A jury convicted defendant, Bernard Albert Steppe, of second degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)),
Facts
During a 911 call on January 8, 2007, the attempted murder victim was heard to say that he and others had been shot by defendant, after the latter threatened to kill “all of [them]” and two of them were “down.” In the background, the murder victim could be heard asking for help and saying he was going to die. Bullets had been fired into the front and back doors of a building which housed the attempted murder victim’s law office. The attempted murder victim told arriving police that defendant had shot him, the murder victim and a female. Defendant had worked as the attempted murder victim’s paralegal and he was living at the next-door bail bonds building rent free. The female and the attempted murder victim had been in the latter’s office, cleaning, and the murder victim had been hired by the new owner of the building to help clean. Defendant, who was being evicted from the bail bonds building, came to the door of the next-door building with a gun, waved it at all of them, pointed it at the murder victim and said he was going to shoot him. The murder victim and the attempted murder victim closed the door, but were shot by defendant in the process. The murder victim had been shot in the chest, the attempted murder victim in the lower right abdomen and on the left side of his face and the female in the thigh. Police followed out into the desert fresh shoe tracks from the building from whence defendant had been evicted. There were indicators that a person had gone down on his or her hands and knees and disturbed the dirt. A gun with seven expended shell casings inside was found buried in this area. The police stopped a car being driven by defendant nearby. As the police approached the car, defendant said, “You caught me.” There were what appeared to be blood splatters on defendant’s hands and jacket. The soles of the shoes he wore resembled the
Defendant testified that he shot the attempted murder victim in self-defense and he denied inflicting the fatal shot to the murder victim and shooting the female. He claimed that he buried $5,000 in the desert, but not the gun, so the police must have dug up the money and replaced it with the gun.
Issues and Discussion
1. Admission of DNA Analysis and Defendant’s Right to Confrontation
A DNA analyst for the San Bernardino County Crime Lab testified in general about DNA testing. She testified that analysts in the lab “obtain DNA typing results that have a numerical value from [items at the crime scene] and we compare those numerical results [with those taken from individuals present at the crime scene]. They either are the same or they are different.” She also testified that “chemicals and reagents ... are used during the analysis” and the analyst “performs the actual extraction [of the DNA] and DNA typing analysis and comes to interpretation, conclusion, and writes a report.” However, neither she nor any other DNA analyst testified about the method by which the raw data used by analysts to conclude that there was a match was obtained—whether this raw data was computer generated
The technical reviewer of the DNA analysis done on bloodstains and suspected bloodstains found on defendant’s clothing and on a door at the crime scene testified that her job was to “review ... all the notes, data, and the report of the DNA analyst and . . . ensure that the results are accurate and the conclusions are appropriate for th[e] items [tested]. It also includes doing an independent analysis of the data and interpretation and arriving at results and then comparing those results to the analyst’s results to . . . ensure that it is accurate and the conclusions are appropriate for those items.” She testified that she was the technical reviewer for the analyst who analyzed the bloodstains and suspected bloodstains on defendant’s clothing and the door. She was asked if she reviewed all of the clothing/door analyst’s raw data regarding those items and she said she did.
After the parties fully briefed this case, the United States Supreme Court decided Williams. In Williams,
As is pertinent to our discussion, the high court held, “Even if the [outside lab’s] report had been introduced for its truth, we would nevertheless conclude that there was no Confrontation Clause violation. . . . [f ] The abuses that the Court has identified as prompting the adoption of the Confrontation Clause shared the following two characteristics; (a) they involved out-of-court statements having the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct and (b) they involved formalized statements such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions. In all but one of the post-Crawford cases in which a Confrontation Clause violation has been found, both of these characteristics were present. [Citations.][
After Williams was decided, the California Supreme Court decided Lopez. In Lopez, a criminologist testified that he reviewed a lab report authored by a nontestifying colleague who had analyzed the defendant’s blood sample. (Lopez, supra, 55 Cal.4th. at p. 574.) The criminologist testified that in the report, his colleague had concluded that the defendant had a blood-alcohol level of 0.09 percent. (Ibid.) However, the criminologist also testified that
The court noted that two pages of the colleague’s report showed computer-generated numerical results of two analyses of the defendant’s blood sample (showing blood-alcohol level of 0.0906 and 0.0908 percent), which bore the colleague’s initials, but “no statement by [him], express or implied, appears on . . . those pages.” (Lopez, supra,
Another page of the report contained the number assigned to the defendant’s blood sample, which had been written down by an assistant and initialed by the colleague, and the result the colleague derived from his analysis, which had been written by him. (Lopez, supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 583-584.) The Supreme Court noted, “Based on [the assignment of a particular number to the defendant’s blood sample] and the machine-generated results for [that sample, the criminalist] gave his independent opinion—reflecting his ‘separate abilities as a[n] . . . analyst’—that defendant’s blood sample contained 0.09 percent alcohol. [The assistant’s] notation linking defendant’s name to [the] blood sample . . . was admitted for its truth. [Citation.] Thus, the critical question here is whether that notation is testimonial hearsay and hence could not be used by the prosecution at trial. [f] The notation in question does not meet the high court’s requirement that to be testimonial the out-of-court statement must have been made with formality or solemnity. . . . [N]either [the assistant] nor [the colleague] signed, certified or swore to the truth of the
Both Williams and Lopez persuade us that the trial court’s overruling of defendant’s objection was not error. There are two aspects of the technical reviewer’s testimony that defendant’s objection could be viewed as encompassing, i.e., her reference to the raw data and her reference to the conclusion reached by the clothing/door analyst, which was the same as the conclusion she reached. As to the first, Lopez specifically held that a machine printout is not subject to confrontation analysis. Here, it was never established how the raw data was generated, or by whom. Defendant cites no authority that testimony concerning raw data, by an expert subject to cross-examination, violates the confrontation clause.
As to the second aspect, the technical reviewer’s reference during her testimony to the conclusion reached by the clothing/door analyst, we note,
We agree with the People that the technical reviewer’s brief reference to the clothing/door analyst’s reports and her reliance on the raw data
We also agree with the People that even if this evidence had been admitted in error, it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Aside from the almost overwhelming nature of the evidence against defendant, and the obvious weakness of his convoluted account of the crimes, the people analyst testified that the murder victim’s DNA was on defendant’s left ring finger and he was a minor contributor to the DNA on defendant’s middle left finger and left thumb. Additionally, she testified that the murder victim was a major contributor to the DNA found on the grip of the gun and defendant was a minor contributor. The evidence at issue—that the murder victim’s DNA was found in suspected and actual bloodstains on defendant’s clothing and on the door—was consistent with this and was not inconsistent with defendant’s claim that the gun accidentally went off, hitting the murder victim in the hand after defendant hit him and took the gun from him.
We decline defendant’s invitation to engage in unfounded speculation by assuming that the prosecution had something to hide when he did not call the clothing/door analyst as a witness.
2., 3.*
The trial court is directed to amend the indeterminate abstract of judgment to show that the terms for enhancements for both crimes for discharge of a handgun causing death (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)) are 25 years to life, not 25 years as the abstract currently states. The trial court is further directed to amend the determinate abstract to show that defendant was convicted of attempted murder, not attempted first degree murder,
Hollenhorst, J., and Miller, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 15, 2013, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 22, 2013, S209540.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
At one point during her testimony, she said she “look[ed] at the data on the computer .... H] ... HD ... I have here in front of me ... an electropherogram. It is a computer printout of the actual DNA data the DNA typing profile.” We note with interest that in his opening brief, defendant states that “the raw data [is] collected from a genetic analyzer” and “the raw data [is] generated by the machine ....” Thus, defendant attempts to school this court in how DNA testing is done and what inaccuracies can occur in the process. His efforts are in vain. The time to introduce these facts was below, when the objection was made to the trial court. We cannot conclude that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s objection based on facts not disclosed to it. Additionally, we note that defendant failed to cross-examine the analyst below about these potential inaccuracies, thereby waiving the matter.
We also note that Williams v. Illinois has a solution for the problems of inaccuracy defendant addresses: “[Requiring that the lab analyst or analysts who produced the DNA profile be called as prosecution witnesses is neither sufficient nor necessary to prevent such errors. Since samples may be mixed up or contaminated at many points along the way from a crime scene to the lab, calling one or more lab analysts will not necessarily catch all such mistakes. . . . What is needed is for the trier of fact to make sure that the evidence, whether direct or circumstantial, rules out the possibility of such mistakes at every step along the way. And in the usual
See text on page 1120, post.
Although in response to the prosecutor’s question to the technical reviewer, “You reviewed all of [the clothing/door analyst’s] raw data?” the technical reviewer said, “Yes,” she later testified concerning one of the stains on the door, after reviewing the raw data she had with her at trial, that she noted she did not “review[] the [clothing/door analyst’s] raw data” at that moment. Of course, this suggests that each was working off an independent set of raw data.
As to the match for one, she testified, “I am referring to my report, [the clothing/door analyst’s] report.”
She also testified that DNA from the victim of the count of attempted murder for which defendant was acquitted was found in a suspected bloodstain on the door and for one of the other suspected bloodstains on the door, the attempted murder victim could not be excluded as a minor donor. However, because defendant was acquitted of attempting to murder the former victim and he claimed to have shot the latter victim in self-defense we do not include these results in our discussion because they could not possibly have prejudiced defendant.
During oral argument, appellate counsel for defendant asserted that we should not rely on the holdings in Williams because, he contended, five justices disagreed with it. We note, however, that the fifth justice, Justice Thomas, concurred in the judgment because, he concluded, the report lacked the formality requisite to be considered testimonial for confrontation clause purposes, a position we reach in this case. (Williams, supra, 567 U.S. at p._[
Thus, defendant’s assertion, during oral argument, that both factors must be present is unfounded. Additionally, the California Supreme Court in People v. Lopez (2012)
For the sake of thoroughness, the DNA testing of the semen in the vagina swabs occurred first, then the results were placed in a state DNA database, which contained the defendant’s DNA results from a previous case, and the computer showed a match between the two. (Williams, supra,
In People v. Geier (2007)
Justice Sotomayor dissented in Williams.
Arguably, of less applicability to the facts here were those in the companion case of Dungo, where a testifying pathologist gave his independent opinion of the cause of death based on the report of his employee-pathologist and photos that the latter had taken during the autopsy. The autopsy report was not introduced into evidence and the testifying pathologist never offered the opinion of the employee-pathologist as to the cause of death. (Dungo, supra,
The companion case of People v. Rutterschmidt (2012)
See footnote 4, ante, page 1120.
See footnote, ante, page 1116.
The jury found not true the allegation that the attempted murder was willful, deliberate and premeditated.
