Justice HECHT
delivered the opinion of the Court,
in which Justice WAINWRIGHT, Justice MEDINA, Justice GREEN, Justice JOHNSON, Justice WILLETT, and Justice GUZMAN joined.
The issue in this case is whether a peace officer’s arrest report must be excluded from evidence if not sworn as required by law. Because it is no less a criminal offense to make a false statement in a governmental record than it is to make one under oath, we hold that an officer’s failure to swear to a report does not deprive it of the assurance of veracity or render it inadmissible. Consequently, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to that court.
Stephen Joseph Caruana, age 21, was arrested by state trooper Eric Flores for driving while intoxicated. A person arrested for driving while intoxicated in Texas is deemed to have consented to submit *559to the taking of a breath or blood specimen to determine its alcohol concentration. Under the state Administrative License Revocation (“ALR”) program, if the person refuses to provide a specimen, or if the specimen provided has an alcohol concentration in excess of the legal limit, the Texas Department of Public Safety will automatically suspend the person’s driver’s license. Flores requested a breath specimen from Caruana and read him the statutory warning about possible consequences of providing or refusing to provide a specimen. Caruana provided a specimen that tested 0.16B and 0.157, about twice the legal limit.
Flores filed an arrest report with the Texas Department of Public Safety. When a person provides a specimen that fails the alcohol concentration test, suspension of his driver’s license is governed by chapter 524 of the Texas Transportation Code. The arresting officer is required to send the department “a sworn report of information relevant to the arrest.” Had Caruana refused to provide the requested specimen, administrative suspension of his driver’s license would have been governed by chapter 724 of the Texas Transportation Code. In that situation, the arresting officer must only “make a written report of the refusal” for the department. Chapter 724 does not require the report to be sworn.
The Department suspended Caruana’s driver’s license, and Caruana requested an *560administrative hearing to challenge the suspension. At that hearing, conducted by an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) employed by the State Office of Administrative Hearings (“SOAH”), the Department called Flores to testify and offered his report of the incident. Although the report stated that Flores had sworn to it, he admitted on questioning by Caruana’s counsel that he had not actually done so. Caruana’s counsel objected to admission of the report on that basis.
Under the Administrative Procedure Act and SOAH rules, ALR proceedings are governed by “the rules of evidence as applied in a non-jury civil case in a district court of this state”. Rule 803(8) of the Texas Rules of Evidence, applicable in district courts, states that the following are not excluded from evidence by the hearsay rule:
Records, reports, statements, or data compilations, in any form, of public offices or agencies setting forth:
(A) the activities of the office or agency;
(B) matters observed pursuant to duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a duty to report, excluding in criminal cases matters observed by police officers and other law enforcement personnel; or
(C) in civil cases as to any party and in criminal cases as against the state, factual findings resulting from an investigation made pursuant to authority granted by law;
unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness.
SOAH’s Rule 159.23, in effect at the time, also provided that “[a]n officer’s sworn *561report of relevant information shall be admissible as a public record.” Rule 803(8) does not require that reports be sworn to be admissible. Rule 159.23 did not specifically address unsworn reports.
The ALJ overruled Caruana’s objection. Flores then testified that everything in the report was true and correct “to the best of my knowledge.” Based on the report and the breath test results, the ALJ sustained the suspension of Caruana’s driver’s license.
Caruana appealed to the county court, which reversed the administrative ruling. On appeal by the Department, a divided court of appeals affirmed the county court. The majority concluded that to admit unsworn reports in evidence would be inconsistent with Rule 159.23’s specific provision making sworn reports admissible and would allow the Department to circumvent the statutory requirement that reports be sworn. To sustain the suspension of Caruana’s license, the Department was required to prove not only that the alcohol concentration in his breath exceeded the legal limit, but that he had been operating a motor vehicle in a public place at the time and that there was probable cause to arrest. Flores did not provide such evidence himself, and therefore, the majority held, without the report there was no evidence to support the ALJ’s ruling. The dissent argued that admission of unsworn reports was not specifically prohibited by Rule 159.23 and is permitted by Rule 803(8).
We granted the Department’s petition for review.
The Department argues that the court of appeals misconstrued the text of Rule 159.23. We agree. By expressly providing for the admission of sworn reports, the rule does not imply that unsworn reports are inadmissible. The inverse of a statement is not always true. Thus, if B is true when A is true — all men (A) are mortal (B) — it does not follow that B is false when A is false — all other creatures (not-A) are immortal (not-B). The fact that a sworn report (A) is admissible (B) does not mean that an unsworn report (not-A) is inadmissible (not-B); as a matter of logic, the former simply does not speak to the latter. By expressly making sworn reports admissible, Rule 159.23 does not foreclose the admission of unsworn reports; rather, it leaves the matter to Rule 803(8), which imposes no condition that public offices’ reports be sworn.
Furthermore, the admission of unsworn reports does not subvert the statutory ALR scheme. Chapter 724, which governs cases in which a driver has refused to provide a specimen, has its origins in a 1969 statute, which required an officer’s report to be sworn. The requirement assured the report’s truthfulness by sub-*562jeeting the officer to the criminal penalty for perjury. But in the 1973 overhaul of the Texas Penal Code, the Legislature created a new offense — for making a false statement in a governmental record— and set the penalty the same as that for perjury. When the license suspension statute was revised in 1983, the requirement that an officer’s report be sworn was dropped in lieu of a provision specifically stating that the report was a governmental record under the Penal Code. That provision was retained for refusal cases when the Legislature, in 1993, adopted a comprehensive, statewide ALR program, but was dropped in the 1995 recodification, obviously as surplusage, given the Penal Code’s broad definition of governmental records — “anything ... kept by government for information”. Though it may certainly be argued that the formality of an oath focuses the affiant’s attention on the importance of complete truthfulness, the Legislature concluded that the desired assurance of veracity was provided by the criminal penalty for making a false statement in a governmental record.
The 1993 statute provided for the first time for administrative license suspension in cases when a driver’s specimen failed to pass the alcohol concentration test (which were formerly handled by the courts) — now chapter 524. These provisions required that the officer’s report be sworn. Though it is not clear why the requirement should have been included for failure cases when it had been abandoned for refusal cases, it is perfectly clear that the purpose of the requirement — an assurance of truthfulness — is as fully served in failure cases by the criminal penalty for making a false statement in a governmental record as it is in refusal cases.
Although chapters 524 and 724 describe the arresting officer’s report differently, nothing in the differences suggests that *563the report should be sworn in failure cases and not sworn in refusal cases. In failure cases, the report must
(1) identify the arrested person;
(2) state the arresting officer’s grounds for believing the person committed the offense;
(3) give the analysis of the specimen if any; and
(4) include a copy of the criminal complaint filed in the case, if any.
In refusal cases, the report must
(1) show the grounds for the officer’s belief that the person had been operating a motor vehicle ... while intoxicated; and
(2) contain a copy of:
(A) the refusal statement requested
...; or
(B) a statement signed by the officer that the person refused to:
(i) submit to the taking of the requested specimen; and
(ii) sign the requested statement. ...
In both situations, the report must be filed within five days of the arrest on a form prescribed by the Department. Department regulations echo the statutory requirement that the report be sworn in failure cases but otherwise prescribe the same information in both reports, except for differences due to whether the driver refused to give a specimen or the specimen failed the test. In both instances, a report’s veracity is assured by the prohibition against false statements in government records.
SOAH’s Rule 159.23 applied to officer reports in both refusal and failure cases alike, just as the rule that replaced it does, current Rule 159.211. The court of appeals read the rule to exclude unsworn reports only in failure cases, but nothing in the rule justifies the distinction. If under the rule only sworn reports are admissible, then unsworn reports are inadmissible in both failure and refusal cases. That is Caruana’s reading of the rule. But without an arrest report in evidence, the proof necessary to sustain suspension of a license in a refusal case can come only from the arresting officer, who would usually find it difficult, if not impossible, to recall a particular arrest. SOAH’s rule, as construed by Caruana, would hinder and often preclude license suspensions in refusal cases. Nothing in chapter 724 suggests that the Legislature intended such a result. The lack of any requirement that the arrest report be sworn should make license suspension easier if anything, certainly not harder. It is unreasonable to conclude that SOAH presumed upon itself to create impediments to license suspension where none existed in the statute by adopting procedural rules for ALR proceedings. The only reasonable conclusion, fully supported by Rule 803(8), is that arrest reports are admissible without being sworn.
The court of appeals was concerned that allowing admission of reports under Rule 803(8) makes Rule 159.23’s express admission of sworn reports mere surplusage. We think that SOAH, in crafting its rules, was understandably careful to adhere to all statutory requirements. But chapter 524 requires only that arrest reports be sworn; it does not make verification a condition of inadmissibility, any more than the five-day deadline, or the requirement that approved forms be used. Read liter*564ally, Rule 159.23 is consistent with chapter 524.
The court of appeals was also concerned that the Department not be allowed to circumvent chapter 524⅛ requirement of a sworn report. But chapter 524 does not prescribe the consequence for a failure to satisfy that requirement or others. If some sanction should be imposed, it need not be automatic exclusion of an arrest report. If the Department’s failure to follow statutory procedures substantively affects a suspension hearing, the ALJ certainly has authority to provide a remedy in that case.
In that regard, we note that public offices’ reports which meet the requirements of Rule 803(8) are not excluded from evidence as hearsay “unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness.” In determining whether such circumstances exist, an ALJ has discretion to consider whether an officer’s failure to swear to a report casts doubt on the facts stated in it or was merely an oversight. In this case, the ALJ concluded that the report should be admitted. That conclusion was not precluded by SOAH’s rules or by chapter 524.
The concurrence argues that “peace officers’ reports, when offered by [DPS] in an ALR proceeding, lack the trustworthiness necessary to come within the public records hearsay exception”, period, “because of the ‘presumed unreliability of law enforcement observations in an adversarial, investigative setting’ ”. We do not share this presumption. Rule 803(8) excludes investigative reports when offered against the defendant in a criminal case, not because law enforcement officers are disinclined to be truthful, but because a criminal case pits law enforcement and defendants as adversaries, and conviction should not be based on an officer’s testimony offered in absentia. ALR proceedings are civil, not criminal. Law enforcement investigation reports are commonly admitted in civil cases — car wrecks, for example. The concurrence cites no authority for the categorical exclusion of such reports in civil cases that, in the concurrence’s words, “share[ ] many characteristics of a criminal prosecution for the same underlying conduct.”
The concurrence founders on the fact that Rule 803(8) does not distinguish between sworn and unsworn reports. A report is no less admissible in a civil case merely because it is unsworn, nor is a report any more admissible against the defendant in a criminal case because it is sworn. No case cited by the concurrence draws the distinction it does. The concurrence argues that the administration of an oath “impresses upon [the officer] the seriousness of the matter and reinforces that his statement is subject to penalties if untrue.” But by statute, “an un-sworn declaration may be used in lieu of a written sworn declaration, verification, certification, oath, or affidavit required by statute or required by a rule, order, or requirement adopted as provided by law” as long as it is “subscribed ... as true under penalty of perjury”. Id. § 132.001(c)(2). The verity of a declaration is thus assured by the criminal penalties for perjury, not a raised arm.
*565Finally, the concurrence would exclude unsworn reports in Chapter 724 “refusal” cases even though nothing in the law requires that they be sworn. Surely a report that meets all requirements of law should be admissible.
The ALJ acted within his discretion in admitting the officer’s report. Thus, the judgment of the court of appeals must be reversed. In accordance with the Department request, we remand the case to the court of appeals to consider whether the ALJ’s ruling sustaining suspension of Ca-ruana’s license was supported by substantial evidence.
Chief Justice JEFFERSON filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice LEHRMANN joined.
Chief Justice JEFFERSON, joined by Justice LEHRMANN,
concurring.
The moment an officer pulls a driver over for suspected drunk driving, the officer and the driver are adversaries. Absent a roadside confession, the driver will plead innocence, and the officer will accumulate evidence to suspend the driver’s license or worse. The officer’s subsequent report is more than an official public record. At a minimum, it is an accusation that threatens the defendant’s ability to get to work or school. The inclination to believe the officer’s account is strong — his mission is to protect the public from the scourge of drunk driving. But the law requires skepticism. It insists that the state prove its case before a driver’s license may be suspended. In the context of this case, the law requires the officer to swear that the contents of his report are true. I disagree that a court can disregard the officer’s refusal to take that oath. Courts, accustomed to mediating adversarial disputes, regularly exclude documents that are created under circumstances that call their credibility into doubt. Most business records fall outside that category. Records implying criminal conduct do not.
I recognize that license suspension is a civil action, but the underlying accusation bears all the hallmarks of a criminal case in which the individual faces the threat of incarceration. The Texas Legislature has written a statute, and SOAH a rule, that carefully negotiates the roles of the two adversaries before our Court today. Because the driver here had an opportunity to confront his accuser, who took an oath before testifying at the hearing, I concur in the Court’s judgment. I cannot join the opinion, however, because the Court’s holding would excuse not only the officer’s failure to swear to the truth of the report, but would permit suspension of a driver’s license even if the officer never formally swears to the facts the report depicts. I would not go that far.
I. Peace officers’ unsworn reports are inadmissible under the Texas Rules of Evidence when offered by the Department in an Administrative License Revocation hearing.
The Court reasons that SOAH rule 159.23’s statement that sworn reports are admissible as public records does not require the converse. Instead, the Court concludes that unsworn reports about driver intoxication are always admissible as public records under our evidentiary rules. I disagree. I would hold that peace officers’ reports, when offered by the Department in an ALR proceeding, lack the *566trustworthiness necessary to come within the public records hearsay exception. A peace officer’s report is admissible only if it satisfies rule 159.23’s requirement that it be sworn or if the officer swears in court to its contents. See 1 Tex. Admin. Code § 159.23(c)(7) (2009) (“An officer’s sworn report of relevant information shall be admissible as a public record.”), repealed 34 Tex. Reg. 334, 335 (2009) (now codified at 1 Tex. Admin. Code § 159.211); see also Tex. Transp. Code §§ 524.002, 724.003 (granting SOAH rulemaking authority over license suspension hearings).
Texas Rule of Evidence 803(8) permits the admission of public records that suggest the government has no ax to grind:
Public Records and Reports. Records, reports, statements, or data compilations, in any form, of public offices or agencies setting forth:
(A) the activities of the office or agency;
(B) matters observed pursuant to duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a duty to report, excluding in criminal cases matters observed by police officers and other law enforcement personnel; or
(C) in civil cases as to any party and in criminal cases as against the state, factual findings resulting from an investigation made pursuant to authority granted by law;
unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness.
Tex.R. Evid. 803(8) (emphasis added); see also Fed.R.Evid. SOS®.
Important to any 803(8) analysis is not just whether the document qualifies under provision (A), (B), or (C), but also whether it satisfies the rule’s catchall trustworthiness requirement. Rule 803(8) of both the Federal and Texas Rules of Evidence makes clear that a public record is admissible only if there is no reason to doubt that its author’s observations are totally reliable.
The rule provides for the admission of a public record when the author has a legal duty to report it. According to the Federal Advisory Committee, the “^justification for the [public records hearsay] exception is the assumption that a public official will perform his duty properly and the unlikelihood that he will remember details independently of the record.” Fed.R.Evid. 803(8) advisory committee’s note. This rationale does not extend to the state’s use of police reports, which are excluded from the public records exception under both the Federal and Texas Rules of Evidence when offered against a defendant in a criminal case. Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A)(ii)-(iii); Tex.R. Evid. 803(8)(B)-(C). As noted by the Fifth Circuit,
*567[Ostensibly, the reason for this exclusion is that observations by police officers at the scene of the crime or the apprehension of the defendant were not as reliable as observations by public officials in other cases because of the adversarial nature of the confrontation between the police and the defendant in criminal cases.
United States v. Quezada, 754 F.2d 1190, 1193-94 (5th Cir.1985) (quoting S.Rep. No. 93-1277 (1974), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7051, 7064). Thus, “the reason for Federal Rule of Evidence 803(8)(B), after which the Texas rule was modeled, was the presumed unreliability of observations that are made by officers at the scene of a crime.” Pondexter v. State, 942 S.W.2d 577, 585 (Tex.Crim.App.1996). While these concerns are not implicated when officers are “conducting routine business matters,” they are applicable when the report is the precursor to prosecution. Id. at 585.
The Court of Criminal Appeals has explained that “[b]oth the federal and Texas hearsay rules have always excluded the crime-scene or investigation observations of law enforcement officers because their factual observations, opinions, and narrations are made while the officer is ‘engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.’ ” Fischer v. State, 252 S.W.3d 375, 382 (Tex.Crim.App.2008) (quoting Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10, 14, 68 S.Ct. 367, 92 L.Ed. 436 (1948)). The Court of Criminal Appeals noted that “[t]he reason for this exclusion [in 803(8)] is the inherently adversarial nature of any on-the-scene or post hoc investigation of a criminal suspect.” Id. at *568B82-83. Therefore, because of the “presumed unreliability of law enforcement observations in an adversarial, investigative setting,” under our evidentiary rules, police reports are excluded from the public records hearsay exception in criminal cases when offered against the defendant. Id. at 385.
This same rationale applies to the observations and conclusions of police officers made in DWI investigations. As the Court of Criminal Appeals has explained:
[0]n-the-scene observations and narrations of a police officer conducting a roadside investigation into a suspected DWI offense are fraught with the thought of a future prosecution: the police officer is gathering evidence to use in deciding whether to arrest and charge someone with a crime. Calculation and criminal litigation shimmer in the air; the officer is gathering evidence, he is not making an off-hand, non-reflective observation about the world as it passes by.
Id. at 384.
An ALR hearing shares many characteristics of a criminal prosecution for the same underlying conduct. The Court overlooks the fact that civil cases in which police reports are admissible generally involve two private parties and a claim for monetary damages — cases involving insurance claims or liability for car wrecks, for example. See United States v. Smith, 521 F.2d 957, 966 (D.C.Cir.1975) (“In many cases where police records are offered, the litigation is civil in nature and between private parties. Thus the record has not been prepared at the behest of either par*569ty, the [issue regarding the trustworthiness of documents prepared with an eye towards litigation] does not arise, and the records are routinely admitted.”). But in this case, the defendant and the State are rivals. In an ALR proceeding, the police officer is an interested party who prepares a criminal offense report to wield the strong arm of the State against a person accused of unlawful acts.
After the Department suspends a defendant’s license, the driver has the right to challenge that decision in an administrative hearing. In that adversarial setting, the Department must prove that the State had reasonable suspicion to stop or probable cause to arrest the defendant for driving while intoxicated. Tex. Transp. Code § 524.035. This mirrors the elements of a criminal DWI prosecution. See Tex. Penal Code § 49.04(a) (“A person commits an offense if the person is intoxicated while operating a motor vehicle in a public place.”). As in a criminal trial, the State seeks to punish.
Accordingly, the sources of information comprising a DWI report and the circumstances under which it is made call its trustworthiness into question, generally making it inadmissible as a public record under Texas Rule of Evidence 803(8)— whether the report is sworn or unsworn. See Tex.R. Evid. 803(8) (allowing admission of “records, reports ... of public offices or agencies ... unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness”). Trooper Flores’s report would be inadmissible as a public record if offered by the State in Caruana’s DWI prosecution. It should be equally inadmissible as a public record to suspend his license. The only vehicle for admission of peace officer DWI reports in ALR proceedings is SOAH rule 159.23, which requires that the report be sworn. This is true even in refusal cases, where peace officers are only required to submit a “written report of the refusal.” Tex. Transp. Code § 724.032(a)(4).
The Court correctly notes that rule 159.23applies to both refusal and failure cases. The court of appeals read rule 159.23to exclude unsworn reports only in failure cases, relying on the Fourth Court of Appeals’ decision in Texas Department of Public Safety v. Pruitt, 75 S.W.3d 634 (Tex.App.-San Antonio 2002, no pet.). In Pruitt, the court of appeals held that a report in a refusal case need not be sworn in order to be admissible because the officer was not required to file a sworn report under the Transportation Code. Id. at 638-39. The court of appeals below agreed with Pruitt’s reasoning and concluded that its holding logically implied that in failure cases, where “the statutory language specifically requires a ‘sworn report,’ as opposed to merely a written one, [the report] must be properly sworn in order to be admissible.” 363 S.W.3d at 610. Thus, the court of appeals read rule 159.23to exclude unsworn reports in failure cases, but not in refusal cases.
As the Court notes, nothing in the rule justifies this distinction. Rule 159.23 does not differentiate between the two types of cases. To the contrary, the rule requires sworn reports in both failure and refusal cases. The Court worries that making an unsworn report inadmissible in both a failure and a refusal case would compromise the Department’s case in the latter. According to the Court, “without an arrest report in evidence, the proof necessary to sustain suspension of a license in a refusal *570case can come only from the arresting officer, who would usually find it difficult, if not impossible, to recall a particular arrest.” 368 S.W.3d at 563. More burdensome? Yes, but we should embrace a burden that guards against wrongfully penalizing the innocent. In any event, in refusal cases, the Department need not prove the defendant was actually intoxicated, it need only show that he refused a breath or blood alcohol concentration test. If the officer cannot recall the particular arrest, he may use the report to refresh his memory at the hearing. See Tex.R. Evid. 612. Requiring an officer to testify from refreshed memory would no more “hinder and often preclude license suspension hearings in refusal cases,” than it would hinder and preclude convictions in criminal DWI trials. 363 S.W.3d 610.
II. If, however, the officer appears and is subject to cross-examination under oath, it is within the administrative law judge’s discretion to admit an unsworn report.
Forensic science reports are inadmissible in the criminal context because they lack the normal components of trustworthiness. The risk that a conviction will rest on an inaccurate entry on a page motivates its exclusion. That risk can be tolerably minimized when the officer takes an affirmative oath that its contents are true. SOAH rule 159.23 adopts that approach by making it clear that sworn reports are admissible in ALR proceedings. But the rule does not end there. It provides other safeguards for both sworn and unsworn reports:
However, the defendant shall have the right to subpoena the officer.... If the defendant timely subpoenas an officer and the officer fails to appear without good cause, information obtained from that officer shall not be admissible.
1 Tex. Admin. Code § 159.23 (emphasis added). Thus, rule 159.23 also conditions the admissibility of the peace officer’s report on the subpoenaed officer’s availability for cross-examination. See Richardson v. City of Pasadena, 513 S.W.2d 1, 3-4 (Tex.1974) (noting that the right to cross-examine a witness is vital and applies even in administrative proceedings). SOAH, by rule, gives the civil ALR defendant safeguards available to criminal defendants to maximize the trustworthiness of information used to suspend or revoke a driver’s license.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent hearsay and Confrontation Clause cases provide a useful comparison. The Confrontation Clause guarantees a defendant’s right to confront “those who ‘bear testimony’ ” against him. Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 51, 124 S.Ct. 1354, 158 L.Ed.2d 177 (2004). “A witness’s testimony against a defendant is thus inadmissible unless the witness appears at trial or, if the witness is unavailable, the defendant had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.” Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 557 U.S. 305, *571129 S.Ct. 2527, 2531, 174 L.Ed.2d 314 (2009). Thus, an ex parte out-of-court affidavit is inadmissible in a criminal prosecution for cocaine possession, because the defendant had no opportunity to confront the analyst who prepared the report. Id. at 2542.
The Flores report falls within the core class of “testimonial” statements that the U.S. Supreme Court described as “the principal evil at which the Confrontation Clause” is directed. Crawford, 541 U.S. at 50, 124 S.Ct. 1354. Included within this class are forensic science reports, which are “affidavits” and are “functionally identical to live, in-court testimony, doing ‘precisely what a witness does on direct examination.’ ” Melendez-Diaz, 129 S.Ct. at 2532 (citation omitted). Because “[f]orensic evidence is not uniquely immune from the risk of manipulation,” forensic science “affidavits do not qualify as traditional official or business records.” Id. at 2536-38. As the Court explained, “business and public records ‘are generally admissible absent confrontation ... because — having been created for the administration of an entity’s affairs and not for the purpose of establishing or proving some fact at trial— they are not testimonial.” Bullcoming, 131 S.Ct. at 2714 n. 6 (citing Melendez-Diaz, 129 S.Ct. at 2539-40). Thus, forensic reports, containing testimonial statements, may not be introduced against the accused at trial unless the person who made the report is unavailable and the accused had an opportunity, pre-trial, to cross-examine that witness. Id. at 2710.
The right of confrontation includes not only “a personal examination,” but also
(1) insures that the witness will give his statements under oath — thus impressing him with the seriousness of the matter and guarding against the lie by the possibility of a penalty for perjury; (2) forces the witness to submit to cross-examination, the ‘greatest legal engine ever invented for the discovery of truth’; [and] (3) permits the jury that is to decide the defendant’s fate to observe the demeanor of the witness in making his statement, thus aiding the jury in assessing his credibility.
Maryland v. Craig, 497 U.S. 836, 845-46, 110 S.Ct. 3157, 111 L.Ed.2d 666 (1990) (citations omitted). These elements of confrontation — physical presence, oath, cross-examination, and observation of the demeanor of the witness by the trier of fact — enhance the accuracy of the fact-finding process by ensuring that evidence admitted against the defendant is reliable and subject to rigorous adversarial testing. Id. at 846, 110 S.Ct. 3157; Romero v. State, 173 S.W.3d 502, 505 (Tex.Crim.App.2005).
Rule 159.23 provides analogous safeguards. It requires that a peace officer’s report be sworn to be admissible. Even a sworn report is inadmissible if an officer does not appear in response to a subpoena. This is likely because an officer’s failure to testify in support of his report indicates a lack of trustworthiness. Similarly, I would hold that unsworn reports, offered alone, are inadmissible under our evidentiary rules because they lack the same attributes of trustworthiness. On the other hand, if the officer appears, testifies under oath, and is subject to cross-examination, the concerns inherent in admitting un-sworn police reports are minimized because the introduction of the report under *572such circumstances does not “collifde] with confrontation rights” of an accused. Fed.R.Evid. 803(8) advisory committee’s note. As noted by the dissent below, hearsay problems may be overcome by administering an oath, requiring the witness’s presence at trial, and subjecting the witness to cross-examination. 363 S.W.3d 606, 615 (Jones, C.J., dissenting) (concluding that “any problems with the perception, memory, narration, or sincerity of the facts stated in the unsworn report were overcome by Officer Flores’s live testimony, under oath and subject to cross-examination, that the facts stated in the report were true and correct”). In that situation, it is within the judge’s discretion to determine whether the lack of trustworthiness accompanying an unsworn report has been overcome.
The Court asserts that the “verity of a declaration is thus assured by the criminal penalties for perjury, not a raised arm.” 363 S.W.3d at 564. It cites to recently amended section 132.001 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, which provides that “an unsworn declaration may be used in lieu of a written sworn declaration, verification, certification, oath, or affidavit required by statute or required by rule.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 132.001(a). This version of the statute was not in effect at the time Trooper Flores’s report was written, and the statute, by its terms, does not apply to the unsworn declaration in this case. See Act of June 17, 2011, 82d Leg., R. S., ch. 847, § 3, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 2119, 2120 (“Section 132.001, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, as amended by this Act, applies only to an unsworn declaration executed on or after the effective date of this Act [September 1, 2011], An unsworn declaration executed before the effective date of this act is governed by the law in effect immediately before the effective date of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for that purpose.”). Even if it did, Trooper Flores’s report does not comport with the statute’s requirement that the unsworn declaration be “subscribed by the person making the declaration as true under penalty of perjury.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 132.001(c)(2). Instead, the report merely states that Trooper Flores “certif[ies] the following information is true and correct.” By requiring that the person declare under penalty of perjury that the contents of the unsworn declaration are true, section 132.001 serves the same function as requiring a person to take an oath — it impresses upon the author the seriousness of the *573matter and reinforces that his statement is subject to criminal penalties if untrue.
III. Conclusion
The Court holds that a license may be taken away — even when the driver swears he is innocent — if an officer’s unsworn report charges the driver with intoxication. I believe an oath is required. The oath should be taken, as the rule requires, when the officer signs the report. Failing that, the officer must take the oath in court so that the defendant’s right to cross-examine his accuser is guaranteed. Because Ca-ruana had the opportunity to confront Trooper Flores after he took an oath in open court, the administrative law judge had discretion to admit the report. For these reasons, I concur in the judgment.