Constitutional Law Cases: Rehnquist Court
1990 - 1999
LILLY v. VIRGINIA
certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
No. 98-5881.
Argued March 29, 1999
Decided June 10, 1999
Petitioner, his brother Mark, and Gary Barker were arrested at the end of a 2-day
crime spree, during which they, inter alia, stole liquor and guns and abducted Alex
DeFilippis, who was later shot and killed. Under police questioning, Mark admitted
stealing alcoholic beverages, but claimed that petitioner and Barker stole the guns
and that petitioner shot DeFilippis. When Virginia called Mark as a witness at petitioner's
subsequent criminal trial, Mark invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
The trial court then admitted his statements to the police as declarations of an unavailable
witness against penal interest, overruling petitioner's objections that the statements
were not against Mark's penal interest because they shifted responsibility for the
crimes to Barker and petitioner, and that their admission would violate the Sixth
Amendment's Confrontation Clause. Petitioner was convicted of the DeFilippis murder
and other crimes. In affirming, the Virginia Supreme Court found that the Confrontation
Clause was satisfied because Mark's statements fell within a firmly rooted exception
to the hearsay rule. The court also held that the statements were reliable because
Mark knew that he was implicating himself as a participant in numerous crimes and
because the statements were independently corroborated by other evidence at trial.
Held: The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded.
255 Va. 558, 499 S. E. 2d 522, reversed and remanded.
J ustice Stevens , delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II,
and VI, concluding:
1. This Court has jurisdiction over petitioner's Confrontation Clause claim. He expressly
argued the claim in his opening brief to the Virginia Supreme Court; and his arguments
based on Williamson v. United States, 512 U. S. 594 , and the Confrontation Clause
opinion of Lee v. Illinois, 476 U. S. 530 , in responding to the Commonwealth's position,
sufficed to raise the issue in that court. P. 4.
2. The admission of Mark's untested confession violated petitioner's Confrontation
Clause rights. Adhering to this Court's general custom of allowing state courts initially
to assess the effect of erroneously admitted evidence in light of substantive state
criminal law, the Virginia courts are to consider in the first instance whether this
Sixth Amendment violation was "harmless beyond a reasonable doubt." Chapman v. California
, 386 U. S. 18, 24 . P. 21.
J ustice Stevens , joined by J ustice Souter, J ustice Ginsburg, and J ustice Breyer,
concluded in Parts III, IV, and V that Mark's hearsay statements do not meet the requirements
for admission set forth in Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U. S. 56, 66 . Pp. 4-21.
(a) The Confrontation Clause ensures the reliability of evidence against a defendant
by subjecting it to rigorous testing in an adversary proceeding, Maryland v. Craig,
497 U. S. 836, 845 , as by cross-examination of a declarant, see California v. Green,
399 U. S. 149, 158 . Hearsay statements are sufficiently dependable to allow their
untested admission against an accused only when (1) the statements fall "within a
firmly rooted hearsay exception" or (2) they contain "particularized guarantees of
trustworthiness" such that adversarial testing would be expected to add little, if
anything, to their reliability. Roberts, 448 U. S., at 66 . Pp. 4-6.
(b) Statements are admissible under a "firmly rooted" hearsay exception when they
fall within a hearsay category whose conditions have proven over time "to remove all
temptation to falsehood, and to enforce as strict an adherence to the truth as would
the obligation of an oath" and cross-examination at a trial. Mattox v. United States,
156 U. S. 237, 244 . The simple categorization of a statement as "against penal interest"
defines too large a class for meaningful Confrontation Clause review. Such statements
are offered into evidence (1) as voluntary admissions against the declarant; (2) as
exculpatory evidence offered by a defendant who claims that the declarant committed,
or was involved in, the offense; and (3) as evidence offered by the prosecution to
establish the guilt of an alleged accomplice of the declarant. The third category,
which includes statements such as Mark's, encompasses statements that are presumptively
unreliable, Lee , 476 U. S., at 541 , even when the accomplice incriminates himself
together with the defendant. Accomplice statements that shift or spread blame to a
criminal defendant, therefore, fall outside the realm of those "hearsay exception[s]
[that are] so trustworthy that adversarial testing can be expected to add little to
[the statements'] reliability." White v. Illinois, 502 U. S. 346, 357 . Such statements
are not within a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule. Pp. 6-16.
(c) The Commonwealth contends that this Court should defer to the Virginia Supreme
Court's additional determination that Mark's statements were reliable and that the
indicia of reliability the court found, coupled with the actions of police during
Mark's interrogation, demonstrate that the circumstances surrounding his statements
bore "particularized guarantees of trustworthiness," Roberts, 448 U. S., at 66 , sufficient
to satisfy the Confrontation Clause's residual admissibility test. Nothing in this
Court's prior opinions, however, suggests that appellate courts should defer to lower
court determinations regarding mixed questions of constitutional law such as whether
a hearsay statement has sufficient guarantees of trustworthiness. See Ornelas v. United
States, 517 U. S. 690, 697 . Thus, courts should independently review whether the
government's proffered guarantees of trustworthiness satisfy the Clause. Here, the
Commonwealth's asserted trustworthiness guarantees are unconvincing. Mark was in custody
for his involvement in, and knowledge of, serious crimes. He made his statements under
governmental authorities' supervision, and was primarily responding to the officers'
leading questions. He also had a natural motive to attempt to exculpate himself and
was under the influence of alcohol during the interrogation. Each of these factors
militates against finding that his statements were so inherently reliable that cross-examination
would have been superfluous. Pp. 16-21.
Justice Scalia concluded that introducing Mark Lilly's tape-recorded statements to
police at trial without making him available for cross-examination is a paradigmatic
Confrontation Clause violation. Since the violation is clear, the case need be remanded
only for a harmless-error determination. P. 1.
J ustice Thomas , while adhering to his view that the Confrontation Clause extends
to any witness who actually testifies at trial and is implicated by extrajudicial
statements only insofar as they are contained in formalized testimonial material,
such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions, White v. Illinois
, 502 U. S. 346, 365 , agrees with T he C hief J ustice that the Clause does not impose
a blanket ban on the use of accomplice statements that incriminate a defendant and
that, since the lower courts did not analyze the confession under the second prong
of the Roberts inquiry, the plurality should not address that issue here. P. 1.
T he C hief J ustice , joined by J ustice O'C onnor and J ustice Kennedy , concluded:
1. Mark Lilly's confession incriminating petitioner does not satisfy a firmly rooted
hearsay exception because the statements in his 50-page confession which are against
his penal interest are quite separate from the statements exculpating him and inculpating
petitioner, which are not in the least against his penal interest. This case, therefore,
does not raise the question whether the Confrontation Clause permits the admission
of a genuinely self-inculpatory statement that also inculpates a codefendant. Not
only were the confession's incriminating portions not a declaration against penal
interest, but these statements were part of a custodial confession of the sort that
this Court has viewed with special suspicion given a codefendant's strong motivation
to implicate the defendant and exonerate himself. Lee v. Illinois, 476 U. S. 530,
541 . A blanket ban on the government's use of accomplice statements that incriminate
a defendant sweeps beyond this case's facts and this Court's precedents. Pp. 1-5.
2. The Virginia Supreme Court did not analyze the confession under the second prong
of the Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U. S. 56 , inquiry, so the case should be remanded for
the Commonwealth to demonstrate that the confession bears "particularized guarantees
of trustworthiness" and, if any error is found, to determine whether that error is
harmless. Pp. 5-7.
Stevens, J ., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion of the
Court with respect to Parts I and VI, in which Scalia, Souter, Thomas, Ginsburg, and
Breyer, JJ., joined, the opinion of the Court with respect to Part II, in which Scalia,
Souter, Ginsburg , and Breyer , JJ., joined, and an opinion with respect to Parts
III, IV, and V, in which Souter, Ginsburg , and Breyer, JJ., joined. Breyer, J., filed
a concurring opinion. Scalia, J., and Thomas, J., filed opinions concurring in part
and concurring in the judgment. Rehnquist , C. J., filed an opinion concurring in
the judgment, in which O'Connor and Kennedy , JJ., joined.
BENJAMIN LEE LILLY, PETITIONER v. VIRGINIA
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
[June 10, 1999]
Justice Stevens announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion of
the Court with respect to Parts I, II, and VI, and an opinion with respect to Parts
III, IV, and V, in which Justice Souter, Justice Ginsburg, and Justice Breyer join.
The question presented in this case is whether the accused's Sixth Amendment right
"to be confronted with the witnesses against him" was violated by admitting into evidence
at his trial a nontestifying accomplice's entire confession that contained some statements
against the accomplice's penal interest and others that inculpated the accused.
I
On December 4, 1995, three men--Benjamin Lee Lilly (petitioner), his brother Mark,
and Mark's roommate, Gary Wayne Barker--broke into a home and stole nine bottles of
liquor, three loaded guns, and a safe. The next day, the men drank the stolen liquor,
robbed a small country store, and shot at geese with their stolen weapons. After their
car broke down, they abducted Alex DeFilippis and used his vehicle to drive to a deserted
location. One of them shot and killed DeFilippis. The three men then committed two
more robberies before they were apprehended by the police late in the evening of December
5.
After taking them into custody, the police questioned each of the three men separately.
Petitioner did not mention the murder to the police and stated that the other two
men had forced him to participate in the robberies. Petitioner's brother Mark and
Barker told the police somewhat different accounts of the crimes, but both maintained
that petitioner masterminded the robberies and was the one who had killed DeFilippis.
A tape recording of Mark's initial oral statement indicates that he was questioned
from 1:35 a.m. until 2:12 a.m. on December 6. The police interrogated him again from
2:30 a.m. until 2:53 a.m. During both interviews, Mark continually emphasized how
drunk he had been during the entire spree. When asked about his participation in the
string of crimes, Mark admitted that he stole liquor during the initial burglary and
that he stole a 12-pack of beer during the robbery of the liquor store. Mark also
conceded that he had handled a gun earlier that day and that he was present during
the more serious thefts and the homicide.
The police told Mark that he would be charged with armed robbery and that, unless
he broke "family ties," petitioner "may be dragging you right into a life sentence,"
App. 257. Mark acknowledged that he would be sent away to the penitentiary. He claimed,
however, that while he had primarily been drinking, petitioner and Barker had "got
some guns or something" during the initial burglary. Id., at 250. Mark said that Barker
had pulled a gun in one of the robberies. He further insisted that petitioner had
instigated the carjacking and that he (Mark) "didn't have nothing to do with the shooting"
of DeFilippis. Id., at 256. In a brief portion of one of his statements, Mark stated
that petitioner was the one who shot DeFilippis.
The Commonwealth of Virginia charged petitioner with several offenses, including
the murder of DeFilippis, and tried him separately. At trial, the Commonwealth called
Mark as a witness, but he invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
The Commonwealth therefore offered to introduce into evidence the statements Mark
made to the police after his arrest, arguing that they were admissible as declarations
of an unavailable witness against penal interest. Petitioner objected on the ground
that the statements were not actually against Mark's penal interest because they shifted
responsibility for the crimes to Barker and to petitioner, and that their admission
would violate the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause. The trial judge overruled
the objection and admitted the tape recordings and written transcripts of the statements
in their entirety. The jury found petitioner guilty of robbery, abduction, carjacking,
possession of a firearm by a felon, and four charges of illegal use of a firearm,
for which offenses he received consecutive prison sentences of two life terms plus
27 years. The jury also convicted petitioner of capital murder and recommended a sentence
of death, which the court imposed.
The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed petitioner's convictions and sentences. As
is relevant here, the court first concluded that Mark's statements were declarations
of an unavailable witness against penal interest; that the statements' reliability
was established by other evidence; and, therefore, that they fell within an exception
to the Virginia hearsay rule. The court then turned to petitioner's Confrontation
Clause challenge. It began by relying on our opinion in White v. Illinois , 502 U.
S. 346 (1992), for the proposition that " `[w]here proffered hearsay has sufficient
guarantees of reliability to come within a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay
rule, the Confrontation Clause is satisfied.' " 255 Va. 558, 574, 499 S. E. 2d 522,
534 (1998) (quoting White , 502 U. S., at 356 ). The Virginia court also remarked:
"[A]dmissiblity into evidence of the statement against penal interest of an unavailable
witness is a `firmly rooted' exception to the hearsay rule in Virginia. Thus, we hold
that the trial court did not err in admitting Mark Lilly's statements into evidence."
Id. , at 575, 499 S. E. 2d, at 534.
"That Mark Lilly's statements were self-serving, in that they tended to shift principal
responsibility to others or to offer claims of mitigating circumstances, goes to the
weight the jury could assign to them and not to their admissibility." Id., at 574,
499 S. E. 2d, at 534.
Our concern that this decision represented a significant departure from our Confrontation
Clause jurisprudence prompted us to grant certiorari. 525 U. S. ___ (1998).
II
As an initial matter, the Commonwealth asserts that we should decline to exercise
jurisdiction over petitioner's claim because he did not fairly present his Confrontation
Clause challenge to the Supreme Court of Virginia. We disagree. Although petitioner
focused on state hearsay law in his challenge to the admission of Mark's statements,
petitioner expressly argued in his opening brief to that court that the admission
of the statements violated his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation. He expanded
his Sixth Amendment argument in his reply brief and cited Lee v. Illinois , 476 U.
S. 530 (1986), and Williamson v. United States, 512 U. S. 594 (1994), in response
to the Commonwealth's contention that the admission of the statements was constitutional.
These arguments, particularly the reliance on our Confrontation Clause opinion in
Lee, sufficed to raise in the Supreme Court of Virginia the constitutionality of admitting
Mark's statements. See Taylor v. Illinois, 484 U. S. 400, 406 , n. 9 (1988). Indeed,
the court addressed petitioner's Confrontation Clause claim without mentioning any
waiver problems.
III
In all criminal prosecutions, state as well as federal, the accused has a right,
guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution,
"to be confronted with the witnesses against him." U. S. Const., Amdt. 6; Pointer
v. Texas , 380 U. S. 400 (1965) (applying Sixth Amendment to the States). "The central
concern of the Confrontation Clause is to ensure the reliability of the evidence against
a criminal defendant by subjecting it to rigorous testing in the context of an adversary
proceeding before the trier of fact." Maryland v. Craig, 497 U. S. 836, 845 (1990).
When the government seeks to offer a declarant's out-of-court statements against the
accused, and, as in this case, the declarant is unavailable, 1 courts must decide
whether the Clause permits the government to deny the accused his usual right to force
the declarant "to submit to cross-examination, the `greatest legal engine ever invented
for the discovery of truth.' " California v. Green, 399 U. S. 149, 158 (1970) (footnote
and citation omitted).
In our most recent case interpreting the Confrontation Clause, White v. Illinois
, 502 U. S. 346 (1992), we rejected the suggestion that the Clause should be narrowly
construed to apply only to practices comparable to "a particular abuse common in 16th-
and 17th-century England: prosecuting a defendant through the presentation of ex parte
affidavits, without the affiants ever being produced at trial." Id., at 352. This
abuse included using out-of-court depositions and "confessions of accomplices." Green,
399 U. S., at 157 . Accord White, 502 U. S., at 361 , 363 (noting that this rule applies
even if the confession is "found to be reliable") ( Thomas , J., concurring in part
and concurring in judgment). Because that restrictive reading of the Clause's term
"witnesses" would have virtually eliminated the Clause's role in restricting the admission
of hearsay testimony, we considered it foreclosed by our prior cases. Instead, we
adhered to our general framework, summarized in Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U. S. 56 (1980),
that the veracity of hearsay statements is sufficiently dependable to allow the untested
admission of such statements against an accused when (1) "the evidence falls within
a firmly rooted hearsay exception" or (2) it contains "particularized guarantees of
trustworthiness" such that adversarial testing would be expected to add little, if
anything, to the statements' reliability. Id., at 66.
Before turning to the dual Roberts inquiries, however, we note that the statements
taken from petitioner's brother in the early morning of December 6 were obviously
obtained for the purpose of creating evidence that would be useful at a future trial.
The analogy to the presentation of ex parte affidavits in the early English proceedings
thus brings the Confrontation Clause into play no matter how narrowly its gateway
might be read.
IV
The Supreme Court of Virginia held that the admission of Mark Lilly's confession
was constitutional primarily because, in its view, it was against Mark's penal interest
and because "the statement against penal interest of an unavailable witness is a `firmly
rooted' exception to the hearsay rule in Virginia." 255 Va., at 575, 449 S. E. 2d,
at 534. We assume, as we must, that Mark's statements were against his penal interest
as a matter of state law, but the question whether the statements fall within a firmly
rooted hearsay exception for Confrontation Clause purposes is a question of federal
law. Accordingly, it is appropriate to begin our analysis by examining the "firmly
rooted" doctrine and the roots of the "against penal interest" exception.
We have allowed the admission of statements falling within a firmly rooted hearsay
exception since the Court's recognition in Mattox v. United States, 156 U. S. 237
(1895), that the Framers of the Sixth Amendment "obviously intended to ... respec[t]"
certain unquestionable rules of evidence in drafting the Confrontation Clause. Id.,
at 243. Justice Brown, writing for the Court in that case, did not question the wisdom
of excluding deposition testimony, ex parte affidavits and their equivalents. But
he reasoned that an unduly strict and "technical" reading of the Clause would have
the effect of excluding other hearsay evidence, such as dying declarations, whose
admissibility neither the Framers nor anyone else 100 years later "would have [had]
the hardihood ... to question." Ibid.
We now describe a hearsay exception as "firmly rooted" if, in light of "longstanding
judicial and legislative experience," Idaho v. Wright, 497 U. S. 805, 817 (1990),
it "rest[s] [on] such [a] solid foundatio[n] that admission of virtually any evidence
within [it] comports with the `substance of the constitutional protection.' " Roberts,
448 U. S., at 66 (quoting Mattox, 156 U. S., at 244 ). This standard is designed to
allow the introduction of statements falling within a category of hearsay whose conditions
have proven over time "to remove all temptation to falsehood, and to enforce as strict
an adherence to the truth as would the obligation of an oath" and cross-examination
at a trial. Mattox , 156 U. S., at 244 . In White , for instance, we held that the
hearsay exception for spontaneous declarations is firmly rooted because it "is at
least two centuries old," currently "widely accepted among the States," and carries
"substantial guarantees of ... trustworthiness ... [that] cannot be recaptured even
by later in-court testimony." 502 U. S., at 355 -356, and n. 8. Established practice,
in short, must confirm that statements falling within a category of hearsay inherently
"carr[y] special guarantees of credibility" essentially equivalent to, or greater
than, those produced by the Constitution's preference for cross-examined trial testimony.
Id., at 356.
The "against penal interest" exception to the hearsay rule--unlike other previously
recognized firmly rooted exceptions--is not generally based on the maxim that statements
made without a motive to reflect on the legal consequences of one's statement, and
in situations that are exceptionally conducive to veracity, lack the dangers of inaccuracy
that typically accompany hearsay. The exception, rather, is founded on the broad assumption
"that a person is unlikely to fabricate a statement against his own interest at the
time it is made." Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U. S. 284, 299 (1973).
We have previously noted that, due to the sweeping scope of the label, the simple
categorization of a statement as a " `declaration against penal interest' ... defines
too large a class for meaningful Confrontation Clause analysis." Lee v. Illinois,
476 U. S., at 544 , n. 5. In criminal trials, statements against penal interest are
offered into evidence in three principal situations: (1) as voluntary admissions against
the declarant; (2) as exculpatory evidence offered by a defendant who claims that
the declarant committed, or was involved in, the offense; and (3) as evidence offered
by the prosecution to establish the guilt of an alleged accomplice of the declarant.
It is useful to consider the three categories and their roots separately.
Statements in the first category--voluntary admissions of the declarant--are routinely
offered into evidence against the maker of the statement and carry a distinguished
heritage confirming their admissibility when so used. See G. Gilbert, Evidence 139-140
(1756); Lambe's Case, 2 Leach 552, 168 Eng. Rep. 379 (1791); State v. Kirby, 1 Strob.
155, 156 (1846); State v. Cowan, 29 N. C. 239, 246 (1847). Thus, assuming that Mark
Lilly's statements were taken in conformance with constitutional prerequisites, they
would unquestionably be admissible against him if he were on trial for stealing alcoholic
beverages.
If Mark were a codefendant in a joint trial, however, even the use of his confession
to prove his guilt might have an adverse impact on the rights of his accomplices.
When dealing with admissions against penal interest, we have taken great care to separate
using admissions against the declarant (the first category above) from using them
against other criminal defendants (the third category).
In Bruton v. United States , 391 U. S. 123 (1968), two codefendants, Evans and Bruton,
were tried jointly and convicted of armed postal robbery. A postal inspector testified
that Evans had orally confessed that he and Bruton had committed the crime. The jury
was instructed that Evans' confession was admissible against him, but could not be
considered in assessing Bruton's guilt. Despite that instruction, this Court concluded
that the introduction of Evans' confession posed such a serious threat to Bruton's
right to confront and cross-examine the witnesses against him that he was entitled
to a new trial. The case is relevant to the issue before us today, not because of
its principal holding concerning the ability or inability of the jury to follow the
judge's instruction, but rather because it was common ground among all of the Justices
that the fact that the confession was a statement against the penal interest of Evans
did not justify its use against Bruton. As Justice White noted at the outset of his
dissent, "nothing in that confession which was relevant and material to Bruton's case
was admissible against Bruton." Id., at 138.
In the years since Bruton was decided, we have reviewed a number of cases in which
one defendant's confession has been introduced into evidence in a joint trial pursuant
to instructions that it could be used against him but not against his codefendant.
Despite frequent disagreement over matters such as the adequacy of the trial judge's
instructions, or the sufficiency of the redaction of ambiguous references to the declarant's
accomplice, we have consistently either stated or assumed that the mere fact that
one accomplice's confession qualified as a statement against his penal interest did
not justify its use as evidence against another person. See Gray v. Maryland, 523
U. S. 185, 194-195 (1998) (stating that because the use of an accomplice's confession
"creates a special, and vital, need for cross-examination," a prosecutor desiring
to offer such evidence must comply with Bruton, hold separate trials, use separate
juries, or abandon the use of the confession); id., at 200 ( Scalia, J., dissenting)
(stating that codefendant's confessions "may not be considered for the purpose of
determining [the defendant's] guilt"); Richardson v. Marsh, 481 U. S. 200, 206 (1987)
("[W]here two defendants are tried jointly, the pretrial confession of one cannot
be admitted against the other unless the confessing defendant takes the stand"); Cruz
v. New York, 481 U. S. 186, 189-190 , 193 (1987) (same).
The second category of statements against penal interest encompasses those offered
as exculpatory evidence by a defendant who claims that it was the maker of the statement,
rather than he, who committed (or was involved in) the crime in question. In this
context, our Court, over the dissent of Justice Holmes, originally followed the 19th-century
English rule that categorically refused to recognize any "against penal interest"
exception to the hearsay rule, holding instead that under federal law only hearsay
statements against pecuniary (and perhaps proprietary) interest were sufficiently
reliable to warrant their admission at the trial of someone other than the declarant.
See Donnelly v. United States , 228 U. S. 243, 272-277 (1913). Indeed, most States
adhered to this approach well into the latter half of the 20th century. See Chambers,
410 U. S., at 299 (collecting citations).
As time passed, however, the precise Donnelly rule, which barred the admission of
other persons' confessions that exculpated the accused, became the subject of increasing
criticism. Professor Wigmore, for example, remarked years after Donnelly that:
"The only practical consequences of this unreasoning limitation are shocking to the
sense of justice; for, in its commonest application, it requires, in a criminal trial,
the rejection of a confession, however well authenticated, of a person deceased or
insane or fled from the jurisdiction (and therefore quite unavailable) who has avowed
himself to be the true culprit. ... It is therefore not too late to retrace our steps,
and to discard this barbarous doctrine, which would refuse to let an innocent accused
vindicate himself even by producing to the tribunal a perfectly authenticated written
confession, made on the very gallows, by the true culprit now beyond the reach of
justice." 5 J. Wigmore, Evidence §1477, pp. 289-290 (3d ed. 1940).
See also Scolari v. United States , 406 F. 2d 563, 564 (CA9 1969) (criticizing Donnelly
); United States v. Annunziato, 293 F. 2d 373, 378 (CA2 1961) (Friendly, J.) (same);
Hines v. Commonwealth, 136 Va. 728, 117 S. E. 843 (1923) (criticizing Donnelly and
refusing to incorporate it into state law); Wright, Uniform Rules and Hearsay, 26
U. Cin. L. Rev. 575 (1957).
Finally, in 1973, this Court endorsed the more enlightened view in Chambers , holding
that the Due Process Clause affords criminal defendants the right to introduce into
evidence third parties' declarations against penal interest--their confessions--when
the circumstances surrounding the statements "provid[e] considerable assurance of
their reliability." 410 U. S., at 300 . Not surprisingly, most States have now amended
their hearsay rules to allow the admission of such statements under against-penal-interest
exceptions. See 5 J. Wigmore, Evidence §1476; p. 352, and n. 9 (J. Chadbourn rev.
1974); id., §1477, p. 360, and n. 7; J. Wigmore, Evidence §§1476 and 1477, pp. 618-626
(A. Best ed. Supp. 1998). But because hearsay statements of this sort are, by definition,
offered by the accused, the admission of such statements does not implicate Confrontation
Clause concerns. Thus, there is no need to decide whether the reliability of such
statements is so inherently dependable that they would constitute a firmly rooted
hearsay exception.
The third category includes cases, like the one before us today, in which the government
seeks to introduce "a confession by an accomplice which incriminates a criminal defendant."
Lee , 476 U. S., at 544 , n. 5. The practice of admitting statements in this category
under an exception to the hearsay rule--to the extent that such a practice exists
in certain jurisdictions--is, unlike the first category or even the second, of quite
recent vintage. This category also typically includes statements that, when offered
in the absence of the declarant, function similarly to those used in the ancient ex
parte affidavit system.
Most important, this third category of hearsay encompasses statements that are inherently
unreliable. Typical of the groundswell of scholarly and judicial criticism that culminated
in the Chambers decision, Wigmore's treatise still expressly distinguishes accomplices'
confessions that inculpate themselves and the accused as beyond a proper understanding
of the against-penal-interest exception because an accomplice often has a considerable
interest in "confessing and betraying his cocriminals." 5 Wigmore, Evidence §1477,
at 358, n. 1. Consistent with this scholarship and the assumption that underlies the
analysis in our Bruton line of cases, we have over the years "spoken with one voice
in declaring presumptively unreliable accomplices' confessions that incriminate defendants."
Lee, 476 U. S., at 541 . See also Cruz, 481 U. S., at 195 ( W hite , J., dissenting)
(such statements "have traditionally been viewed with special suspicion"); Bruton,
391 U. S., at 136 (such statements are "inevitably suspect").
In Crawford v. United States, 212 U. S. 183 (1909), this Court stated that even when
an alleged accomplice testifies, his confession that "incriminate[s] himself together
with defendant ... ought to be received with suspicion, and with the very greatest
care and caution, and ought not to be passed upon by the jury under the same rules
governing other and apparently credible witnesses." Id., at 204. Over 30 years ago,
we applied this principle to the Sixth Amendment. We held in Douglas v. Alabama ,
380 U. S. 415 (1965), that the admission of a nontestifying accomplice's confession,
which shifted responsibility and implicated the defendant as the triggerman, "plainly
denied [the defendant] the right of cross-examination secured by the Confrontation
Clause." Id., at 419.
In Lee , we reaffirmed Douglas and explained that its holding "was premised on the
basic understanding that when one person accuses another of a crime under circumstances
in which the declarant stands to gain by inculpating another, the accusation is presumptively
suspect and must be subjected to the scrutiny of cross-examination." 476 U. S., at
541 . This is so because
"th[e] truthfinding function of the Confrontation Clause is uniquely threatened when
an accomplice's confession is sought to be introduced against a criminal defendant
without the benefit of cross-examination. ... `Due to his strong motivation to implicate
the defendant and to exonerate himself, a codefendant's statements about what the
defendant said or did are less credible than ordinary hearsay evidence.' " Ibid. (quoting
Bruton , 391 U. S., at 141 (White, J., dissenting)).
Indeed, even the dissenting Justices in Lee agreed that "accomplice confessions ordinarily
are untrustworthy precisely because they are not unambiguously adverse to the penal
interest of the declarant" but instead are likely to be attempts to minimize the declarant's
culpability. 476 U. S., at 552-553 (Blackmun, J., dissenting). 2
We have adhered to this approach in construing the Federal Rules of Evidence. Thus,
in Williamson v. United States , 512 U. S. 594 (1994), without reaching the Confrontation
Clause issue, we held that an accomplice's statement against his own penal interest
was not admissible against the defendant. 3 We once again noted the presumptive unreliability
of the "non-self-inculpatory" portions of the statement: "One of the most effective
ways to lie is to mix falsehood with truth, especially truth that seems particularly
persuasive because of its self-inculpatory nature." Id., at 599-601.
It is clear that our cases consistently have viewed an accomplice's statements that
shift or spread the blame to a criminal defendant as falling outside the realm of
those "hearsay exception[s] [that are] so trustworthy that adversarial testing can
be expected to add little to [the statements'] reliability." White, 502 U. S., at
357. This view is also reflected in several States' hearsay law. 4 Indeed, prior to
1995, it appears that even Virginia rarely allowed statements against the penal interest
of the declarant to be used at criminal trials. See, e.g., Ellison v. Commonwealth,
219 Va. 404, 247 S. E. 2d 685 (1978). That Virginia relaxed that portion of its hearsay
law when it decided C handler v. Commonwealth , 249 Va. 270, 455 S. E. 2d 219 (1995),
and that it later apparently concluded that all statements against penal interest
fall within "a `firmly rooted' exception to the hearsay rule in Virginia," 255 Va.,
at 575, 499 S. E. 2d, at 534, is of no consequence. The decisive fact, which we make
explicit today, is that accomplices' confessions that inculpate a criminal defendant
are not within a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule as that concept has been
defined in our Confrontation Clause jurisprudence. 5
V
Aside from its conclusion that Mark's statements were admissible under a firmly rooted
hearsay exception, the Supreme Court of Virginia also affirmed the trial court's holding
that the statements were "reliabl[e] . . . in the context of the facts and circumstances
under which [they were] given" because (i) "Mark Lilly was cognizant of the import
of his statements and that he was implicating himself as a participant in numerous
crimes" and (ii) "[e]lements of [his] statements were independently corroborated"
by other evidence offered at trial. Id., at 574, 499 S. E. 2d, at 534. See also App.
18 (trial court's decision). The Commonwealth contends that we should defer to this
"fact-intensive" determination. It further argues that these two indicia of reliability,
coupled with the facts that the police read Mark his Miranda rights and did not promise
him leniency in exchange for his statements, demonstrate that the circumstances surrounding
his statements bore "particularized guarantees of trustworthiness," Roberts, 448 U.
S., at 66 , sufficient to satisfy the Confrontation Clause's residual admissibility
test. 6
The residual "trustworthiness" test credits the axiom that a rigid application of
the Clause's standard for admissibility might in an exceptional case exclude a statement
of an unavailable witness that is incontestably probative, competent, and reliable,
yet nonetheless outside of any firmly rooted hearsay exception. Cf. id., at 63; Mattox,
156 U. S., at 243 -244. When a court can be confident--as in the context of hearsay
falling within a firmly rooted exception--that "the declarant's truthfulness is so
clear from the surrounding circumstances that the test of cross-examination would
be of marginal utility," the Sixth Amendment's residual "trustworthiness" test allows
the admission of the declarant's statements. Wright, 497 U. S., at 820 .
Nothing in our prior opinions, however, suggests that appellate courts should defer
to lower courts' determinations regarding whether a hearsay statement has particularized
guarantees of trustworthiness. To the contrary, those opinions indicate that we have
assumed, as with other fact-intensive, mixed questions of constitutional law, that
"independent review is ... necessary ... to maintain control of, and to clarify, the
legal principles" governing the factual circumstances necessary to satisfy the protections
of the Bill of Rights. Ornelas v. United States, 517 U. S. 690, 697 (1996) (holding
that appellate courts should review reasonable suspicion and probable cause determinations
de novo ). We, of course, accept the Virginia courts' determination that Mark's statements
were reliable for purposes of state hearsay law, and, as should any appellate court,
we review the presence or absence of historical facts for clear error. But the surrounding
circumstances relevant to a Sixth Amendment admissibility determination do not include
the declarant's in-court demeanor (otherwise the declarant would be testifying) or
any other factor uniquely suited to the province of trial courts. For these reasons,
when deciding whether the admission of a declarant's out-of-court statements violates
the Confrontation Clause, courts should independently review whether the government's
proffered guarantees of trustworthiness satisfy the demands of the Clause.
The Commonwealth correctly notes that "the presumption of unreliability that attaches
to codefendants' confessions . . . may be rebutted." Lee , 476 U. S., at 543 . We
have held, in fact, that any inherent unreliability that accompanies co-conspirator
statements made during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy is per se rebutted
by the circumstances giving rise to the long history of admitting such statements.
See Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U. S. 171, 182-184 (1987). Nonetheless, the historical
underpinnings of the Confrontation Clause and the sweep of our prior confrontation
cases offer one cogent reminder: It is highly unlikely that the presumptive unreliability
that attaches to accomplices' confessions that shift or spread blame can be effectively
rebutted when the statements are given under conditions that implicate the core concerns
of the old ex parte affidavit practice--that is, when the government is involved in
the statements' production, and when the statements describe past events and have
not been subjected to adversarial testing.
Applying these principles, the Commonwealth's asserted guarantees of trustworthiness
fail to convince us that Mark's confession was sufficiently reliable as to be admissible
without allowing petitioner to cross-examine him. That other evidence at trial corroborated
portions of Mark's statements is irrelevant. We have squarely rejected the notion
that "evidence corroborating the truth of a hearsay statement may properly support
a finding that the statement bears `particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.'
" Wright, 497 U. S., at 822 . In Wright, we concluded that the admission of hearsay
statements by a child declarant violated the Confrontation Clause even though the
statements were admissible under an exception to the hearsay rule recognized in Idaho,
and even though they were corroborated by other evidence. We recognized that it was
theoretically possible for such statements to possess " `particularized guarantees
of trustworthiness' " that would justify their admissibility, but we refused to allow
the State to "bootstrap on" the trustworthiness of other evidence. "To be admissible
under the Confrontation Clause," we held, "hearsay evidence used to convict a defendant
must possess indicia of reliability by virtue of its inherent trustworthiness, not
by reference to other evidence at trial." Ibid.
Nor did the police's informing Mark of his Miranda rights render the circumstances
surrounding his statements significantly more trustworthy. We noted in rejecting a
similar argument in Lee that a finding that a confession was "voluntary for Fifth
Amendment purposes ... does not bear on the question of whether the confession was
also free from any desire, motive, or impulse [the declarant] may have had either
to mitigate the appearance of his own culpability by spreading the blame or to overstate
[the defendant's] involvement" in the crimes at issue. 476 U. S., at 544 . By the
same token, we believe that a suspect's consciousness of his Miranda rights has little,
if any, bearing on the likelihood of truthfulness of his statements. When a suspect
is in custody for his obvious involvement in serious crimes, his knowledge that anything
he says may be used against him militates against depending on his veracity.
The Commonwealth's next proffered basis for reliability--that Mark knew he was exposing
himself to criminal liability--merely restates the fact that portions of his statements
were technically against penal interest. And as we have explained, such statements
are suspect insofar as they inculpate other persons. "[T]hat a person is making a
broadly self-inculpatory confession does not make more credible the confession's non-self-inculpatory
parts." Williamson, 512 U. S., at 599 . Accord, Lee, 476 U. S., at 545 . Similarly,
the absence of an express promise of leniency to Mark does not enhance his statements'
reliability to the level necessary for their untested admission. The police need not
tell a person who is in custody that his statements may gain him leniency in order
for the suspect to surmise that speaking up, and particularly placing blame on his
cohorts, may inure to his advantage.
It is abundantly clear that neither the words that Mark spoke nor the setting in
which he was questioned provides any basis for concluding that his comments regarding
petitioner's guilt were so reliable that there was no need to subject them to adversarial
testing in a trial setting. Mark was in custody for his involvement in, and knowledge
of, serious crimes and made his statements under the supervision of governmental authorities.
He was primarily responding to the officers' leading questions, which were asked without
any contemporaneous cross-examination by adverse parties. Thus, Mark had a natural
motive to attempt to exculpate himself as much as possible. See id., at 544-545; Dutton
v. Evans, 400 U. S. 74, 98 (1970) (Harlan, J., concurring in result). Mark also was
obviously still under the influence of alcohol. Each of these factors militates against
finding that his statements were so inherently reliable that cross-examination would
have been superfluous.
VI
The admission of the untested confession of Mark Lilly violated petitioner's Confrontation
Clause rights. Adhering to our general custom of allowing state courts initially to
assess the effect of erroneously admitted evidence in light of substantive state criminal
law, we leave it to the Virginia courts to consider in the first instance whether
this Sixth Amendment error was "harmless beyond a reasonable doubt." Chapman v. California
, 386 U. S. 18, 24 (1967). See also Lee, 476 U. S., at 547 . Accordingly, the judgment
of the Supreme Court of Virginia is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
BENJAMIN LEE LILLY, PETITIONER v. VIRGINIA
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
[June 10, 1999]
Justice Breyer , concurring.
As currently interpreted, the Confrontation Clause generally forbids the introduction
of hearsay into a trial unless the evidence "falls within a firmly rooted hearsay
exception" or otherwise possesses "particularized guarantees of trustworthiness."
Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U. S. 56, 66 (1980). Amici in this case, citing opinions of Justices
of this Court and the work of scholars, have argued that we should reexamine the way
in which our cases have connected the Confrontation Clause and the hearsay rule. See
Brief for American Civil Liberties Union et al. as Amici Curiae 2-3; see also, e.g
, White v. Illinois, 502 U. S. 346, 358 (1992) ( Thomas , J., joined by Scalia , J.,
concurring in part and concurring in judgment); Friedman, Confrontation: The Search
for Basic Principles, 86 Geo. L. J. 1011 (1998); A. Amar, The Constitution and Criminal
Procedure 129 (1997); Berger, The Deconstitutionalization of the Confrontation Clause:
A Proposal for a Prosecutorial Restraint Model, 76 Minn. L. Rev. 557 (1992).
The Court's effort to tie the Clause so directly to the hearsay rule is of fairly
recent vintage, compare Roberts , supra , with California v. Green , 399 U. S. 149,
155-156 (1970), while the Confrontation Clause itself has ancient origins that predate
the hearsay rule, see Salinger v. United States, 272 U. S. 542, 548 (1926) ("The right
of confrontation did not originate with the provision in the Sixth Amendment, but
was a common-law right having recognized exceptions"). The right of an accused to
meet his accusers face-to-face is mentioned in, among other things, the Bible, Shakespeare,
and 16th and 17th century British statutes, cases, and treatises. See The Bible, Acts
25:16; W. Shakespeare, Richard II, act i, sc. 1; W. Shakespeare, Henry VIII, act ii,
sc. 1; 30 C. Wright & K. Graham, Federal Practice and Procedure §6342, p. 227 (1997)
(quoting statutes enacted under King Edward VI in 1552 and Queen Elizabeth I in 1558);
cf. Case of Thomas Tong, Kelyng J. 17, 18, 84 Eng. Rep. 1061, 1062 (1662) (out-of-court
confession may be used against the confessor, but not against his co-conspirators);
M. Hale, History of the Common Law of England 163-164 (C. Gray ed. 1971); 3 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries *373. As traditionally understood, the right was designed to prevent,
for example, the kind of abuse that permitted the Crown to convict Sir Walter Raleigh
of treason on the basis of the out-of-court confession of Lord Cobham, a co-conspirator.
See 30 Wright & Graham, supra , §6342, at 258-269.
Viewed in light of its traditional purposes, the current, hearsay-based Confrontation
Clause test, amici argue, is both too narrow and too broad. The test is arguably too
narrow insofar as it authorizes the admission of out-of-court statements prepared
as testimony for a trial when such statements happen to fall within some well-recognized
hearsay rule exception. For example, a deposition or videotaped confession sometimes
could fall within the exception for vicarious admissions or, in The Chief Justice
's view, the exception for statements against penal interest. See post, at 3. See
generally White , supra , at 364-365 ( Thomas , J., concurring in part and concurring
in judgment); Friedman, supra , at 1025; Amar, supra , at 129; Berger, supra , at
596-602; Brief for the American Civil Liberties Union et al. as Amici Curiae 16-20.
But why should a modern Lord Cobham's out-of-court confession become admissible simply
because of a fortuity, such as the conspiracy having continued through the time of
police questioning, thereby bringing the confession within the "well-established"
exception for the vicarious admissions of a co-conspirator? Cf . Dutton v. Evans,
400 U. S. 74, 83 (1970) (plurality opinion). Or why should we, like Walter Raleigh's
prosecutor, deny a plea to "let my Accuser come face to face," with words (now related
to the penal interest exception) such as, "The law presumes, a man will not accuse
himself to accuse another"? Trial of Sir Walter Raleigh, 2 How. St. Tr. 19 (1816).
At the same time, the current hearsay-based Confrontation Clause test is arguably
too broad. It would make a constitutional issue out of the admission of any relevant
hearsay statement, even if that hearsay statement is only tangentially related to
the elements in dispute, or was made long before the crime occurred and without relation
to the prospect of a future trial. It is not obvious that admission of a business
record, which is hearsay because the business was not "regularly conducted," or admission
of a scrawled note, "Mary called," dated many months before the crime, violates the
defendant's basic constitutional right "to be confronted with the witnesses against
him." Yet one cannot easily fit such evidence within a traditional hearsay exception.
Nor can one fit it within this Court's special exception for hearsay with "particularized
guarantees of trustworthiness"; and, in any event, it is debatable whether the Sixth
Amendment principally protects "trustworthiness," rather than "confrontation." See
White, supra, at 363 ( Thomas , J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment);
cf . Maryland v. Craig , 497 U. S. 836, 862 (1990) ( Scalia , J., dissenting) ("[T]he
Confrontation Clause does not guarantee reliable evidence; it guarantees specific
trial procedures that were thought to assure reliable evidence, undeniably among which
was `face-to-face' confrontation").
We need not reexamine the current connection between the Confrontation Clause and
the hearsay rule in this case, however, because the statements at issue violate the
Clause regardless. See ante , at 6. I write separately to point out that the fact
that we do not reevaluate the link in this case does not end the matter. It may leave
the question open for another day.
BENJAMIN LEE LILLY, PETITIONER v. VIRGINIA
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
[June 10, 1999]
Justice Scalia , concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
During a custodial interrogation, Mark Lilly told police officers that petitioner
committed the charged murder. The prosecution introduced a tape recording of these
statements at trial without making Mark available for cross-examination. In my view,
that is a paradigmatic Confrontation Clause violation. See White v. Illinois , 502
U. S. 346, 364-365 (1992) ( Thomas, J. , concurring in part and concurring in judgment)
("The federal constitutional right of confrontation extends to any witness who actually
testifies at trial" and "extrajudicial statements only insofar as they are contained
in formalized testimonial material, such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony,
or confessions"). Since the violation is clear, the case need be remanded only for
a harmless-error determination. I therefore join Parts I, II, and VI of the Court's
opinion and concur in the judgment.
BENJAMIN LEE LILLY, PETITIONER v. VIRGINIA
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
[June 10, 1999]
Justice Thomas , concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
I join Parts I and VI of the Court's opinion and concur in the judgment. Though I
continue to adhere to my view that the Confrontation Clause "extends to any witness
who actually testifies at trial" and "is implicated by extrajudicial statements only
insofar as they are contained in formalized testimonial material, such as affidavits,
depositions, prior testimony, or confessions," White v. Illinois , 502 U. S. 346,
365 (1992) (opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment), I agree with The
C hief J ustice that the Clause does not impose a "blanket ban on the government's
use of accomplice statements that incriminate a defendant." Post , at 5. Such an approach
not only departs from an original understanding of the Confrontation Clause but also
freezes our jurisprudence by making trial court decisions excluding such statements
virtually unreviewable. I also agree with The C hief J ustice that the lower courts
did not "analyz[e] the confession under the second prong of the Roberts inquiry,"
ibid., and therefore see no reason for the plurality to address an issue upon which
those courts did not pass.
BENJAMIN LEE LILLY, PETITIONER v. VIRGINIA
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of virginia
[June 10, 1999]
Chief Justice Rehnquist , with whom Justice O'Connor and Justice Kennedy join, concurring
in the judgment.
The plurality today concludes that all accomplice confessions that inculpate a criminal
defendant are not within a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule under Ohio
v. Roberts , 448 U. S. 56 (1980). See ante , at 16. It also concludes that appellate
courts should independently review the government's proffered guarantees of trustworthiness
under the second half of the Roberts inquiry. See ante , at 17. I disagree with both
of these conclusions, but concur in the judgment reversing the decision of the Supreme
Court of Virginia.
I
The plurality correctly states the issue in this case in the opening sentence of
its opinion: Whether petitioner's Confrontation Clause rights were violated by admission
of an accomplice's confession "that contained some statements against the accomplice's
penal interest and others that inculpated the accused." Ante , at 1. The confession
of the accomplice, Mark Lilly, covers 50 pages in the Joint Appendix, and the interviews
themselves lasted about an hour. The statements of Mark Lilly which are against his
penal interest--and would probably show him as an aider and abettor--are quite separate
in time and place from other statements exculpating Mark and incriminating his brother,
petitioner Benjamin Lilly, in the murder of Alexis DeFilippis. 1
Thus one is at a loss to know why so much of the plurality's opinion is devoted to
whether a declaration against penal interest is a "firmly rooted exception" to the
hearsay rule under Ohio v. Roberts , supra . Certainly, we must accept the Virginia
court's determination that Mark's statements as a whole were declarations against
penal interest for purposes of the Commonwealth's hearsay rule. See ante , at 6. Simply
labeling a confession a "declaration against penal interest," however, is insufficient
for purposes of Roberts , as this exception "defines too large a class for meaningful
Confrontation Clause analysis." Lee v. Illinois , 476 U. S. 530, 544 , n. 5 (1986).
The plurality tries its hand at systematizing this class, see ante , at 8, but most
of its housecleaning is unwarranted and results in a complete ban on the government's
use of accomplice confessions that inculpate a codefendant. Such a categorical holding
has no place in this case because the relevant portions of Mark Lilly's confession
were simply not "declarations against penal interest" as that term is understood in
the law of evidence. There may be close cases where the declaration against penal
interest portion is closely tied in with the portion incriminating the defendant,
see 2 J. Strong, McCormick on Evidence §319 (4th ed. 1992), but this is not one of
them. Mark Lilly's statements inculpating his brother in the murder of DeFilippis
are not in the least against Mark's penal interest.
This case therefore does not raise the question whether the Confrontation Clause
permits the admission of a genuinely self-inculpatory statement that also inculpates
a codefendant, and our precedent does not compel the broad holding suggested by the
plurality today. Cf. Williamson v. United States , 512 U. S. 594, 618-619 (1994) (
Kennedy, J. concurring) (explaining and providing examples of self-serving and more
neutral declarations against penal interest). Indeed, several Courts of Appeals have
admitted custodial confessions that equally inculpate both the declarant and the defendant,
2 and I see no reason for us to preclude consideration of these or similar statements
as satisfying a firmly rooted hearsay exception under Roberts .
Not only were the incriminating portions of Mark Lilly's confession not a declaration
against penal interest, but these statements were part of a custodial confession of
the sort that this Court has viewed with "special suspicion" given a codefendant's
"strong motivation to implicate the defendant and to exonerate himself." Lee , supra,
at 541 (citations omitted). Each of the cases cited by the plurality to support its
broad conclusion involved accusatory statements taken by law enforcement personnel
with a view to prosecution. See Douglas v. Alabama , 380 U. S. 415, 416-417 (1965);
Lee , supra , 532-536; cf. Bruton v. United States , 391 U. S. 123, 124-125 (1968);
Williamson, supra, at 596-597. These cases did not turn solely on the fact that the
challenged statement inculpated the defendant, but were instead grounded in the Court's
suspicion of untested custodial confessions. See, e.g. , Lee , supra , at 544-545.
The plurality describes Dutton v. Evans , 400 U. S. 74 (1970), as an "exception" to
this line of cases, ante , at 14, n. 2, but that case involved an accomplice's statement
to a fellow prisoner, see 400 U. S., at 77 -78, not a custodial confession.
The Court in Dutton held that the admission of an accomplice's statement to a fellow
inmate did not violate the Confrontation Clause under the facts of that case, see
id. , at 86-89, and I see no reason to foreclose the possibility that such statements,
even those that inculpate a codefendant, may fall under a firmly rooted hearsay exception.
The Court in Dutton recognized that statements to fellow prisoners, like confessions
to family members or friends, bear sufficient indicia of reliability to be placed
before a jury without confrontation of the declarant. Id., at 89. Several federal
courts have similarly concluded that such statements fall under a firmly rooted hearsay
exception. 3 Dutton is thus no "exception," but a case wholly outside the "unbroken
line" of cases, see ante , at 14, n. 2, in which custodial confessions laying blame
on a codefendant have been found to violate the Confrontation Clause. The custodial
confession in this case falls under the coverage of this latter set of cases, and
I would not extend the holding here any further.
The plurality's blanket ban on the government's use of accomplice statements that
incriminate a defendant thus sweeps beyond the facts of this case and our precedent,
ignoring both the exculpatory nature of Mark's confession and the circumstances in
which it was given. Unlike the plurality, I would limit our holding here to the case
at hand, and decide only that the Mark Lilly's custodial confession laying sole responsibility
on petitioner cannot satisfy a firmly rooted hearsay exception.
II
Nor do I see any reason to do more than reverse the decision of the Supreme Court
of Virginia and remand the case for the Commonwealth to demonstrate that Mark's confession
bears "particularized guarantees of trustworthiness" under Roberts . The Supreme Court
of Virginia held only that Mark Lilly's confession was admissible under a state law
exception to its hearsay rules and then held that this exception was firmly rooted
for Confrontation Clause purposes. See 255 Va. 558, 573-574, 499 S. E. 2d 522, 533-534
(1998). Neither that court nor the trial court analyzed the confession under the second
prong of the Roberts inquiry, and the discussion of reliability cited by the Court,
see ante , at 4, 16, pertained only to whether the confession should be admitted under
state hearsay rules, not under the Confrontation Clause. Following our normal course,
I see no reason for this Court to reach an issue upon which the lower courts did not
pass. See National College Athletic Assn. v. Smith , 525 U. S. __, ___ (1999) (slip
op., at 10) ("[W]e do not decide in the first instance issues not decided below").
Thus, both this issue and the harmless-error question should be sent back to the Virginia
courts. See ante , at 20.
The lack of any reviewable decision in this case makes especially troubling the plurality's
conclusion that appellate courts must independently review a lower court's determination
that a hearsay statement bears particularized guarantees of trustworthiness. Deciding
whether a particular statement bears the proper indicia of reliability under our Confrontation
Clause precedent "may be a mixed question of fact and law," but the mix weighs heavily
on the "fact" side. We have said that "deferential review of mixed questions of law
and fact is warranted when it appears that the district court is `better positioned'
than the appellate court to decide the issue in question or that probing appellate
scrutiny will not contribute to the clarity of legal doctrine." Salve Regina College
v. Russell , 499 U. S. 225, 233 (1991) (citation omitted).
These factors counsel in favor of deference to trial judges who undertake the second
prong of the Roberts inquiry. They are better able to evaluate whether a particular
statement given in a particular setting is sufficiently reliable that cross-examination
would add little to its trustworthiness. Admittedly, this inquiry does not require
credibility determinations, but we have already held that deference to district courts
does not depend on the need for credibility determinations. See Anderson v. Bessemer
City , 470 U. S. 564, 574 (1985).
Accordingly, I believe that in the setting here, as in Anderson , "[d]uplication
of the trial judge's efforts in the court of appeals would very likely contribute
only negligibly to the accuracy of fact determination at a huge cost in diversion
of judicial resources." See id ., at 574-575. It is difficult to apply any standard
in this case because none of the courts below conducted the second part of the Roberts
inquiry. I would therefore remand this case to the Supreme Court of Virginia to carry
out the inquiry, and, if any error is found, to determine whether that error is harmless.
FOOTNOTES
Footnote 1
Petitioner suggests in his merits brief that Mark was not truly "unavailable" because
the Commonwealth could have tried and sentenced him before petitioner's trial, thereby
extinguishing Mark's Fifth Amendment privilege. We assume, however, as petitioner
did in framing his petition for certiorari, that to the extent it is relevant, Mark
was an unavailable witness for Confrontation Clause purposes.
Footnote 2
The only arguable exception to this unbroken line of cases arose in our plurality
opinion in Dutton v. Evans, 400 U. S. 74 (1970), in which we held that the admission
of an accomplice's spontaneous comment that indirectly inculpated the defendant did
not violate the Confrontation Clause. While Justice Stewart's lead opinion observed
that the declarant's statement was "against his penal interest," id., at 89, the Court's
judgment did not rest on that point, and in no way purported to hold that statements
with such an attribute were presumptively admissible. Rather, the five Justices in
the majority emphasized the unique aspects of the case and emphasized that the coconspirator
spontaneously made the statement and "had no apparent reason to lie." Id., at 86-89.
See also id., at 98 (Harlan, J., concurring in result).
Footnote 3
Federal Rule of Evidence 804(b)(3) provides an exception to the hearsay rule for
the admission of "[a] statement which was at the time of its making so far contrary
to the declarant's pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so far tended to subject
the declarant to civil or criminal liability ... that a reasonable person in the declarant's
position would not have made the statement unless believing it to be true."
Footnote 4
Several States provide statutorily that their against-penal-interest hearsay exceptions
do not allow the admission of "[a] statement or confession offered against the accused
in a criminal case, made by a codefendant or other person implicating both himself
and the accused." Ark. Rule Evid. 804(b)(3) (1997). Accord, Ind. Rule Evid. 803(b)(3)
(1999); Me. Rule Evid. 804(b)(3) (1998); Nev. Rev. Stat. §51.345(2) (Supp. 1996);
N. J. Rule Evid. 803(25)(c) (1999); N. D. Cent. Code Rule Evid. §804(b)(3) (1998);
Vt. Rule Evid. 804(b)(3) (1998). See also State v. Myers, 229 Kan. 168, 172-173, 625
P. 2d 1111, 1115 (1981) ("Under 60-460( f ), a hearsay confession of one coparticipant
in a crime is not admissible against another coparticipant" ). Several other States
have adopted the language of the Federal Rule, see n. 3, supra , and adhere to our
interpretation of that rule in Williamson. See Smith v. State, 647 A. 2d 1083, 1088
(Del. 1994); United States v. Hammond, 681 A. 2d 1140, 1146 (Ct. App. D. C. 1996);
State v. Smith, 643 So. 2d 1221, 1221-1222 (La. 1994); State v. Matusky, 343 Md. 467,
490-492, and n. 15, 682 A. 2d 694, 705-706, and n. 15 (1996); State v. Ford, 539 N.
W. 2d 214, 277 (Minn. 1995); State v. Castle, 285 Mont. 363, 373-374, 948 P. 2d 688,
694 (1997); Miles v. State, 918 S. W. 2d 511, 515 (Tex. Ct. Crim. App. 1996); In re
Anthony Ray, Mc., 200 W. Va. 312, 321, 489 S. E. 2d 289, 298 (1997). Still other States
have virtually no against-penal-interest exception at all. See Ala. Rule Evid. 804(b)(3)
(1998) (no such exception); Ga. Code Ann. §24-3-8 (1995) (exception only if declarant
is deceased and statement was not made with view toward litigation); State v. Skillicorn,
944 S. W. 2d 877, 884-885 (Mo.) (no exception), cert. denied, 522 U. S. 999 (1997).
Footnote 5
Our holdings in Bruton v . United States, 391 U. S. 123 (1968), Cruz v . New York,
481 U. S. 186 (1987), Gray v . Maryland, 523 U. S. 185 (1998), and Lee v. Illinois,
476 U. S. 530 (1986), were all premised, explicitly or implicitly, on the principle
that accomplice confessions that inculpate a criminal defendant are not per se admissible
(and thus necessarily fall outside a firmly rooted hearsay exception), no matter how
much those statements also incriminate the accomplice. If "genuinely" or "equally"
inculpatory confessions of accomplices were--as The Chief Justice' s concurrence suggests
is possible, post, at 3-- per se admissible against criminal defendants, then the
confessions in each of those cases would have been admissible, for each confession
inculpated the accomplice equally in the crimes at issue. But the Court in Lee rejected
the dissent's position that nontestifying accomplice's confessions that are "unambiguously"
against the accomplice's penal interest are per se admissible, see 476 U. S., at 552
(Blackmun, J., dissenting) and we ruled in Bruton, Cruz, and Gray that such equally
self-inculpatory statements are inadmissible against criminal defendants. Today we
merely reaffirm these holdings and make explicit what was heretofore implicit: A statement
(like Mark's) that falls into the category summarized in Lee --"a confession by an
accomplice which incriminates a criminal defendant," 476 U. S., at 544 , n. 5--does
not come within a firmly rooted hearsay exception.
This, of course, does not mean, as The Chief Justice and Justice Thomas erroneously
suggest, see post, at 5, and post, at 1, that the Confrontation Clause imposes a "blanket
ban on the government's use of [nontestifying] accomplice statements that incriminate
a defendant." Rather, it simply means that the Government must satisfy the second
prong of the Ohio v. Roberts, 488 U. S. 56 (1980), test in order to introduce such
statements. See Part V, infra .
Footnote 6
Although The Chief Justice contends that we should remand this issue to the Supreme
Court of Virginia, see post, at 5-6, it would be inappropriate to do so because we
granted certiorari on this issue, see Pet. for Cert. i, and the parties have fully
briefed and argued the issue. The "facts and circumstances" formula, recited above,
that the Virginia courts already employed in reaching their reliability holdings is
virtually identical to the Roberts "particularized guarantees" test, which turns as
well on the "surrounding circumstances" of the statements. Idaho v . Wright, 497 U.
S. 805, 820 (1990). Furthermore, as will become clear, the Commonwealth fails to point
to any fact regarding this issue that the Supreme Court of Virginia did not explicitly
consider and that requires serious analysis.
FOOTNOTES
Footnote 1
Mark identifies Ben as the one who murdered Alexis DeFilippis in the following colloquy:
"M. L. I don't know, you know, dude shoots him.
"G. P. When you say `dude shoots him' which one are you calling a dude here?
"M. L. Well, Ben shoots him.
"G. P. Talking about your brother, what did he shoot him with?
"M. L. Pistol.
"G. P. How many times did he shoot him?
"M. L I heard a couple of shots go off, I don't know how many times he hit him."
App. 258.
A similar colloquy occurred in the second interview. See id., at 312-313.
Footnote 2
See, e.g., United States v. Keltner , 147 F. 3d 662, 670 (CA8 1998) (statement "clearly
subjected" declarant to criminal liability for "activity in which [he] participated
and was planning to participate with ... both defendants"); Earnest v. Dorsey , 87
F. 3d 1123, 1134 (CA10 1996) ("entire statement inculpated both [defendant] and [declarant]
equally" and "neither [attempted] to shift blame to his co-conspirators nor to curry
favor from the police or prosecutor").
Footnote 3
See , e.g., United States v. York , 933 F. 2d 1343, 1362-1364 (CA7 1991) (finding
federal declaration against penal interest exception firmly rooted in case involving
accomplice's statements made to two associates); United States v. Seeley , 892 F.
2d 1, 2 (CA1 1989) (exception firmly rooted in case involving statements made to declarant's
girlfriend and stepfather); United States v. Katsougrakis , 715 F. 2d 769, 776 (CA2
1983) (no violation in admitting accomplice's statements to friend).