State of Hawaiʻi v. Zuffante
What's at Stake
In 1994, the Supreme Court of Hawaiʻi held in State v. Kekona that the due process clause of the Hawai‘i Constitution does not require custodial interrogations to be recorded. More than 30 years later, with advances in technology that have made recording far easier, this case asks whether this decision should be reconsidered. The Ƶ’s State Supreme Court Initiative, along with the Ƶ of Hawai‘i filed an amicus brief arguing that the Supreme Court of Hawaiʻi should now hold that custodial interrogations must be recorded in order to be admissible in court, either as a matter of due process or as an exercise of the Court’s supervisory authority over lower courts.
Summary
The defendant in this case, Charles Zuffante, was riding in a car that was stopped by the Hawai‘i Police Department (HPD). Officers found methamphetamine and took Mr. Zuffante to a police station for questioning. The two HPD officers who conducted the traffic stop were equipped with body-worn cameras and, consistent with HPD policy, recorded it. But when another HPD officer interrogated Mr. Zuffante at the police station, the officer did not record it or take notes. At Mr. Zuffante’s trial, the interrogating officer testified that Mr. Zuffante had waived his Miranda rights and confessed to drug trafficking.
The Ƶ’s State Supreme Court Initiative and the Ƶ of Hawai‘i filed an amicus brief arguing that the failure to record the interrogation was both unfair and unconstitutional.
With respect to due process, the brief makes three points. First, the Court’s prior decision in Kekona is out of step with the Court’s current case law, which stresses the state’s affirmative obligation to demonstrate that a confession was voluntary, and which stresses outcomes that are good for all Hawaiians. That case law is relevant here because recording protects suspects and officers alike. Second, the Court’s decision in Kekona has been overtaken by technology, which has made recording far easier for everyone and for police in particular. Thus, here, the police had the wherewithal to record Mr. Zuffante during a traffic stop but argued that it could not do so—due to broken equipment—when he was in the controlled environment of the police station. That doesn’t make sense. Third, the Court’s decision in Kekona has been overtaken by the law, because courts or legislatures in roughly 30 states now require recording of at least some custodial interrogations.
With respect to the Court’s supervisory power, the brief explains that requiring recording—or, at a minimum, requiring trial courts to give an appropriately stern jury instruction when police fail to record—is well within the Court’s authority to supervise the judiciary. The brief also discusses some decisions of other state supreme courts that have exercised their supervisory powers to require or encourage the recording of custodial interrogations.
Given the high stakes, it does not make sense to excuse the police from recording custodial interrogations especially where a defendant’s words can mean the difference between conviction and acquittal.
Decision: State of Hawaiʻi v. Zuffante
In September 2025, the Hawai’i Supreme Court reversed their 1994 ruling in State v. Kekona and issued a decision holding that, under the Hawai’i Constitution’s due process clause, police must record all in-station custodial interrogations and record outside-the-station custodial interrogations “when feasible.” The Court also clarified that such recording must be “simultaneous video and audio.” When a custodial interrogation is unrecorded and police cannot show infeasibility in an out-of-station setting, the Court held that the defendant’s statements are inadmissible.
Legal Documents
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09/17/2025
Opinion of the Court -
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09/17/2025
Dissenting Opinion by Justice Ginoza -
09/17/2025
Opinion by Chief Justice Recktenwald, Concurring in Part and Dissenting in Part
State of Hawaiʻi v. ZuffanteLegal DocumentsDissenting Opinion by Justice GinozaDate Filed: 09/17/2025
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii
State of Hawaiʻi v. ZuffanteLegal DocumentsOpinion by Chief Justice Recktenwald, Concurring in Part and Dissenting in PartDate Filed: 09/17/2025
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii
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09/17/2025
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04/04/2025
Brief of Amici Curiae Ƶ of Hawaiʻi Foundation and Ƶ Foundation in Support of Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant -
03/21/2025
Brief of Amici Curiae the Hawaiʻi Innocence Project and the Innocence Project in Support of Petitioner -
12/23/2024
Petition for Writ of Certiorari
Date Filed: 09/17/2025
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii
Date Filed: 04/04/2025
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii
Date Filed: 03/21/2025
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii
Date Filed: 12/23/2024
Court: Hawai‘i Supreme Court
Affiliate: Hawaii