Lead Opinion
Aрpellant Raymond Jenkins was convicted of first-degree murder while armed, first-degree burglary while armed, attempt to commit robbery while armed, two counts of first-degree felony murder while armed, and possession of a prohibited weapon, all in connection with the June 1999 stabbing death of Dennis Dolinger. In this appeal, appellant seeks reversal of his convictions on the ground that his rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment were violated when the trial court permitted the government to present the entirety of its DNA evidence through the testimony of a single expert witness without making available for cross-examination the laboratory analysts who performed the underlying sero-logical and DNA laboratory work.
While this case was pending on appeal, the Supreme Court of the United States decided Williams v. Illinois, — U.S. -,
In addition to his Confrontation Clause claim, appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion when, denying a defense discovery motion, it declined to compel the government to determine and report the number of “pairwise matches, at 9 or more loci” in the FBI and Virginia State DNA databases. We affirm the denial of the defense’s discovery motion.
I. Background
Dennis Dolinger was murdered in the basement of his house on Potomac Avenue, S.E., on June 4, 1999.
Shortly after the murder, the MPD learned that a man identified as Stephen Watson had made several purchases using Dolinger’s credit card. Police officers executed a search warrant at Watson’s residence and recovered a black backpack (which Watson said he had found discarded near the King Street Metro station) and a wallet containing Dolinger’s credit, identification, and bank cards. MPD officers initially arrested Watson for Dolinger’s murder, but subsequent DNA testing excluded Watson as a suspect.
On November 16, 1999, the MPD received information that caused appellant to become a “person of interest.” As we explained in an earlier opinion in this case reversing the trial court’s pretrial order excluding the introduction of DNA evidence, United States v. Jenkins,
*177 Seeking further assistance, on November 16, 1999, the government contacted the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services (“DCJS”) requesting that DCJS run the profile of the unknown person [whose blood DNA was found in Dolinger’s house] through Virginia’s DNA database of 101,905 previously profiled offenders. Using only eight of the thirteen loci profiled by the FBI, the DCJS reported that the evidence sample was consistent with the eight-loci profile of Robert P. Garrett, a known alias of [appellant] Raymond Anthony Jenkins. At that point, the MPD investigation focused solely on Mr. Jenkins.
The government also called several other -witnesses at trial. James West, who worked at The Fireplace, a bar frequented by appellant, testified that appellant usually wore a grayish-blue pullover shirt and blue jeans. West identified the gray shirt recovered from Dolinger’s dressing room as “just like” the shirt that appellant usually wore. Anthony Scott, who knew appellant because they both “hung out” in the Dupont Circle area, also identified the gray shirt as one that appellant “wore all the time” (explaining that appellant “used to wash it in the little fountain” in Dupont Circle).
Robert Bethea, who, like Scott, knew appellant from frequenting the Dupont Circle area, testified that in early June 1999, he saw appellant on the Metro. Appellant told Bethea that “he was going over to a” “white dude[’s]” house “to steal stuff’ and would just “fuck him up” if he didn’t want to let appellant in. A few days later, Bethea again ran into appellant, who had “several pieces” of jewelry that he was trying to sell, including a diamond ring. Still later, when Bethea once again encountered appellant in Dupont Circle, appellant told Bethea that he had been in a fight with a guy, that he had “fucked him up ... [and] punished him,” and that he did not know if the man was “dead or alive.”
William Martin, a self-styled “jailhouse lawyer,” testified that while he and appellant were incarcerated together in February 2000, appellant asked him “if he could be convicted of dried blood.” When Martin told appellant, “yeah,” appellant appeared “shocked.” On a later occasion, Martin testified, appellant told Martin that he had “robbed a faggot” and had stabbed the “white guy” with a screwdriver and taken “a thousand dollars and some cash and a ring.” Martin said appellant told him that, after the robbery, he left his backpack near the Potomac Avenue Metro station and that he was aware that another “white guy” had found the backpack and had used the credit cards. Appellant stated that he was going to allow the “white guy” to take the charge because that guy “was dying of AIDS anyway.”
Appellant did not testify at trial, but the defense advanced the theory that the “attack was directed at Dennis Dolinger because Mr. Dolinger was inside that house with Raymond Jenkins and they’re inside that house and they are engaging inside that house in some act of some degree of sexual activity and someone came in and didn’t like what the person saw”; and that “[t]hat person reacted, responded, attacked and in the attack Raymond Jenkins got cut and ... got out of there.” Defense counsel told the jury that the “police investigation in this case missed evidence left and right” and emphasized that there were “several blood stains [in Dolinger’s house] that simply just went untested.”
II. Appellant’s Confrontation Clause Claim
Appellant’s defense team filed a pretrial motion to preclude the government from presenting the results of the FBI’s DNA testing without the in-court testimony of the personnel who actually did the laboratory work. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that if the laboratory personnel were “available to be subpoenaed and to be called as witnesses by the defense, then ... that address[ed] the confrontation issue.”
We start by recognizing that the Sixth Amendment right of an accused to confront the witnesses against him is a fundamental right.
In this jurisdiction, it is settled that “[f]orensic evidence, including DNA analysis, is not exempt from Crawford’s[
Since the Supreme Court decided Crawford, Confrontation Clause cases involving forensic evidence have turned on the meaning of “testimonial.” Id. In Crawford,
1. Confrontation Clause Jurisprudence Before Williams
The Supreme Court first took up the issue of whether reports of laboratory analysts’ findings are “testimonial” for Confrontation Clause purposes in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts,
Writing separately in Melendez-Diaz, Justice Thomas, the fifth member of the majority, stated that he joined the Court’s opinion “because the documents at issue in this case are quite plainly affidavits, ... [and][a]s such, they fall within the core class of testimonial statements governed by the Confrontation Clause.” Id. at 330,
The Supreme Court returned to the issue of the Confrontation Clause and forensic laboratory reports in Bullcoming v. New Mexico, — U.S. -,
Justice Sotomayor wrote separately to highlight her view that the laboratory report was testimonial “specifically because its primary purpose is evidentiary.” Id. at 2719 (Sotomayor, J., concurring) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also id. at 2721 n. 3 (opining that “[fjormality is not the sole indicator of the testimonial nature of a statement because it is too easily evaded”). She also “emphasize[d] the limited reach of the Court’s opinion,” for it did not resolve the issue that might be presented in some other “substitute” witness scenarios, where “the person testifying is a supervisor, reviewer, or someone else with a personal, albeit limited, connection to the scientific test at issue,” rather than someone who “played no role in producing the ... report.” Id. at 2719, 2722 (Sotomayor, J., concurring).
Although Justice Thomas joined most of the opinion in Bullcoming, he did not join footnote 6, which states that “[t]o rank as ‘testimonial,’ a statement must have a ‘primary purpose’ of ‘establishing] or proving] past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.’ ” Id. at 2714 (Thomas, J., concurring) (quoting Davis v. Washington,
This court’s relevant Confrontation Clause jurisprudence starts with Thomas,
Following Thomas, we decided a series of cases involving Confrontation Clause claims that focused on the testimony of DNA experts who referred to forensic laboratory findings, but who did not themselves perform the underlying laboratory tests. The first of these cases was Roberts. The DNA expert who testified at appellant Roberts’s trial on sexual abuse charges had not performed the serology
[T]he FBI laboratory scientists here were “forensic expert[s] employed by a law enforcement agency, ... tasked by the government” to perform tests providing the basis for “critical expert witness testimony ... against appellant at his criminal trial.” ... To the extent that their conclusions were used as substantive evidence against appellant at trial, he was therefore entitled to be “confronted with” the conclusions in the manner the Sixth Amendment requires, that is, through the opportunity for cross-examination of the declarant.
Id. (quoting Thomas,
In Gardner, the government had been permitted to introduce into evidence the testimony of Dr. Robin Cotton, a representative of a private forensic laboratory that had conducted the DNA testing and analysis, and the testimony of Caroline Zervos, an FBI serology analyst.
The government “concede[d] that the conclusions set forth in the DNA and serology reports were ‘testimonial’ ” and that “the admission of these results, either through the admission of the DNA report or the expert testimony, violated appellant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause ... because the scientists who actually conducted the testing were not available for cross-examination.” Id. at 58-59, 59 n. 5. Citing Melendez-Diaz and Roberts, we agreed in a footnote that “there is no question that this evidence was testimonial” because the governmеnt’s DNA and serology analysis was “ ‘created primarily for the government to use it as a substi
Although the Supreme Court has not agreed on the limitations of what it means to be testimonial, our own case law has established the principle that statements of DNA findings and analysis are testimonial if they are made primarily with an evidentiary purpose, regardless of their formality or any other particular criteria.
2. The Effect of Williams on Confrontation Clause Jurisprudence
The Supreme Court’s most recent Confrontation Clause case has not provided any clarity. Williams was decided by a plurality opinion and Justice Thomas’s opinion concurring in the judgment. During petitioner Williams’s bench trial for rape, the prosecutor called as its expert a forensic specialist at the Illinois State Police (“ISP”) laboratory, who testified that according to ISP business records, vaginal swabs taken from the victim were sent to Cellmark, an outside, accredited laboratory, and were returned to the State police laboratory “along with a deduced male DNA profile.” Williams,
In the portion of its opinion relevant here,
The plurality noted that all except one of the post -Crawford cases in which the Court found a Confrontation Clause violation “shared the following two characteristics”: The cases “involved out-of-court statements having the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct” and “they involved formalized statements such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions.” Id. at 2242.
In his opinion concurring in the judgment, Justice Thomas agreed that the Cellmark report was not testimonial— “solely because Cellmark’s statements lacked the requisite formality and solemnity to be considered testimonial for purposes of the Confrontation Clause” — but he rejected the plurality’s “targeted accusation” test because it “lacks any grounding in constitutional text, in history, or in logic.” Id. at 2255, 2262 (Thomas, J., concurring). The requirement that a statement is testimonial only if it is meant to incriminate a known individual “makes little sense.” Id. at 2268. “A statement that is not facially inculpatory may turn out to be highly probative of a defendant’s guilt when considered with other evidence.” Id. Justice Thomas “agree[d] that, for a statement to be testimonial within the meaning of the Confrontation Clause, the declarant must primarily intend to establish some fact with the understanding that his statement may be used in a criminal prosecution[,]” but for Justice Thomas, “this necessary criteriоn is not sufficient, for it sweeps into the ambit of the Confrontation Clause statements that lack formality and solemnity-” Id. at 2261.
According to Justice Kagan’s dissenting opinion, joined by Justices Scalia, Ginsburg, and Sotomayor, the Court’s “Confrontation Clause precedents” made Williams “an open-and-shut case.” Williams,
Concluding, Justice Kagan commented on the confusion that Williams would leave in its wake:
Before today’s decision, a prosecutor wishing to admit the results of forensic testing had to produce the technician responsible for the analysis. That was the result of not one, but two decisions this Court issued in the last three years. But that clear rule is clear no longer.... What comes out of four Justices’ desire to limit Melendez-Diaz and Bull-coming in whatever way possible, combined with one Justice’s one-justice view of those holdings, is — to be frank — who knows what. Those decisions apparently no longer mean all that they say. Yet no one can tell in what way or to what extent they are altered because no proposed limitation commands the support of a majority.
Id. at 2277.
This jurisdiction has decided one case since Williams. In Young,
In determining what effect the fractured Williams opinion had on Young’s appeal, we recognized that the so-called Marks principle — that “[w]hen a fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five Justices, the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds,” Marks v. United States,
A statement could be made for the purpose of accusing a targeted individual and therefore be testimonial under Justice Alito’s test without being formal enough to satisfy Justice Thomas’s test. Conversely, a statement could be sufficiently formal to pass Justice Thomas’s test without being accusatory or targeted at a particular person. Thus, the rationales of Justice Alito’s opinion and Justice Thomas’s opinion are incommensurable — neither rationale is subsumed within the other or narrower than the other in any meaningful sense that we discern.
Id.; see also Williams,
For the resolution of Young’s appeal, we found it unnecessary to determine any precise holding in Williams, extracting instead “an intermediate position”:
By analogy to Marks, it can be argued that while Justice Alito’s rationale and Justice Thomas’s rationale may not be includible within each other, the different tests they utilize to determine whether a statement is testimonial are subsumed within and narrower than the dissenters’ test. That is so because Justice Alito and Justice Thomas each added an additional requirement to the basic “evidentiary purpose” test espoused by Justiсe Kagan. If the four-justice plurality would deem a statement testimonial under the targeted accusation test, the four dissenting Justices surely would deem it testimonial under the broader evidentiary purpose test. Similarly, if Justice Thomas would deem a statement testimonial employing his formality criterion along with the eviden-tiary purpose test, the four dissenting Justices necessarily would deem it testimonial using the evidentiary purpose test alone. It therefore is logically coherent and faithful to the Justices’ expressed views to understand Williams as establishing — at a minimum — a sufficient, if not a necessary, criterion: a statement is testimonial at least when it passes the basic evidentiary purpose test plus either the plurality’s targeted accusation requirement or Justice Thomas’s formality criterion.
Young’s sufficient criterion takes us only so far in this case. Much of the forensic evidence that Dr. Baechtel relayed through his written reports and testimony was obtained after appellant became a suspect
Young established a sufficient criterion for determining when evidence is testimonial, using a kind of reverse-Marks approach based on the plurality opinion and Justice Thomas’s opinion each resting on a narrower definition of testimonial than the dissenting opinion. We were careful in Young not to make the sufficient criterion extracted from Williams a necessary one; in other words, this court left open the possibility that a statement might be considered testimonial even if it does not meet the sufficient criterion. We decline to extend Young to hold that for a statement to be considered testimonial it must pass the basic evidentiary purpose test plus either the plurality’s targeted accusation requirement or Justice Thomas’s formality criterion. Because the evidence at issue here lacked Justice Thomas’s required formality and involved both pre- and post-target testing, we must determine what effect, if any, Williams has on the outcome of this case.
We are presented here with the question of how to treat a fractured Supreme Court opinion when Marks does not apply. As we observed in Young, Marks “works only when the narrowest opinion actually does represent ‘a common denominator.’ ” Young,
At least one court has held that Williams is “confined to the particular set of facts presented in that case.” United States v. James,
B. Admission of Dr. Baechtel’s Reports and Testimony
Dr. Baechtel testified that his responsibilities as a forensic examiner are to “man
By referring to the findings of other laboratory analysts — those who tested for the presence of biological material in the crime scene evidence and those who extracted and amplified the DNA — and doing so without a limiting instruction that would have directed the jury not to consider the analysts’ findings as substantive evidence, we think it is clear that under the law in this jurisdiction Dr. Baechtel relayed hearsay.
Further, the government offered and the court admitted into evidence Dr. Bae-chtel’s written DNA reports, which contained statements (such as “Blood,” “No blood,” “Insufficient DNA obtained,” and “Jenkins as major contributor; Dolinger as minor”) that were based on the laboratory analysts’ findings. The reports indicate, inter alia, that a “DNA Profile Match” to appellant was found between the DNA profile developed from appellant’s blood sample and the DNA profile developed from the gray shirt, the jeans, the towel, the sink and stopper, and the bannister.
Under pre-Williams case law in this jurisdiction, the hearsay that Dr. Baechtel relayed also was testimonial. The serology and DNA testing was conducted for the primary purpose of establishing some fact relevant to a later criminal prosecution: the identity of Dolinger’s killer. As in Thomas and Roberts, “the FBI laboratory scientists here were ‘forensic experts] employed by a law enforcement agency, ... tasked by the government’ to perform tests providing the basis for ‘critical expert witness testimony ... against appellant at his criminal trial.’” Roberts,
The dissent asserts that we apply the Confrontation Clause with “wooden formalism” and that such an application is uncalled for in this case because the crime-scene evidence “was made available for testing or re-testing by appellant’s defense team.” Post at 207-08. We rejected this very argument in Thomas, еxplaining that “[t]he flaw in the logic of this argument is evident: if the chemist was available to the defense, then she also was available to the prosecution, i.e., she was not unavailable to testify in person as Crawford categorically requires. Crawford’s unqualified insistence on the declarant’s unavailability as a precondition to admitting testimonial hearsay forecloses the argument that there exists an ‘available to the accused’ exemption from the demands of the Confrontation Clause.” Thomas,
C. Harmless Error
Having found a Confrontation Clause error, we must reverse appellant’s conviction unless we find the error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Young,
The government argues that any confrontation error in this case was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because “appellant openly conceded at trial that both his blood and DNA were found at the crime scene ... to advance the theory that [he] was really a second victim who was attacked by some unknown perpetrator.” Because it is true that appellant’s counsel conceded in both opening and closing statements that appellant’s blood was found in all the locations in Dolinger’s house where the government sought (through Dr. Baechtel’s testimony) to prove it was found, this case bears certain similarities to Kaliku. In that case, we assumed without deciding that there had been a Confrontation Clause error but concluded that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because “[f]rom opening to closing statements [the defendants] conceded that they engaged in sexual acts with [the victim,] ... maintaining] that those sexual acts were consensual.”
Appellant’s evidentiary admission, however, does not account for the other blood and DNA testimony in issue: Dr. Bae-chtel’s testimony that Dolinger’s blood, too, was found on the gray shirt (evidence that the prosecutor used to argue that “there is only one way that this blood here got ... onto [defendant’s shirt, he placed Dennis Dolinger in a headlock”); his testimony that appellant’s and Dolinger’s DNA profiles “account for all of the profiles in the blood evidence” (evidence that the prosecutor used to argue that “[t]here’s no evidence of two people with cuts walking around that house.” There is “only evidence ... that one person is cut badly inside.”); and his testimony that insuffi
Appellant’s evidentiary admission that his own blood was found on the crime scene was neither an admission that his was the only blood there other than Dol-inger’s, nor an admission that Dolinger’s blood was found where Dr. Baechtel indicated, and we do not believe the admission of this evidence was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Indeed, it undermined, perhaps fatally, the defense theory that appellant was a second victim rather than the killer.
The non-DNA evidence against appellant was not weak, but we cannot say it was so strong that the verdict was “surely unattributable” to the admission of Dr. Baechtel’s forensic testimony and reports. The three witnesses whose testimony was most incriminating — Scott, Bethea, and Martin
III. Appellant’s Rule 16 Claim
We now turn to appellant’s claim that the trial court abused its discretion when it denied appellant’s motion, filed pursuant to Super. Ct. Crim. R. 16(a)(1)(C) and 16(a)(1)(D), to compel the government to determine and report all the current pairwise matches at 9 or more loci in the National DNA Index System (NDIS) and the Virginia State DNA Index System (SDIS), excluding any duplicate profiles and marking any profiles belonging to siblings.
As an example to support its argument, the defense pointed to the results of a discovery request involving the 65,000-pro-file Arizona DNA database, which revealed that “1 in every 228 profiles in that state’s ... system matches another profile at 9 or more loci” and “1 in [every] 32,747” profiles matches another profile at 12 loci. Appellant’s counsel expected that “a similar frequency [will be] found” in the Virginia and NDIS databases. Counsel argued “empirical evidence of coincidental DNA matches at 9 or more loci” might make the government’s expert “unwilling to testify that Mr. Jenkins is the unique source of the crime scene DNA” and the requested information would thus be necessary to conduct an adequate cross-examination. Moreover, counsel argued, the Arizona discovery response “took just a few hours to prepare.”
In opposing the defense motion to compel, the government argued that the discovery request was irrelevant, untimely, and infeasible. The government emphasized that this case involved a 18-loci match and that no research had ever revealed a coincidental match between two 13-loci DNA profiles.
At the initial hearing on the motion to compel, the trial court stated:
[L]ooking at this declaration [of] Mr. Callaghan regarding the time that it would take to produce the information, relevance aside for the moment, it looks like he’s saying a minimum of ... four to six months. So if that’s what he’s saying, that is a problem [and] ... I think that there is a substantial timeliness issue and I’m prepared to deny the request on [a] timeliness basis....
The court deferred its ruling on the motion, however, until a few days later. In ruling on the motion on February 22, 2006, the court agreed that the requested information was “relevant,” and commented that it did not understand “why the FBI [could not] run ... or retrieve the information,” but ultimately declined to compel the FBI to do so since “for whatever reason they’re claiming they can’t.”
Appellant now argues that the court abused its discretion in denying the motion because the FBI did not assert that it could not comply with the request, because the time-consuming nature of the requested search was “not a valid legal basis to deny an otherwise proper discovery request under Rule 16,” and because the court ruled without hearing live testimony on the issues (despite appellant’s request, made after the court had ruled, that the court “bring Dr. Callaghan in” to testify). Rule 16(a)(1)(C) provides that:
Upon request of the defendant the prosecutor shall permit the defendant to inspect and copy or photograph books, papers, documents, photographs, tangible objects, buildings or places, or copies or portions thereof, which are within the possession, custody or control of the government, and which 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, or were obtained from or belong to the defendant.
Rule 16(a)(1)(D) provides that:
Upon request of a defendant the prosecutor shall permit the defendant to inspect and copy or photograph any results or reports of physical or mental examinations, and of scientific tests or experiments, or copies thereof, which are within the possession, custody or control of the government, the existence of which is known, or by the exercise of due diligence may become known, to the prosecutor, and which are material to the preparation of the defense or are intended for use by the government as evidence in chief at the trial.
We review a trial court’s Rule 16 discovery ruling for abuse of discretion. Young,
Although the trial court ruled that the number of pairwise matches at 9 or more loci would be relevant and material to the preparation of appellant’s defense, this case is governed by our recent holding in Young that the results of an NDIS
Even if appellant could show that the pairwise comparison search would be material to his defense, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the discovery request as untimely. Discovery in the case had been ongoing for years, the motion to compel was argued when the long-scheduled trial was a few weeks away, and the trial court had before it Callaghan’s undisputed sworn statement that completing the requested search would take at least three months and probably more.
Although we affirm the denial of appellant’s discovery request, he is entitled to relief on his Confrontation Clause claim. We therefore reverse his convictions and remand for a new trial.
Reversed, and remanded.
Notes
. At various places in the trial transcript, "Dolinger” is spelled "Dolenger.” For consistency, when quoting from the transcript, we have used the first spelling, without noting the variation.
. In that same room, police found open jewelry boxes. They later discovered that some of Dolinger’s jewelry, including a diamond ring, was missing.
. Appellant was originally tried in March 2006, but that trial ended in a hung jury on all counts. Appellant's second trial, resulting in the convictions that he now appeals, commenced in Junе 2006. The government’s evidence at appellant’s first trial did not differ materially from its evidence at his second trial.
. The government did not rely on the cold hit at trial. The jury did not learn that the unknown DNA profile derived from crime-scene evidence was run through Virginia's DNA database of previously identified offenders.
. Both Scott and West also testified to having seen appellant leave The Fireplace with Dol-inger.
. MPD Detective Oliver Garvey testified that police had not made public that the weapon used in the killing of Dolinger was a screwdriver.
. Defense counsel also highlighted to the jury that government witnesses Martin, Scott, and Bethea were all felons who sought parole help, letters of support, or other favorable treatment from the United States Attorney’s Office.
. The court issued its ruling on March 10, 2006, prior to this court’s December 2006 decision in Thomas v. United States,
. The Confrontation Clause declares that "in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him." U.S. Const, amend. VI.
. Crawford v. Washington,
. In Veney v. United States,
. The dissent finds our summary of the holding in Roberts "somewhat misleading,” noting that in that case we held that the evidence was testimonial because the lab analysts performed tests that "provid[ed] the basis for ‘critical expert witness testimony ... against appellant at his criminal trial.’ " Roberts,
. As described above, the trial court in the instant case did not give the jury an instruction limiting in any way the use of Dr. Bae-chtel's testimony or reports; thus, they were admitted as substantive evidence. Accordingly, the primary rationale supporting the plurality holding in Williams does not apply: That, because the Confrontation Clause does not bar the use of testimonial statements for purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted, a DNA expert’s testimony that relayed the findings of outside laboratory analysts but that was admitted for the limited
. The exception, the plurality observed, is Hammon v. Indiana,
. See Michigan v. Bryant, - U.S. -,
. When appellant became a suspect after the cold hit, the FBI took two samples of appellant’s blood and conducted additional rounds of testing on crime scene evidence.
. Although “it would be possible to predict the outcome in almost every case simply by counting the votes of the Justices,” as the dissent urges in this case, "such a system would be unprincipled” because it would combine the accusatory purpose test and the formality test to conclude that certain evidence is nontestimonial “even though not one Justice would have argued that there was any special synergistic effect of the two attributes.” Rappa,
. Although we conclude that Williams gives us no new governing standard, we would be bound by its result in a "substantially identical” case. See Rappa,
. Dr. Baechtel did not explain what he meant by “interacting," testifying at one point that he "might have” personally looked at a shirt that was found underneath Dolinger's body, but he could not remember.
. Dr. Baechtel also explained that after the technicians "go through the procedures to recover DNA from a stain[,] we have to determine how much we have.... There is a lower limit below which we can’t depict DNA and under those circumstances I would say no detectable DNA.”
. We recognize that Justice Sotomayor’s concurrence in Buttcoming left open the question whether expert testimony like Dr. Bae-chtel's would be admissible as substantive evidence without the in-court testimony of the analysts if "the person testifying” is someone with “a personal, albeit limited, connection to the scientific test at issue,” for example, "a supervisor who observed an analyst conducting a test.” Bullcoming,
. Anticipating what it calls a "knee-jerk reaction,” the dissent quotes Justice Kennedy's dissent in Melendez-Diaz that "requiring the [government] to call the technician who filled out a form and recorded the results of a test is a hollow formality.” Post at 208 (quoting Bullcoming,
. We therefore agree with the dissent that the admission of evidence that appellant's blood was found in various places at the crime scene was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because appellant conceded that his blood was found where Dr. Baechtel said it was found. Post at 201.
. Because this testimony was based on lab findings and analysis completed before appellant became a suspect, the dissent would deem this evidence nontestimonial and thus properly admitted under the Confrontation Clause. Post at 201. For the reasons previously discussed, we do not agree.
. Two of them claimed that appellant had confessed to them, and the third identified the recovered backpack as the one appellant typically carried with a screwdriver inside and claimed to have seen appellant the day after the murder looking as if he had been in a fight.
. We cannot agree with the dissent’s alternative rationale for affirming appellant’s conviction — that appellant waived his confrontation rights by strategically using Dr. Baechtel’s inadmissible testimony to bolster his defense. See E.L. Cheeney Co. v. Gates,
.The Combined DNA Index System (CO-DIS) is a software database program that maintains the national database (NDIS) and that states use to compile their records into indexed databases.
. Appellant did not dispute that matches at 13 loci would be more rare than matches at lower numbers of loci. Cf. United States v. Davis,
The attachment to appellant's motion to compel indicates that the 11- and 12-loci matches found in the Arizona database that appellant cited as the basis for his motion were between confirmed siblings, and that " ‘[r]elatedness' between 9 and 10 locus matches has not been determined.” People v. Wright,
. Appellant did not present any contrary affidavits or sworn testimony challenging the statistics upon which the FBI relied. The fact that Callaghan's affidavit was undisputed justified the court in ruling without hearing live testimony.
. Contrary to appellant's argument that the time required for compliance with the request and similar considerations were not a valid legal basis for the court’s ruling, we have held that a Rule 16 discovery request must be "reasonable, that is, it may not unduly burden the government.” Beaner v. United States,
. Because we reverse appellant’s convictions, we need not address his argument that his armed first-degree burglary and attempted armed robbery convictions must merge with the felony murder convictions predicated on those crimes, and that the felony murder convictions then must merge with his first-degree murder conviction.
. Bullcoming v. New Mexico, - U.S. -,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
My colleagues in the majority conclude that appellant Jenkins is entitled to reversal of his first-degree murder and other convictions on the ground that the admission of DNA testimony by an expert who relayed the underlying laboratory analysts’ findings without the laboratory analysts having been called to testify violated appellant’s rights under the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause, and constituted reversible error. On the facts of this case, I cannot agree. Neither Supreme Court jurisprudence nor our own case law requires the result my colleagues reach, and, in my view, reversal of appellant’s conviction is wholly unwarranted.
As I explain below, there are compelling reasons why we should hold instead that admission of the DNA expert’s testimony was not error with respect to some of the laboratory findings, and was not reversible error with respect to other laboratory findings the expert relayed. In the alternative, even if we assume that the DNA expert’s testimony was admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause and might otherwise constitute reversible error, we should hold that appellant waived his confrontation rights when he relied on (and urged the jury to rely on) the DNA expert’s testimony about the laboratory analysts’ findings to his own advantage.
I.
A. This court should hold that admission of the DNA expert’s testimony and the laboratory reports either was not error at all or was not reversible error.
The Confrontation Clause “bars the government from introducing testimonial statements at trial against a criminal defendant without calling the declarant to testify in person, unless the declarant is unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine the declar-ant.” Thomas v. United States,
1. It is dear that five Justices of the Supreme Court would hold that the critical forensic evidence in this case was not testimonial.
In Crawford, the Supreme Court left “for another day any effort to spell out a comprehensive definition of ‘testimonial.’ ”
Nevertheless, one fact can be clearly distilled from the Court’s opinions in this area: Five Justices of the Supreme Court would agree that DNA testimony by an expert who did not perform or witness the underlying laboratory work is not testimonial hearsay where the underlying laboratory report lacks the formality of an affidavit and where the laboratory findings were made before the defendant became a suspect (such that it cannot be said that the primary purpose of the laboratory analysis was to obtain evidence for use against the defendant at his criminal trial). See Williams v. Illinois, — U.S. -,
The fact that five Justices of the Supreme Court (“the five Justices”) agree
Given that five Justices of the Supreme Court would agree that the forensic laboratory evidence described above was not testimonial hearsay as relayed by Dr. Bae-chtel, we should hold that this evidence was properly admitted, without the individuals who did the underlying laboratory work having been called to testify.
2. Admission of the forensic evidence that we are bound to recognize as testimonial was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
There was, to be sure, additional laboratory work done after appellant became a suspect. This court’s opinion in Young requires us to treat this evidence as testimonial even though it lacked the formality that Justice Thomas generally would require for evidence to be deemed testimonial. See Young,
Most of the evidence just described was DNA typing and other laboratory work involving appellant’s known blood sample, on which Dr. Baechtel relied to conclude that there was a match between appellant’s blood and the blood found at the crime scene. To repeat, in relaying the results of the underlying laboratory-analyst work, Dr. Baechtel relayed what Young compels us to hold was testimonial hearsay. Admission of this testimonial hearsay was not prejudicial, however, because appellant’s trial counsel conceded in both opening statement and closing argument that appellant’s blood was found in all the locations in Dolinger’s house where the government sought (through Dr. Bae-chtel’s testimony) to prove it was found.
The record shows that Dr. Baechtel also relayed other laboratory findings made after appellant became a suspect: that no blood was found on what other evidence showed was appellant’s black backpack that contained Dolinger’s credit and identification cards; that Dolinger’s blood was found on the clothing removed from his body; that no DNA was found on the kitchen stool or bathroom floor of Doling-er’s house; and that the DNA of five other individuals known to the FBI did not match DNA found at the crime scene. However, this evidence was either non-inculpatory, or cumulative of laboratory findings produced before appellant became a suspect in the case,
To summarize the discussion above, the forensic laboratory evidence relayed by Dr. Baechtel in this case falls into three categories: (1) laboratory findings reported before appellant became a suspect, which should be deemed non-testimonial under the tests applied by the four Justices in the Williams plurality and Justice Thomas; (2) laboratory findings reported after appellant became a suspect, which we must recognize as testimonial hearsay under Young, but whose admission was harmless because appellant made eviden-tiary admissions acknowledging what the evidence showed (i.e., that his blood was found at the crime scene everywhere Dr. Baechtel said it was found); and (3) laboratory findings reported after appellant became a suspect, which we recognize as testimonial under Young, but whose admission was harmless because the evidence was non-inculpatory, cumulative of non-testimonial evidence, or both. Accordingly, none of this admitted evidence warrants reversal of appellant’s conviction.
S. Neither Marks nor adherence to other pre-Williams Supreme Court precedent dictates against applying the guidance derived from the opinions of the plurality and Justice Thomas in Williams.
My colleagues in the majority reject the analysis I set out above with respect to the
I believe my colleagues’ approach is misguided and that their objections need not and should not lead us to ignore the guidance of the five Justices. First, this court has never held that the fact that a plurality opinion and concurring-in-the-judgment opinion do not rely on a single rationale to explain the result (i.e., the fact that the Marks principle does not apply) means that guidance that may be derived from the opinions taken together is irrelevant. To the contrary, faced with this circumstance in the past, we have deemed it appropriate to analyze a case “under both [the concurring] opinion and the plurality’s test.” Edwards v. United States,
Nor, in my view, in light of M.A.P. v. Ryan,
Further, if my colleagues seriously mean to take guidance from “Supreme Court precedent before Williams ” and to cleave to the Marks principle, to be consistent they ought not apply the rule they articulate, i.e., “that a statement triggers the protections of the Confrontation Clause when it is made with the primary purpose of creating a record for use at a later criminal trial.” Ante, 189 (quoting James,
The Supreme Court came close to applying the “primary evidentiary purpose test” in Melendez-Diaz when it held that the certificates of analysis at issue in the case “required the analysts to testify in person” because the certificates were “prepared specifically for use at petitioner’s trial,” were “incontrovertibly a ‘solemn declaration or affirmation made for the purpose of establishing or proving some fact,’ ” and under Massachusetts law had “the sole purpose ... to provide ‘prima facie evidence of the composition, quality, and the net weight’ of the analyzed substance.”
This situation has led one court to observe, insightfully, that “[w]hile on its face the [Melendez-Diaz ] opinion could be dubbed a ‘majority’ opinion, we refer to it as a plurality opinion because the language of Justice Thomas’s concurrence makes clear that his assent to the opinion was not a blanket endorsement of its entire rationale.” People v. Davis,
“When applying the Marks rule, we look for ‘a legal standard which, when applied, will necessarily produce results with which a majority of [the Justices] from that case would agree.’ ” Dickens v. Brewer,631 F.3d 1139 , 1145 (9th Cm. 2011).... Therefore, in Melendez-Diaz, Justice Thomas’ limitation in his concurrence to “extrajudicial statements only insofar as they are contained in formalized testimonial materials, such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions,” provides the narrow holding of that case with regard to the type of extrajudicial statements that implicate the Confrontation Clause.
Benjamin v. Harrington, No. CV 11-2899-JVS,
I agree with the courts quoted above that the Marks principle dictates that the common denominator (what People v. Davis termed the “analytical consistency”) between the Melendez-Diaz “majority” opinion and Justice Thomas’s separate concurrence represents the controlling Supreme Court precedent — meaning that what my colleagues in the majority refer to as “Supreme Court precedent before Williams ” amounts to a rule that (outside the context of police interrogation) only formalized materials, such as affidavits, certificates, and prior testimony, are testimonial.
Stated differently, to rely solely on “Supreme Court precedent before Williams ” would be to conclude that none of the DNA testimony at issue in this case relayed testimonial hearsay, because nothing in the record indicates that any of the laboratory reports presented through Dr. Baechtel’s testimony were in the form of affidavits, certifications, or similar formalized statements.
Jp. This court’s precedents harmonize with, and thus do not require us to turn a blind eye to, the guidance derived from the plurality and Thomas opinions in Williams.
My colleagues in the majority conclude that the opinions in Williams do not “affect[ ] our rule in Roberts v. United States,
The first point I would make is that my colleagues’ summary of the holding of Roberts (ante, 182-83) is somewhat misleading. We decided Roberts (and made the statement that my colleagues quote) in reliance on Thomas, observing that Thomas left “no room for dispute,” that the conclusions of the laboratory analysts admitted as substantive evidence were testimonial, since the analysts were “ ‘tasked ’ ... to perform tests providing the basis for ‘critical expert witness testimony ... against appellant at his criminal trial.’ ” Roberts,
My second basis for disagreeing with my colleagues is that M.A.P. v. Ryan does not “oblige[] us to follow, inflexibly, a ruling whose philosophical basis has been substantially undermined by subsequent Supreme Court decisions.” Frendak v. United States,
Third, in my view, the plurality and concurring-in-the-judgment opinions in Williams give us a weighty reason to limit our opinion in Roberts as well as our opinions in Gardner and other relevant cases to their facts — a course we have sometimes taken when, in a prior case, our court was not presented with facts that subsequent case law developments suggest may be significant. See, e.g., Robinson v. Washington Internal Med. Assocs., P.C.,
In Roberts, after complainant K.W. reported that defendant Roberts had forced her to have sexual intercourse with him, FBI analysts compared DNA extracted from semen found in KW.’s panties to the known DNA profile of appellant and found a match.
Thus, limited to their facts, none of our precedents compels us to treat as testimonial hearsay a DNA expert’s testimony that relays non-solemnized laboratory findings reported before the defendant became a suspect.
5. The facts of this case furnish an additional compelling reason for declining to apply the Confrontation Clause with “wooden formalism.”
There is an additional reason why we should resolve this case by applying the analysis this dissenting opinion advocates, rather than by applying Confrontation Clause rules “unleavened by principles tending to make [the] rules more sensible” or “applying wooden formalism” that results in “bar[ring] reliable [DNA] testimony offered by the prosecution.” Bull-coming,
I recognize that an almost knee-jerk reaction to this point will be a protest that it amounts to shifting the burden of proof away from the government (where it must always remain) to the defense, but that protest would be misplaced. There can be no doubt that the government bore its burden of proof in his case. The point I have attempted to make is that this court should not be resistant to a test for whether DNA testimony relays testimonial hearsay that both reflects the views of five Justices of the Supreme Court that testimony such as that in issue here was not testimonial and that sensibly avoids reversal of a murder conviction when the availability of independent testing by the defense leaves us with no reason to doubt that the DNA expert’s testimony was reliable.
B. In the alternative, we should hold that appellant waived his confrontation rights in this case when, to his own advantage, he elicited from Dr. Baechtel testimony relaying laboratory analysts’ findings.
There is yet another reason why reversal is not warranted in this case. • A defendant can waive his confrontation rights by strategically using the objectionable evidence “to bolster his theory of the case.” United States v. Cooper,
During trial, appellant’s defense team did not stand on the objections the defense had raised earlier about Dr. Baechtel’s inability to “say whether the biologists did ... what the biologist[ ] was supposed to do,” about Dr. Baechtel’s lack of “personal knowledge” about whether laboratory analysts did certain testing and about matters such as whether a stain was a bloodstain and whether it came from a particular evidence sample, and about the possibility that analysts “manipulate[d] the data.” Nor was defense counsel’s cross-examination of Dr. Baechtel limited to asking questions to establish that he could not say from personal knowledge whether or how the laboratory analysts performed various tasks.
For example: Defense counsel elicited Dr. Baechtel’s agreement that he “definitively kn[e]w that someone else’s DNA is in the wearer areas of’ the gray shirt, and then told the jury in closing argument that “DNA inconsistent with Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Dolinger on the wearer area” showed that someone else was connected to the shirt. Counsel also elicited Dr. Baechtel’s agreement that no blood was on the screwdriver (“So what’s there is not blood, correct?”), and that laboratory staff “didn’t take the screwdriver apart to see if there was any blood ... that ... seeped down the shaft ... where the handle is” and also made no attempt to get skin-cell DNA from the screwdriver. In addition, counsel elicited testimony from Dr. Baechtel that the laboratory analysts made no effort to obtain wearer DNA from the straps of the backpack and that no blood was found on the black backpack despite diligent efforts to find any that might be there (“you [i.e., the laboratory analysts] tried as hard as— as you could to see if there was any blood on the backpack, correct?”). Counsel thereafter drew jurors’ attention to the fact that no blood was found on the backpack and asked the jury whether it made sense that appellant carried the backpack everywhere, as the government claimed, without leaving any blood.
Further, сounsel elicited from Dr. Bae-chtel testimony that no effort was made by the laboratory analysts to get skin-cell DNA from a shirt that was found under Dolinger’s body; that “no serological work was done” on the collar and cuff of the gray shirt and thus that there were “no negative serological results” as to those areas; that no attempt had been made to see how much DNA was present in presumed-blood samples taken from the floor
Additionally, defense counsel elicited Dr. Baechtel’s agreement that the DNA technicians “didn’t attempt amplification” of the DNA recovered from sample Q-82, a swab from the bathroom sink; that the collar and left cuff of the gray shirt were “eyeballed and no blood was observed with the eyes”; that the analysts “didn’t check all the wearer areas of the sweatshirt” and “didn’t swab the zipper.” Defense counsel also elicited Dr. Baechtel’s statement that while Dolinger’s blood was found on a Swiss army knife found in the basement, nothing connected appellant to the knife.
This court has previously recognized that where the government improperly elicits evidence but the defense “turn[s] the violation to its own advantage,” the defendant cannot on appeal “be heard to complain of the prejudice [the evidence] allegedly caused.” Mack v. United States, 570 A.2d 777, 778 n. 1 (D.C.1990).
For all the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. See also id. at 2250-51 (Breyer, J., concurring) ("As the plurality notes, in every post-Crawford case in which the Court has found a Confrontation Clause violation, the statement at issue had the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual."); Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts,
. Cf. United States v. Williams,
. This was evidence that the prosecutor emphasized to argue that "there is only one way that this blood ... got ... onto [djefendant’s shirt[:] he placed Dennis Dolinger in a headlock.”
. My colleagues retort that the FBI’s first round of testing was conducted after Stephen Watson had been arrested and charged with the crime. Ante, 189 n. 17. That is of no moment, because, it seems to me, the whole point of the targeted accusation test is to require confrontation of declarants who have a motive to tailor their statements to support the accusation against the suspect. In this case, the laboratory work actually exonerated the then-suspect Watson, and, because appellant did not become a target of the police investigation until months later, there is no basis for suspicion that the first round of laboratory work was tailored to implicate him either.
.In subsection c infra, I meet my colleagues’ other objections to this analysis.
. Cf. also United States v. Shanton,
. In his opening statement, defense counsel told the jury that "no one disputes that both Mr. Jenkins'[s] blood and Mr. Dolinger’s blood were in that home.” During closing arguments, defense counsel made similar statements, including, "[n]o one ever said that Raymond Jenkins’[s] blood wouldn’t be found in the house, you all knew that going in. [Y]ou know why Mr. Jenkins was in that house and you also know that his DNA, his blood, was only in four places in that house ... the bathroom, the jeans, the back of the sweatshirt and one drop ... that may have been on the railing....” Defense counsel similarly acknowledged that the "blood on the wall sort of beneath where the steps ... were ... belongs to Raymond Jenkins[.]”
In light of appellant’s concessions, my colleagues are wrong to suggest, ante at 189 n. 17, that the facts of this case are on all fours with those in Young. In Young, the expert testified that she "had compared a DNA profile of Young created by her staff from his [known, "post-targeting”] buccal swab with [an unknown] male DNA profile derived at the lab from [the complainant’s] vaginal swabs” and determined that there was a match.
. Specifically, the evidence wаs cumulative of the laboratory findings, reported before appellant became a suspect, that the only blood found on the crime-scene evidence belonged either to Dolinger or to a single unknown individual (who, the defense conceded at the outset of trial, was appellant).
. My colleagues in the majority imply that erroneously admitted DNA and other forensic laboratory evidence generally cannot be harmless. Ante at 193, quoting Gardner v. United States,
. But see Den v. State,
.
. There, we relied on alternative criteria for determining whether a statement is testimonial that would be accepted by the four Williams dissenters plus Justice Thomas or by the four Williams dissenters plus the Williams plurality, alternative tests that were "all we need to say about Williams ... for purposes of deciding the present case.” Young,
. As Justice Kagan observed in her dissenting opinion in Williams, "no proposed limitation commands the support of a majority” of the Supreme Court.
. Similarly, in Bullcoming,
. In Derr, the Court of Appeals of Maryland noted that "one legal scholar, Stanford Law School Professor Jeffrey L. Fisher, has concluded that Justice Thomas’s concurring opinion, which focuses on the need for a statement to be formalized to be testimonial is 'the narrowest in terms of assessing whether forensic reports are testimonial’ and ‘will control future cases involving forensic evidence[,]’ ” citing Jeffrey Fisher, The Holdings and Implications of Williams v. Illinois, SCOTUSblog (June 20, 2012, 2:20 PM), http:// www.scotusblog.com/2012/06/the-holdingsandimplications-of-williams-v-illinois/. Id. at 116 n. 16,
.Cf. Romano v. Oklahoma,
Notably, the Williams plurality, too, recognized the importance of Justice Thomas’s formality test, observing that
The abuses that the Court has identified as prompting the adoption of the Confrontation Clause shared the following two characteristics: (a) they involved out-of-court statements having the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct and (b) they involved formalized statements such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions. In all but one of the post-Crawford cases in which a Confrontation Clause violation has been found [a police interrogation case], both of these characteristics were present.
. Accordingly, I cannot agree with my colleagues that ”[u]nder pre-Williams case law[,] [all of] the hearsay that Dr. Baechtel relayed ... was testimonial” by virtue of the fact that ”[t]he serology and DNA testing was conducted for the primary purpose of establishing some fact relevant to a later criminal prosecution.” Ante, 191.
. Young relied on the observation that:
If the [Williams ] four-Justice plurality would deem a statement testimonial under the targeted accusation test, the four dissenting Justices surely would deem it testi*206 monial under the broader evidentiary purpose test. Similarly, if Justice Thomas would deem a statement testimonial employing his formality criterion along with the evidentiary purpose test, the four dissenting Justices necessarily would deem it testimonial using the evidentiary purpose test alone.
Id. at 1043.
. Accord Tabaka v. District of Columbia,
. Cf. Williams,
. Cf. Roberts,
. I do not, as my colleagues imply, argue for an "available to the accused” exemption from the demands of the "Confrontation Clause.” Ante, 191. Nor do I ignore that appellant's rights under the Confrontation Clause are "fundamental,” ante 180, or dispute that the Confrontation Clause "commands, not that evidence be reliable, but that reliability be assessed in a particular manner: by testing in the crucible of cross-examination.” My point is that the views of the five Justices give us a sound reason to conclude that the critical testimony here (that Dolinger's blood was on the gray shirt and that the blood DNA of only a single unknown individual was found at the crime scene) was not testimonial, and thus that it did not implicate appellant’s Confrontation Clause (including cross-examination) rights.
. Through such questioning on cross-examination, appellant could have "actually benefited from the absence of [the laboratory analysts] ... by showing that [Dr. Baechtel] could not be sure there were no flaws in [their] work without establishing that there were any actual flaws.” Commonwealth v. Barbosa,
. See also United States v. Silvers,
