could not reference the fact that

the government initially declined to prosecute him because, without also

introducing the constitutionally suppressed confession that caused the

prosecution to change its mind, it would create a substantial risk of misleading the

                                         10
jury into thinking that the prosecution charged the defendant for improper

reasons).

¶57   Federal courts have observed the interplay between Rule 403 and the rule

of completeness, explaining that Rule 403 can also be used to rectify the unfairness

that the rule of completeness aims to prevent. One court explained that Rule 403

      should not be overlooked when considering the implications of the
      rule of completeness . . . . If[, for example,] allowing a government
      witness to testify only to a defendant’s inculpatory statements,
      without being subject to cross[-]examination about the exculpatory
      portions of the same statement (because they are not independently
      admissible) would leave the jury with a misleading understanding of
      the defendant’s statement to the extent that it would cause unfair
      prejudice, the court may give the government a choice: either allow
      cross[-]examination to provide a complete picture of what the
      defendant said; or exclude the testimony of the incomplete portion of
      the statement.

United States v. Bailey, 322 F. Supp. 3d 661, 673 (D. Md. 2017). That choice is similar

to the one the trial court provided Johnson here: either allow the prosecution to

provide a complete picture of the GSR results or exclude the incomplete GSR

results. In other words, the trial court concluded that the jury could hear all of the

GSR evidence, or none of it, but Johnson could not mislead the jury by introducing

only evidence of Carrethers’s GSR results.2

2The trial court’s concern was well-founded. The jury in fact submitted questions
following Detective Mark Yacano’s testimony asking whether Johnson, his hands,

                                          11
¶58   The trial court was in the best position to assess the potential prejudicial

impact of this evidence. Wend v. People, 235 P.3d 1089, 1097 (Colo 2010); see also

People v. Gibbens, 905 P.2d 604, 607 (Colo. 1995) (“Under CRE 403, trial courts are

given broad discretion in balancing the probative value of the evidence against the

danger of unfair prejudice.”).   It did not abuse its broad discretion when it

concluded that the introduction of Carrethers’s GSR results, in isolation, would

mislead the jury in violation of CRE 403, and thus properly conditioned the

introduction of that evidence on the admission of Johnson’s GSR results.

         III. The Trial Court’s Ruling Did Not Violate Johnson’s
                          Constitutional Rights

¶59   The trial court’s ruling did not violate Johnson’s constitutional rights. As

noted above, the “[e]xclusion [of illegally obtained evidence] is ‘not a personal

constitutional right,’ nor is it designed to ‘redress the injury’ occasioned by an

unconstitutional search.” Davis, 564 U.S. at 236 (quoting Stone, 428 U.S. at 486).

Instead, the “sole purpose” of the rule “is to deter future Fourth Amendment

violations.” Id. at 236–37 (emphasis added). Accordingly, if a defendant has no

constitutional right to the exclusion of evidence, a defendant certainly has no

or his clothing were tested for GSR and, if so, what were the results. Given the
court’s ruling, the parties agreed that neither question should be asked.

                                        12
constitutional right to thwart the trial court’s truthseeking function by using the

exclusionary rule as both a sword and a shield.

¶60      Notably, courts prevent defendants from using the Fifth Amendment as

both a sword and shield, even where their express constitutional privilege to avoid

self-incrimination is implicated. See United States v. $133,420.00 in U.S. Currency,

672 F.3d 629, 640 (9th Cir. 2012); United States v. $148,840.00 in U.S. Currency,

521 F.3d 1268, 1277 (10th Cir. 2008) (“[A] district court may strike conclusory

testimony if the witness asserts the Fifth Amendment privilege to avoid answering

relevant questions, yet freely responds to questions that are advantageous to his

cause.     This doctrine exists to prevent a party from converting the Fifth

Amendment privilege from its intended use as a shield against compulsory

self-incrimination into an offensive sword.” (citations omitted)).

¶61      Courts prevent this dual use “to protect the integrity and truth-seeking

function of the judicial system,” and do so by “preventing [a] witness from using

the privilege to ‘mutilate the truth a party offers to tell.’” $133,420.00, 672 F.3d at

640–41 (quoting Lawson v. Murray, 837 F.2d 653, 656 (4th Cir. 1988)). Given that

defendants may not use their express Fifth Amendment constitutional privilege as

both a sword and a shield, surely they may not exploit a judicially created rule to

similarly thwart the truthseeking process of a criminal trial.

                                          13
¶62   The trial court’s ruling likewise did not infringe on Johnson’s Sixth

Amendment guarantee of “a meaningful opportunity to present a complete

defense.”   Holmes v. South Carolina, 547 U.S. 319, 324 (2006) (quoting Crane v.

Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683, 690 (1986)). A defendant is deprived of this right only if he

is denied “virtually his only means of effectively testing significant prosecution

evidence.” Krutsinger v. People, 219 P.3d 1054, 1062 (Colo. 2009).

¶63   A trial court may exclude defense evidence without infringing a defendant’s

Sixth Amendment rights, so long as the exclusion serves a legitimate purpose and

is proportionate to the ends it is asserted to promote. Holmes, 547 U.S. at 326.

Notably, the U.S. Supreme Court in Holmes concluded that “well-established rules

of evidence permit trial judges to exclude evidence if its probative value is

outweighed by . . . [the] potential to mislead the jury.” Id. This court similarly has

held that the right to present a defense is limited by evidentiary rules and that

“even relevant alternate suspect evidence may be excluded if its probative value

is substantially outweighed by . . . the danger of . . . misleading the jury.” Elmarr,

¶ 25, 351 P.3d at 438.

¶64   Here, the trial court did not actually preclude Johnson from introducing

Carrethers’s GSR test results; it merely warned him that if he introduced it in a

manner that would mislead the jury, the prosecution would be allowed to

introduce Johnson’s own GSR test results. Johnson has no constitutional right to

                                         14
present evidence in an incomplete and misleading manner. Thus, he merely faced

a difficult strategic decision—whether the value of introducing Carrethers’s GSR

test results outweighed the admission of the otherwise excludable GSR evidence.

See People v. Skufca, 176 P.3d 83, 88–89 (Colo. 2008) (noting that a “defendant may

constitutionally be required to make difficult strategic choices” and deeming the

decision of whether to risk self-incrimination by testifying about drug transactions

introduced in the prosecution’s case-in-chief a tactical choice, but not one

implicating constitutional rights).3   Finally, the choice Johnson faced did not

prevent him from presenting an alternate suspect defense. Johnson presented

evidence that Carrethers killed the victim because she was in the apartment when

the victim was shot, had tampered with evidence, made several implausible

statements about not investigating the gunshots, and left the next day without

checking on Johnson or the victim. Accordingly, the trial court’s ruling did not

run afoul of Johnson’s constitutional rights.

3 Johnson contends that, because he had to choose between his right against illegal
search and seizure and his right to present a defense, the trial court forced him to
make a Hobson’s choice involving “an intolerable tension between two
constitutional rights.” See People v. Chavez, 621 P.2d 1362, 1365 (Colo. 1981).
However, as explained above, Johnson has no personal right under the Fourth
Amendment to exclude illegally obtained evidence, and his Sixth Amendment
right to present a complete defense was not violated. Therefore, he was not forced
to choose between two constitutional rights.

                                         15
                                 IV. Conclusion

¶65    “[A]rriving at the truth is a fundamental goal of our legal system.” James,

493 U.S. at 311 (quoting United States v. Havens, 446 U.S. 620, 626 (1980)). And

while the exclusionary rule is an example of a constitutional rule that limits the

means by which the government may conduct this search for truth in order to

promote other constitutional values, see id., the U.S. Supreme Court has carved out

exceptions to the exclusionary rule “where the introduction of reliable and

probative evidence would significantly further the truthseeking function of a

criminal trial and the likelihood that admissibility of such evidence would

encourage police misconduct is but a ‘speculative possibility,’” id. at 311–12

(quoting Harris, 401 U.S. at 225).

¶66   The majority holds today that “a defendant may offer truthful, albeit

potentially incomplete, evidence without opening the door to previously

suppressed evidence.” Maj. op., ¶ 14. In so doing, the majority effectively allows

defendants to exploit the exclusionary rule by introducing incomplete evidence to

mislead a jury, knowing that the information necessary to contextualize such

evidence will remain suppressed. I am concerned that the majority’s ruling

undermines our legal system’s fundamental goal of arriving at the truth, see

Havens, 446 U.S. at 626, by allowing a defendant to wield the exclusionary rule as

both a shield and a sword in ways directly contrary to the principles animating

                                        16
James, Walder, and the case law on which they rely. Accordingly, I respectfully

dissent.

                                      17