¶ 1. Dеfendant appeals his conviction after a jury found him guilty of murder in the second degree for causing mortal head trauma to a sixteen-month-old child left in his care. Defendant argues that he is *54 entitled to a new trial because the Chittenden District Court erred by: (1) denying his motion to dismiss in which he claimed that the State failed to collect and preserve potentially еxculpatory evidence; (2) prohibiting him from introducing certain evidence at trial in his defense; (3) admitting as evidence the statements he made to the police while on furlough; (4) denying his request for a presentence investigation report; and (5) failing to hold an evidentiary hearing on his motion for a new trial. We affirm.
¶ 2. On March 3,1999, a call was made from defendant’s home tо 911, reporting that a sixteen-month-old girl was not breathing. Within one minute and a half, a rescue team arrived. The rescue team found the child not breathing, with no heartbeat and no electrical activity. A medical expert testified at trial that this condition indicates that at least ten minutes must have elapsed from the time the child was injured to the time the rescue team arrived and was unable to detect electrical activity. A CAT scan performed at the hospital revealed that the child had endured significant trauma to her brain with enough force to cause bleeding in several areas, dramatic retinal hemorrhages, and retinal detachment. One retinal specialist testified that he had examined thousands of eyes and had never witnessed a more dramatic example of an injury consistent with a baby who had been shaken. When defendant was interviewed at the hospital that day, he told police that his dog knocked the child over and that she struck her head on a toolbox.
¶ 3. The medical testimony presented at trial directly contradicted defendant’s claim that the dog pushed the child. For instance, one medical expert, who treated the child at the hospital, testified, “[T]his dramatic presentation, that is bleeding within the brain serious enough to cause a cardiac arrest, was not consistent with the stated mechanism of injury.” The doctor went on to say that the child’s injury instead “would be consistent with a head injury with forces seen in moderаte to high speed motor vehicle accidents... from children who have been ejected from cars and strike their head on the ground or trees____” The medical experts agreed: defendant’s explanation that the child was knocked over by a dog onto the toolbox was inconsistent with the multiple injuries to the child’s head and the extreme retinal bleeding found in the child’s eyes.
¶ 4. In its decision denying defendant’s motion for acquittal, the trial court found:
The evidence was essentially uncontroverted that the total fatal head trauma could not be accounted for, and was plainly inconsistent with, defendant’s explanation for the death of the child. The dog’s push and the infant’s less than two-footfall onto the toolbox, as dеscribed and demonstrated by defendant, was *55 not nearly equivalent to the high speed collision, long fall or severe shaking described by the physicians as necessary to cause the combined sub-dural, sub-arachnoid and retinal bleeding. If the dog’s push could have caused the torque required for the tissue-tearing hematoma, it did not appear to account fоr all three injuries, or for the necessary velocity and force to cause death. If the impact from the dog’s push could have caused retinal bleeding, the doctors agreed that it did not account for the extraordinary degree of hemorrhaging in this case.
The court explained that most of the medical experts testified, and none disagreed, that the child’s injuries were consistent only with “shaken infant” or “shaken impact” syndrome.
¶ 5. An autopsy was done on the child’s body, in March 1999, at which a small blood sample was collected but not a hair sample. Also in early March 1999, police collected physical evidence from defendant’s home, including the toolbox. One to two months after the autopsy and burial оf the body, hairs were found on the toolbox collected from defendant’s home.
¶ 6. On May 17,1999, defendant filed a motion with the district court to preserve, test, and/or provide duplicate material to the defense. In his motion, defendant requested the State to “preserve and provide to the defendant for independent testing hair samples of the decedent” and also requested “an adequate comparison sample from [police] evidence... [which] contains hair.” The State filed a letter, on May 26, 1999, in which it responded that hair samples were not collected from the victim but that a mitochondrial DNA analysis could be performed to test the hair sample by using an available sample of the victim’s blood instead of hair. The judge ruled the motion as moot, stating that “there’s nothing to preserve here” since the State did not have a hair sample from the victim. The court also pointed out at the hearing that there was “another way... for you to get hair samples [from the victim] if that were required as a last resort,” referring to exhumation.
¶ 7. In April 2000, defendant filed a motion to dismiss in which he again argued that the State had faded “to collect and preserve such evidence as may be exculpatory in nature” and “to produce such evidence after having been requested to do so.” The court held a hearing on the motion to dismiss several months later. At the hearing, a medical expert, Dr. Buell, testified that a mitochondrial DNA tеst could be performed on the unidentified hair from the toolbox by using a blood sample, but that the mitochondrial DNA test of hair is statistically weaker than a nucleus *56 genomic DNA test, especially because a mother and all of her children have the same mitochondrial DNA Additionally, Dr. Buell testified that a microscopic exam of the unidentified hair might show whether the hair “was crushed, pulled out or broken.” Following the expert’s testimony, the judge observed, “I asked the last time whether there was anything in this hair to indicate that it was left there other than by pulling it out of the sky, and I still don’t have an answer to that.... is there any evidence that the hair was there by virtue of anything other than gravity?” Defendant did not offer anything in response at that time. Subsequently, the State filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence relating to the unidentified hair on the toolbox. The court granted the motion, declaring that the evidence proffered by defendant in this regard was irrelevant. As noted, the jury returned a verdict of guilty after the trial, and this appeal followed.
I.
¶ 8. Citing
Brady v. Maryland,
¶ 9. The purpose of the first element, suppression of evidence by the State, and
Brady
as a whole is “to assure that the defendant will not be denied access to exculpatory evidence only known to the Government.”
United States v. LeRoy,
¶ 10. Moreover, defendant has not established that the evidence would be favorable to him. He requested a hair sample from the child in order to prove that the unidentified human hair on the toolbox came from the child during the purported fall. Despite the сourt’s repeated requests, however, defendant failed to show how the unidentified hair found on the toolbox, even if it was the child’s hair, would have been favorable or relevant to his case. Prior to receiving her fatal injury, the child had lived in defendant’s home for several weeks. The court noted that her hair could have fallen onto the toolbox at any time during this period. Defendant nevertheless declined to do a microscopic examination of the hair to look for any signs that the hair had been pulled out or broken as opposed to simply resting there as a result of the child living in the home. All of these options, a microscopic exam for trauma to the hair, exhumation, and a mitochondrial DNA test, were available to defendant in advance of his trial. Defendant has not made the requisite showing that the evidence would have been favorable to him, nor did he attempt to do so through any of these options.
¶ 11. Finally, defendant relies on our decision in
State v. Goshea,
II.
¶ 12. Defendant next argues that his constitutional right to present a defense was violated because he was prohibited from introducing evidence at trial regarding the hair found on the toolbox, and thus he is entitled to a new trial. The State had filed a motion in limine to exclude any testimony that a hair was found on the toolbox or that the State had failed to *58 perform a comparative analysis of the child victim’s hair and the unidentified hair. The trial court granted the State’s motion on the ground that the hair and lack of a comparative analysis were not relevant under V.R.E. 401. In its decision, the court explained:
Absent some indication that the hair reflects traumatic contact, or that the child’s head reflects traumatic contact with the toolbox, or that the infаnt’s death could have resulted from striking the box without such traumatic indication appearing, the presence of a single hair upon the toolbox is no more relevant than household dust. Absent any proffer by defendant of injury consistent with head-to-toolbox contact, the failure of the state to conduct comparative analysis of decedent’s hair is no more relevant than the state’s failure to perform comparative analysis of the decedent’s fingerprints or dental records; all for which no apparent reason appeared at the time of investigation or appears now.
Defendant did not proffer any evidence in response to the court’s inquiries regarding relevance.
¶ 13. It is well settled that trial courts have wide latitude in determining whether to admit or exclude evidence.
State v. Little,
¶ 14. Under V.R.E. 401, relevant evidence is evidence “having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” In
State v. Hooper,
III.
¶ 15. Defendant claims that the court should have granted his motion to suppress certain statements he made to police because he was on furlough at the time and did not receive
Miranda
warnings before making the statements. Relying on
Miranda v. Arizona,
¶ 16. Custody for
Miranda
purposes has been more narrowly defined than custody in other situations, such as federal habeas corpus.
Minnesota v. Murphy,
IV.
¶ 17. Defendant next claims that the trial court erred in denying his • request for a presentence investigation report (PSI). Defendant contends that because he was sentenced to a maximum term of life imprisonment without parole, thе court acted unreasonably in denying his request. The argument is -without merit.
¶ 18. The purpose of a PSI is “to give to the sentencing judge the fullest possible information concerning the defendant’s life and characteristics” so that the judge may impose an appropriate sentence.
State v. Ramsay,
(A) if the offense is a misdemeanor;
(B) if the defendant has two or more felony convictions;
(C) if the defendant refuses to be interviewed by a probation officer or requests that disposition be made without a presentence report;
(D) if it is impractical to verify the background of the defendant.”
While it may have been the better practice for the court to have ordered a PSI, defendant does not challenge the court’s finding that dеfendant had “two or more felony convictions” and was, therefore, within the ambit of V.R.Cr.P. 32(c)(1)(B). Moreover, defendant fails to demonstrate — or even allege — how the lack of a PSI prejudiced him. Further, defendant makes no claim that he was sentenced on the basis of unreliable or insufficient information. See
State v. Patterson,
V.
¶ 19. Defendant’s final claim is that the court committed reversible error by failing to hold an evidentiary hearing on his motion for a new trial, which was based upon claims of inadequate representation.
*61
Defendant conceded, however, that his motion was filed after the ten-day limit of V.R.Cr.P. 33 had expired. Thus, the court did not err in denying defendant’s motion. See
State v. Grega,
¶ 20. A defendant claiming ineffective assistance of counsel may file a post-conviction relief action under 13 V.S.A. § 7131. Should defendant decide to pursue this matter, he may properly file for relief under this statute. Finally, due to defendant’s ability to seek relief under 13 V.S.A. § 7131, we do not reach his coram nobis claim. See
In re Stewart,
Affirmed.
