presented by judge stanley j. rumbaugh department 18 pierce county superior court current issues on...

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PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

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Page 1: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

PRESENTED BYJUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH

DEPARTMENT 18PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT

Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Page 2: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Starting with the obvious, the interpreter is in court to accurately interpret the witnesses testimony, not be the witness

Page 3: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Witness says:

“Someone began to push me with a black tow truck. Later he began to move me.”

Page 4: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Interpreter Says:

“Someone began to honk at me and I moved.” (fn 1)

Page 5: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Witness says:

“I don’t even have ten cents.”

Page 6: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Interpreter Says:

“I don’t even have ten kilos.” (fn 2)

Page 7: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Witness is asked by counsel:

“Do you remember the day [defendant] sexually assaulted you?”

Page 8: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Interpreter asks the witness:

“Do you remember the day [defendant] made love to you?” (fn 3)

Page 9: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

The growing requirement of bilingual courtrooms mirrors expanding bilingualism in the larger culture regionally, and nationally.

Page 10: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

By the 1990 census, 13.8% of Americans over the age of 5 did not use English in the home. (fn 4)

Page 11: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Of that 13.8% in 1990, 44% (almost 14 million people) spoke English less than very well. (fn 5)

Page 12: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

By 2011, 20.7% of all Americans over the age of 5 did not use English in the home. (fn 6)

Page 13: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Of the 20.7% of individuals not speaking English in the home, 62% speak Spanish in the home, 4.8% speak Chinese (Mandarin), 2.6 speak Tagalog, and 2.3% speak Vietnamese. (fn 7)

Page 14: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Filling out the approximately 28% remaining is a melange of nearly 300 recognized languages or dialects. (fn 8)

Page 15: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Exclusion of bilingual jurors who have doubts about their ability to ignore original, non-English language testimony in favor of English language interpretation is authorized. (fn 9)

Page 16: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

The venire of prospective jury members must be composed of individuals who reasonably reflect the ethnic and racial composition of the vicinage population. (fn 10)

Page 17: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

The requirement of a racially neutral explanation for juror challenge (fn 11) does not, ipso factor, prohibit bilingual jurors from being subject to challenge because of their bilingual abilities.

Page 18: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Intentional discrimination is not established by exclusion of bilingual jurors who are hesitant to swear allegiance to the foreign language to English evidentiary interpretation of a court interpreter, regardless of the accuracy of the interpretation. Such hesitancy can be accepted as a racially neutral explanation for the challenge. (fn 12)

Page 19: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Some state constitutions offer greater protection against the potential for discrimination in jury selection than exist under Federal law. (fn 13)

Page 20: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Greater state constitutional protections do not necessarily prohibit peremptory challenges of bilingual jurors who express concern about basing their decision only on the English interpretation of testimony. (fn 14)

Page 21: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

The so-called Hernandez accommodation presents an alternative to exclusion of bilingual jurors whose sole reliance on the English record cannot be assured.

Page 22: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Bilingual jurors can be impaneled with a process in place to inform the court of potential or perceived interpretation errors.

Page 23: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Jurors can be permitted to inform the court of perceived interpretation error and furnish the court with written explanation of the difference between what the juror heard and what the interpreter said.

Page 24: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

A second alternate to resolving the bilingual juror’s “harsh paradox” is to remove the paradox. This removal is accomplished by confining what the jurors hear exclusively to the simultaneous translation.

Page 25: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Recorded foreign language testimony, in some jurisdictions, forms part of the official record and has independent evidentiary value.

Page 26: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Special instructions to the jury defining exactly what is the official record of proceedings, and confining the jury’s attention to the English translation, are required in some states. (fn 15)

Page 27: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

Why not acknowledge both the original foreign language testimony and its English interpretation, allow jurors to consider both, and preserve both for the record?

Page 28: PRESENTED BY JUDGE STANLEY J. RUMBAUGH DEPARTMENT 18 PIERCE COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT Current Issues on Courtroom Interpreters

For cause challenges are generally not permitted of jurors with highly specialized skills, other than language skills, who can assure impartiality. (fn 16) There seems no reason to treat specialized language skills any differently.