Opinion by
Defendant, Steve Martinez, Jr., appeals the judgment of conviction on one count of vehicular homicide-driving under the influence (DUI), and the eight-year sentence to the Department of Corrections imposed on his conviction. We affirm.
I. Background
On the night of January 31, 2005, defendant and three other teenagers, including C.B., had beеn drinking alcohol at defendant's grandmother's home when defendant volunteered to drive C.B. to a fast food restaurant. As defendant drove along, a police officer observed that defendant's vehicle had an open gas tank door, was speeding, and was braking excessively at a stoplight. The officer susрected that the driver was drunk and turned on his vehicle's emergency lights and siren. Rather than pull over, defendant's vehicle accelerated onto the highway.
Shortly thereafter, defendant's vehicle collided with a tractor-truck stopped at the bottom of a highway exit ramp. The officer arrived at the seеne within thirty seconds of the collision. C.B. was airlifted to the hospital, but died the following day from injuries incurred in the collision.
Defendant, who also was seriously injured, was transported to a hospital. Because the pursuing officer had probable cause to suspect defendant was driving under the influence of alcohol, two nurses obtained blood samples from defendant. Chematox Laboratories analyzed the alcohol content of the samples.
The state charged defendant with vehieu-lar homicide-driving under the influence, a class three felony in violation of section 18-3-106(1)(b)(I), C.R.S.2010; vehicular homicide-reckless driving, a class four felony in violation of section 18-8-106(1)(a), CRS. 2010; and driving under restraint, a misdemeanor in violation of section 42-2-138, C.R.$.2010.
Defendant was deemed incompetent to proceed to trial for a period of approximately two years due to head injuries he suffered in the collision. He was restored to competency in 2007, and his case was tried in March 2008.
At trial, the prosecution called Sarah Ur-fer, an employee of Chematox, who was qualified without objection as an expert in forensic toxicology. Urfer testified that the Colorado Department of Health annually certified Chematox Laboratories. Urfer also tеstified about Chematox's calibration and testing procedures and the process it used to test defendant's blood samples. However, Urfer did not personally test or supervise the testing of defendant's blood samples. She identified exhibits 12 and 18, Chema-tox's laboratory reports for the two blood kits containing defendant's samples. The exhibits reflected defendant's blood aleohol content at two different times after the accident: .118 at 1:10 a.m., and .097 at 1:55 a.m.
Defendant objected to the admission of the exhibits on grounds of hearsay and lack of foundation. The prosecution argued that the exhibits were admissible pursuant to seсtion 16-3-809(5), C.R.S.2010. That section provides:
Any report or copy thereof or the findings of the criminalistics laboratory shall be received in evidence in any court ... in the same manner and with the same force and effect as if the employee or technician of the criminalisties laboratory who accomplished the requested analysis ... 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 ten days before the date of such criminal trial
§ 16-8-309(5). Defendant argued that the statute was inapplicable because Chematox was a private business and not a state-run criminalistiecs laboratory, defendant's counsel *1200 stating only: "It is the eriminalisties laboratory. This is a private business." The court found that Chematox was a criminalistics laboratory within the meaning of the statute and admitted exhibits 12 and 13, pursuant to section 16-8-309(5).
Urfer then opined, based on the blood aleohol content set forth in the reports and extrapolating from that data, that defendant had a blood alcohol content of .148 at the time of the collision. Defendant did not object to her opinion.
The jury returned guilty verdicts on the сharges of vehicular homicide-DUI, and the lesser included offense of careless driving resulting in death. The court merged the careless driving charge and entered judgment on the vehicular homicide-DUI conviction. The court sentenced defendant to eight years in the custody of the Department of Corrections (DOC) and five years mandatory parole.
II. Admission of Laboratory Findings
On appeal, defendant contends that the trial court erred in admitting exhibits 12 and 13 because they were prepared by a private laboratory, and because they were admitted without the testimony of the testing technician in violation of defendant's right to confrontatiоn. We disagree with both contentions.
A. Private Laboratory
"We review de novo a trial court's interpretation of a statute governing the admissibility of a particular type of evidence." People v. Hill,
Defendant argues that the use of the words "the" and "criminalistiecs" in the first phrase of section 16-8-309(5) ("Any report or copy thereof or the findings of the eriminal-istics laboratory ..."), indicates that the statute applies only to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) or other state-run criminalistics laboratories that are part of local law enforcement agencies, and not to other private laboratories. We disagree.
As defendant correctly states, the phrase "the criminalistics laboratory" is not defined in the statute, nor do the parties refer us to any case that has defined the term. Thus, we must interpret the statutory language.
The interpretation of a statute is a question of law, which we review de novo. Hendricks v. People,
If the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, we do not engage in further statutory analysis. Romero,
A statutory interpretation leading to an illogical or absurd result will not be followed, and we avoid constructions that are at odds with the legislative scheme. See Peoplе v. Tixier,
The subject matter of section 16-38-8309 is the "admissibility of laboratory test results" in any criminal case under various cireum-stances, as its title suggests. As described in People v. Mojica-Simental,
Moreover, Webster's Third New International Dictionary 587 (2002) defines "crimi-nalistics" as "scientific crime detection," and "the application of techniques from the criminal sciences and psychology to the problems of criminal identification." Nothing in these definitions limits the practice of "criminalis-tics" to state-run or local law enforcemеnt laboratories.
It is common knowledge, and we assume the legislature was equally aware, that there are many privately operated laboratories that engage in ceriminalistics analysis. If the statute were intended to exclude test results from privately operated laboratories, the legislature certainly could have expressly so stated.
Taking into account the plain language of the statute and its ordinary meaning, and interpreting all parts of the statute in a consistent, harmonious, and sensible manner, we conclude that the reference to "the erimi-nalistics laboratory" in the statute is only a refеrence to the forensic laboratory that performed the test, the results of which are being offered into evidence. See People v. Moses, 64 904, 908 (Colo.App.2002) ("Forensic laboratory reports are admissible in criminal proceedings without establishing the usual foundation, absent a request that the techniсian be made available at trial."). Defendant's interpretation is not a reasonable application of the statute, nor is it consistent with the plain language or meaning of the statute.
Furthermore, in the context of this case, where defendant was charged with violation of section 18-8-106(1)(b)(I), vehicular homicide while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, the statute provides for a presumption of intoxication if an analysis of the defendant's blood reveals over 0.08 grams of alcohol per one hundred milliliters of blood. The statute provides that the test of the blood shall be administered in accordance with thе rules and regulations of the state board of health. § 18-3-106(4)(c), C.R.8.2010.
Regulations of the Colorado Department of Health and Environment, in turn, establish minimum standards for certification and approval of entities utilized for alcohol testing. Laboratory Services Division Reg. 1.1, 5 Code Colo. Regs. 1005-2:1. The regulations define a "certified lаboratory" as "a laboratory certified by the Department to perform analytical testing of bodily fluids for alcohol." Id. Reg. 1.5. Ulfer's testimony established that Chematox was a "certified laboratory." No provision in the regulations concerning certified laboratories requires that the facility be state run or statе funded.
We thus reject defendant's argument that the trial court erred in admitting exhibits 12 and 13 because Chematox is not a "state-run" facility.
B. Right of Confrontation
Defendant also contends that admission of exhibits 12 and 18 violated his right to confrontation because the laboratory technician who performed the tests did not testify, and that we must review this claim under the constitutional harmless error standard. However, defendant did not raise this constitutional argument before the trial court, arguing only that the laboratory did not meet the statutory requirement. Nonetheless, denial of a right to confrontation may be raised on appeal under the doctrine of plain errоr. People v. Vigil,
Defendant first argues that the admission of the exhibits pursuant to section 16-8-309(5) deprived him of his right to confrontation because the statute places the burden to request the laboratory technician's presence at trial on the defendаnt rather than the prosecution. However, in Hinojos-Mendoza v. People,
Defendant contends that the rationale of Hinojos-Mendoza may no longer apply after the decision by the United States Supreme Court in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, -- U.S. --,
Defendant also argues that he did not knowingly and voluntarily waive his right of confrontation because his counsel "reasonably" interpreted section 16-3-809(5) to apply only where the lab report was issued by a state-run laboratory. We reject this contention.
As we concluded above, the limited application proposed by defendant is not a reasonable interpretation of the statutory language. A defense counsel's erroneous and unreasonable interpretation of section 16-8-309(5) might give a client "a colorable claim for malpractiсe"; however, it does not render involuntary a defendant's waiver of his confrontation rights. Cropper,
III. Sentence
Defendant contends that the trial court erred in sentencing him to eight years in the custody of the DOC with five years mandatory parole. He argues that the court "overlooked several mitigating circumstances," and "relied upon improper evidence," thereby abusing its discretion. We disagree.
"A trial court has broad discretion over sentencing decisions, and will not be overturned absent a clear abuse of that discretion." Lopez v. People,
Contrary to his assertion, ample evidence in the record indicates that the court considered defendant's youth, criminal history, and time confinеd to the state hospital.
Defendant's reliance on Townsend v. Burke,
Because the sentence imposed is within the range required by law, based on appropriate
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considerations as reflected in the record, and factually supported by the cireumstances of the case, the sentence did not constitute an abuse of discretion. See People v. Zuniga,
The judgment of conviction and sentence are affirmed.
