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Chapter 48: Questioning Accomplices (Aranda-Bruton)

Notes

[1] USSC:
Franks v. Delaware (1978) 438 US 154, 164 ["probable cause
may be founded upon hearsay"]. CAL:
P v. Navarro (2006) 138 CA4 146, 174 ["it is inappropriate
to apply the rules of evidence as a criterion to determine
probable cause"]; Humphrey v. Appellate Division (2002) 29
C4 569, 573 ["police officers may rely on hearsay (an informant's
statements) in obtaining a warrant to search for incriminating
evidence"].

[2] USSC: Bruton v.
US (1968) 391 US 123. CAL: P v.
Aranda (1965) 63 C2 518. NOTE: This rule was first
announced by the California Supreme Court in P v.
Aranda (1965) 63 C2 518. Three years later, the US Supreme
Court essentially adopted the rule as a matter of constitutional
law in Bruton v. US (1968) 391 US 128.
Consequently, in California it is commonly known as the
Aranda-Bruton Rule. ALSO SEE: P v.
Boyd (1990) 222 CA3 541, 561 ["The premise of
Aranda is essentially the same as that of Bruton"].
NOTE: Aranda-Bruton applies to both admissions and
confessions. P v. Anderson (1987) 43 C3 1104,
1123. NOTE: Aranda-Bruton also applies when the
declarant and the accomplice both make statements that, when
considered together, incriminate the accomplice because they are
inconsistent. See P v. Fulks (1980) 110 CA3
609, 617 [inconsistent statements are highly incriminating because
they "carried the unmistakable message that each was a hastily
contrived fabrication"].

[3] USSC: Bruton v. US (1968) 391
US 123, 136; Lee v. Illinois (1986) 476 US 530, 541.
CAL: P v. Burney (2009) 47 C4 204, 230.

[4] USSC: Bruton v. US (1968) 391
US 123, 134.

[5] USSC:
Richardson v. Marsh (1987) 481 US 200, 210.

[6] CAL: P v. Aranda (1965) 63 C2
518, 530; P v. Hajek (2014) 58 C4 1144, fn. 5 [the
Aranda/Bruton rule applies to a "nontestifying
codefendant's extrajudicial statement that inculpates the other
defendant"]; P v. Mitcham (1992) 1 C4 1027, 1047
[the officer "requested that [the declarant] provide another
statement referring solely to his own involvement in the crimes
and omitting any reference to [Mitcham]."].

[7] CAL: CALCRIM 357; Evid. Code§
1221; P v. Castille (2005) 129 CA4 863, 876 ["There
are only two requirements for the introduction of adoptive
admissions: (1) the party must have knowledge of the content of
another's hearsay statement, and (2) having such knowledge, the
party must have used words or conduct indicating his
adoption of, or his belief in, the truth of such
hearsay statement." Quoting from P v. Silva
(1988) 45 C3 604, 623]. Note: Survives Crawford:
Because an adoptive admission is, as a matter of law, a statement
by the accomplice (not the declarant), its admission into evidence
does not violate Crawford v. Washington.
P v. Castille (2005) 129 CA4 863, 877-81;
P v. Combs (2004) 34 C4 821, 842-43.

[8] CAL: P v.
Jennings (2010) 50 C4 615, 664 ["statements made by [the
declarant] that were met by defendant's silence, or by equivocal
or evasive responses on his part, properly are viewed as adoptive
admissions."]; CALCRIM 357.

[9] CAL: P v. Washington (2017)
15 CA5 19, 27 ["a trial court faced with a prosecutor's request to
admit a codefendant's confession at a joint trial must resort to
other options beyond a limiting instruction, such as redacting the
codefendant's confession in a way that both omits the defendant
but does not prejudice the codefendant"].

[10] USSC: Gray v.
Maryland (1998) 523 US 185.

[11] USSC: Richardson v.
Marsh (1987) 481 US 200, 208-9. CAL: P v.
Johnson (1989) 47 C3 1194, 1230-31; P v.
Orozco (1993) 20 CA4 1554, 1564; P v.
Mitcham (1992) 1 C4 1027, 1045-46.

[12] CAL: P v.
Douglas (1991) 234 CA3 273, 285; P v.
Tealer (1975) 48 CA3 598.

[13] CAL: P v.
Lewis (2008) 43 C4 415, 457.

[14] CAL: P v.
Stallworth (2008) 164 CA4 1079, 1096.

[15] CAL: P v.
Orozco (1993) 20 CA4 1554; P v.
Vasquez Diaz (1991) 229 CA3 1310, 1313-16; P v.
Bolden (1996) 44 CA4 707, 713-14.

[16] NOTE: Referring to the accomplice
by a neutral term (e.g., "the other guy") didn't work because
jurors would figure out that the purpose of these devices was to
hide the identity of another person—and the most likely candidate
was the declarant's codefendant. See Gray v.
Maryland (1998) 523 US 185, 193; P v.
Schmaus (2003) 109 CA4 846, 855 [Sixth Amendment violation
occurs "if references to defendant's name are merely replaced by a
symbol or by a blank space in place of defendant's name."];
P v. Burney (2009) 47 C4 203, 231 ["when,
despite redaction, a codefendant's statement obviously refers
directly to the defendant and implicates him or her in the charged
crimes, the Bruton rule applies and introduction of the
statement at a joint trial violates the defendant's rights under
the confrontation clause"]. As a result, prosecutors would delete
everything that could possibly be interpreted to mean that the
declarant had an accomplice. But this didn't work either because
it resulted in strange and awkward sentences; e.g., "Well, first
broke open, opened up the lock with bolt cutters"; "and then
opened the back of the car and got the body out and left the body
near some rocks." P v. Archer (2000) 82 CA4 1380, 1390.
Also see P v. Washington (2017) 15 CA5 19;
US v. Parks (9C 2002) 285 F3 1133, 1139 ["The combination
of an obviously redacted statement with the language implying the
existence of a third party reasonably could lead the jury to
conclude that the unnamed third party must be the codefendant
before them."]. COMPARE: US v. Javell (7C 2012) 695
F3 707, 712 ["nor did any part of the statement even reference
Javell indirectly by redacting and replacing his name with a more
innocuous phrase"].

[17] USSC: Lee v.
Illinois (1986) 476 US 530, 545 ["Obviously, when
codefendants' confessions are identical in all material respects,
the likelihood that they are accurate is significantly
increased."].

[18] USSC: Lee v.
Illinois (1986) 476 US 530, 545-46.

[19] 9th CIR: US v.
Allen (9C 2005) 425 F3 1231, 1235 ["co-conspirator
statements are not testimonial and therefore beyond the compass of
Crawford's holding"]. OTHER: US v.
Delgado (5C 2005) 401 F3 290, 299; US
Rashid (8C 2004) 383 F3 769, 777.