Opinion
Rоosevelt Holmes appeals from a judgment after conviction by jury for murder (Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a), 189),
Appellant contends that his right to confrontation under the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution was violated because the testifying DNA experts did not personally perform all of the testing upon which they relied in reaching their opinions. We reject the contention. The forensic analysis relied on by the DNA exрerts in this case was not “testimonial” under any formulation of that term yet adopted by a majority of the United States Supreme Court justices or by the California Supreme Court. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Gretchen Lewis was killed in her apartment. She was strangled and stabbed. At her apartment, police colleсted gloves, a knife, and samples of a bloodstain, among other things. The coroner collected blood and fingernail scrapings from Lewis’s body. Police also collected DNA samples from a friend who reported Lewis missing (James Marquez) and, later, from appellant becausе Marquez said he had seen appellant in Lewis’s apartment about two weeks before she was killed.
The collected materials were subjected to DNA analysis at the Los Angeles Police Department’s Scientific Investigation Division (SID) and at two private
Three supervising criminalists from these three labs offered opinions at trial, over defense objection, based on DNA tests that they did not personally perform. They referred to notes, DNA profiles, tables of results, typed summary sheets, and laboratory reports that were prepared by nontestifying analysts. None of these documents was executed under oath. None was admitted into evidence. Each was marked for identification and most were displayed during the testimony. Each of the experts reached his or her own conclusions based, at least in part, upon the data and profiles generated by other analysts.
Moss—Knife Handle
Amber Mоss, a senior forensic scientist at the Texas Cellmark laboratory,
As a technical reviewer, it was Moss’s job to review the paperwork associated with each step of testing these samples to ensure that a gеnerally accepted protocol was followed. After verifying that protocol was followed, she looked at the data and made sure she was in agreement with the conclusions of the person who generated the report. The steps of sample testing are (1) extracting DNA from a sample; (2) quantifying the amount of DNA extracted; (3) amplifying the sample by copying the extracted DNA; (4) running the sample on a genetic analyzer machine, which generates a profile by type tags on the DNA with a laser; (5) comparing the resulting profile with the profile of known samрles to determine if they match; and (6) performing a statistical analysis by entering the profiles into a software program. Moss had personally performed these steps thousands of times on other samples.
Appellant’s counsel objected to Moss’s testimony on the grounds that it was heаrsay and violated his constitutional right to confront witnesses against him because Moss relied on tests that she did not personally perform. Appellant’s counsel cited Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts (2009) 557 U.S.
Word—Fingernail Scrapings
Charlotte Word, a technical reviewer at Cellmark’s Pennsylvania laboratory, offered the opinion that a sample from the fingernail scrapings taken from Lewis’s body contained a mixture of DNA from two individuals. The primary donor was Lewis, and the other was a male, not Marquеz. (Appellant was not yet a suspect when Word’s laboratory performed its tests.) In reaching her opinion, Word relied on the analysis of blood and fingernail scrapings performed at her laboratory by others. Like Moss, she acted as a reviewer and checked all the paрerwork for each step of testing to ensure compliance with protocol before reaching her own conclusions based on the data.
Appellant’s counsel objected to Word’s testimony by saying, “Foundation and hearsay, ongoing objection.” The trial court overrulеd the objection and said, “It is understood.”
Matthies—Glove, Fingernail Scrapings, Appellant’s Sample
Carl Matthies, a criminalist at SID, opined that a DNA sample taken from one of the gloves matched appellant’s DNA profile, that appellant could not be ruled out as a donor to the sample taken from Lewis’s fingernails, and that blood that hе found on the outside of the glove matched Lewis’s DNA profile. Matthies personally collected evidence at the crime scene. He personally performed the tests on the glove and on appellant’s sample. He also relied on the tests performed on Lewis’s blоod and fingernail scrapings by Cellmark’s Pennsylvania laboratory.
Appellant’s counsel objected to Matthies’s testimony “because Matthies didn’t actually do the testing.” The trial court overruled the objection and noted, “the running objection is known.”
DISCUSSION
Preservation of Objections
We first reject respondent’s contention that appellant forfeited his confrontation objections. In order to preserve an evidentiary objection on appeal, a party must make a timely objection in the trial court “so stated as to make
Defense counsel expressly raised a confrontation clause objection to the testimony of Moss, citing Melendez-Diaz. He was granted a running objection, which he renewed with each witness, using the shorthand statements “hearsay,” and “ongoing.” In context, the specific ground for these objections was clear. Appellant’s confrontation clause objection was not forfeited.
Confrontation Clause Analysis
Appellant contends that the experts’ reliance on notes, DNA profiles, tables of results, typed summary sheets, and laboratory reports prepared by others viоlated his confrontation rights because the documents were prepared for possible use at a criminal prosecution and were therefore within the core class of statements that the United States Supreme Court classified as “testimonial” in Crawford v. Washington (2004)
“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right... to be confronted with the witnesses against him . . . .” (U.S. Const., 6th Amend.) This clause precludes admission of any “testimonial” out-of-court statement offered against a criminal defendant, unless the witness is unavailable at trial and the defendant had a prior opportunity for cross-examination. (Crawford, supra,
In Melendez-Diaz, a chemical analyst’s affidavit was admitted as a substitute for live testimony to prоve an element of the drug trafficking offense: that the substance the defendant possessed was cocaine. Five justices agreed that the certification was “testimonial” because affidavits are within the core class of testimonial materials covered by the confrontаtion clause. (Melendez-Diaz, supra,
In Bullcoming v. New Mexico (2011)
In Williams, five justices agreed that the uncertified results of a DNA analysis, performed by nontestifying Cellmark analysts, were nontestimonial. (Williams, supra, 567 U.S. at p._[
The California Supreme Court has extracted two critical components from the “widely divergent” viеws of the United States Supreme Court
The forensic data and reports in this case lack “formality.” They are unsworn, uncertified records of objective fact. Unsworn statements that “merely record objective facts” are not sufficiently formal to be testimonial. (Dungo, supra,
The primary purpose of the materials did “pertain to criminal prosecution” because the recorded procedures were undertaken at the behest of рolice, using biological material taken from a crime scene to identify a suspect in a murder case. Some of the analysis was performed after appellant was targeted as a suspect. And the reports did not consist solely of machine-generated data. But they lacked formality and this primary purpose is immaterial under Lopez and Dungo.
It is now settled in California that a statement is not testimonial unless both criteria are met. In Lopez, the court concluded that lack of formality alone rendered the blood-alcohol report nontestimonial regardless of its primary purpose. (Lopez, supra,
Based upon existing precedent from the California and United States Supreme Courts, we must conclude that the forensic analysis relied on by the
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Yegan, Acting P. J., and Perren, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied'March 27, 2013, S208254.
Notes
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, assigned by the Chief Justiсe pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.
Each of the testifying criminalists had changed employment by the time of trial. We refer to their occupations at the time the genetic testing was conducted and reviewed.
