The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado ex rel. Robert R. GALLAGHER, Jr., District Attorney in and for the Eighteenth Judicial District, Petitioner,
v.
The DISTRICT COURT In and For the COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, and the Honorable John P. Gately, One of the Judges Thereof, Respondents.
Supreme Court of Colorado, En Banc.
*1288 Robert R. Gallagher, Jr., Dist. Atty., Catherine DiSante, Deputy Dist. Atty., Littleton, for petitioner.
Leonard M. Chesler, Denver, for respondents.
LOHR, Justice.
In this original proceeding under C.A.R. 21, we issued a rule directing the Arapahoe County District Court to show cause why it should not be prohibited from reducing the charge against the defendant from first degree murder[1] to second degree murder[2] as a sanction for failing to preserve the victim's hands in a condition suitable for trace metal testing by the defendant. We now discharge the rule.
The defendant, Thomas Reynolds, was charged with first degree murder based on the shooting of his wife, Elaine Reynolds. The defendant's theory appears to be[3] that the victim held the pistol from which the fatal bullet was fired and that the gun discharged during a struggle in which the defendant was attempting to defend himself against an attack by his wife.
Elaine Reynolds was shot at the family home during the early morning hours of February 28, 1982. Officer Garbett of the Aurora Police Department was summoned to the scene and was in charge of the investigation. While the initial on-scene investigation was in progress, a deputy district attorney asked Garbett to obtain a trace metal test of the victim's hands. Defense counsel also requested that the police perform such a test and asked that the victim's hands be covered with bags until the analysis could be accomplished. The purpose of the requested trace metal test was to attempt to determine whether the victim had held the gun. After receiving these requests, on the morning of the same day Elaine Reynolds was shot Garbett asked the supervisor of the police department crime laboratory to perform the trace metal test. The supervisor stated that his laboratory would not conduct the examination, but also said that if Garbett wished to ask one of the laboratory workers to accomplish such an analysis as a personal favor the supervisor would not interfere. Garbett advised defense counsel on that same morning that the police department crime laboratory would not perform the test.
Bags were placed around the victim's hands at the death scene at the request of the police crime laboratory supervisor. The body was then taken to a mortuary, where an autopsy was performed.[4] No defense representative was present at the autopsy; the record does not indicate that defense counsel was notified and given an opportunity to appear. After the autopsy, the body was transported to another mortuary for embalming. A mortician began preparing the body for burial shortly after midnight on March 2, 1982. When the mortician began his work there were no bags on the victim's hands. As part of the usual procedures to prepare a body for burial, the mortician massaged the victim's hands with a solution of surgical soap and Clorox *1289 bleach to obtain better circulation of the embalming fluid and later washed and scrubbed the hands with the same solution to remove dried blood resulting from the postmortem examination. On the evening of March 2, 1982, at the request of Garbett, an Aurora Police Department crime laboratory technician performed a trace metal test on the victim's hands.
The defendant moved to dismiss the murder charge on the ground that by failing to preserve the victim's hands in a condition suitable for trace metal testing the prosecution had violated his right to due process of law. The trial court held a hearing at which Garbett, the crime laboratory supervisor, the mortician, and a Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) expert on trace metal tests gave testimony. The CBI expert explained that the trace metal test was devised to determine whether a person has held a metal object in the recent past. It is a chemical test and is based upon the scientific fact that when a human hand touches certain metals perspiration reacts with the metal and a minute layer of metal is deposited on the tissue of the hand. After a hand has been sprayed with the appropriate chemical compound and is exposed to a particular kind of light, it will fluoresce in colors that vary depending on the type of metal present.
Although in the most successful analyses it is possible to discern on the hand an image of a pattern appearing on the metal, only in approximately four percent of tests conducted under laboratory conditions on a subject who has held metal is it possible to identify the particular object that was grasped. The absence of a positive reaction does not necessarily mean that the subject has not held a metal object,[5] nor does a positive reaction necessarily mean that the object that produced it was a weapon. Where a positive reaction is obtained it is not possible to tell at what time in the recent past the subject touched the metal object. Notwithstanding these shortcomings, the CBI expert was of the opinion that such a test should be conducted in all cases where there is a question whether the subject held a metal weapon. His opinion was based principally on the fact that the four percent possibility of definite evidence that the subject held a particular weapon is too significant to ignore.
The CBI expert also testified that, although he could not state definitely the manner in which the washing of hands with the Clorox bleach and surgical soap solution would affect the trace metal test, he would expect some reaction, especially because Clorox is a strong chemical. He also noted that many soaps contain zinc, which produces its own characteristic color on trace metal testing.
The police crime laboratory supervisor's testimony, although not so detailed as that of the CBI expert, was not significantly in conflict with it. The supervisor was self-taught in trace metal testing, had engaged in periodic testing for eight to ten years for the Aurora Police Department, and had done his last testing six months earlier. He stated that over the years he had conducted about seventy-five to one hundred tests, about twenty-five percent of them in field situations. The laboratory supervisor was of the opinion that because a negative test result is not conclusive that the subject held a metal object and because a positive reaction does not necessarily establish that the source of the metal was a weapon, the test is too inconclusive to be useful. That is the reason he assigned for deciding not to conduct the trace metal test notwithstanding the requests by the investigating officer, deputy district attorney, and defense counsel.
The trial court found the prosecution's position at the motion hearing that the trace metal test has no value to be implausible, particularly in light of the long history of use of the test by the Aurora Police Department and the testimony of the CBI expert as to the validity and usefulness of *1290 the analysis. The court ruled that under the circumstances here, including the fact that the defendant relies on the theory of self-defense, the prosecution had an affirmative duty to preserve the victim's hands in a condition suitable for testing on behalf of the defendant. The court concluded that the failure to perform that duty deprived the defendant of due process of law.
As a remedy for the due process violation, the trial court ordered the charge reduced from first degree murder to second degree murder. In addition, it vacated its earlier determination that a capital offense was involved and that the proof was evident or the presumption great,[6] and set bail. The trial court also suppressed from use as evidence in the prosecution's case the results of the trace metal test conducted after the victim's hands had been cleansed by the mortician. In this original proceeding the People challenge only the order reducing the charge to second degree murder.
Although we have considered on several occasions whether due process of law was violated by prosecutorial conduct depriving a defendant of relevant evidence and the appropriate remedies for such an infringement of a defendant's constitutional rights, this case presents a novel fact pattern for application of familiar legal principles. We first address the question of whether the defendant's due process rights were violated and then consider whether the relief granted by the trial court was appropriate.
I.
In determining whether the defendant's due process rights were violated by the failure of the prosecution to conduct a trace metal test or to make the victim's body available to the defendant for testing we begin with the principles established in the seminal case of Brady v. Maryland,
that the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.
Id. at 87,
A.
The desired evidencea trace metal test of the victim's handswas not obtained before the mortician scrubbed them, so it can never be known whether such a test would have provided evidence favorable to the defendant. In such circumstances "it is not necessary that the defendant prove the exculpatory value of the evidence so long as that evidence is not merely incidental to the prosecution's case or the defendant's defense." *1291 People v. Morgan,
In order to support Thomas Reynolds' theory that Elaine Reynolds' death was caused when he struggled with her to obtain possession of the gun with which she was assaulting him, it would be valuable to the defendant to establish that his wife had held the gun. Although the evidence shows that there is only a four percent chance of a positive finding that Elaine Reynolds held the death weapon even if she did, and notwithstanding that proof of that fact would not be conclusive that the events occurred as the defendant's theory would portray them, we believe that a reasonable possibility that the evidence could have been of assistance to the defense has been established. As the CBI expert indicated, a four percent chance of determining a fact centrally significant to the defendant's theory of the case in this first degree murder prosecution is simply too significant to ignore.
B.
We also hold that the materiality criterion has been satisfied. It will never be known whether the test would have shown that Elaine Reynolds held the gun. If she did, the evidence reflects that there is a four percent chance that the trace metal test would have supported the defense claim. The defendant specifically requested performance of the test. Had the test revealed that the victim had held the pistol, this would have tended to prove or disprove a matter at issuewhether Elaine Reynolds was the aggressorand we conclude that is sufficient to meet the materiality test under the circumstances here. See People v. Holloway,
C.
Finally, we consider whether the trace metal test was suppressed by the prosecution.
This is not a case where the prosecution has failed or refused to furnish existing exculpatory material to the defense. Rather, the police were asked to perform an additional test. We have recognized that police investigators have no general duty to search out possible exculpatory evidence or to perform tests to determine marginally relevant facts that, with the benefit of hindsight, a defendant might speculate would have been of possible value to support his defense against a criminal charge. People v. Roark,
Applying these criteria to the facts here, we conclude that the police conduct was tantamount to suppression of evidence. The police laboratory had conducted trace metal tests in field situations on numerous occasions. It had the equipment and personnel to accomplish the testing. Both the prosecution and defense counsel specifically requested the test very shortly after the victim's death. See People v. Thatcher,
The trial of a criminal case is not a game of fox and hounds in which the state attempts to outwit and trap a quarry. [Citation omitted.] It is, instead, a sober search for truth, in which not only the resources of the defendant, but those readily available to the state must be put to work in aid of that search.
Under the circumstances here we conclude that at a minimum the prosecution had the duty to preserve the hands in a condition suitable for testing and to make available to the defendant an opportunity for independent trace metal testing of the victim's hands before burial. It failed to do so, with the result that the defendant has been deprived of due process of law.
II.
We next consider the appropriateness of the reduction of the charge from first degree to second degree murder as a remedy for the due process violation.
*1293 The imposition of sanctions serves the dual purposes of protecting the integrity of the truth-finding process and deterring the prosecutor and the police from destroying material evidence. People v. Garries, supra; People v. Morgan, supra; see People v. Poole, supra. In furtherance of these purposes, the trial court has broad discretion in fashioning an appropriate remedy to protect a defendant's rights where a due process violation has denied him access to evidence. People v. Holloway, supra; People v. Morgan, supra; People v. Poole, supra. That remedy, however, should be "no more restrictive than necessary to protect the defendant's right to due process." People v. Morgan, supra,
In evaluating the appropriateness of the trial court's order we note that, although the likelihood that the trace metal test would have shown that the victim held the gun is slight, such a showing would be highly material to the defendant's claim that the gun was held by the victim and discharged during a struggle. In this connection we think it important that the present case is not one where, with the benefit of hindsight and after the possibility of testing has been foreclosed, the police are faulted for failure to conduct a test that they might reasonably have rejected as having only a negligible prospect for production of useful evidence. Cf. People v. Roark, supra (failure to test the alcoholic content of blood in absence of a defense request did not violate due process where the issue of intoxication was not central to the offense charged and was not shown to be relevant or material to guilt or innocence); People v. Hedrick, supra (it was relevant to the issue of whether the police suppressed evidence that the defendant's first request for a breath sample was made nearly three months after the incident that served as a basis for the charge of driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor). Instead, not only the defense but also the prosecution requested the testing at a time when a simple testing procedure, commonly performed by this very police department in the past, could have been conducted. We find the opinion of the CBI expert to be compelling: in a case involving the serious charge of first degree murder, even a slight chance that a simple test would support the claim that the victim held the pistol is too significant to ignore. The prosecution has suggested no other way, except for the defendant's own possible testimony, that this disputed fact can be determined. Compare this case with People v. Holloway, supra, and People v. Alonzi,
We discharge the rule.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Section 18-3-102, C.R.S.1973 (1978 Repl.Vol. 8) (1982 Supp.).
[2] Section 18-3-103, C.R.S.1973 (1978 Repl.Vol. 8).
[3] Our understanding of the defendant's proposed theory of defense is taken from the briefs filed in this case and inferences from the transcript of the hearing on the defendant's motion to dismiss or suppress evidence.
[4] Officer Garbett testified that he could not remember the exact date of the autopsy but that it was either February 28, 1982, or March 1, 1982.
[5] The CBI expert testified that in only forty percent of tests conducted under laboratory conditions will a trace metal test yield positive results where the subjects have handled weapons.
[6] "All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties except for capital offenses, when the proof is evident or the presumption great." Colo. Const. Art. II, § 19.
[7] The three part analysis is described as set forth in Moore v. Illinois, supra. Although our own descriptions of the three criteria have been essentially the same, the precise language of our formulations has varied somewhat from case to case. For example, we have frequently referred to the "favorable nature of the evidence" inquiry as a test of whether the evidence is "exculpatory." People v. Garries, supra; People v. Hedrick, supra. Also, in our later cases we have not required a request by the defendant as an essential part of a showing of a due process violation, for there may be no defendant or no defense counsel at the time evidence is destroyed. People v. Morgan,
[8] Because the results of a properly conducted trace metal test in this case are unknown, this case is distinguishable from United States v. Agurs, supra, and other cases where the evidence suppressed by the prosecution is available for review or the probable content of such evidence is clear to the reviewing court. In such cases, the standard for determining materiality is whether the evidence could have affected the outcome at trial in light of the other evidence presented. See People v. Shaw,
[9] In People v. Hedrick, supra, the absence of a showing that a breath sample could be simply preserved was important to a determination that no due process violation occurred when no sample was retained for testing by the defendant.
[10] Compare the present case with People v. Hedrick, supra (it was relevant to the determination of whether evidence had been suppressed that the defendant's request for a breath sample was first made nearly three months after the breath test was conducted).
[11] The good faith or bad faith of the police in suppressing evidence is not determinative in the decision whether a due process violation has occurred. Brady v. Maryland, supra. "If the suppression of evidence results in constitutional error, it is because of the character of the evidence, not the character of the prosecutor." United States v. Agurs, supra,
[12] The evidence established that, while bagging was important to preserve the hands in a condition suitable for testing for the presence of gunpowder, it was not critical to trace metal testing. The same cannot be said of the mortician's scrubbing of the hands with the Clorox and surgical soap solution.
