Norman PICKEL, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Patrick B. Burke, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and James J. Carney, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
FARMER, J.
In the world of trial evidence, DNA may well be the whole megillah. It is the single, most formidable evidence in proving many sexual offenses. Because of its scientific reliability, it is often regarded as conclusive. Once inculpatory DNA evidence is well and truly laid before the jury, a guilty verdict is all but a downhill slide on a glacier.
The admission of DNA evidence has two aspects. It demands a scientific foundation of both molecular-biochemical and statistical convention: first, a sample specimen related to a crime must be shown to *639 match the DNA of an identified person (viz., defendant); second, expert statistical testimony must quantify and explain the odds of someone other than defendant having that same DNA.[1] When both parts of the foundation have been shown to point to defendant, the effect can be overpowering. Therefore the structure of both the State's presentation and the defense's right to attack its forensic foundation, is vital. Adequate time for the defense to prepare is indispensable.
Defendant was charged with capital sexual battery. After an extensive pretrial period,[2] the State disclosed its expert for the second aspect of the DNA evidence only on the first day of trial. In a Richardson hearing the State attempted to justify its massively overdue disclosure by arguing that its population geneticist is its usual witness in such cases, indeed the only one the State has ever called for this purpose. The expert witness told the court he had testified in as many as 150 trials in Broward County. Defense counsel responded that she had never heard of him before the disclosure, did not know he would be called as a State's witness, and thus had no opportunity to take his deposition to prepare for trial. Her testimony was not rebutted.
In denying the motion for the continuance, the trial court found this an inadvertent discovery violation. The court also found defense counsel had been furnished reports regarding the DNA analysis. Finally, the trial judge stressed that defense counsel had not even attempted to depose the witness in the three days of trial since disclosure.
The witness testified. Defendant was convicted. We have the appeal.
The issue is the denial of the continuance to afford a reasonable time for the defense to prepare for this crucial witness. It is significant that this particular assistant public defender had never before faced a DNA statistical expert in a courtroom. The greater experience of other assistant public defenders in the same county is irrelevant to the circumstances she was confronting for the first time. She was to be givenat bestthe nights following three long days of trial to prepare to counterattack the most critical expert witness of all. After trial begins in a life felony case, there is no reasonable chance for defense counsel to prepare to meet and counter a newly disclosed expert as important as this one.
To be sure, the State had months to prepare its own DNA statistical expert. Balanced against the several months afforded the State, by the trial judge's reckoning the defense could plausibly be given only a handful of hours at the end of three grueling days in court to prepare to test the foundational reliability of the DNA. Rushed hotel depositions in the nighttime by exhausted defense counsel cannot possibly balance the scales of preparation.[3] In our judgment, the circumstances required *640 no further showing by defense counsel as to why she needed a continuance or what she might have accomplished thereby. The lack of disclosure until trial had already begun, and her lack of sophistication in the subject, irrefutably set up an overriding necessity.
Disclosing a population geneticist on the first day of trial is in the nature of a structural delict. The effect is the same whether intentional or negligent. It sends defense counsel into battle without arms. It should not matter that the State's failure is thought inadvertent.
Nor is it fair to place a burden on defense counsel to anticipate disclosure and somehow prepare for it. It was the State's burden to disclose. In civil trials, the failure of the other side to disclose an expert witness before trial is usually understood to authorize opposing counsel to prepare for a trial without such evidence.[4] There is no reason why it should not be thus for criminal defense counsel.
If the State is to send an accused to prison for the rest of his life, the least it can do is give him and his lawyer fair notice of all particulars of the DNA evidence it plans to present. As a matter of elemental justice we must recognize that the nature of DNA makes any failure to disclose such evidence well before trial strikingly consequential. Hence we do not think the trial judge's finding of no prejudice is supported by the record. Defendant could hardly have been more unfairly prejudiced.
Reversed for a new trial.
POLEN, J., concurs.
GROSS, C.J., dissents with opinion.
GROSS, C.J., dissenting.
The majority has applied the wrong standard of review to this case, which involves the state's disclosure of a witness on the first day of trial, before the jury was selected. The majority has incorrectly applied the concept of "prejudice" that is central to the analysis required by Richardson v. State,
The state first disclosed the name of Dr. Martin Tracey, a population geneticist, on the first day of trial prior to jury selection, Monday, December 11, 2006. The state called Tracey as a witness on Thursday. It was only then that the defense raised a Richardson objection to his testimony and moved for a continuance. The trial judge conducted a full Richardson hearing and her extensive ruling fills eight pages of the trial transcript. She overruled the objection and denied the motion for continuance.
As set forth by the supreme court in Brim v. State,
*641 Tracey's testimony concerned the second step of the DNA testing process. Significantly, the information he conveyed to the jury was provided to the defense months before. Tracey explained that given the match between the defendant's DNA profile and the profile obtained from the evidence (testified to by another witness), the chances were "one in 58 trillion" that someone else in the population other than the defendant had that same profile. This exact information is contained in Table 2 of the Bode lab reports that the state gave to defense counsel in January and July 2006. These reports contained the same charts that Tracey referenced and explained in his testimony. The crux of his testimony was thus disclosed over 9 months before trial.
"During a Richardson hearing, the trial court must inquire as to whether the violation (1) was willful or inadvertent; (2) was substantial or trivial; and (3) had a prejudicial effect on the aggrieved party's trial preparation." State v. Evans,
In this case, the trial court held a full Richardson hearing[5] and decided that the defense was not procedurally prejudiced by the disclosure of Tracey's name on the first day of trial. When the trial court has held a Richardson hearing, its decision is subject to reversal only upon a showing that it abused its discretion. See Gethers v. State,
Procedural prejudice resulting from a Richardson violation demonstrates three characteristics not present in this case. First, the discovery violation injects facts into the case that have not been previously *642 disclosed. Second, the undisclosed information is case specific, not information generally available. Third, knowledge of the undisclosed information would have altered the way the defense prepared for trial.
For example, in Stern v. State,
On the other hand, cases where courts have reversed a trial judge's finding of no procedural prejudice involve the nondisclosure of case specific evidence which would have changed the defendant's strategy or theory of defense at trial.
Thus, in McDowell v. State,
Similarly, in Hatcher v. State,
The fifth district found procedural prejudice in a case where the defense did not learn of the existence of DNA evidence until the middle of trial. In Rojas v. State,
Here, the trial judge's determination that the defense had not been procedurally prejudiced was entirely reasonable, so there was no abuse of discretion. None of the hallmarks of procedural prejudice were *643 present. Tracey's testimony did not inject new facts into the case; they had been disclosed for months. The statistical information was not case specific, but was generally applicable in all DNA cases. The defense never said how it would have changed its strategy or theory of defense had Tracey's name been timely disclosed, instead of just the substance of his testimony.
The defense was aware of the substance of the testimony by July 2006 from the reports disclosed by the state. The statistical aspect of the DNA evidence had been available to the defense for months. Also, as the trial judge noted, Tracey was the only DNA statistical expert that the Broward state attorney's office had ever used. He had testified in as many as 150 trials in Broward County and the public defender's office had participated in a majority of them.[6] In another context, the supreme court has written that "a public defender's office is the functional equivalent of a law firm." Bouie v. State,
Tracey's testimony was not case specific. It was a necessary link in any DNA case that established the statistical probability that a particular sample of DNA would match anyone in the population other than the defendant. This testimony would be virtually the same in any case for any defendant whose DNA profile matched the evidence. Tracey's testimony generally explained how these statistics are generated. For this, he referenced an FBI population database that is commonly used and publicly available on the internet. Although the defense had the necessary information to prepare for this aspect of the case, it did not do so.
By the time jury selection began on Monday, the trial judge had granted eleven continuances, nine of which were charged to the defense. Defense counsel did not move for a continuance on Richardson grounds on Monday, before the jury was sworn. She waited until Thursday, when every witness but Tracey had testified. She made no attempt to speak with Tracey or depose him on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday, when he would have been available.
Most significantly, the defense has never identified what it might have done differently had Tracey's name been disclosed, instead of just the lab report. The initial brief states that the defendant "did not have the opportunity to ... develop impeachment and rebuttal testimony," but does not say what the testimony is or how it could be accomplished. The brief was filed over two years after trial, which is certainly enough time to figure out what the "impeachment and rebuttal" testimony would be so that it could be specifically described. At trial, the defense attorney could not say what she would have done differently, even though she had known the substance of the testimony for months. Even her motion for new trial talks in generalities and not specifics.
It was thus well within the trial judge's discretion to conclude that there was no *644 procedural prejudice, that the defense would have done nothing differently had Tracey's name been disclosed when the charges were filed. The defense had always faced "one in 58 trillion" odds with the DNA testimony and did nothing to try and change the equation. Rather, the defense chose to cast a hollow objection into the legal waters in the hope that a judge would bite. You never know.
NOTES
Notes
[1] See Brim v. State,
[2] Defendant: in custody January 2006; trial: December 11-15, 2006.
[3] See Grau v. Branham,
[4] See Grau,
[5] Most cases that reverse for discovery violations do so because the trial judge has not conducted a full Richardson hearing, usually because the court erroneously found that no discovery violation had occurred. There is a difference between a procedural prejudice analysis in the context of a full Richardson hearing and deciding whether a discovery violation amounted to harmless error where there has not been a full Richardson hearing that considered the issue of procedural prejudice. As the supreme court wrote in Scipio v. State,
An analysis of procedural prejudice does not ask how the undisclosed piece of evidence affected the case as it was actually presented to the jury. Rather, it considers how the defense might have responded had it known about the undisclosed piece of evidence and contemplates the possibility that the defense could have acted to counter the harmful effects of the discovery violation. By contrast, an analysis of substantive prejudice would ask whether it was possible that the error affected the jury's verdict. While this standard itself is a high one for the State to overcome, it is of an entirely different quality than a procedural prejudice analysis.
Id. (citations omitted). These "deficient" Richardson hearing cases engage in a harmless error analysiscan it be said "beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not procedurally prejudiced by the [discovery] violation." Evans,
[6] Dr. Tracey is a commonly used expert and his name frequently appears as an expert used in Florida cases. See, e.g., Owen v. State,
