Defendant appeals by right his jury-trial convictions in four separate cases, all of which were joined for trial. In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011607-FC, defendant was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC I), MCL 750.520b(1)(f). 1 In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011875-FC, defendant was convicted of two counts of CSC I, MCL 750.520b(1)(e) (Count 1), and MCL 750.520b(1)(f) (Count 2). 2 In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011944-FC, defendant was convicted of third-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC III), MCL 750.520d(1)(a). 3 In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-012819-FH, defendant was convicted of CSC III, MCL 750.520d(1)(b). 4 Defendant was acquitted in a fifth, separate case. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
i
Defendant first argues that he was denied his right to a fair trial when he was forced to appear in court with
*186
an unshaven face, wearing leg shackles, and surrounded by armed guards in the courtroom during the first two days of trial. We review a trial court’s decision to shackle a defendant for an abuse of discretion under the totality of the circumstances.
People v Dixon,
A
Included within the right to a fair trial, absent extraordinary circumstances, is the right to be free of shackles or handcuffs in the courtroom.
Dixon,
B
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion with respect to defendant’s personal appearance. It is true that a criminal defendant generally has the right to appear before the court “ ‘with the appearance, dignity, and self-respect of a free and innocent man....’”
People v Shaw,
c
Defendant also refers in his statement of the questions presented to his appearance in court “surrounded
*188
by armed guards.” Defendant has abandoned this issue by failing to provide any analysis in the text of his brief on appeal. MCR 7.212(C)(7);
People v Anderson,
n
Defendant next argues that he was denied the constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. Although the trial court rejected his motion, defendant preserved his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel by moving for a new trial or
Ginther
5
hearing in the court below.
People v Sabin (On Second Remand),
In
People v Carbin,
A
Defendant first contends that defense counsel’s failure to meet with him during the time between the preliminary examination and the first day of trial amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel. However, the record reveals that defense counsel was prepared for trial, displayed an adequate knowledge of the evidence, and was fully prepared to cross-examine the prosecution’s witnesses. We cannot conclude that counsel’s performance in this regard fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
Toma,
B
Defendant next contends that several strategic decisions made by his trial attorney constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. Specifically, defendant asserts that defense counsel should have retained independent expert witnesses to review the work of the prosecution’s DNA experts, that defense counsel improperly cross-examined two of the victims, and that defense counsel should not have waived his
*190
opening statement. An attorney’s decision whether to retain witnesses, including expert witnesses, is a matter of trial strategy.
People v Ackerman,
In addition, we note that irrespective of whether defense counsel’s decision concerning whether to retain independent experts was proper trial strategy, defendant has merely speculated that an independent expert could have provided favorable testimony. In other words, defendant has failed to show that the retention of an independent expert would have altered the outcome of the lower court proceedings.
Carbin,
*191 c
Defendant contends that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to object to defendant’s appearance in court with a “wild beard” and leg shackles. As we have already stated, defendant cannot show that the shackles prejudiced him because the jury never saw them.
Horn,
hi
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred by accepting waivers of arraignment by mail, thus denying him the right to engage in plea negotiations. Defendant waived formal arraignment on the informations and pleaded “not guilty” to the charges when he and his attorney signed waiver forms and provided them to the trial court. The trial court properly accepted the waivers and did not deny defendant any of his pretrial rights in this respect. See MCR 6.113(C). Further, we note that defendant’s contention that he had the “right” to engage in plea negotiations with the prosecution lacks merit. As our Supreme Court has noted, “neither this Court nor the United States Supreme Court has recognized that the parties have a right to present a plea.”
People v Grove,
IV
Next, defendant argues that the trial court improperly exceeded the sentencing guidelines by sentencing him to 40 to 60 years in prison for Count 2 in Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011875-FC. The offense for which defendant was convicted, and which gave rise to this sentencing issue, occurred in August 1989. Therefore, the former judicial sentencing guidelines promulgated by the Michigan Supreme Court would normally apply in this case. MCL 769.34(1);
People v Reynolds,
In cases such as this, we review the trial court’s sentencing of an habitual offender for an abuse of discretion.
Hansford,
Defendant’s criminal history and underlying felonies showed that he could not conform his conduct to the laws of society, and the sentence imposed by the trial
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court was within the statutory limits established by the Legislature.
Id.
Defendant’s criminal history at the time he committed the offense at issue showed that he had committed prior violent sexual assaults. With respect to the felony giving rise to the challenged sentence, itself, defendant attacked the victim while she was alone in a field at night. He brutally beat her by punching and hitting her in the face, and he choked her before throwing her to the ground and tying her hands and feet so she could not escape. Defendant threatened to kill the victim and informed her that she would soon be dead. In addition, defendant held a knife to the victim’s throat, and forced her to perform fellatio after penetrating her on two separate occasions with his penis. Defendant then left the victim alone, naked, and tied up in a field. The Legislature has prescribed a sentence of “imprisonment for life or for any term of years” for CSC I, MCL 750.520b(2)(a), and has likewise specified that upon sentencing a defendant as a third-offense habitual offender, “[i]f the subsequent felony is punishable upon a first conviction by imprisonment for life, the court... may sentence the person to imprisonment for life or for a lesser term,” MCL 769.11(1)(b). In light of the nature of the sentencing offense, and given defendant’s criminal history at the time, we conclude that the sentence of 40 to 60 years in prison did not violate the principle of proportionality. See
Coy,
v
Defendant also argues that the trial court improperly considered his lack of remorse during sentencing. Specifically, defendant argues that the trial court improperly based its sentencing decision on his assertion of innocence. “A sentencing court cannot base a sentence
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even in part on a defendant’s refusal to admit guilt.”
People v Dobek,
vi
Defendant has raised certain additional claims of error in his supplemental brief, filed in propria persona. We address these issues seriatim.
A
Defendant first contends in his supplemental brief that several laboratory reports containing the results of DNA testing should not have been admitted into evidence under Federal Rules of Evidence 1002 and 1003. As an initial matter, we note that this was a state prosecution in state court, and that the Federal Rules of Evidence were accordingly inapplicable. It is true that MRE 1002 and 1003 — like FRE 1002 and 1003 — govern the requirement of an original document and the ad
*195
missibility of duplicate documents into evidence. However, there is quite simply no evidence that the laboratory reports admitted in this case were anything other than accurate and complete copies of the originals. See MRE 1003. Defendant has not sufficiently developed this argument, and we therefore decline to consider it further. “An appellant may not merely announce his position and leave it to this Court to discover and rationalize the basis for his claims, nor may he give only cursory treatment with little or no citation of supporting authority.”
People v Kelly,
B
Defendant also contends that the trial court erred by admitting the laboratory reports over his objection in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC 6 because the reports constituted inadmissible hearsay. Defendant asserts that the reports were not admissible pursuant to MRE 803(6) as business records. He also argues that because foundation witness Allisa Gindlesperger did not prepare the reports herself, she was unqualified to provide foundation testimony as a “custodian or other qualified witness.” We conclude that the reports constituted inadmissible hearsay, and were admitted in error.
At trial there was no dispute that the contents of the laboratory reports amounted to hearsay evidence. MRE 801 and 802. But the trial court admitted the records under MRE 803(6), which excepts from the hearsay rule
*196 [a] memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form, of acts, transactions, occurrences, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses, made at or near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge, if kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, all as shown by the testimony of the custodian or other qualified witness ... unless the source of information or the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness.
Our Supreme Court has made clear that a laboratory report prepared by a nontestifying analyst “is, without question, hearsay.”
People v McDaniel,
c
Defendant lastly contends that the admission of the hearsay laboratory reports in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him. We agree.
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The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment bars the admission of testimonial hearsay unless the declarant is unavailable and the defendant has had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.
Crawford v Washington,
In
People v Lonsby,
We acknowledge that because the other members of the
Lonsby
panel concurred in the result only,
Lonsby
is not binding precedent. See
Fogarty v Dep’t of Transportation,
Similar to the facts of
Lonsby
and
Melendez-Diaz,
in the instant case, DNA testing was conducted and it resulted in the generation of laboratory reports that were used against defendant at trial. Just as the non-testifying laboratory analysts in
Melendez-Diaz
knew that their affidavits would later be used in criminal proceedings to establish that the defendant in that case had possessed cocaine, it is clear to us that the nontestifying analyst who generated the reports in the present case must have known that the purpose was to ultimately establish the perpetrator’s identity through DNA evidence. Although the witnesses who actually testified concerning the laboratory reports at issue here had basic knowledge concerning DNA testing and the methods used to prepare the reports in general, they had not personally conducted the testing, had not personally examined the evidence collected from the victims, and had not personally reached any of the scientific conclusions contained in the reports. In short, the laboratory reports admitted in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC constituted testimonial hearsay,
Lonsby,
Of course, although defense counsel did object to the admission of the laboratory reports on the ground that they were inadmissible under the rules of evidence, counsel did not object to the admission of the reports on Confrontation Clause grounds. Therefore, defendant’s Confrontation Clause argument was not preserved,
People v Bauder,
After reviewing the record, we are compelled to conclude that the improperly admitted laboratory reports were decisive to the outcome of defendant’s trial. Taken together, the DNA laboratory reports far and away constituted the single most condemning piece of evidence introduced against defendant in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC. Unlike Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-012819-FH, in
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which defendant admitted that he had solicited the victim for sex, defendant never admitted to any contact whatsoever with the victims in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC. No other physical evidence linked defendant to the crimes. Indeed, only the DNA evidence contained in the hearsay laboratory reports tied defendant to the victims in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC. Albeit in a different context, this Court has recognized the “significant possibility” that a jury might attribute preemptive or undue weight to improperly admitted DNA evidence.
People v Coy,
We also believe that the erroneous admission of the testimonial hearsay evidence affected the fairness and integrity of defendant’s trial.
Id.
at 764. There simply was no other independent and properly admitted evidence of defendant’s guilt sufficient to erase or overcome the overwhelming taint of the improperly admitted hearsay reports. See
Coy,
*201
Given the preserved evidentiary error and outcome-determinative plain constitutional error discussed earlier, we must reverse defendant’s convictions and sentences in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC. In general, the constitutional principle of double jeopardy does not bar reprosecution after a defendant’s original conviction has been reversed on appeal.
Green v United States,
Defendant’s convictions and sentences in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011875-FC and 06-012819-FH are affirmed. Defendant’s convictions and sentences in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC are reversed.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011607-FC, defendant was sentenced as a third-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.11, to life imprisonment.
In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011875-FC, defendant was sentenced as a third-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.11, to life imprisonment for Count 1 and to 40 to 60 years in prison for Count 2.
In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-011944-FC, defendant was sentenced as a third-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.11, to 10 to 30 years in prison.
In Kent Circuit Court Case No. 06-012819-FH, defendant was sentenced as a fourth-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to 20 to 40 years in prison.
People v Ginther,
Unlike the laboratory reports admitted in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011875-FC and 06-012819-FH, which were prepared by analysts who did testify at trial, a nontestifying analyst prepared the laboratory reports admitted in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC.
In contrast to Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011607-FC and 06-011944-FC, the laboratory analysts who conducted the DNA testing *201 and prepared the laboratory reports in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011875-FC and 06-012819-FH did testify at trial. We perceive no evidentiary or Confrontation Clause error with respect to the admission of the laboratory reports in Kent Circuit Court Case Nos. 06-011875-FC and 06-012819-FH.
