A jury found appellant Rashaun Gee guilty of first-degree burglary while armed (knife), assault with intent to kill while armed, aggravated assault while armed, malicious disfigurement while armed, and attempted first-degree sexual abuse while armed, all in connection with an attack on victim Rachel Moretta. In this appeal, appellant contends that he is entitled to reversal of his convictions and a new trial because of “the trial court’s error in admitting improper expert testimony, in misapplying the Teomne-Lessane decision
I.
Moretta was a tenant occupying the basement bedroom of a house located at 548 14th Street, S.E. She shared the home with Carrie Shaffer and Lauren Behr, who occupied second-floor bedrooms. On the evening of October 6, 2008, Shaffer, who had just returned from a trip abroad and was jet-lagged, went to her room and fell into a sound sleep, and Behr left the house to meet with her parents. Moretta went to her basement bedroom and went to sleep. Moretta testified at trial that she was awakened by the sound of a “clanging” noise and dishes rattling in the kitchen sink. Moments later, she saw someone descending the basement steps, and after she said, “Hello,” the person ran back up the steps. Thinking the intruder was a robber, Moretta walked into the basement bathroom and called 911 on her cell phone.
Moretta was still on her cell phone when a man armed with a knife appeared in her bathroom. He immediately began stabbing Moretta. Eventually, Moretta was able to push him away and to run into the adjacent laundry room, but she tripped and fell. The assailant caught up with her and continued to stab her. While Moretta was on her hands and knees and attempting to escape, the assailant grabbed her around her stomach and pulled her closer to him. Moretta heard him unzip his pants and state either, “Shut up, bitch” or “Come here, bitch,” while he pulled her underwear down, partially exposing her buttocks. Moretta continued to struggle and kick her attacker, and suddenly, “he just left.” Leaving a trail of blood, Moret-ta climbed the basement stairs and eventually exited the house and screamed for help.
Detective Wallace Carmichael testified that when he interviewed Moretta in the hospital on the day of the attack, she told him that her attacker was wearing “a dark hoodie” and light blue jeans. Similarly, Moretta testified at trial that the attacker was wearing “dark clothing,” specifically, “a hoodie, like a hooded sweatshirt,” and light-colored jeans. Moretta also testified that she looked at her attacker’s face for “[a] second maybe, two, not even” and that the hood of his shirt was “over his face,” “deep enough to where you couldn’t fully see someone’s face, like it would cast a shadow.”
Appellant was identified as a suspect when fingerprint analysis revealed that his fingerprints matched those found on the kitchen window.
Officer Robert Johnson testified that, hours after the incident at 548 14th Street, he searched in the alley adjacent to the house for potential items of evidence and came upon a T-shirt, with what appeared to be small bloodstains on it, lying on top of other items in a recycling can located at the rear of 1403 E Street, S.E.
The jury began its deliberations on September 16, 2010, and rendered its guilty verdicts the next day.
II.
Before trial, the government filed a motion in limine in which it asked the court to rule that if the defense engaged in cross-examination that suggested “that the MPD’s DNA [or] fingerprint ... testing in this case was flawed” or that “ask[ed] the jury to speculate about untested DNA” or “suggested] ineffective quality assurance procedures or unreliable testing procedures” in the MPD laboratories, the government should be permitted to “rebut the alleged deficiencies” by asking its relevant expert to inform the jury in rebuttal testimony that “the defendant had the right to independently test all items containing biological material and ha[d] an option of independently testing the latent fingerprints.” Addressing the motion just before the government called its first witness, the court ruled more narrowly, stating that if the defense sought to
Appellant asserts that, proceeding cautiously in light of the court’s ruling, defense counsel “did not ask questions of the [government’s] DNA expert that would have directly challenged the expert’s actual findings concerning [appellant’s] DNA, and instead focused on explaining what testing was actually done on the shirt.”
Shortly after the court’s ruling described in the paragraph above, defense counsel sought an advance ruling about whether, if the defense called its own DNA expert,
During a subsequent discussion focused on cross-examination of the government’s fingerprint expert Haywood Bennett, the court ruled: “If you want to say isn’t it true, Mr. Bennett, that there are other methods, other than [those used in his] report that are more reliable and are used in the field, he can say yes, he can say no, but you very well may open the door by suggesting that they are using a methodology which is against your client, whereas they could be using other methodologies that might exonerate Mr. Gee. So that’s the best I can tell you.”
Appellant challenges each of the court’s rulings described above. He contends that the trial court misapplied this court’s holding in Teoume-Lessane. He also argues that the court’s rulings “prevented] the defense from properly and lawfully cross-examining the Government’s expert witnesses, and from presenting the defense’s DNA expert testimony, in a case where the credibility of the complainant and her description of her assailant was conflicting, and when the Governmentfs] proof was circumstantial.”
In Teoume-Lessane, the defense elicited during cross-examination of the government’s DNA expert that although nearly thirty items of evidence had been collected during the investigation of the case and sent to the FBI laboratory, and although the MPD requested DNA testing on “all applicable items,” some of the items had not been tested for the presence of DNA.
As in Teoume-Lessane, we perceive no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s reasoning that not allowing the jury to learn that the defense had the right to test the shirt and that the shirt was available for testing would have been unduly prejudicial to the government, creating the impression that the government had deliberately ignored, and then had withheld from the defense, evidence that could have called into question the government’s DNA-based case. Nor, in light of our holding in Teoume-Lessane, can we agree that the trial court’s ruling shifted the burden of proof to the defense. We note that defense counsel rejected the trial court’s suggestion that the court include in its closing instructions to the jury a statement to the effect that while the court “took judicial notice of [the] rule that permits the defense to independently test ... [,] this does not mean the defendant had any obligation to put on evidence [because] the burden of proof is solely on the Government.” But the court did give the standard instruction that the government’s burden of proof “never shifts throughout the trial. The law does not require a defendant to prove his innocence or to produce any evidence at all.” Defense counsel, too, in his closing argument, emphasized to the jury that the “burden of proof never shifts to the defendant” and that “I don’t have to prove anything. I didn’t have to bring in any evidence. It’s their burden.” And, in the government’s closing argument, the prosecutor made no mention of the defense right or opportunity to conduct independent testing. These facts, in addition to the fact that the questioning and information appellant challenges were permitted only in response to defense questioning and only for the purpose of dissipating the prejudicial effect of the questions’ implication of incomplete or selective government testing, persuade us that the trial court’s evi-dentiary rulings did not result in impermissible burden-shifting. Cf. People v. Santana,
We reject the first distinction appellant draws, because the prejudicial effect of questioning suggesting that the government selectively tested evidence is not cured if the jury is informed that the defendant has a right to test but the jury is left to speculate either that the government’s experts left no unconsumed material that could be tested,
As to appellant’s argument about the protection the IPA affords against disclosure of the defense right to test, we agree with the observation made by the trial judge: we see no basis for concluding that the IPA “stands for that proposition.” Nothing in the IPA addresses whether disclosure may be made to the jury about the defendant’s right to request independent testing or about whether the defense has received biological evidence for testing. Appellant’s (undeveloped) CJA argument is an apparent reference to the fact that the motions judge (the Honorable Lynn Leibovitz) signed an order pursuant to the CJA authorizing payment of the costs of defense DNA and fingerprint experts. Neither the CJA nor that order says anything whatsoever about whether the jury may be informed about the defense opportunity to obtain expert testing or about the availability of biological material for testing.
Appellant contends that he was unable, because of the court’s rulings, to call the defense fingerprint and DNA experts to testify that appellant’s fingerprints and DNA were not found anywhere in the house (other than prints on the kitchen window), because even that would have triggered the trial court’s “reading] another judicial notice under Teoume-Les-sane ” and the government’s “asking ... questions concerning [the defense experts’] independent testing of evidence.”
For all the foregoing reasons, we. reject appellant’s arguments that the trial court’s rulings in reliance on Teoume-Lessane violated his rights to cross-examine witnesses and to present defense expert testimony and improperly shifted the burden of proof.
III.
Appellant next argues that the trial court erroneously permitted Brown, Behr, and Johnson to provide “expert testimony” when “none had been previously designated as expert witnesses in the case[.]”
Appellant’s focus on Brown’s and Behr’s statements no doubt reflects a recognition that the statements tended to support an inference that the assailant entered through the kitchen window, where appellant’s fingerprints and palm print were found. Appellant asserts that Officer Brown provided “crime scene reconstruction” expert testimony when he testified that the fingerprints found on the kitchen ■window appeared to have been made by fingertips that were “at a slant ... consistent with [someone’s] grabbing a window and lifting it up ... from the outside,” and that the scraper at the end of the grill brush found on the kitchen window sill “could be used to pry something open.” We agree with the prosecutor’s response: that Brown’s testimony was not “beyond the ken of the average layperson [to] see three fingerprints, and [to] tell it’s the tips of the fingers, [and] to figure out which way they’re pointing.” We also agree with the trial court’s ruling that Brown’s grill brush testimony was “within his ... knowledge as a lay person.” Further, both items of testimony were helpful to the jury in understanding how the attacker may have entered the home.
Appellant raised a similar objection to Behr’s testimony that “[i]t was upsetting to come to the house and see that someone had come in through the window.” Behr testified that she had that impression upon seeing that the patio chair had been moved from “where [she had] left it”; that the barbecue scraper was on the window sill; that the screen was “shoved up” into the window frame; and that several items were “knocked over” into the kitchen sink. For the reasons discussed above, we are satisfied that Behr’s statements, too, constituted permissible lay testimony. Behr’s statements, which were based on her personal knowledge about the arrangement of her home and on her perceptions when she returned after the crime, did not require any specialized knowledge.
As to Officer Johnson, the testimony in issue came in the context of the prosecutor’s questioning about the responses of canine-unit dogs that were used (unsuccessfully) at the crime scene sometime after the attack. Officer Johnson answered in the affirmative when the prosecutor asked, “[I]s it your understanding that K9s are only effective, if it’s the very first scent?” Further, Officer Johnson
IY.
During the trial proceedings on September 13, 2010, defense counsel sought leave of court to cross-examine the government’s fingerprint expert, Haywood Bennett, by reading or quoting excerpts from the 2009 National Academy of Sciences report entitled “Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward” (the “NAS Report” or the “Report”).
Well, let’s be careful here. That’s why we need to air this out. Because I think there are parts of the report which may very well be [used for] cross examination as [a] learned treatise. But I don’t believe the report found what you say it found.22
The court concluded the discussion that day by asking defense counsel to give the court a copy of the Report with the portion counsel intended to use bracketed or highlighted.
The following day, the court took up again the issue of “whether or not this NAS report constitutes a learned treatise such as is defined in the rule,” meaning that “it is authoritative in the field and therefore it can be used to cross-examine experts.” The court explained its understanding that “even if it is [generally] considered to be a learned treatise,” that conclusion might not apply to “every part of it”; rather, “you literally have to go sec
Citing his interaction with members of the Scientific Working Group, government counsel responded:
The relevant scientific fingerprint community does not consider the NAS Report a learned treatise. The people on the scientific working group on fingerprints, SWGFAST, do not consider it a learned treatise. The FBI at Quantico does not consider it a learned treatise. The fingerprint unit at Scotland Yard does not consider it a learned treatise. These are the leaders in the field. These are the people that are brought together to issue protocols and standards for those folks who are practicing in the field. And they don’t consider it a learned treatise. What they consider it to be is a policy statement^]
The court next asked counsel for both sides whether they were aware of any court having “admitted or not admitted portions of the NAS report as a learned treatise.” Counsel for both sides stated that they were unaware of any case in which a court had ruled that the Report was either admissible or inadmissible as a learned treatise for purposes of cross-examination. The court then concluded the day’s discussion of the issue by observing that “[t]here are a couple of parts [of the Report] which I disagree with.”
Discussion of the learned treatise issue resumed the next day. Government counsel again objected to the Report “being designated as a learned treatise,” but commented that much of what defense counsel had bracketed, including an explanation of the so-called ACE-V (Analysis, Comparison, Evaluation, and Verification) methodology and other material found on pages 136-39 of the Report, was “accepted” factual material or not “particularly controversial” material. He said that the government would not oppose the defense’s use of that material for purposes of cross-examination, “with the understanding that what’s being asked from this would not be designated as. a learned treatise.” The government’s objections, he told the court, focused on the use of the material bracketed by defense counsel beginning in the middle of page 141 (and continuing to page 145) of the Report. In particular, government counsel drew the court’s attention to the following passage found on page 144 of the Report:
Uniqueness and persistence are necessary conditions for friction ridge identification to be feasible, but those conditions do not imply that anyone can reliably discern whether or not two friction ridge impressions were made by the same person. Uniqueness does not guarantee that prints from two different people are always sufficiently different that they cannot be confused, or that two impressions made by the same finger will also be sufficiently similar to be discerned as coming from the same source. The impression left by a given finger will differ every time, because of inevitable variation in pressure, which change the degree of contact between each part of the ridge structure and the impression medium. None of these variabilities — of features across a population of fingers or of repeated impressions left by the same finger — has been characterized, quantified, or compared.
The trial court asked government counsel whether government fingerprint expert Bennett would say that the Report “is an authoritative treatise and something that he uses and relies upon.” Government counsel responded that Bennett would not, and added, “I don’t think any trained fingerprint expert would testify to that.” The court then asked defense counsel— who had told the court that the defense would not be calling its own fingerprint expert to testify — how he would show that the portion of the Report he wished to use in cross-examination is “an authoritative treatise ... subject to the learned treatise exception.” Defense counsel responded, “[TJhis is a Government publication that has generally been accepted by the scientific community.” When the court replied that “just saying it doesn’t make it so,” defense counsel responded:
Well, it is, because it’s noted that it is written by the Government and it has been accepted by the Government, so I don’t see how they then can say, well, we’re not accepting it as a learned treatise when — just because maybe this particular fingerprint examiner, maybe all the fingerprint examiners don’t know its contents or don’t follow the Government’s own methodology and learned treatise, but it’s clear to me under the definition of a learned treatise that this fits within those four corners. And, in fact, this is a document that’s been drafted and accepted by the Government. ... This is a branch of the Government that has published and written this report. So to say that one branch accepts it and writes it, and the other branch doesn’t, I think would be unfair to the defense and belies common sense.
Thereafter, the court ruled as follows:
[IJt seems to me the defense has not demonstrated that the NAS report is a learned treatise as required in the rules[.J ... [TJo establish the reliability of an authority, it has to be established as a standard treatise on the subjects and] ... it must be a reliable authority by the testimony or admission of a witness or by other expert testimony or by judicial notice. And the Court believes it’s certainly not in a position to take judicial notice of the NAS report as an authoritative treatise. There are many parts in it which I had indicated seemed, well, not innocuous, but common sense and understandable, and I think you can cross-examine on those points.
But I don’t think, under these circumstances, that it’s been shown to the Court by appropriate evidence that it’s been established by a reliable authority, by the testimony or admission of a witness or other expert testimony within the relevant field. And, as such, I don’t believe it’s appropriate to give it at thisstage the benefit of being considered a learned treatise.
Mere publication itself does not render a text a reliable authority. You certainly can demonstrate a textf’s] authoritativeness if other professionals in the field regard the text as trustworthy. And, you’re certainly welcome to ask Mr. Bennett if he regards it as authoritative. But absent other evidence to the contrary, the Court doesn’t believe that the requirements for establishing it have been met in this, particular case. The fact that the Government funded this document doesn’t make it, in and of itself, a learned treatise.
... You’re not permitted to use the NAS report as a basis to quote it as a learned treatise with this witness, such as aren’t you aware of the NAS report, and then read out, if it was a learned treatise, that particular part.
Appellant now argues that the trial court erred in precluding the use of the NAS Report, which he contends was admissible for both substantive and impeachment purposes. He asserts that the trial court’s ruling curtailed his right to confront his accuser Bennett, who “provided the only testimony that physically linked [appellant] to the Moretta home by way of his expert identification of [appellant’s] prints on a window of the home.”
The learned treatise exception to the hearsay rule is set out in Rule 803(18) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Rule 803(18) provides:
A statement contained in a treatise, periodical, or pamphlet [is admissible notwithstanding the general rule against hearsay] if: (A) the statement is called to the attention of an expert witness on cross-examination or relied on by the expert on direct examination; and (B) the publication is established as a reliable authority by the expert’s admission or testimony, by another expert’s testimony, or by judicial notice. If admitted, the statement may be read into evidence but not received as an exhibit.
Fed.R.Evid. 803(18); see Washington v. United States,
As the discussion above indicates, appellant did not establish that the “Friction Ridge Analysis” section of NAS Report is a reliable authority by an “expert’s admission or testimony.” Fed.R.Evid. 803(18)(B). Government expert Bennett did not (and according to the government’s proffer, would not) testify that the Report is a reliable authority, the defense had decided not to call its own fingerprint expert to testify before the jury, and the defense did not otherwise — through voir dire, or through an affidavit or otherwise — provide the court with expert testimony “to establish the trustworthiness of [that section of the Report] as viewed by professionals in that field.” Schneider v. Revici,
Second, a trial court errs if it takes judicial notice “without determining that ... the sources relied upon have an accuracy that cannot reasonably be questioned[.]” GE Capital Corp. v. Lease Resolution Corp.,
Third, the court did not err in declining to take judicial notice of the Report solely on the ground — the major ground urged by defense counsel — that it is a “Government publication.” Cf. Dawsey v. Olin Corp.,
Finally, we note that despite the court’s ruling that the Report could not be used as a learned treatise, defense counsel made effective use of the Report’s content during his cross-examination of Bennett. Defense counsel had told the court that the Report cites publications that “specifically discuss how a forensic analyst is to conduct not only lifting the prints, but also to conduct the assessment of the prints pursuant to the ACE-V method,” and that he “believe[d] those [were] proper areas for cross-examination” of Bennett about the protocols Bennett followed in this case. Although somewhat limited
V.
When trial resumed on September 15, 2010, the prosecutor informed the court that, the night before, she saw a document she had “never seen before” and thus had previously “inadvertently]” failed to provide it to the defense team. The document, which the prosecutor emailed to defense counsel on the night of September 14, was a copy of Detective Turner-Cov-ington’s notes taken during the December 2008 interview of Moretta when Detectives Turner-Covington and Carmichael went to Houston to show her a photo array. In her notes, Detective Turner-Covington recorded Moretta’s description of her attacker as a person of “Middle Eastern” descent (unlike appellant, who is African-American). The prosecutor told the court that she had Detective Turner-Covington available if the defense wanted to call her.
The trial court, stating that it could not find that the delayed disclosure of the notes had been deliberate or in bad faith, denied the motion to dismiss and declined to strike Moretta’s testimony. The court found there was no Brady
Appellant argues that the trial court erred in declining to sanction the government for a Brady violation. Upon this record, we agree with the trial court that there was no true Brady violation. “For there to be a true Brady violation: (1) the evidence at issue must be favorable to the accused either because it is exculpatory or because it is impeaching; (2) that evidence must have been suppressed by the [government], either willfully or inadvertently[;] and[ ] (3) prejudice must have ensued.” Fortson v. United States,
Appellant also argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial. Appellant made that motion after the government introduced — during its rebuttal case, and without prior disclosure to the defense during discovery — a photograph of appellant that was taken in 2007 and that shows him wearing a black hooded sweatshirt (i.e., a dark-colored hoodie that generally matched Moretta’s description of what her attacker was wearing).
Appellant contends that he was entitled to relief for the government’s failure to comply with its discovery obligations under Super. Ct.Crim. R. 16(a)(1)(C). Under Rule 16(a)(1)(C), a criminal defendant has a right to discover photographs in the government’s possession, custody or control that are “material to the preparation of the defendant’s defense, or are intended for use by the government as evidence in chief at the trial[.]” The government did not use (and appellant cites no evidence that it intended to use) the photograph in its case-in-ehief. As described, it was only upon defense counsel’s inquiry into whether Detective Carmichael had recovered a hooded shirt from appellant’s home that the prosecution sought to admit the photograph. Further, even assuming that the photograph was “material to the preparation” of the defense’s case,
VI.
Finally, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his attempted first-degree sexual abuse conviction. He argues that the government failed to introduce “any forensic, physical, or other evidence in the case to support the sexual assault charge ... beyond [the victim’s] statement that she was under the impression that the assailant wanted to rape her” during the physical assault.
To prove attempted first-degree sexual abuse while armed, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant came “dangerously close”
“[V]iew[ing] the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, [and] giving full play to the right of the fact finder to determine credibility, weigh the evidence, and draw justifiable inferences of fact,” as we must, In re D.W.,
VII.
For the foregoing reasons, appellant’s convictions are hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. Teoume-Lessane v. United States,
. A palm print found on the window was also later determined to be that of appellant.
. Officer Johnson testified that, from the back door of 548 14th Street, it would take "seconds” to reach the location of the recycling can.
. Thus, appellant asserts, defense counsel refrained from asking the government's DNA expert about her reading of electrophero-grams, which appellant contends "showed ‘sputter’ or peaks at certain points, which through questioning ... would have called into question the actual reading of the samples and DNA match.”
. Defense counsel proffered that the defense DNA expert would testily that he "received 22 items ... from inside of the house. Most of them are blood swabbings. He tested those for the presence of DNA, excluding Mr. Gee. Two of those swabbings included a mixture of DNA, and neither of those swabbings led to a match of DNA of Mr. Gee.” Appellant asserts that this was "highly exculpatory DNA evidence.”
.The court later reiterated that it agreed with the prosecutor that the defense was on notice that "when the defense calls into question the bias of an expert in terms of only examining that which would inculpate a defendant, but not looking at other aspects which would exculpate him, ... the Government is also, to balance that out, without burden shifting, al
. The court did not specifically rule on the prosecutor’s assertion that any defense inquiry about fingerprint analysis error rates would open the door to informing the jury about the defense right to test (and this opinion does not address whether the requested ruling would have been improper).
. Appellant’s brief also suggests that he was “forced to not present the testimony” of defense fingerprint expert Vernon McCloud.
. Our holding followed our express recognition that “[a] trial court's decision to admit evidence as more probative than prejudicial may be reversed only for abuse of discretion.” Id. at 491.
. Compare State v. Roman Nose,
. See D.C.Code § 22-4132(b)(l) (2001) ("A defendant charged with a crime of violence shall be informed in open court ... [t]hat he or she may request ... independent DNA testing prior to trial.... ”).
. See D.C.Code §§ 11-2601 and -2605 (2001) (providing that the plan for furnishing representation of indigents in criminal cases "shall include ... expert ... services necessary for an adequate defense”).
. Indeed, a condition of a defendant's right to request independent DNA testing under § 22-4132 is that "[t]here is sufficient biological material to conduct another DNA test[.]” D.C.Code § 22-4132(b)(1)(B).
. Judge Leibovitz did issue an order "se[tting] forth the procedures that will be used in transmitting and preserving the [biological] evidence to ensure its integrity,” in
. We have in mind the court's September 8, 2010, ruling about the door possibly opening if defense questioning of the government’s analyst witnesses sought to show that the analysts had acted in a “bias[]ed fashion or acted inappropriately, in terms of ... conduct of the scientific tests,” and its September 15, 2010, ruling that “when the defense calls into question the bias of an expert in terms of only examining that which would inculpate a defendant, but not looking at other aspects which would exculpate him, ... the Government is also, to balance that out, without burden shifting, allowed to seek a judicial notice” about the defense’s opportunity to conduct its own testing.
. We note that it is far from clear that appellant is entitled to complain of the court’s rulings where he did not call his experts to testify and where, as a consequence, we cannot know precisely what question(s) the prosecutor would have asked and how the court would have ruled on any objection. The prosecutor had to consider whether its use of rebuttal questioning of the type the court’s rulings allowed "might be deemed reversible error on appeal,” Ohler v. United States,
. Specifically, Bennett testified that none of the (more than twenty) other prints lifted from the house was "useful for identification purposes,” since those prints lacked "enough identifying ridge characteristics to effect an identification.”
. Appellant also complains of the prosecutor's question to Shaffer about whether "any of the puncture wounds [in Moretta’s body] appealed] to be near her heart[.]” We need not address this issue other than to observe that Shaffer's “I don’t recall” answer rendered the question harmless, even if, arguen-do, it called for expert testimony.
. Sergeant Ginger stated, inter alia, that "[t]he more foot traffic around, it's bad because the dog only tracks the freshest scent."
. See National Research Council of the National Academies, Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward (National Academies Press 2009) (hereinafter cited as “NAS Report”).
. The trial court agreed that it was not "appropriate for the defense to be quoting a legal opinion.”
. Cf. Pettus v. United States,
. NAS Report at 141.
. In his brief to this court, appellant makes much of the fact (which he did not mention during his colloquy with the trial judge) that the majority opinion in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts,
Metendez-Diaz did not cite the Report for its particular statements about fingerprint analysis, such as the statement on page 144 of the Report, quoted supra, questioning whether "anyone can reliably discern whether or not two friction ridge impressions were made by the same person.” On the issue that was before the trial court — whether the relevant scientific community accepts such statements in the Report as authoritative — there is post-Report commentary that appears to be consistent with government counsel’s proffer that the answer to that question is "no.” See, e.g., United States v. Rose,
. Pettus,
. We say "somewhat” because nothing prevented the defense from using Scientific Working Group publications or peer-reviewed journal articles cited in the Report as learned treatises, something to which the government has indicated it would not object.
. The prosecutor also told the court that if she had seen the notes earlier, she would have asked Moretta what she meant by "Middle Eastern descent.” The prosecutor recognized that the government was "stuck with her answer now.”
. Moretta, who never returned to the house on 14th Street after the attack, came back to the District of Columbia to testify during the government’s case, but immediately thereafter went back to Texas.
. Brady v. Maryland,
. As explained by the prosecutor, what the defense had was a report, prepared by Detective Carmichael and turned over in discovery, that Moretta’s mother had called to say that, during a flashback episode, Moretta told her mother that the attacker had "North African features and his parents might be from the Middle East.” (Moretta testified that during the months after the attack, the incident took a psychological toll that included her suffering from flashbacks, night terrors, and panic and anxiety attacks.)
. Appellant argued in the trial court that he was prejudiced by the delay in production on the additional ground that he learned only belatedly that Detective Turner-Covington’s notes include a reference to Moretta's statement that, on her way home prior to the attack, she saw a group of "four to five black males on the [subway] train who appeared to be really drugged out” and who "seemed strange” but "never said anything to her.” Appellant told the trial court that this information "creates the possibility that ... these four or five black males ... could have been involved.” Appellant apparently has abandoned this argument, as he does not re-assert it in his brief on appeal. In any event, as the government argues, the information may have been more inculpatory than exculpatory (since it described a group to which appellant might have belonged). The prosecutor offered to get Moretta on the telephone to be questioned about the comment, but the defense did not pursue that suggestion.
Appellant’s brief also alludes to the "late disclosure of Jencks material,” but does not identify any witness statement that was not turned over by the end of the witness's direct testimony, which is what the Jencks Act requires. See 18 U.S.C. § 3500(b) ("After a witness called by the United States has testified on direct examination, the court shall, on motion of the defendant, order the United States to produce any statement ... of the witness in the possession of the United States which relates to the subject matter as to which the witness has testified.”) (emphasis added); Super. Ct.Crim. R. 26.2(a) (embodying the quoted Jencks Act provision).
. The photograph was taken in connection with a prior arrest, but the trial court observed that there was "nothing [about the photo] that indicates it’s an arrest photo at all."
. Pursuant to that ruling, the prosecutor asked Detective Carmichael on redirect examination, "In the course of your investigation, did you find a photograph of [appellant] wearing a hoodie in October of 2007?” The photograph in question was introduced after the detective responded that he had located such a photo.
. Cf. Beaner v. United States,
.See Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 7.101 (5th ed. rev. 2011).
.Moretta also testified that at the time of the attack, she was wearing pearl earrings, a necklace with pearls and three small diamonds on it, and a "very expensive watch,” but that the assailant did not seem to be interested in (and did not take) those items. From this, and from the fact that the assailant had stopped stabbing Moretta, the jury could infer that his motive in pulling her close to him was something other than robbery.
. "[I]t is only where die government has produced no evidence from which a reasonable mind might fairly infer guilt beyond a reasonable doubt that we may reverse a conviction on sufficiency grounds.” In re D.W.,
. Id. (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
