Posted On: December 18, 2008

Hearsay: Mapquest for the Truth

Supreme Court of Delaware: Jianniney v. Delaware

Mapquest is great for directions. For restaurants along the way. And for finding your way to historic attractions like state prisons. But is Mapquest reliable enough to be considered evidence in a criminal case?

Jason Baker (the pseudonym the court gave him) was 13. He was home from school working outside his house. At about 11:30 a.m. a man later identified as Christopher Jianniney approached him. Young Baker ignored him and went indoors. Later that day, at bout 6:00 p.m. when Jason was taking out the trash, he was again approached by Jianniney who this time offered him $40 to show him his penis.

Baker ran into the house and got his mom. Jianniney beat a hasty retreat and mom and son drove the neighborhood looking for him without success. They called the cops and Jianniney was later arrested after neighbors ID’ed his car and placed him on the street at 6:00 p.m. on the date in question. Jianniney pleaded innocent and demanded his day in court.

At trial, Jianniney claimed he was at work at the time of the crime and couldn’t possibly be the perpetrator. His boss, Jerry Wilson, was called to testify. Jianniney, he said, was one of his fuel delivery drivers. He had punched in for work the morning of the crime. Based on the location of the truck yard, what his time card indicated and the deliveries he made, Wilson claimed Jianniney could not have been at Baker’s house at 11:30 a.m. By Wilson's own calculations, the drive would have taken way too long.

Prosecutors then cross examined Wilson about Mapquest. Wilson admitted that he was familiar with it and used it to determine how long it takes to get from one place to another. Yet Mapquest’s ETAs from the fuel yard to the scene of the crime were half what Wilson personally estimated for Jianniney to get to Baker’s house, which, the state argued, meant he could have been there on the morning in question. At the prosecutor’s request, the trial court admitted the Mapquest time estimates as an exception to the hearsay rule.

Jianniney was convicted.

Defendant then appealed claiming Mapquest’s time estimates between locations were not reliable enough to fall within the hearsay exception.

The Delaware Supreme Court agreed with the defendant.

It found that the state failed to show that Mapquest’s driving time estimates “are relied upon by the public or professional drivers.” In fact, the Mapquest website disclaims all warranties including that the information found there is free from defects. It also warns users that “weather, construction projects, traffic conditions, or other events may cause road conditions to differ from the listed results.” Given its own disclaimer and the variables that can make its time estimates inaccurate, Mapquest cannot be admitted as an exception to the hearsay rule. Apparently, the state took a wrong turn using it to convict Jianniney.

Unfortunately for the defendant, it was just a detour.

Mapquest had been used only to show that defendant could have made it to Baker’s house in the morning when his boss said he couldn’t. Mapquest wasn’t used to challenge defendant’s presence at Baker’s home when the child was propositioned at 6:00 p.m. and Wilson did not offer testimony in defense of Jianniney’s whereabouts at that time. Moreover, even if Mapquest should not have been admitted into evidence, two neighbors saw the defendant that day and placed him at the scene.

So Mapquest travel times were hearsay, but their use in court was harmless error. Well, maybe not for Jianniney, who's life may have taken a turn for the worse. As a potential guest of the state, he now runs the risk that his new friends will ask him the same thing that got him arrested in the first place.

One wonders if he appreciates the irony.

Posted On: December 2, 2008

Underage Drinking: Minor Drinking, Major Problem

Supreme Court of Illinois: The People of the State of Illinois v. Jenna M. Christopherson

Can a minor who supplies another minor with beer be charged with unlawful delivery of alcohol to a minor?

Does your answer change if the minor who received the alcohol dies in a one-car accident after drinking some of the contraband brew?

Illinois law provides in part that:

No person, after purchasing or otherwise obtaining alcoholic liquor, shall sell, give, or deliver such alcoholic liquor to another person under the age of 21 years, except in the performance of a religious ceremony or service.

Defendant Christopherson was a minor. She provided the late Jamie Smith, also a minor, with a 30-pack of Icehouse beer and two cases of Bud Light. After his death at the wheel, she was charged under the above section with a Class A misdemeanor (even though the same statute provides that since death resulted, she could have been charged with a Class 4 felony). She moved to dismiss claiming the statute didn’t intend to apply to minors, but to adults who could legally buy booze then illegally give it to minors. In response, the state argued that the language of the statute was unambiguous: Defendant was a person, which was all that was required by law, and as such, she could be charged under the statute.

The lower court agreed with the defendant and dismissed the charge. It also agreed that the evil the statute addressed was “adults providing alcohol to minors.” The state appealed.

The appellate court reversed, finding that “the commonly understood meaning of ‘person’ is ‘an individual human being,’ and that … ‘no person’ would encompass juveniles.” Defendant appealed.

Defendant’s main argument was that if the alcohol laws were read in context, “it’s clear that the entire section is directed only at those people who are authorized to possess liquor,” to wit, adults, and since defendant was not authorized to possess liquor because of her age, she couldn’t be charged (this logic brings to mind the defendant who shoots his parents to death, then asks the court for leniency because he’s now an orphan).

The Illinois Supreme Court wasn’t buying, and neither should have defendant. It found that the statutory language “is clear and unambiguous” and because defendant is “an individual human being” she is a “person” under the statute, regardless of her age.

The true legislative intent of the statute was to keep alcohol out of the hands of minors, no matter how it gets to them. As the court noted, “The tragic facts of this case indicate that the potential harm when alcohol reaches the hands of minors is no different when the alcohol is provided by another minor rather than by an adult.” Moreover, that the state had mercy (or a weak case) and charged defendant with a felony instead of a misdemeanor did not mean that it conceded that the statute was ambiguous or defective.

It’s back to the lower court for Ms. Christopherson to take a plea or go to trial.

Certainly adults know the risks of supplying minors with booze, guns, drugs and other controlled substances. And those who don’t know the risks at least know they can get in serious trouble for doing so. Minors should become aware of the same potential trouble. Unfortunately, the very nature of being a minor is not to appreciate the risks to self and others, to be ignorant of the law, and too often, not to care one way or the other what might happen.

When it comes to minors buying or dying for a drink, there may be more to answer to than just parents, and way more to regret the morning after.