Lead Opinion
In King v. State,
On remand from the Supreme Court, we are presented again with the opportunity to consider the constitutionality of King’s conviction.
(1) Does the Maryland DNA Collection Act violate Article 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights?; and
(2) Did the trial judge improperly shift the burden of proof to the defense to demonstrate that a search or seizure made without individualized suspicions is reasonable?
I. King Did Not Preserve His Article 26 Argument For Appellate Review.
As a threshold matter, before we might reach the merits of King’s Article 26 argument, we must address the State’s challenge that King failed to raise this argument before the trial court. This Court will not consider ordinarily any issue “unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court ...” Md. Rule 8 — 131(a). “[T]he animating policy behind Rule 8 — 131(a) is to ensure fairness for the parties involved and to promote orderly judicial administration.” Jones v. State,
King’s argument in the trial court focused solely upon the Fourth Amendment challenge. He failed to include any reference to the Maryland Declaration of Rights. King mentioned
Nevertheless, it is well-settled that Md. Rule 8-131(a) vests this Court with the discretionary power “to decide such an [unpreserved] issue if necessary or desirable to guide the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of another appeal.” Md. Rule 8-131(a). See Abdul-Maleek v. State,
First, the appellate court should consider whether the exercise of its discretion will work unfair prejudice to either of the parties ... Second, the appellate court should consider whether the exercise of its discretion will promote the orderly administration of justice.
Id.,
In the case sub judice, no unfair prejudice results to either the parties or the lower court in our determining King’s Article 26 argument. King raises the issue and therefore
We caution strongly, however, that “[o]ur decision to review unpreserved issues in this particular case should not be viewed as an indication that we will review unpreserved issues in future cases.” Conyers v. State,
II. The Maryland DNA Collection Act Does Not Violate Article 26 Of The Maryland Declaration Of Rights.
Because the Supreme Court determined that the DNA Collection Act complies with the Fourth Amendment, see-U.S. at-,
Article 26 provides:
That all warrants, without oath or affirmation, to search suspected places, or to seize any person or property, are grievous and oppressive; and all general warrants to search suspected places, or to apprehend suspected persons, without naming or describing the place, or the person in special, are illegal, and ought not to be granted.
Although Article 26 pre-dates the Fourth Amendment, Gahan v. State,
As King acknowledges, this Court has interpreted historically Article 26 in pari materia with the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. See, e.g., Parker v. State,
Although we have asserted that Article 26 may have a meaning independent of the Fourth Amendment, we have not held, to date, that it provides greater protection against state searches than its federal kin. Rather, we rejected uniformly such assertions. See, e.g., Jones v. State,
Even if we were to depart in this case from our traditional practice of construing Article 26 consistent with the Fourth Amendment, never have we concluded explicitly and with clarity that an exclusionary rule, permitting the suppression of King’s DNA evidence as a remedy for an alleged Article 26 violation, exists under our state constitutional law. Meisinger v. State,
We shall not do either in the present case. As this Court noted previously, in construing Article 26, decisions of the Supreme Court are “entitled to great respect.” Richardson v. McGriff,
III. The Trial Judge Did Not Shift Erroneously The Burden Of Proof To King And, Even If A Statutory Violation Were Proven, There Is No Reversible Error On This Record.
Next, we address the admissibility of a DNA database match stemming from a DNA sample obtained pursuant to a warrant and court order, which were issued upon the sole basis of an initial DNA database match stemming from an
We disagree with King’s contention and conclude that, regardless of the “disguise” employed to characterize King’s challenge,
A. The Trial Court Placed Properly The Initial Burden On King.
We begin by addressing the proper procedure to challenge the DNA database match evidence in this and similar future cases. In the present case, the trial court and the parties had different views apparently of the proper characterization of King’s challenge. The trial judge and the State characterized King’s argument as challenging the basis of the warrant. The probable cause for the warrant was established in the affidavit by a single statement that King’s DNA was collected pursuant to the Act. Because King argued that his DNA was collected illegally, the trial court framed his argument as challenging the veracity of the statement in the affidavit under Franks v. Delaware,
Although King could have made such an argument, he asserts that he never did so and, in fact, that he disputed the State’s and the trial court’s characterizing his challenge in that manner at the motions hearing. King’s challenge as mounted by him, albeit not entirely clear, focused apparently on the illegality of the probable cause underlying the warrant. He contended that the DNA database match stemming from the second DNA sample, collected pursuant to the warrant and court order, should be suppressed on the grounds that the initial DNA sample was collected in violation of the Act. This argument is recognized more properly as a corollary of the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. Under the traditional version of this doctrine, “evidence tainted by Fourth Amendment violations may not be used directly or indirectly against
The significance of the difference in characterizing King’s challenge as one under Franks or as one under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine is the standard of proof applicable at the hearing. As the trial court stated correctly, in the context of a Franks challenge,
If the Defendant seeks to scrutinize a warrant and its application beyond the four corners doctrine, it is his burden to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the supporting warrant affidavit is tainted by allegations of deliberate falsehood or with reckless disregard for the truth.
App. 6 (citing Fitzgerald,
Specifically, ‘[a] defendant seeking shelter under the umbrella of the ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine has to prove each of two propositions: 1) the primary illegality, to wit, that the tree was poisonous; and 2) the cause and effect relationship between the primary illegality and the evidence in issue, to wit, that the evidence was, indeed, the identifiable fruit of that particular tree.’
Cox v. State,
King failed to meet his burden, regardless of the label given his challenge. Reviewing the evidence under the disguise of a Franks challenge, we would agree with the trial court that King failed to meet his prima facie burden of production. As the Court of Special Appeals noted in Herbert v. State,
What the appellant thought he was doing is by no means clear. One does not just stumble into a Franks hearing casually, let alone inadvertently. That is why Franks makes repeated references to the fact that “a sensible threshold showing is required,”438 U.S. at 170 ,98 S.Ct. 2674 , and that the “requirement of a substantial preliminary showing should suffice to prevent the misuse of a veracity hearing,” id. The appellant here did not even pause at the threshold.
Id. Because King’s actual argument did not focus on the warrant,
Secondly, when reviewing the evidence under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, we conclude no differently and find likewise that King failed to meet his burden. King failed to adduce any evidence to demonstrate that the State violated actually the Act in this case. Admittedly, proving a negative is an arduous task, but it certainly is a plausible one here, with adequate discovery.
The record suggests that trial defense counsel recognized the plausibility of this burden when he filed a motion seeking a continuance of the motions hearing so that he could have sufficient time to prepare and serve “various subpoenas.” After acknowledging the need for “proper preparation,” defense counsel subpoenaed ultimately only two witnesses: Ms. Michelle Groves, the custodian of records at the Maryland State Police Forensics Division, and Ms. M.I. Jenkins, the collecting agent who obtained King’s initial DNA sample.
At the 26 March 2010 hearing on the suppression motion, for some reason, defense counsel called as a witness only Ms. Groves. Through questioning Ms. Groves, defense counsel established only that she had no records documenting (1) whether King received notification of the expungement provisions or (2) the training and qualifications of the collecting agent. Defense counsel argued that, because Ms. Groves lacked these records, there was no compliance. A crucial step is missing in the defense’s syllogism: whether Ms. Groves should have had such records. Without that evidence, the fact that Ms. Groves did not have these records means nothing necessarily.
B. Even If The State Violated The Act, Suppression Is Not The Appropriate Remedy For A Statutory Violation Of The Act.
Even if we were to assume that the State violated the technical requirements of the sections of the Act at issue in its initial collection of King’s DNA sample, suppression would not be the proper remedy for such violations as alleged and, therefore, the trial judge denied properly the motion to suppress the DNA database match. The exclusionary rule, which is recognized generally as a “judicially imposed sanction for violations of the Fourth Amendment,” does not apply automatically to every violation. Myers v. State,
In light of the scientific and statutory safeguards [of the Act], once respondent’s DNA was lawfully collected the STR analysis of respondent’s DNA pursuant to CODIS procedures did not amount to a significant invasion of privacy that would render the DNA identification impermissible under the Fourth Amendment.
Id. at-,
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that violations of state statutes do not affect the Fourth Amendment analysis. Virginia v. Moore,
We thought it obvious that the Fourth Amendment’s meaning did not change with local law enforcement practices— even practices set by rule. While those practices “vary from place to place and from time to time,” Fourth Amendment protections are not “so vaKable” and, cannot “be made to turn upon such trivialities. ”
Moore,
The alleged technical violations in this case epitomize the reason state statutory violations have no Fourth Amendment
Although some other circumstances may present an opportunity to find that a violation of the Act amounted to an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment, this case is certainly not that one. The question is not whether the Act was violated, but whether the alleged statutory violation could amount to a Fourth Amendment violation in its own right. Were the Act’s technical protocols for DNA collection violated, the collection would remain a reasonable search nonetheless. Therefore, the statutory violations alleged by King, assuming arguendo they occurred, do not alter the Supreme Court’s holding in King. The initial collection of King’s DNA — whether pursuant to the Act’s technical requirements or not — was constitutional.
In the absence of a Fourth Amendment violation, we must ask next whether the statute demands exclusion as a remedy for a statutory violation. We have not addressed this issue before, but we find the analytical framework used by other jurisdictions and Maryland’s intermediate appellate court instructive. As the Court of Special Appeals stated, “One may not wish an exclusionary rule into being by waiving a magic wand. It is something that must be deliberately and explicitly created to cover a given type of violation.” Sun Kin
Illustrative of this general approach is the Court of Special Appeals’s analytical framework in Upshur v. State,
No explicit exclusionary provision exists in the DNA Collection Act. See Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Pub. Safety Art., § 2-501 et seq. The Act provides criminal sanctions for certain, limited prohibited acts. See Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Pub. Safety Art., § 2-512 (prescribing criminal sanctions for disclosing DNA information to unauthorized persons, obtaining DNA information from the database system without authorization, testing a DNA sample for information unrelated to identification, and failing to destroy a DNA sample in specified circumstances). For the remaining majority of its provisions, such as those alleged to be violated in this case, the Act is silent on any remedy for a violation.
This silence is in stark contrast to the explicit provisions of other statutes, such as the explicit statutory exclusionary provision in the Maryland Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Act, Maryland Code, Section 10-401 et seq. of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (1977, 2013 Repl. Vol.).
Because “the exclusionary rule is not a remedy [the courts] apply lightly.” Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon,
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WICOMICO COUNTY AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
BELL, C.J., (ret.) dissents.
Notes
. For a description of the facts and procedural history underlying this case, see King,
. Because we determined that the collection of DNA from King was unconstitutional in King I, we declined to reach, as moot, these arguments.
. Although this specific challenge is mentioned briefly in the “Statement of Facts” in Appellant's Brief, there is no other mention of this challenge in the brief and, thus, we do not address it here.
. Section 2-5 04(c) provides,
A DNA sample shall be collected by an individual who is:
(1) designated by the Director; and
(2) trained in the collection procedures that the Crime Laboratory uses.
Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Pub. Safety Art., § 2-504(c).
. Section 2-504(a)(3)(ii) provides, "At the time of collection of the DNA sample under this paragraph, the individual from whom a sample is collected shall be given notice that the DNA record may be expunged and the DNA sample destroyed in accordance with § 2-511 of this subtitle.” Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Pub. Safety Art., § 2-504(a)(3)(ii).
. The "disguise” analogy, drawn from Judge Moylan's opinion in Fitzgerald v. State,
. A Franks challenge may have been the appropriate avenue to challenge the State’s assertion that King’s DNA sample was taken in April of 2009. Because King's argument that his DNA sample was never taken actually goes to the heart of the truth of the statement in the warrant’s affidavit, King could have challenged the warrant under Franks. As noted earlier, it does not appear to us that he traveled that path.
. During cross-examination, when the prosecutor sought to question Ms. Groves whether she kept such records in the ordinary course of business, defense counsel objected on the grounds of relevancy. After
. We acknowledge that courts have recognized an implicit suppression remedy for certain statutory violations on limited occasions. See, e.g., Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon,
. The Maryland Wiretapping Statute's statutory exclusionary provision provides, in pertinent part,
[Wlhenever any wire, oral, or electronic communication has been intercepted, no part of the contents of the communication and no evidence derived therefrom may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court, grand jury, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, legislative committee, or other authority of this State, or a political subdivision thereof if the disclosure of that information would be in violation of this subtitle.
Md.Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 10-405(a) (1957, 2013 Repl. Vol.).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent. It is my belief that the conclusion this Court reached applying the Fourth Amendment is equally supported by application of Article 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, which we determined, at that time, to be a moot argument. Accordingly, I would re-affirm our judgment on that State Law ground.
