Utah Court of Appeals
When do off-the-record comments to jurors trigger a presumption of prejudice? State v. Camara Explained
Summary
Charles Camara was convicted of multiple counts of child sexual abuse. On appeal, he challenged the district court’s denial of motions to dismiss based on the State’s seizure of his expert’s files, denial of a mistrial motion after jurors heard gallery comments, and alleged ineffective assistance regarding directed verdict motions.
Analysis
In State v. Camara, the Utah Court of Appeals addressed a critical issue facing trial practitioners: when do off-the-record communications with jurors trigger the heightened presumption of prejudice standard rather than ordinary mistrial analysis?
Background and Facts
During Camara’s trial for child sexual abuse, jurors were seated both in the jury box and gallery due to COVID-19 social distancing requirements. The alleged victim, Bree, was permitted to sit in the gallery during trial. When a defense witness testified favorably for Camara, Juror 7 overheard either Bree or her attorney say “she’s lying.” The trial court denied Camara’s subsequent mistrial motion, finding no articulation of prejudice under ordinary mistrial standards.
Key Legal Issues
The court addressed whether State v. Soto‘s presumption of prejudice test applies to off-the-record comments made inside the courtroom during trial, or whether such situations should be analyzed under ordinary mistrial standards. The majority and lead opinion disagreed on this threshold question, with the majority adopting a broader interpretation of when unauthorized communications trigger the Soto analysis.
Court’s Analysis and Holding
The majority held that the key distinction is not whether contact occurs inside or outside the courtroom, but whether it occurs on-the-record or off-the-record. Off-the-record communications lack the procedural safeguards of sworn testimony, cross-examination, and evidentiary rules. Applying Soto’s three-part test examining who said what under what circumstances, the court found the presumption of prejudice applied because the speaker was either the victim or someone associated with her, the statement directly challenged witness credibility, and no special circumstances weighed against the presumption.
Practice Implications
This decision significantly expands when the presumption of prejudice applies to jury contact. Practitioners should be aware that inadvertent off-the-record comments during trial—even inside the courtroom—may trigger heightened scrutiny. The State faces a heavy burden to prove such contact was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, potentially requiring testimony from the communicators or proof that evidence of guilt was overwhelming. Trial courts should carefully manage courtroom observers and consider prophylactic measures to prevent unauthorized communications.
Case Details
Case Name
State v. Camara
Citation
2026 UT App 5
Court
Utah Court of Appeals
Case Number
No. 20220502-CA
Date Decided
January 15, 2026
Outcome
Affirmed in part and Remanded
Holding
The district court properly denied motions to dismiss based on the State’s copying of defense expert files, but the presumption of prejudice applies when a juror overhears off-the-record comments from trial participants during proceedings.
Standard of Review
Abuse of discretion for motions to dismiss and mistrial motions; correctness for constitutional interpretation; clear error for factual findings with correctness for legal conclusions on mixed questions of law and fact; question of law for ineffective assistance claims raised for the first time on appeal
Practice Tip
When jurors are exposed to off-the-record comments during trial, even if inadvertent, consider moving for a mistrial and arguing for application of the Soto presumption of prejudice test rather than ordinary mistrial standards.
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