This case presents us with the question of whether a Forensic DNA Case Report, not executed under the penalty of perjury, but containing the language of “within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty”, was testimonial within the meaning of
Williams v. Illinois,
567 U.S.-,
The testimonial issue was queued up when DNA was found on a mask that, according to witnesses, had been used in a robbery; the mask later was identified as potentially belonging to Harold Norton, Jr. 1 A small piece of the mask that contained saliva, from which a DNA sample was extracted, was sent to The Bode Technology Group, Inc., a commercial DNA testing company, “based” in Wharton, Virginia, along with a buccal swab 2 obtained from Norton for DNA comparison.
An analyst at Bode Technology created and executed a Forensic DNA Case Report, which was comprised of three pages on the lab’s letterhead addressed to the Baltimore County Police Department, which contained the results of her comparison of a “ ‘buccal swab from suspect Harold Norton’ ” and a “ ‘cutting from ski mask[’]”. On the second page, above her signature, the analyst documented her ultimate conclusion, that “within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, Harold Norton (2S06-062-01) is the major source of the biological material obtained from [the mask]”. The Report reflected the following: 3
[First page]
Bode Technology
10430 Furnace Road Lorton, VA 22079 Phone 703-644-1200
Forensic DNA Case Report September 28, 2006
Laura Pawlowski Agency Case# : 06-188-1852/06-4567
Baltimore County Police Department
Forensic Services
700 East Joppa Road
Towson, MD 21286
List of Evidence Received on August 29, 2006 for DNA analysis:
BODE # Agency ID Description
2S06-062-01 - 3521-001.1 Labeled as “buccal swab from suspect Harold Norton”
2S06-062-02 4257-010.1 Labeled as “cutting from ski mask (+ amylase phadebas dark blue)”
CASE REVIEW AND RESULTS:
The items listed above were processed for DNA typing by analysis of the 13 CODIS Short Tandem Repeat (STR) loci and the gender determination locus, Amelogenin. Appropriate positive and negative controls were used concurrently throughout the analysis. The results of the analysis are summarized in Table 1.
1. A mixed DNA profile was obtained from evidence item 2S06-062-02.
2. A complete DNA profile was obtained from reference item 2S06-062-01.
The DNA profiles reported in this case were determined by procedures that have been validated according to standards established by the Scientific Working Group on DNA Analysis Methods (SWGDAM) and adopted as Federal Standards. [Second page]
BODE Case #: 2S06-062 Date: September 28, 2006
Agency Case#: 06-188-1852/06-4567
CONCLUSIONS AND STATISTICS:
1. The DNA profile that was obtained from evidence item 2S06-062-02 is a mixture that includes a major component male DNA profile. The major component male DNA profile matches the DNA profile obtained from the reference item from Harold Norton (2S06-062-01).
The probability of randomly selecting an unrelated individual with this DNA profile is:
1 in 900 Quintillion (1 in 9.0 x 10 20 ) from the Caucasian population;
1 in 1.5 Quintillion (1 in 1.5 x 10 18 ) from the African American population;
1 in 18 Quintillion (1 in 1.8 x 10 19 ) from the SW Hispanic population;
1 in 27 Quintillion (1 in 2.7 x 10 19 ) from the SE Hispanic population.
Therefore, within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, Harold Norton (2506-062-01) is the major source of the biological material obtained from evidence item 2506-062-02.
The evidence and extracts will be returned to the Baltimore County Police Department.
Report submitted by:
-/s/-
Rachel E. Cline, MFS DNA Analyst III
-/s/-
Susan Bach, MFS
Forensic Casework Manager
(emphasis added to conclusion).
Norton’s first trial in which he was charged with armed robbery ended in a mistrial. During a second trial, 4 the State attempted to introduce the Forensic DNA Case Report into evidence through the testimony of a Bode Technology supervisor, without calling the analyst who had authored and signed the Report. The supervisor testified, ultimately, that he had “reviewed all the materials, all of the notes, the lab notes, all of the data that was generated, the paperwork and the final report.”
Before the Report was admitted, however, Norton’s counsel raised two issues, one of which related to discovery, which is not before us. The other objection forms the gravamen of the present dispute — that the Confrontation Clause would be violated were the Report to be admitted under the umbrella of the testimony of the supervisor, because the original analyst, then, could not be cross-examined. The State retorted that Norton had waived the objection, because his counsel had stipulated to the Report’s admissibility during the first trial. At the second trial, the Report was admitted as State’s Exhibit 10A.
Norton appealed to the Court of Special Appeals.
5
In an unreported opinion, our intermediate appellate court held that
admission of the Report without the analyst’s testimony violated Norton’s ability to confront his accuser under
Derr v. State,
In
Derr II,
after having heard arguments, we concluded that the three exhibits in issue that identified Derr as the source of DNA found on the victim, about which testimony had been elicited from someone other than the analyst, had not violated Derr’s right of confrontation.
Derr v. State,
In light of
Derr II,
we vacated
Norton 1
7
and remanded it to the Court of Special
Did the Court of Special Appeals err in determining that Norton’s right to confrontation under the federal constitution was violated where a DNA expert testified regarding the work of another DNA analyst, and that expert was a supervisor in the same lab, reviewed the work of the other analyst, and came to his own conclusion that was consistent with the conclusion of the other analyst, but the analyst herself did not testify?
State v. Norton,
We shall hold that the language “within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty” in the Forensic DNA Case Report rendered the Report testimonial within
Williams,
567 U.S. -,
Our analysis regarding the admission of a forensic document absent the testimony of its author begins with
Crawford v. Washington,
Justice Scalia’s analysis in
Crawford
was steeped in the history of England, which, two centuries before the Revolution, according to Justice Scalia, began to incorporate “elements of the civil-law practice” of continental Europe into its “common-law tradition.”
10
Id.
at 43,
As Justice Scalia continued to review English history with respect to the Confrontation Clause, he noted that
ex parte
pretrial examinations had become routine during the sixteenth century reign of Queen Mary.
11
Id.
at 43,
According to Justice Scalia, an ex parte examination of Sir Walter Raleigh’s alleged accomplice, Lord Cobham, was read to the jury during Sir Walter Raleigh’s trial, at which Lord Cobham did not appear. Id. Sir Walter Raleigh had demanded that the judges adhere to the common law tradition of allowing the accused to examine the witnesses against him in court: “ ‘[t]he Proof of the Common Law is by witness and jury: let Cobham be here, let him speak it. Call my accuser before my face....’” Id., quoting 2 How. St. Tr., at 15-16. The judges refused, and Sir Walter Raleigh was convicted and sentenced to death. 13 Id.
Justice Scalia described the statutory and judicial reforms that developed following Sir Walter Raleigh’s trial in order to limit the use of
ex parte
examinations.
Id.
Treason statutes, for example, required witnesses to confront the accused at arraignments; meanwhile, courts developed strict rules of unavailability and admitted
ex parte
examinations only if the witness was demonstrably unable to testify in person.
Id.
at 44-45,
Justice Scalia then reviewed the practices embraced by the English in pre-revolutionary America, which continued the civil law tradition of
ex parte
examinations; the Governor of Virginia, for example, “ ‘privately issued several commissions to examine witnesses against particular men
ex parte’ ”,
which was met by protests from the Virginia Council advocating for the common law approach of permitting the accused “ ‘to be confronted with, or defend himself against his defamers.’ ”
Id.
at 47,
Justice Scalia opined that in reaction to the use of such
ex parte
examinations the declarations of rights adopted by many of the colonies around the time of the Revolution guaranteed a right of confrontation.
Id.
at 48,
From this historical perspective, Justice Scalia extrapolated that the Confrontation Clause embodied two essential premises: “First, the principal evil at which the Confrontation Clause was directed was the civil-law mode of criminal procedure, and particularly its use of
ex parte
examinations as evidence against the accused”; and, second, “that the Framers would not have allowed admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless he was unavailable
to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.”
Id.
at
Deducing that the Framers intended, by the adoption of the mandate of the Confrontation Clause, to eliminate the use of civil law
ex parte
examinations at the trial of the accused, Justice Scalia concluded that the Clause adheres when “testimonial hearsay” is being introduced at trial.
Id.
at 53,
In
Crawford,
Justice Scalia’s application of the testimonial tenets gleaned from the historical analysis yielded a conclusion that a wife’s statements implicating her husband made during a police interrogation were testimonial and inadmissible without the wife’s presence as a witness at trial.
Id.
at 65-68,
The United States Supreme Court reversed, because, as Justice Scalia recounted, “[t]he Framers would be astounded to learn that
ex parte
testimony could be admitted against a criminal defendant because it was elicited by ‘neutral’ government officers.”
Id.
at 66,
The
Crawford
holding, then, that testimonial hearsay is inadmissible at trial without the accused having had the opportunity to cross-examine is foundational. Justice Scalia, however, did not define “testimonial” nor identify its parameters. What we do know is “that the Framers would not have allowed admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless he was unavailable to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.”
Id.
at 53-54,
A number of inquiries can be derived from
Crawford,
however, to determine whether hearsay would be considered “testimonial”. To whom the statement is made is a key component, because the involvement of a government official, or
Another inquiry would involve whether the statement had been solicited and, if so, whether the solicitation occurred under circumstances that “would lead an objective witness reasonably to believe that the statement would be available for use at a later trial”.
Id.
at 52,
Yet another question involves whether, when viewed objectively, the challenged statement was made “for the purpose of establishing or proving some fact” in a criminal prosecution or investigation.
Id.
at 51,
Another query from
Crawford
is whether the statement under scrutiny was made in a formal context. During Justice Scalia’s textual analysis of the Confrontation Clause, he noted that a testimonial statement is one that is “formal”, and a “core class” of such declarations is one contained within an affidavit, deposition, prior testimony or confession.
Id.
at 51-52,
A final inquiry involves whether there is historical authority for the admission of the challenged statement, despite its testimonial nature. Justice Scalia reflected upon at least two situations in which such historical precedent exists: when the statement is a dying declaration as that term is understood by the rules of evidence pertaining to hearsay,
(id.
at 56 n. 6,
Following
Crawford,
refining what is “testimonial” has been the gravamen of a number of Supreme Court cases, most notably for our analysis,
Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts,
In
Melendez-Diaz,
Melendez-Diaz was charged with distributing cocaine.
Melendez-Diaz was convicted and the Massachusetts intermediate appellate court affirmed.
Id.
at 309,
The second point of emphasis, Justice Scalia observed, was that the reports were created specifically to resolve a fact in question, “that the substance found in the possession of Melendez-Diaz ... was, as the prosecution claimed, cocaine”.
Id.
The sole purpose of the certificates, Justice Scalia opined, was to provide evidence to be used at trial against Melendez-Diaz and, therefore, it was clear that he should have been afforded an opportunity to cross-examine the analysts who created the certificates.
Id.
at 311,
As we have explained, “[t]he Framers were no more willing to exempt from cross-examination volunteered testimony or answers to open-ended questions than they were to exempt answers to detailed interrogation.” Davis, supra, at 822-823, n. 1 [126 S.Ct. 2266 ]. Respondent and the dissent cite no authority, and we are aware of none, holding that a person who volunteers his testimony is any less a “ ‘witness against’ the defendant,” Brief for Respondent 26, than one who is responding to interrogation. In any event, the analysts’ affidavits in this case were presented in response to a police request. See Mass. Gen. Laws, ch. Ill, §§ 12-13. If an affidavit submitted in response to a police officer’s request to “write down what happened” suffices to trigger the Sixth Amendment’s protection (as it apparently does, see Davis,547 U.S. at 819-820 [126 S.Ct. 2266 ]; id., at 840, n. 5 [126 S.Ct. 2266 ] (THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part)), then the analysts’ testimony should be subject to confrontation as well.
Id.
at 316-17,
The later case of
Bullcoming v. New Mexico,
564 U.S.-,
The Supreme Court reversed Bullcoming’s conviction and held that introduction of the Report through the testimony of a technician in the Laboratory who had neither performed nor witnessed the testing did not meet the requirements of the Confrontation Clause.
Id.
at-, -,
In all material respects, the laboratory report in this case resembles those in Melendez-Diaz. Here, as in Melendez-Diaz, a law-enforcement officer provided seized evidence to a state laboratory required by law to assist in police investigations. Like the analysts in Melendez-Diaz, [the] analyst [in Bullcoming ] tested the evidence and prepared a certificate concerning the result of his analysis. Like the Melendez-Diaz certificates, [the Bullcoming ] certificate is “formalized” in a signed document, Davis,547 U.S. at 837, n. 2 ,126 S.Ct. 2266 (opinion of THOMAS, J.), headed a “report[.]” ...
In sum, the formalities attending the “report of blood alcohol analysis” are more than adequate to qualify [the analyst’s] assertions as testimonial. The absence of notarization does not remove his certification from Confrontation Clause governance. The New Mexico Supreme Court, guided by Melendez-Diaz, correctly recognized that [the analyst’s] report “fell within the core class of testimonial statements”, described in this Court’s leading Confrontation Clause decisions: Melendez-Diaz,557 U.S. at 330 [308-312],129 S.Ct. at 2531-2532 ; Davis,547 U.S. at 830 ,126 S.Ct. 2266 ; Crawford,541 U.S. at 51-52 ,124 S.Ct. 1354 .
Id.
at -,
Most recently, in
Williams v. Illinois,
567 U.S.-,-,
The Cellmark DNA profile was later received in evidence during Williams’s bench trial during the testimony of the police specialist and not the Cellmark analyst.
Id.
at-,
The plurality opinion authored by Justice Samuel Alito and joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy and Stephen Breyer,
21
set forth two rationales for concluding that Williams’s right of confrontation was not violated by admission of the Cellmark profile. Justice Alito posited that the profile was not offered for its truth and, therefore, was outside the scope of the Confrontation Clause.
Id.
at-,
Justice Clarence Thomas concurred only in the judgment and provided his own opinion.
Id.
at-,
In
Derr II,
we were called upon to apply the tenets of
Williams
and did so by “applying] the standard articulated by the Supreme Court in
Marks v. United States,
The plurality opinion expressed that statements are testimonial when they both have “the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct” and are “formalized statements such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions.” 567 U.S. at-,132 S.Ct. at 2242 ,183 L.Ed.2d at 116 (plurality). Justice Thomas’s concurrence expressed that for statements to be testimonial both “the declarant must primarily intend to establish some fact with the understanding that his statement may be used in a criminal prosecution,” 567 U.S. at -,132 S.Ct. at 2261 ,183 L.Ed.2d at 135 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment) (citation omitted), and the statements must “bear[ ] [an] indicia of solemnity.” 567 U.S. at -,132 S.Ct. at 2259 ,183 L.Ed.2d at 133 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment) (quotation omitted). Those statements, Justice Thomas explained, include “formalized testimonial materials, such as depositions, affidavits, and prior testimony, or statements resulting from formalized dialogue, such as custodial interrogation.” 567 U.S. at-,132 S.Ct. at 2260 ,183 L.Ed.2d at 133 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment) (citations and quotation omitted). The common point of agreement between the plurality opinion and Justice Thomas’s concurring opinion is that statements must, at least, be formalized, or have “indicia of solemnity” to be testimonial. Therefore, using the Marks approach, we conclude that the narrowest holding of Williams is that a statement, at a minimum, must be formalized to be testimonial.
Id.
at 114-15,
In
Derr II
we had been asked to determine whether three exhibits received in evidence were testimonial. The first exhibit “appeared] to be the notes from the bench work of the serological examiner”, which were compiled during the 1985
investigation of the underlying rape, and were the result of an examination of physical evidence collected at the scene.
Id.
at 118,
With respect to the second exhibit, which was a DNA profile created in 2002 from biological material obtained via a vaginal swab of the victim, we observed that it “display[ed] a series of numbers and lines, and on the bottom of the documents [were] the initials of two parties. No statements, however, appeared] anywhere on the results attesting to their accuracy or that the analysts who prepared them followed any prescribed procedures.”
Id.
at 119,
The third exhibit was created when “a match was discovered between Derr’s existing profile in CODIS[
23
] and the profile generated in 2002”, which led investigators to create a reference DNA sample from Derr’s buccal swab.
Id.
at 99,
Since
Derr II
was decided, many other courts also have struggled to interpret
Williams
and apply its tenets.
E.g., State v. Michaels,
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals, in
Young v. United States,
opined that “the two opinions of the Justices who concurred in the judgment in
Williams
lack the necessary common denominator” to allow the court to synthesize the narrowest grounds for affirming Williams’s conviction.
There is an intermediate position. By analogy to Marks, it can be argued that while Justice Alito’s rationale and Justice Thomas’s rationale may not be includible within each other, the different tests they utilize to determine whether a statement is testimonial are subsumed within and narrower than the dissenters’ test. That is so because Justice Alito and Justice Thomas each added an additional requirement to the basic “evidentiary purpose” test espoused by Justice Kagan. If the four-Justice plurality would deem a statement testimonial under the targeted accusation test, the four dissenting Justices surely would deem it testimonial under the broader evidentiary purpose test. Similarly, if Justice Thomas would deem a statement testimonial employing his formality criterion along with the evidentiary purpose test, the four dissenting Justices necessarily would deem it testimonial using the evidentiary purpose test alone. It therefore is logically coherent andfaithful to the Justices’ expressed views to understand Williams as establishing — at a minimum — a sufficient, if not a necessary, criterion: a statement is testimonial at least when it passes the basic evidentiary purpose test plus either the plurality’s targeted accusation requirement or Justice Thomas’s formality criterion. Otherwise put, if Williams does have precedential value as the government contends, an out-of-court statement is testimonial under that precedent if its primary purpose is evidentiary and it is either a targeted accusation or sufficiently formal in character.
Other of our sister state supreme courts have declined to apply
Williams
and have retreated, instead, to
Melendez-Diaz
and
Bullcoming.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in
Commonwealth v. Yohe,
The Supreme Court of New Jersey, in
State v. Michaels,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in
United States v. Duron-Caldera,
By examining the way in which sister courts have applied
Williams
we have the opportunity to explore how best to accurately and faithfully implement the Supreme Court’s pronouncement on the issue of the Confrontation Clause in the context of forensic documents, when “other [courts] have persuasively argued” a different application.
Critical Mass Energy Project v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
As the District of Columbia in
Young v. United States
recognized, an approach to
Williams
can be constructed by formulating a test that, if satisfied, would result in adherence to the opinions of a majority of the Justices. The
Young
court opined that, if a forensic document is testimonial under either
Justice Thomas’s or Justice Alito’s rationale, then it, necessarily, is testimonial under the rule advocated by Justice Kagan’s dissent, because each of the plurality’s opinions narrows the broader rule urged by the dissent.
By embracing both Justice Thomas’s and Alito’s opinions, we guide our trial courts, when reviewing the admissibility of forensic documents under the Confrontation Clause, to consider first, whether the report in issue is formal, as analyzed by Justice Thomas,
(Williams,
567 U.S. at -,
Should there be a determination that the document in issue was not formal, the next inquest would be whether the report has “the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct”.
Id.
at-,
Under the paradigm so articulated, the Forensic DNA Case Report at issue in the instant ease is testimonial. With respect to Justice Thomas’s formality inquiry, the Report contains a certification in the phrase “within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty”. The inclusion of such language, “within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty”, in a DNA report identifying a match between a defendant’s profile with that of a perpetrator is key to the acceptance of the expert’s testimony into evidence in Maryland.
Young v. State,
The Report before us is testimonial under Justice Alito’s plurality opinion as well, because it was created with “the primary purpose of accusing a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct”.
Williams,
567 U.S. at-,
The result we reached in
Derr II,
whereby the three exhibits were not testimonial, does not change, however, under our enunciated inquiry. Although
Derr II
was decided by the application of Justice Thomas’s rationale, even under Justice Alito’s plurality, the three forensic reports would not have been considered testimonial, because they were not created to accuse “a targeted individual of engaging in criminal conduct”.
Williams,
567 U.S. at-,
The second report at issue in
Derr II,
similarly, was developed when the Charles County “Sheriffs Office submitted the rape kit to the FBI laboratory for additional forensic analysis.”
The third of the
Derr II
reports was developed after it was discovered that Derr’s existing profile in CODIS matched the previous report developed during the investigation. The final document, generated in order to “create a new ‘reference DNA sample’ and to verify that Derr’s profile in CODIS was accurate”, appeared
Even assuming
arguendo
that we were not able to discern a viable framework from
Williams
to apply in the present case, we would note, alternatively, that the instant report is testimonial under Supreme Court precedent prior to
Williams
as akin to the report presented in
Bullcoming,
which five Justices, including Justice Thomas, determined to be testimonial.
30
See State v. Stanfield,
In
Bullcoming,
Bullcoming’s blood sample was sent to the Scientific Laboratory Division of the New Mexico State Police to be analyzed for Bullcoming’s blood alcohol concentration. 564 U.S. at-,
The present Report reflects a DNA profile, produced by an analyst at Bode Technology, from a piece of fabric taken from the mask identified as the one worn by the assailant. That Report materially is identical to the one in
Bullcoming.
The Report was made to establish “some fact in a criminal proceeding” — here, the identity
of the
assailant,
(id.
at-,
In the event that a trial court has occasion to review a forensic document that is analogous to the report discussed in Bullcoming, application of Bullcoming is appropriate to determine the impact of the accused’s right of confrontation on the item’s admissibility. A report may be considered so analogous when it includes the signatures of laboratory officials, identifies the accused as the culprit in the underlying investigation, conveys eonclusory statements and certifies that proper procedures were followed in reaching the ultimate conclusion.
The reports at issue in Derr II, for example, were not analogous to that in Bullcoming, because the Derr II reports did not include, substantially, a certification nor did they contain any language referring to a specific individual as being connected with the underlying offense. Compare Appendix A (report from Bullcoming), with Appendix B (third report from Derr II, which, we said, was identical to the second report in that case).
In conclusion, the Forensic DNA Case Report in the instant case is testimonial within
Williams v. Illinois,
567 U.S.-,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Judge HARRELL joins the judgment only.
APPENDIX A
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APPENDIX B
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APPENDIX C
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Notes
. The mask was received in evidence as State’s Exhibit 9A.
. "A buccal sample is obtained, by swabbing the cheek area inside of a person's mouth.”
Derr v. State,
. Page three of the Report contains only "Table 1: Summary of Short Tandem Repeat Results” and has been omitted herein.
. In addition to armed robbery, Norton was also charged with attempted second degree murder, witness intimidation and lesser offenses, for which he had been indicted in 2007.
. The questions before the intermediate appellate court were:
I. Was [he] denied his constitutional, Sixth Amendment right of confrontation and cross-examination of Rachel Kline?
II. Was it error to grant the State's motion for joinder of charges?
. In
Derr I,
we reversed Derr’s conviction, because we determined that the exhibits at issue were testimonial under
Melendez-Diaz
and
Bull-coming.
. We granted
certiorari
in
Norton I
on October 21, 2013.
Did the Court of Special Appeals err in determining that Norton’s right to confrontation underthe federal constitution was violated where a DNA expert testified regarding the work of another DNA analyst, and that expert was a supervisor in the same lab, reviewed the work of the other analyst, and came to his own conclusion that was consistent with the conclusion of the other analyst, but the analyst herself did not testify?
. The Supreme Court, in
Crawford v. Washington,
. The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, in pertinent part:
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him;
The Sixth Amendment was incorporated against the States through the Fourteenth Amendment in
Pointer v. Texas,
. The terms "civil law” and "common law" refer to the legal system of continental Europe and that of England, respectively, that concurrently emerged during the Middle Ages. The Common Law and Civil Law Traditions, The Robbins Collection 1 (2010), https://www.law.berkeley. edudibrary/robbins/pdfrCommonLawCivilLawTraditions.pdf (last visited July 7, 2015). Common law systems, most recognizable in American and British law, rely on an adversarial contest between two parties, which is moderated by a judge, with a jury of citizens who are not trained in the law deciding the facts. Id. The judge in a common law system then determines an appropriate sanction based on the jury's verdict. Id. In contrast, a judge in a civil law system ordinarily "brings the formal charges, investigates the matter, and decides on the case [while] workfing] within a framework established by a comprehensive, codified set of laws." Id.
. The coronation of Queen Mary occurred on October 1, 1553. John Edwards, Mary I, England's Catholic Queen 123 (2011). She reigned until her death on November 17, 1558. Id. at 332.
.
Cf. Crawford,
. "One of Raleigh’s trial judges later lamented that 'the justice of England has never been so degraded and injured as by the condemnation of Sir Walter Raleigh.' ”
Crawford,
. Section Nineteen of the Maryland Declaration of Rights of 1776 provided, in relevant part:
That, in all criminal prosecutions, every man hath a right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him;
The same language is now memorialized in Article Twenty-One of the Maryland Declaration of Rights.
. From January 9 to February 7, 1788, over three hundred delegates from Massachusetts convened to consider whether the commonwealth should ratify the United States Constitution. Gregory E. Maggs, A Concise Guide to the Records of the State Ratifying Conventions As A Source of the Original Meaning of the U.S. Constitution, 2009 U. Ill. L.Rev. 457, 468, 472 (2009). During the debates, Anti-Federalists strongly objected to ratification, because the proposed constitution lacked a bill of rights. Id. at 472.
. Justice Sealia specifically described business records and statements in furtherance of a conspiracy as hearsay, but not testimonial and, therefore, outside the purview of the Confrontation Clause, because such statements are not created for the purpose of a criminal prosecution or investigation.
Crawford,
. The three reports received in evidence were identical in form, which appeared as follows, followed by an attestation by a notary public, which we have omitted:
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services
Department of Public Health State Laboratory Institute 305 South Street
Boston, MA 02130-3597 617-983-6622
DATE RECEIVED: 11/19/2001
DATE ANALYZED: 11/28/2001
No. 615742
I hereby certify that the substance Contained in 2 plastic bags MARKED: 615742
Submitted by P.O. FRANK MCDONOUGH of the BOSTON POLICE DEPT.
Has been examined with the following results:
The substance was found to contain:
Cocaine, a derivative of Coca leaves, as defined in Chapter 94 C, Controlled Substance Act, Section 31, Class B.
NET WEIGHT: 2.41 grams DEFENDANT: MONTERO, ELIS A. ET AL
-/s/-Js/_
Assistant Analysts Della Saunders Michael Lawler The two other reports varied with respect only to the amount "Contained’' and the specimen’s "NET WEIGHT”.
. The “Certificate of Analyst” stated, in relevant part:
I certify that I followed the procedures set out on the reverse of this report, and the statements in this block [relating to the integrity of the sample and the analyst’s ultimate conclusion] are correct. The concentration of alcohol in the sample is based on the grams of alcohol in one hundred milliliters of blood.
. In New Mexico, the threshold for aggravated driving while intoxicated is 0.16 grams per hundred milliliters; the analyst certified that Bullcoming’s blood alcohol level was 0.21 grams per hundred milliliters.
Bullcoming v. New Mexico,
564 U.S.-,-,
. The "RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS” produced by the Cellmark analyst appeared as follows:
RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS:
DNA testing using the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) and the AmpFISTR Profiler Plus™ and AmpFISTR COfiler™ Amplification Kits was performed on the [vaginal swab and a standard obtained fromthe victim, L.J.]. The loci tested and the results obtained for each tested sample are listed in Table 1. Additional information regarding possible male contributor(s) is listed in Table 2.
The DNA obtained from the epithelial cell fraction of the vaginal swab is from a female and matches the profile obtained for L.J. The DNA obtained from the sperm fraction of the vaginal swab is a mixture from a male and a female. Types present in the mixture are consistent with the types obtained from L.J. Assuming that the mixture contains DNA from only two sources and L.J. is one of the sources, the possible types of the male donor are listed in Table 2.
DISPOSITION:
In the absence of specific instruction, evidence will be returned to the submitting agency by Federal Express or another appropriate carrier.
Reviewer: _/s/_
Robin W. Cotton, Ph.D.
Laboratory Director Forensic Laboratory
Reviewer: _M
Jennifer E. Reynolds, Ph.D.
Laboratory Director
Forensic Laboratory
. A plurality opinion occurs when five or more Justices agree on the result of a case, but no single opinion garners five votes. James F. Spriggs II & David R. Stras,
Explaining Plurality Decisions, 99
Geo. L.J. 515, 515 (2011). The opinion authored by Justice Alito is, however, criticized by a majority of the Court.
See Williams v. Illinois,
567 U.S. -, -,
. Justice Elena Kagan authored a dissent, which was joined by Justices Antonin Scalia, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor.
Id.
at-•,
The Court today disagrees [that Williams's confrontation rights were violated], though it cannot settle on a reason why. Justice ALITO, joined by three other Justices, advances two theories — that the expert's summary of the Cellmark report was not offered for its truth, and that the report is not the kind of statement triggering the Confrontation Clause’s protection.... [I]n all except its disposition, his opinion is a dissent: Five Justices specifically reject every aspect of its reasoning and every paragraph of its explication. Justice THOMAS, for his part, contends that the Cellmark report is nontestimonial on a different rationale. But no other Justice joins his opinion or subscribes to the test he offers.
Id.
at-,
. CODIS is short for Combined DNA Index System, which “connects DNA laboratories” at all jurisdictional levels to assist law enforcement agencies in identifying DNA found at crime scenes.
Maryland v. King,
569 U.S. --,-,
. In
Cooper v. State,
. The
“Marks
Rule” instructs lower courts that, when the Supreme Court issues a plurality opinion, "the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds.”
Marks v. United States,
. Other courts, such as those cited by the State, have avoided
Williams
by relying on their own jurisprudence.
. Justice Kagan's dissent in
Williams,
567 U.S. at-,
. In
Derr II,
we had occasion to consider whether a specific jury instruction was generated by the use of the phrase "to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty”.
. A contrary conclusion requiring such magic words as "certification” would elevate form over substance, which this Court is loath to do, especially when constitutional rights are in issue.
E.g., In re Spalding,
. Reliance upon
Bullcoming
is appropriate, because the Forensic DNA Case Report is distinguishable from the Cellmark Report in
Williams,
attached hereto as Appendix C.
See Commonwealth v. Yoke,
. The first page of the Report at issue in Bullcoming is attached at the end of this opinion as Appendix A.
. We have concluded that admission of the Report without the analyst’s
The cases cited by the State to the contrary are inapposite, because those courts either first determined that the forensic document at issue was not testimonial,
(see People v. Barba,
State v. Manion,
