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Crawford v. Washington US Supreme Court, March 2004 Implications for Courts NYC Elder Abuse Training Project.

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Presentation on theme: "Crawford v. Washington US Supreme Court, March 2004 Implications for Courts NYC Elder Abuse Training Project."— Presentation transcript:

1 Crawford v. Washington US Supreme Court, March 2004 Implications for Courts NYC Elder Abuse Training Project

2 Decision impacts:  Evidence procedures  Special considerations to older and child witnesses  Defendants confrontation rights  Priority of hearsay exceptions

3 Before Crawford  Judge could admit “reliable” evidence without victim appearing Child victims Elder victims  Per Roberts v. Ohio, hearsay exceptions first, then “reliability”

4 After Crawford  Witness must be cross-examined  Defendant’s 6 th Amendment confrontation right primary

5 Crawford applies only when:  Case is criminal  Witness is unavailable to testify  Statement is “testimonial”  Defense has not had an opportunity to cross examine the witness

6 Testimonial  Key term  Not defined in decision  Decision offers factors to consider

7 Factors to consider  Statement casual or overheard?  Declarant an accuser making formal statement to gov’t officers?  Could declarant reasonably expect statement to be used at trial?  Contained in formalized material?  Knowingly given in response to police questioning?

8 Likely “testimonial”  Police investigations  Statements disputed by another party in court  Joint interviews by police and social workers  Some 911 tapes (e.g., to report a crime)

9 Likely not testimonial  Offhand remarks to police  Medical notes and diagnoses  Social agency records if they qualify under the “business rule” exception  Some 911 tapes (e.g., to seek aid)

10 Hearsay exceptions endorsed  Dying declarations  Business records (but not testimonial)  Statements in furtherance (but not testimonial)

11 Exceptions upheld in recent cases  Statements by conspirators in furtherance  Business records  Present sense impressions  Excited utterances  State of mind  Residual exception

12 Case law split  Testimoniality of 911 tapes  Testimoniality of interactions with police officers  Hundreds of confrontation cases since March 2004 decision

13 Appeals  Crawford applies to current cases  Once verdict final, state or habeas appeals not accepted if defendant did not argue confrontation previously  Hundreds of confrontation cases since March 2004 decision


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