Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
{1 The People charged the Petitioner, Dina Marshall, with driving under the influence of drugs, careless driving, and possession of drug paraphernalia after lab urinalysis results revealed Marshall had methamphetamine in her system when she caused a car accident. At trial, the People
€ 2 We now affirm the district court's ruling regarding the admission of the lab report. First, we find that admission of the lab report did not violate the Confrontation Clause. While Burbach did not conduct the test of Marshall's urine sample herself, she supervised the testing process, reviewed all the data generated by the test, made the determination that the data accurately determined that Marshall had methamphetamine present in her urine, and certified the test results. She therefore did not provide "surrogate" testimony of the sort found to be problematic in Bullcoming v. New Mexico, - U.S. -,
T 3 Second, admission of the lab report did not violate section 16-3-809(5), C.R.S. (2012). That section provides that, upon a defendant's timely request, the lab employee who "accomplished the requested analysis" must be made available to testify at trial. According to the plain meaning of "accomplish," Burbach accomplished the analysis because she performed the final analysis of the data required to certify the results. as accurate. Therefore, Burbach's testimony satisfied seetion 16-8-309(5).
T4 Finally, the People concede, and our review confirms, that there was no evidence presented that Marshall possessed drug paraphernalia. Therefore, we find that the county court erroneously denied Marshall's motion for judgment of acquittal on this charge, and reverse the district court's judgment in this regard.
I.
1 5 Dina Marshall was driving her truck on March 4, 2008, in Thornton when she rear-ended another woman's vehicle. The two women pulled into a gas station parking lot to exchange information. After pulling into the parking lot, Marshall backed into the woman's car, and the woman called Thornton police.
T6 Officer Mark Swisher arrived on the scene and began asking Marshall what happened. Marshall talked rapidly, jumped from subject to subject, hesitated during the middle of sentences, was unsteady while standing and walking, and could not hold still while speaking with him. Based on this conduct, Officer Swisher began to suspect that Marshall was under the influence of drugs. Officer Swisher asked Marshall if she would be willing to complete voluntary roadside maneuvers, and Marshall responded, "I don't want to but I will." After Marshall failed all three roadside maneuvers, Officer Swisher advised her of her Miranda rights and arrested her. When Officer Swisher asked Marshall whether she was under the influence of prescription or illegal drugs, Marshall responded, "You already know I smoked meth two hours ago." Officer Swisher administered a breath test to rule out the presence of alcohol. When he informed Marshall that she had passed the breath test, she responded that she already told him she had not been drinking but had smoked meth. Marshall then consented to a urine test to sereen for the presence of drugs.
T7 The Thornton Police Department sent Marshall's urine sample to the Colorado Department of Health toxicology lab and requested that the sample be tested for the presence of amphetamines. When the lab receives a sample, protocol dictates that the receiving analyst sign for the sample and note whether the seal appears intact. Then the sample is assigned a toxicology number. A lab analyst first performs a screening test on the sample to determine whether amphetamines might be present in the urine. If this screening test produces a presumptive posi
8 According to Burbach's testimony, she conducts several steps of review of the instrument data. First, she determines whether the controls fall within their expected range. Second, she considers the calibration samples to ensure that they met quality control standards. Third, she determines whether all the ions necessary to conclude that methamphetamine existed in the urine are present in the urine sample. Fourth, she analyzes the internal standard to determine whether it worked in each sample. Finally, she looks to make sure the two lab techni-clans have not taken any corrective actions during the test. Onee Burbach has completed her review, she can certify the results and send them back to the requesting police department.
T9 In this case, Burbach certified results showing that Marshall's urine tested positive for the presence of methamphetamine by signing the results form. No other person's name appears on the form. During her testimony, Burbach acknowledged that she did not perform any of the tests on the sample. The form Burbach signed stated that only the confirmation test should be used for "legal purposes."
{10 The People charged Marshall with driving under the influence of drugs
§11 Defense counsel also objected when the People sought to admit People's Exhibits 1 and 2 through the testimony of Burbach. Exhibit 1, which was signed by Officer Swisher and initialed by an unidentified lab employee, provided the chain of custody for the sample. Exhibit 2, which was signed by Burbach, provided the urinalysis results. The county court admitted both exhibits under the business records exception to the hearsay rule.
1 12 On October 15, 2010, the People also charged Marshall with possession of drug paraphernalia
113 The jury convicted Marshall of all three offenses. Marshall appealed her convictions to the district court, and the district court affirmed. She then petitioned this court for certiorari. We granted certiorari to consider whether either the Confrontation Clause or section 16-8-309(5), precluded the People from introducing the report showing Marshall's urinalysis results when Burbach, but not the lab technician, testified at trial, and also to consider whether the trial court erred in denying the motion for judgment of acquittal on the possession of drug paraphernalia charge
IL.
15 The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution affords to the accused the right "to be confronted with the witnesses against him." U.S. Const. amend. VI; see also Colo. Const. art. II, § 16 ("In erimi-nal prosecutions the accused shall have the right ... to meet the witnesses against him face to face. ..."); Hinojos-Mendoza v. People,
116 Marshall argues that Burbach's testimony ran afoul of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Bullcoming. We disagree.
T17 In Bullcoming, the state introduced as evidence against the defendant test results certified by a particular lab analyst. Bullcoming, - U.S. at -,
1] 18 We find that Burbach did not provide "surrogate" testimony of the sort that the Court found problematic in Bulleoming. Unlike in Bullcoming, where the testifying witness had no connection with the particular lab report at issue, here Burbach supervised the performance of the tests and certified the lab report. According to Burbach's testimony, she synthesized the tests performed by two different analysts to ensure that both had reached the same conclusion. Then, she reviewed the data generated by the scientific instruments to ensure that the controls show the instruments were working properly while they performed the tests in question. Finally, she reviewed the analysts' notes to conclude that they followed lab protocol throughout the testing process. Only after she performed all of these steps did she certify the test results and sign the form that was sent back to the Thornton Police Depart-ment
¶ 19 Other courts that have considered this question have found that supervisor testimony satisfies the Confrontation Clause when the supervisor prepares or signs the report. See, e.g., United States v. Summers,
120 Under Bullcoming, onee the lab report certified by Burbach was introduced as evidence against Marshall, she became "a
III.
We also disagree with Marshall's argument that the People violated section 16-3-309(5) by calling Burbach, rather than the analyst who performed the confirmation test, to testify at Marshall's trial. Section 16-3-809(5) provides as follows:
Any report or copy thereof or the findings of the criminalistics laboratory shall be received in evidence in any court, preliminary hearing, or grand jury proceeding in the same manner and with the same force and effect as if the employee or technician of the eriminalisties laboratory who accomplished the requested analysis, comparison, or identification had testified in person. Any party may request that such employee or technician testify in person at a criminal trial on behalf of the state before a jury or to the court, by notifying the witness and other party at least fourteen days before the date of such criminal trial.
(Emphasis added). As relevant here, the statute requires that the employee or analyst "who accomplished the requested analysis" be present to testify if the defendant comports with the other requirements of the statute. See Cropper v. People,
{21 Because the legislature has not defined "accomplish" in the statute, we look to the plain meaning of the word. "Accomplish" means "to execute fully: perform, achieve, fulfill." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 12 (2002). For many of the same reasons discussed in the previous section, Burbach "accomplished" the requested urinalysis.
122 Although two other analysts performed the screening and confirmation tests, Burbach's expertise was required to generate the final report. Burbach reviewed both the screening and confirmation tests to ensure that their results coincided, analyzed the instrument data to verify that the instrument was working properly in each instance and that the results indicated the positive presence of methamphetamine, and reviewed the notes of the lab analysts to determine that the analysts had followed what Burbach considered to be acceptable lab protocol. Bur-bach's review and independent analysis was necessary to fully execute the requested urinalysis, because without this review, the results would not have been certified as accurate and mailed to the police department. Therefore, even though other analysts contributed to the ultimate result, Burbach performed the final and necessary step before the results could be certified as accurate. As a result, she "accomplished" the urinalysis that she signed and returned to the Thornton Police Department.
$23 In sum, we conclude that because Burbach accomplished the requested urinalysis, her testimony was sufficient to satisfy section 16-8-8309(5).
1 24 The People concede that there was no evidence presented that Marshall possessed drug paraphernalia. A review of the record confirms that both parties discussed a drug pipe during opening statements but that the People introduced no evidence of the drug pipe. Therefore, we find that the county court erroneously denied Marshall's motion for judgment of acquittal on this charge, and reverse the district court's judgment in this regard.
v.
25 For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court's judgment that the admission of the lab report certified by Bur-bach did not violate the Confrontation Clause or section 16-8-809(5). We reverse the judgment of the district court as to the drug paraphernalia charge, and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. § 42-4-1301(1)(a), C.R.S. (2012).
. § 42-4-1402, C.R.S. (2012).
. § 18-18-428(1), CR.S. (2012).
. Specifically, we granted certiorari to consider the following issues:
1. Whether, in light of the United StatesSu-preme Court's recent decision in Bullcom*946 ing v. New Mexico, - U.S. -,131 S.Ct. 2705 ,180 L.Ed.2d 610 (2011), the appearance of a lab supervisor that reviewed and approved test results completed by another technician is sufficient to satisfy the Confrontation Clause of the United States Constitution.
2. Whether the appearance of a lab supervisor that reviewed and approved test results completed by another technician is sufficient to satisfy section 16-3-309(5), C.R.S. (2011).
3. Whether the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal was in error where no evidence was presented in support of the charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.
. The People argue that because Marshall's objection at trial was phrased only in terms of a violation of section 16-3-309(5), and not the Confrontation Clause, her Confrontation Clause claim should be reviewed only for plain error. We need not decide what sort of objection would be required to preserve a Confrontation Clause challenge because, assuming for the purposes of this case that Marshall's objection was sufficient to preserve such a challenge, we find that there was no confrontation error in this case.
. People's Exhibit 1, the lab services requisition form, contains a signature from someone other than Burbach acknowledging that the lab received Marshall's urine sample and that the seal did not appear broken. Marshall does not raise a confrontation challenge to this form, and therefore we do not address it.
. As would be expected in labs with different procedures, factual circumstances surrounding supervisors' method of reviewing and certifying lab results can vary. See, e.g., Summers,
. We find other decisions to be unpersuasive because they either declined to resolve the issue, found any error to be harmless, or are factually distinguishable. In United States v. Moore,
. Burbach's tenure as supervisor has been the subject of some controversy. However, as noted above, Marshall had the opportunity to confront Burbach and did in fact subject her to thorough cross-examination. At issue here is not the content of Marshall's cross-examination, but rather whether the Confrontation Clause is satisfied where the testifying lab supervisor independently reviews scientific data, draws the conclusion that the data indicates the positive presence of a substance, and signs a report to that effect. We hold that it is.
. In this case, we are only asked to consider whether Burbach "accomplished" the urinalysis, and conclude that she did. We express no opin-fon as to whether other analysts within the lab could accomplish the test within the meaning of section 16-3-309(5).
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
{ 26 The majority holds that the Confrontation Clause is not violated by the admission of a lab report, which is conceded to be testimonial evidence, through testimony of a supervisor who neither performed the laboratory analysis nor supervised its performance. Maj. op. 118. Reliance upon forensic evidence has increased in criminal cases and the need to retain the traditional right of cross-examination must nonetheless be preserved. This case is only one example of the importance of testimonial forensic reports such as the lab report here. In my view, admitting a testimonial report without allowing the accused to confront the technician who created that report violates the Confrontation Clause in light of the Supreme Court's decision in Bullcoming v. New Mexico, - U.S. -,
T27 The supervisor's review in this case does not substitute for the testimony of a technician who received the defendant's sample, performed the testing, and observed the results. The supervisor here testified that she did not know which technicians performed the testing and could not tell from the form she reviewed who they were. She testified that she based her certification on her expectation that the technicians had followed laboratory procedures but had no way of knowing whether they actually did follow procedures. Her supervision thus consisted of reviewing machine-generated reports in large batches, assuming procedures had been followed if there were no notes on the reports and the data indicated the machines were working properly, and "rubber stamping" the reports. Although, unlike the analyst in Bullcoming, the supervisor's signature appeared on the reports as a certifier, she testified as to the contents of a lab report without actually sereening or observing the screening of a blood sample. Her testimony raises the same constitutional concerns as the testimony of the Bullcoming analyst, who also testified about results without performing or observing the test that generated those results.
1f 28 Although the Confrontation Clause issue is dispositive to this case, I address the statutory issue because the majority does. Section 16-8-809(5), C.R.S. (2012) requires the employee or technician who "accomplished" the analysis in a laboratory test be made available to testify. In my view, the person who "accomplishes" a laboratory test is a percipient witness-one who perceives the results through his or her senses. Because a supervisor who reviews reports and does not run the tests herself does not perceive the test results and does not accomplish the test under the statute, I would also hold that the trial court erred by not following the mandate of section 16-8-809(5), which requires a forensic lab percipient witness to testify and be subject to cross-examination by either party in a criminal case. To hold as the majority does places a higher value on the convenience of state laboratory employ
I.
129 Defendant Dina Marshall rear-ended another woman's car, then backed into the car again after pulling into a parking lot. An officer gave Marshall roadside sobriety tests, which she failed. She told the officer that she had been smoking methamphetamine. Marshall consented to a urine test and provided a sample, which the police sent to the Colorado Department of Health toxicology lab for sereening.
{30 The People notified defense counsel that they would introduce the results of Marshall's urinalysis. Marshall's defense counsel filed a motion under section 16-8-809(5) requesting that the technician who analyzed Marshall's urine sample testify in person. The People then notified defense counsel that they intended to call Cynthia Burbach, director of the toxicology lab. Burbach supervised the lab and signed off on all of the lab's final reports, but she did not test samples herself.
131 At trial, Marshall objected to Bur-bach's proposed testimony because Burbach had not tested Marshall's sample herself, nor had she actually supervised the technician who did to make sure the technician followed proper procedures. Marshall requested that the technician who performed the analysis testify. The trial court overruled Marshall's objection and allowed Burbach to testify in lieu of the technician about the results of Marshall's urine sample.
T{32 Burbach testified about the process that each sample goes through before she reviews the reports. One technician receives the sample and performs an initial sereening. A second technician then performs a more detailed test to determine more precisely what drug is in the sample and how much. The data is reviewed by two people before Burbach performs the final review. Reports for about a hundred different samples are compiled and sent to Burbach, who reviews them all in a batch as the final checkpoint before the reports are sent to the requesting police departments. This process takes her less than a day. She makes sure the tests match the calibrations and internal quality controls and checks to see whether either testing technician made any notes. If all appears to have gone according to procedure, then Burbach signs the reports before they are sent out,. She does not observe the technicians while they perform the tests and does not perform any testing herself.
T33 Burbach testified that she had not tested Marshall's sample and had not supervised the technicians who did. To determine whether Marshall's sample had been tested according to lab procedures, Burbach examined the printouts showing the results. These printouts did not show who had tested Marshall's sample or what had happened during the tests. Burbach did not know whether either of the technicians who tested Marshall's sample had run the sample more than onee or had taken any other corrective measures. She testified: "I'm not standing over them on the day that they did it ... I expect them to follow the standard operating procedure, but being over their shoulder, no."
IL.
34 Under the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the accused "shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him." U.S. Const. amend. VI; see also Colo. Const. art. II, § 16 ("[Thhe accused shall have the right ... to meet the witnesses against him face to face."). The accused's right to confrontation is rooted in the common law tradition dating back to sixteenth-century England, "one of live testimony in court subject to adversarial testing." Crawford v. Washington,
135 In Bullcoming, the Supreme Court considered whether a "surrogate" analyst who does not "sign the certification or personally perform or observe the performance of the test reported in the certification" is a sufficient substitute.
T86 Forensic evidence such as that featured in Melendezs-Diaz and Bullcoming has "become an increasingly important and routinized aspect of our criminal justice system." Richard D. Friedman, Confrontation and Forensic Laboratory Reports, Round Four, 45 Tex. Tech L.Rev. 51, 58 (2012). "[COJriminal convictions often turn on scientific testing." Jesse J. Norris, Who Can Testify About Lab Results After Melendez-Diaz and Bullcom-ing?: Surrogate Testimony and the Confrontation Clause, 38 Am. J.Crim. L. 375, 377 (2011). However, the results of scientific testing, such as the urinalysis performed here, are "not uniquely immune from the risk of manipulation." Melendes-Diaz,
T 37 Given the increasing use of testimonial forensic evidence-and the possibility that such evidence could be analyzed incorrectly-it is important that courts maintain the historical right of an accused to cross-examine witnesses who present testimonial evidence. The problems reported at toxicology labs in general and the Colorado Department of Health toxicology lab in particular highlight the need to adhere to the traditional guarantee of confrontation. "[The analyst who provides false results may, under oath in open court, reconsider his false testimony." Id. at 819,
138 A supervisor who signs off after reviewing data puts a "rubber stamp" on the report.
€39 In this case, the majority concludes that Burbach was not a surrogate for the technician who analyzed Marshall's urine sample because she testified to her own involvement in the process and signed the report herself. Maj. op. 118. The majority reasons that Burbach's review of technicians' data reports and her signature on the final report provide a sufficient connection with the results of Marshall's urinalysis such that Burbach's testimony satisfies the requirements of the Confrontation Clause. Id. The majority cites cases from other courts that "have found that supervisor testimony satis
1 40 In my view, Burbach's review does not substitute for the testimony of a technician who received Marshall's sample, performed the testing, and observed the results. Bur-bach testified that she did not know which technicians performed the testing and could not tell from the form she reviewed who they were. She testified that she based her certification on her expectation that the technicians had followed laboratory procedures but had no way of knowing whether they actually did follow procedures. Her supervision thus consisted of reviewing machine-generated reports in large batches, assuming procedures had been followed if there were no notes on the reports and the data indicated the machines were working properly, and "rubber stamping" the reports. Although, unlike the analyst in Bullcoming, Burbach's signature appeared on the reports as a certifier, she testified as to the contents of a lab report without actually sereening or observing the sereening of a blood sample. Her testimony raises the same constitutional concerns as the testimony of the Bullcoming analyst, who also testified about results without performing or observing the test that generated those results.
141 The "text of the Sixth Amendment does not suggest any open-ended exceptions from the confrontation requirement to be developed by the courts." Bullcoming,
Although the Confrontation Clause issue is dispositive, I also address the majority's holding that Burbach's testimony satisfied section 16-3-309(5) because she "accomplished" the urinalysis by reviewing the data and signing the final report. Maj. op. 1 28.
{ 43 Section 16-83-809(5) allows for reports from a forensic laboratory to be received in court "in the same manner and with the same force and effect as if the employee or technician . who accomplished the requested analysis" testified in person. § 16-3-309(5) (emphasis added). The majority defines "accomplish" as "to execute fully: perform, achieve, fulfill." Maj. op. 21. Under this definition, the majority concludes, Bur-bach "accomplished" the urinalysis because she generated the final report. Id. 123.
1 44 Section 16-8-809(5) allows either party to request that the employee or technician testify in person. The legislature included the provision that a technician would testify on request in section 16-8-809(5) to protect the constitutional rights of the accused to confront the witness against her face to face. SeeHearing on H.B. 1881 Before the House Judiciary Committee, 54th General Assembly, 2d Reg. Sess., Feb. 14, 1984 (hearing tape 84-9 5:55 p.m.-7:00 pm.). The bill's sponsor, Representative Don Mielke, noted that although the legislature's goal in enacting the statute was to make it easier to admit lab reports, the provision allowing the accused to request that the technician testify served as a "constitutional safeguard" ensuring that the rights of the accused were protected. Hearing on H.B. 1381 before the Senate Judiciary Committee, 54th General Assembly, 2d Reg. Sess. Feb. 29, 1984 (hearing tape 84-13 4:84 p.m.-4:50 p.m.).
1 45 A technician who performed a forensic test testifies as a percipient witness who perceived the results of the test through his or her own senses. See Mueller & Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 6:6. To hold otherwise places a higher value on the convenience of state laboratory employees over the protection of the accused's confrontation rights and undermines the purpose of this statute, which is to preserve these rights.
146 The majority's conclusion stretches the meaning of "accomplish" to encompass a supervisor who signed off on a final report and performed no part of the urinalysis test. In my view, the person who "accomplished" the urinalysis according to the plain meaning of the word is the person who performed the test. Burbach did not perform any step of the urinalysis. Hence, I would hold that Burbach's testimony was not sufficient to satisfy section 16-3-309(5), and I respectfully dissent from Part III of the majority opinion.
I am authorized to state that Justice BOAT-RIGHT joins in the concurrence in part and the dissent in part.
. The People appear to concede, and the majority agrees, that the report in this case was testimonial. Maj. op. 115.
. '"[LJaboratory error and operator error exist even with the most well-established or unassailable scientific method." See Pamela R. Metzger, Cheating the Constitution, 59 Vand. L.Rev. 475, 494 (2006). A report by the National Academy of Sciences stated that forensic analyses are often handled by "poorly trained technicians" who might exaggerate the accuracy of their methods. Solomon Moore, Science Found Wanting in Nation's Crime Labs, NY. Times, Feb. 4, 2009, at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/05/us/05 forensics.html. Forensic science can also be discredited. As an example, comparative bullet lead analysis was discredited by the National Academy of Sciences in 2004, in a study stating that decades of FBI court testimony linking a particular bullet to an accused's gun should be considered misleading. John Solomon, FBI's ForensicTest Full of Holes, Wash. Post, Nov. 18, 2007, http://www. content/article/2007/1 1/1 7/AR2007111701681. html.
. Innocence Project, http:/www.innocence project.org/Content/DNA_Exonerations _Nation-wide.php (last visited June 26, 2013). Another study of 200 criminal exonerations found that faulty forensic evidence was the second leading type of evidence (after eyewitness identification) featured at trials that had resulted in wrongful convictions. Brandon L. Garrett, Judging Innocence, 108 Colum. L.Rev. 55, 59, 81 (2008). A different study of 137 exonerees' trial transcripts "found invalid forensic science testimony was not just common but prevalent." Brandon L. Garrett & Peter J. Neufeld, Invalid Forensic Science Testimony and Wrongful Convictions, 95 Va. L.Rev. 1, 14 (2009).
. Investigation Report, Office of the Attorney General, Mar. 18, 2013, available at http://local tvkdvr.files.wordpress.com/201 3/06/msec-letter- and-report.pdf.
. News reports identified Burbach as the supervisor. She resigned her position as supervisor of the state toxicology lab shortly before the report was released to the state attorneys general. Eli Stokols, Report: Former State Lab Supervisor Involved in Possible Cover-Up, Fox 31 Denver (June 9, 2013, 7:01 p.m., updated June 10, 2013, 9:34 p.m.), http:/kdvr.com/2013/ 06/09/report-
. See Norris, Who Can Testify About Lab Results After Melendez-Diaz and Bullcoming?, 38 Am. J.Crim. L. at 401; see also Pendergrass v. State,
. See United States v. Summers,
