2012 WI App 89 | Wis. Ct. App. | 2012
¶ 1. Richard Deadwiller appeals the judgments entered on jury verdicts convicting him of two counts of second-degree sexual assault with the use of force. See Wis. Stat. § 940.225(2)(a). He contends that the trial court violated his right to confrontation
I.
¶ 2. The State charged Deadwiller with forcibly sexually assaulting Kristina S. and Chantee O. Twenty-three-year-old Kristina S. testified at trial that Deadwiller "raped" her. Thirty-seven-year-old Chantee O. also testified that Deadwiller "raped" her. Both Kristina S. and Chantee O. went to Mount Sinai hospital after the assault. A sexual-assault nurse examiner at Mount Sinai testified that she took vaginal and cervical specimens from both Kristina S. and Chantee O. She also told the jury that she packaged the specimens and secured them in a special storage area at the hospital. Milwaukee police officers testified that they took the materials to their department, and that the specimens were later transferred to the State Crime Laboratory.
¶ 3. Ronald G. Witucki, a State Crime Laboratory technician, testified that the Crime Laboratory sent the specimens collected from Kristina S. and Chantee O. to Orchid Cellmark, a Texas laboratory that examines some DNA material for the State Crime Laboratory. He told the jury that Orchid Cellmark sent him DNA-
¶ 4. Witucki testified that when he received the reports from Orchid Cellmark, he assured himself that Orchid Cellmark followed standard DNA-analysis protocols: "What we're looking for is we're checking to see that they followed their procedures, that their quality control measures were followed, they got acceptable results on their control values." Witucki then personally determined that the DNA profiles showed semen, and compared them to profiles stored in a DNA data bank to see if they matched someone whose DNA profile was there.
¶ 5. The Orchid Cellmark profiles of the semen DNA taken from Kristina S. and Chantee O. both matched Deadwiller's DNA profile in the data bank. Witucki described the matches, however, as "investigative information" only that prompts the State Crime Laboratory to "ask for a new fresh DNA sample be submitted from the individual we've identified as matching to those evidentiary profiles." See State v. Ward, 2011 WI App 151, ¶ 5, 337 Wis. 2d 655, 661, 807 N.W.2d 23, 27 (describing the two-step process). Witucki told the jury that he got samples of Deadwiller's DNA and compared Deadwiller's DNA to the semen DNA taken from the victims. He told the jury that in his opinion Deadwiller was the source of the DNA taken from both Kristina S. and Chantee O.
¶ 6. Deadwiller testified at the trial, and told the jury that he had consensual sex with Kristina S. and Chantee O., and did not dispute that the semen was his. He argues on appeal that he may not have testified if the
II.
¶ 7. The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides:
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 8. The defendant in Williams was convicted in a bench trial of rape. Williams, 567 U.S. at _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *5. There, as here, the State relied on the testimony of its DNA expert to connect the DNA recovered from the victim with the DNA from the defendant. Ibid. The rapists's DNA recovered from the victim was profiled by an "outside laboratory," and no one from that laboratory testified. Ibid. The defendant contended that the expert's reliance on the outside laboratory's report violated his right to confrontation. Ibid. Williams disagreed, although no one thread of analysis commanded a majority.
¶ 9. Justice Samuel A. Alito wrote the lead opinion, in which three of his colleagues joined. Id., 567 U.S. at _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *4.
When an expert testifies for the prosecution in a criminal case, the defendant has the opportunity to cross-examine the expert about any statements that are offered for their truth. Out-of-court statements that are related by the expert solely for the purpose of explaining the assumptions on which that opinion rests are not offered for their truth and thus fall outside the scope of the Confrontation Clause.
Ibid.
Second, that the outside laboratory's report was not "testimonial":
[The outside laboratory's] report is very different from the sort of extrajudicial statements, such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, and confessions, that the Confrontation Clause was originally understood to reach. The report was produced before any suspect was identified. The report was sought not for the purpose of obtaining evidence to be used against petitioner, who was not even under suspicion at the time, but for the purpose of finding a rapist who was on the loose. And the profile that [the outside laboratory] provided was not inherently inculpatory. On the contrary, a DNA profile is evidence that tends to exculpate all but one of the more than 7 billion people in the world today.
Ibid.
¶ 10. Justice Clarence Thomas concurred in Williams's judgment (and, indeed, provided the necessary fifth vote to affirm Williams's conviction), but disagreed with the lead opinion's conclusion that the outside laboratory's report was not received for its truth. Id., 567 U.S. at _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *31-*34
¶ 11. Justice Elena Kagan dissented on behalf of three of her colleagues. Id., 567 U.S. at _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *38. They agreed with Justice Thomas that the outside laboratory's report was used at the trial for its truth, but disagreed with the five justices concurring in Williams's judgment that this did not violate the defendant's right to confrontation. Thus, Justice Kagan pointed out that the Illinois DNA technician "informed the trier of fact that the testing of [the victim]'s vaginal swabs had produced a male DNA profile implicating Williams," and that this thus "went to its truth." Id., 567
¶ 12. We need not parse in any great detail the philosophical underpinnings of the various opinions in Williams because although they disagreed as to their rationale, five justices agreed at the core that the outside laboratory's report was not testimonial. This conclusion governs this case, and we do not have to delve beyond this core to analyze whether, as Justice Alito's lead opinion concludes in part, that the outside laboratory's report was not relied on for its truth (with which five justices disagreed), or whether, as Justice Alito seems to indicate, the analysis might have been more far-ranging if Williams's trial had been to a jury rather than to a judge, although he also notes that he does "not suggest that the Confrontation Clause applies differently depending on the identity of the factfinder. Instead, our point is that the identity of the factfinder makes a big difference in evaluating the likelihood that the factfinder mistakenly based its decision on inadmissible evidence." Id., 567 U.S. at _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *14 & *14 n.4 (internal reference to Dissent omitted). This discourse on possible foundational gradations does not apply here because, as we have seen, the State laid more than a sufficient foundation for the jury to conclude that the semen recovered from Kristina S. and Chantee O. was sent to Orchid Cellmark, and that Orchid Cellmark's profiles were consistent with approved DNA-analysis standards.
¶ 14. We are bound in this case by the judgment in Williams, and the narrowest holding agreed-to by a
By the Court. — Judgments affirmed.
Article I, § 7 of the Wisconsin Constitution is similar:
In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to be heard by himself and counsel; to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him; to meet the witnesses face to face; to have compulsory process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf; and in prosecutions by indictment, or information, to a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county or district wherein the offense shall have been committed; which county or district shall have been previously ascertained by law.
(Emphasis added.) Deadwiller does not argue on this appeal that the trial court violated his confrontation right under the Wisconsin Constitution. Accordingly, we do not discuss it. See
Although Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote a concurring opinion, he joined Justice Alito's opinion "in full." Williams v. Illinois, 567 U.S. _, _, 2012 WL 2202981, at *30 (June 18, 2012).