A jury convicted Marvin John Thomas of murder in the first degree, sexual assault in the first degree and abduction. Mr. Thomas now appeals, and we reverse and remand.
I.
On 28 November 1986, Janet Miller, the victim of the alleged crimes, appeared in Parkersburg to visit her boyfriend Jeffrey Mosier.
1
Ms. Miller went to the Player’s Club, where she found Mr. Mosier and they argued. Defendant, Marvin John Thomas, bought Ms. Miller a drink. A short time
Around 11:00 p.m., Ms. Miller left the Player’s Club. Defendant Thomas was seen leaving the club a little later than Ms. Miller. Mr. Mosier seemed upset but stayed a while longer, leaving at 11:45 p.m. Both Mr. Mosier and the defendant, Mr. Thomas, claimed they went straight home and went to sleep. Defendant’s mother and sister testified that defendant was home by 12:30 a.m., while Mr. Mosier alleg
edly
The next morning, Mr. Mosier found the victim’s car still in the parking lot of the Player’s Club and left a note, saying:
I knew you would do this. It’s 5:30 a.m. and I am going to work. How about you! Ha. Hope it was good and you didn’t catch anything. You are a bitch, just like the rest.
Transcript at 647. Meanwhile, the police had begun to search for Janet Miller after the hotel where she had been staying reported her missing. Janet Miller was next seen on 10 December 1986 when her body was discovered at the closed Sundowner Drive-In.
The investigation of Ms. Miller’s murder focused on two persons: Mr. Mosier (the victim’s boyfriend) and the defendant. The Parkersburg police contacted the F.B.I. Psychological Evaluation Unit. The Par-kersburg police related a description of the circumstances surrounding the disappearance and murder to the F.B.I., and the F.B.I. gave the police a psychological profile of the likely murderer. 2 The police were able to fit both Mr. Thomas and Mr. Mosier into the profile. The F.B.I. examined the victim’s car and found the fingerprints of Mr. Mosier, but not the fingerprints of the defendant.
The police, unable to differentiate any further between the suspects, sought search warrants to search the cars and homes of both suspects. Detective G.A. Waybright obtained the warrant to seize Mr. Thomas’ car. In his affidavit, Detective Waybright averred:
Due to the association of Marvin John Thomas with Janet S. Miller in the Player’s Club, the discrepancies in his statements given to Detective Bureau personnel ... and the similarities between the personalities of Marvin John Thomas and that of the murderer indicated in the Federal Bureau of Investigations [sic] Psychological Profile, your affiant has reason to believe and does believe that Marvin John Thomas was involved in the abduction, assault and subsequent murder of Janet S. Miller. [Emphasis added]
Affidavit Supporting Search Warrant dated 12 December 1986 at 8. One factor that Det. Waybright relied upon in his affidavit to link Mr. Thomas to the psychological profile was a report that Mr. Thomas had at one time physically abused an ex-girlfriend, Jennifer Moorehead. This was a false report that Det. Waybright later attributed to a “miscommunication.”
In an affidavit sworn in front of the same judge at the same time, a different officer, Detective J. M. Spellacy, sought a search warrant to seize Mr. Mosier’s car. Primarily relying on the identical facts, the same F.B.I. psychological profile and a failed polygraph examination, Det. Spellacy swore in his affidavit, “[y]our affiant believes and has cause to believe that the crime of first degree murder of Janet S. Miller was committed by one Jeffrey L. Mosier. [Emphasis added]” Affidavit Supporting Search Warrant dated December 12, 1986, at 9. Despite the fact that two officers, working together and relying on the same facts, each swore that they believed that a different person committed the crime, Judge Gustke (the same judge who conducted the trial) found probable cause to issue both search warrants.
Under authority of the warrants, the cars were seized and sent to the F.B.I. crime lab. The F.B.I. thoroughly searched and examined both cars. The F.B.I. agents reported that they found nothing of significance in their search of either Mr. Mosier’s or Mr. Thomas’ car. Upon completion of its examination of the cars, the F.B.I. returned both cars to the Parkersburg police impound lot. The Parkersburg police then searched Mr. Thomas’ car a second time. They ripped out the right back seat cover and left rear floor mat, and sent them back to the F.B.I. lab for further examination. This time, the F.B.I. found one tiny bloodstain on the bottom of the back seat cover and a solitary hair on the floor mat.
II.
Defendant alleges several errors relating to the electrophoresis tests. Defendant asserts that: electrophoresis tests of bloodstains are inherently unreliable; the test performed in this case was performed on unreliable materials; and, the destruction of the entire bloodstain without preserving some of the material that was tested or photographs of the test results themselves for independent analysis violated Brady v. Maryland and the Sixth Amendment.
A.
In State v. Woodall, we held:
We find nothing inherently unreliable in statistical evidence based on blood-typing and enzyme tests. First, blood tests themselves are reliable when properly conducted, and these tests are valuable only when their results are placed in the context of statistical probabilities. [Emphasis added]
Solely because electrophoresis testing in general is reliable, however, is no assurance that the test performed in any given circumstance, no matter how bizarre, is necessarily reliable. Indeed, most of the criticism leveled against forensic use of electrophoresis comes not from objections that the test is inaccurate per se, but rather from objections to the specific methodology employed in performing a particular test.
In her letter,
The Misapplication of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science,
29 J. Forensic Sci. 8 (1984), Dr. Diane Juricek identifies several factors in electrophoresis testing that could result in a wrong result. Dr. Juricek cites such factors as age, exposure to heat, and possible contamination that can all lead to incorrect results. Although it is possible to control for most known factors,
4
such control cannot be au
tomatically
In a follow-up letter, Dr. Juricek clarifies her position and describes the methods for ensuring reliable electrophoresis test results. Dr. Juricek recommends the use of controls to take into account heat exposure, age, chemical contaminants, additives and other possible environmental agents that can distort the response of the sample when subjected to electrophoresis examination. After completion of the electrophoresis analysis, Dr. Juricek suggests the test be replicated whenever possible. Finally, Dr. Juricek urges that photographs of the electrophoresis slides be taken so that others may conduct independent verification of the results. 5
The responses to the suggestion of preserving as much as possible by photograph for independent verification has drawn disagreement from some forensic scientists. However, the objection to taking photographs appears to have little to do with determining the reliability of a given test, but instead focuses on the determination by scientists practicing in the forensic field that they do not want to be questioned about their analysis. For example, Dr. Simon J. Baxter commented in his letter, Electrophoresis in Forensic Sciences, 30 J. Forensic Sci. 994, 995 (1985):
In the courtroom context reference would have to be made to record books in order to identify the samples in question and in addition the analyst could be examined on his photographic qualifications.
The whole situation can be seen to be a farce where interpretation of data from a leisurely examination by an isolated observer (of unknown relative experience) of a photograph (of untested quality) of the analysis of a sample (of assumed identity) with an unknown history performed by an operator (of unknown competence, reliability, and impartiality) is accepted by the court.
Dr. Baxter continues his harangue against outside review by people who are not full-time forensic scientists by describing the plight of the forensic scientist, “Not for him the leisurely pace of research, attendance at many scientific meetings, but the ever present deadline and harassment in court." [Emphasis added.] Id.
There is some evidence in the record that Special Agent Murch, the F.B.I. expert who conducted the electrophoresis test, supports Dr. Baxter’s negative view of independent review. Dr. Murch declared that the F.B.I.’s rationale for not taking photographs was that the FBI experts did not want their conclusions to be second-guessed by defense experts:
We believe that if the defense counsel and his experts wish to challenge us or reproduce our work, then they can make the test ... [they can] re-test using their own methods in their own laboratories.
Transcript at 1391. We agree that ideally a defendant should be given samples and allowed to conduct his own test. However, when a “re-test” is clearly not an option, as when the State uses up all of the available sample, providing photographs of the electrophoresis slides is the best option available to assure reliability through independent review of the test performed.
Cross-examination is the engine of truth; in order for evidence of scientific tests to be considered reliable by the courts, the tests must be subject to the fullest cross-examination possible. In this case, the opportunity for effective cross-examination and careful inquiry into methodology was denied by the State’s failure to preserve the electrophoresis test. This is a problem of the first order: should it be present in a criminal trial, pseudo-science is eminently convincing because it is accompanied by all the mumbo-jumbo of real science.
B.
The right of an accused to a fair trial and the right to a full and fair cross-examina
tion
We have recognized this right under the West Virginia Constitution as well:
A prosecution which withholds evidence which if made available would tend to exculpate an accused by creating a reasonable doubt as to his guilt violates due process of law under Article III, Section 14 of the West Virginia Constitution.
Syl. Pt. 4,
State v. Hatfield,
More important, however, than the technical language of Brady-type cases is the policy on which Brady is grounded. As Justice Douglas wrote:
Society wins not only when the guilty are convicted but when criminal trials are fair; our system of the administration of justice suffers when any accused is treated unfairly. An inscription on the walls of the Department of Justice states the proposition candidly for the federal domain: ‘The United States wins its point whenever justice is done its citizens in the courts.’ [Footnote omitted] A prosecution that withholds evidence ... which, if made available, would tend to exculpate him or reduce the penalty helps shape a trial that bears heavily on the defendant. That casts the prosecutor in the role of an architect of a proceeding that does not comport with standards of justice.
Brady v. Maryland,
Despite the policy of Brady, the State maintains in the case before us that it was under no obligation to photograph the electrophoresis tests because the defendant did not make a showing that the evidence which he did not possess was in fact exculpatory. This is a highly disingenuous contention for two reasons. First, the State itself declared, “[pjerhaps the most crucial evidence linking the defendant to the crime was the physical evidence.” 7 The State then proceeds to describe the most crucial elements of the “physical evidence” being the blood comparisons; i.e., the electrophoresis tests. Second, in order for a defendant to make the exculpatory showing that the State suggests is required before the State must take photographs of the electrophoresis slides, the defendant needs already to know the methodology and results of those tests. 8 Such a high threshold creates an unfair “Catch-22” situation.
Although the materiality of the potentially exculpatory evidence is clear in this case,
9
not every test performed by a
Furthermore, as we discussed above in Part II A, the precondition for accepting the scientific test as relevant evidence is the ability of a defendant to examine fully the results. This is the only reliable method the courts have to determine the accuracy of a given test. As we held in Woodall:
The party seeking to impeach blood test evidence is free to cross-examine the proponent’s experts and offer experts of his own to discredit the conduct of the tests and the underlying statistical probabilities.
Taking photographs of the slides used in an electrophoresis examination is an acceptable laboratory procedure for which the technology is readily available. 11 When a test uses up an entire sample, photographic documentation of the test gives an independent expert a view of how the test was performed. In addition to photographs, the State should also provide the laboratory notes, reports, and any other records of the test in question. Such documentation is required to simulate, as closely as possible, the independent review that would have been conducted were there enough of a sample to provide to the defendant. 12
In an ideal world, the State would be able to preserve enough of the sample that a completely independent test could be performed.
13
However, we recognize that given the necessities of certain tests and the small quantities of available material, preservation of enough of the sample for an
In this case, the State did not preserve the sample for independent testing by defendant, nor did the State preserve the results of the test it performed by taking photographs of the electrophoresis results. The State therefore deprived Marvin John Thomas of his right to a full and fair cross-examination of the expert who performed the electrophoresis test. Accordingly, we find that the circuit court committed reversible error by denying defendant’s motion to suppress the results of the electrophoresis examinations of the evidentiary bloodstains.
III.
Defendant alleges three different errors relating to the search warrant: (1) the affidavits did not contain all information available to police; (2) there was no probable cause because the police were able to use the identical information to get warrants to search the cars and premises of two suspects; and, (3) the police intentionally lied on the affidavit submitted to the court.
In
Illinois v. Gates,
[W]e have repeatedly said that after-the-fact scrutiny by the courts of the sufficiency of an affidavit should not take the form of de novo review. A magistrate’s ‘determination of probable cause should be paid great deference by reviewing courts.’ Spinelli [v. United States], 393 U.S. [410], 419, 89 S.Ct. [584], 590 [21 L.Ed.2d 637 (1969)]. ‘A grudging or negative attitude by reviewing courts toward warrants,’ [United States v.] Ventresca, 380 U.S. [102], 108, 85 S.Ct. [741], 745, [13 L.Ed.2d 684 (1965)] is inconsistent with the Fourth Amendment’s strong preference for searches conducted pursuant to a warrant; ‘courts should not invalidate warrants] by interpreting affidavits] in a hypertechnical, rather than a commonsense, manner.’ Id., at 109,85 S.Ct., at 746 .
To obtain a warrant, the police are required only to show enough evidence to convince the judge (or magistrate) that the police have reason to believe that probable cause exists. The police need not reveal all evidence in the case. However, similar to the requirements of Brady v. Maryland, supra, the police may not omit facts from their affidavit that they know tend to diminish probable cause.
The standard for eliminating probable cause on the basis of material omissions does not go to every piece of information in an affidavit. The U.S. Supreme Court described the standard in Franks v. Delaware:
There is, of course, a presumption of validity with respect to the affidavit supporting the search warrant.... There must be allegations of deliberate falsehood or of reckless disregard for the truth, and those allegations must be accompanied by an offer of proof_ Allegations of negligence or innocent mistake are insufficient.... Finally, [there is no need to invalidate a warrant] if, when material that is the subject of the alleged falsity or reckless disregard is set to one side, there remains sufficient content in the warrant affidavit to support a finding of probable cause.
The facts in the search warrants that are not attributed to individuals are not those which implicate Mr. Thomas. No one told the police officer that Mr. Thomas committed the murder. The facts which were laid out without attribution were mainly background facts about the mur
der.
14
However, two different police officers, working together and relying on the same evidence, each swore that they believed that the murder was committed by a different person. 15 The police would have us believe one of two things: either two officers working together had honest differences of opinion or they were performing some fancy footwork to avoid an obvious false swearing. If the same facts can be used to implicate more than one person in a crime that could have been committed by only one of them, can probable cause be found to exist?
The U.S. Supreme Court explicitly allowed for such a possibility in Gates:
Finely tuned standards such as proof beyond a reasonable doubt or by a preponderance of the evidence, useful in formal trials, have no place in the magistrate’s decision. While an effort to fix some general, numerically precise degree of certainty corresponding to ‘probable cause’ may not be helpful, it is clear that ‘only the probability, and not a prima facie showing, of criminal activity is the standard of probable cause.’ Spinelli [393 U.S. 410 ] at 419, 83 S.Ct. [584], 590 [21 L.Ed.2d 637 (1969)].
The standard for evaluating probable cause is a “totality-of-the-circumstances” test.
Id.,
at 230,
Finally, defendant asserts that the police intentionally lied to the magistrate in the affidavit supporting the search warrant. Det. Waybright attested that Jennifer Moorehead had been physically abused by Mr. Thomas. Det. Waybright used that evidence to fit Mr. Thomas into the F.B.I. psychological profile. There is no dispute that the information cited was in fact false. The claim of a “miscommunication” be
tween
At several places in the record, the red flags of questionable police conduct in handling this investigation have been raised. We are concerned about the appearance of impropriety on the part of the police. The “miscommunication” about Ms. Moorehead is hardly an isolated incident in this case. Another instance of questionable police conduct is the mysterious appearance of the bloodstain and solitary hair in Mr. Thomas’ automobile after the F.B.I. returned the car to the Parkersburg police. 17 In any reasonable mind, a serious question of how that stain and single hair came to be found in the car is raised. One can draw only two inferences: the Parkersburg police were not doing their job before the first trip to the F.B.I. lab and the F.B.I. did not do its job properly during the first examination of the car, or else the evidence was placed in the car between the first and second F.B.I. examination of the car. Neither option is particularly comforting, but the possibility of the latter is very real and raises doubts about the credibility of the evidence and the police.
A further example of police indiscretion is the participation in the investigation by Det. Spellacy. Det. Spellacy is engaged to the sister of Nancy Chipps, a material witness and good friend of Mr. Mosier. Ms. Chipps’ credibility in no small part weighed in the police’s determination to pursue Mr. Thomas instead of Mr. Mosier. Det. Spel-lacy’s participation also leads to an impression of police favoritism and lack of impartiality. Incidents such as these serve to undermine faith in the police and the judicial system, in addition to confidence in the verdict in this case.
IV.
At the trial, defendant wanted to introduce under Rule 803(2), W.Va. Rules of Evidence, evidence that on a previous occasion Mr. Mosier physically beat Ms. Miller. To prove this, the defendant called Fred Baltice to the stand. Mr. Baltice was a friend of Ms. Miller’s. The morning after Mr. Mosier hit Ms. Miller and bruised her significantly, she drove from Columbus, Ohio, to Greensburg, Indiana, where Mr. Baltice lived. After driving around Mr. Baltice’s house three or four times, Ms. Miller went in and explained that Mr. Mosier had caused the bruises. The judge allowed in Mr. Baltice’s testimony that he saw the bruises, but did not allow in the hearsay identification of the cause of the bruises because Ms. Miller’s statement on this subject was not an “excited utterance” under Rule 803(2).
The test for an excited utterance requires, in part, a showing that the utterance was not a description of a past completed act and that the statement was made under circumstances that would exclude the possibility that it was the result of deliberation. 18 In this instance, the long passage of time between incident and recounting, as well as the circling of Mr. Baltice’s house, certainly raise enough possibility of deliberation that the circuit court’s ruling is not an abuse of discretion. 19
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Wood County is
Reversed and Remanded.
APPENDIX A
AFFIDAVIT SUPPORTING 12 DECEMBER 1986 SEARCH WARRANT FOR SEIZING MARVIN JOHN THOMAS’ CAR *
The foregoing grounds tending to establish probable grounds for the issuance of a search warrant are as follows:
On this the 12th day of December, 1986, came before the Honorable Arthur N. Gustke, Judge of this 4th Judicial Circuit, Detective G. A. Waybright, heretofore known as your affiant.
Your affiant states that he is a police officer in and for the City of Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia, and that his duties include the investigation of crimes. Your affiant further states that he is investigating the disappearance and subsequent murder of Janet S. Miller that occurred on or about the 28th day of November, 1986. This investigation was initiated by a complaint/report filed with the Parkersburg Police Department by one Pat Honaker, who is the desk manager of the Uptowner Inn, located in Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia. This initial report indicates that a white female, who identified herself as Janet S. Miller checked into the Uptown-er Inn on Friday, the 28th day of November, 1986, and was assigned to Room # 215. A short time subsequent to checking in to the Uptowner Inn Janet S. Miller was seen leaving the hotel grounds after first placing her clothing and toilet articles and a large purse inside of Room #215. Her leaving was observed by various members of the staff of the Uptowner Inn. At no time following this did Janet S. Miller ever return to the hotel. Housekeeping staff for the Uptowner Inn became alarmed when Janet Miller did not return for her personal effects and then notified the Par-kersburg Police Department on Sunday, November 30, 1986. Also on Sunday, the 30th' day of November, 1986, a 1986 Chevrolet Z-24 Cavalier automobile, bearing Indiana Registration 69A6876, and having Vehicle Identification Number 1G1JF27W8G7114945, was located on the parking lot of the Olympic Sports World complex, which is located in the 2800 block of Birch Street in Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia. This vehicle was discovered by uniformed officers of the Parkersburg Police Department. A vehicle registration inquiry through the National Law Enforcement Tele-Communications System showed that this vehicle was owned by and registered to Janet S. Miller of 410 Hermans Street in Batesville, Indiana. The driver’s side door of the vehicle was found to unlocked and Officer L.I. Reed inspected it’s interior. Located inside the vehicle were a ladies handbag and coat, which were found to belong to Janet S. Miller. The handbag was taken into the custody of Officer Reed for safekeeping and the handwritten note left in the vehicle advising the owner to contact police headquarters for the return of the purse. Through investigation it was learned that Janet S. Miller had come to Parkersburg, WV, from Greensburg, Indiana, on the afternoon of November 28,1986, and that between 9 and 10 p.m. on that date had arrived at the Players Club, which is located within the Olympic Sports World complex with the intention of meeting Jeffrey L. Mosier, her fiancee. While in the Players Club, one Marvin John Thomas did purchase at least one drink for Janet S. Miller and other females present in the bar. Moments later Marvin John Thomas approached Nancy Black, a patron of the Players Club, and asked her to dance with him, a request refused by Miss Black. Marvin J. Thomas then proceeded to and asked Janet S. Miller to dance. Upon her ascent, the couple went to the dance floor area of the Players Club and there did dance one dance. This was observed by a number of other patrons
On Friday, December 5, 1986, Marvin John Thomas was interviewed at the Par-kersburg Police Department Detective Bureau by Detectives G. A. Waybright and J. M. Spellacy at which time Mr. Thomas related the following as his day’s activities for Friday, the 28th of November, 1986. During the late morning hours of that date, Marvin John Thomas obtained a 1987 Nissan Pulsar automobile from the Parkers-burg Nissan dealership on Murdoch Avenue in the City of Parkersburg. This vehicle was obtained for testdriving purposes and left in it’s place was a 1980 Datsun 510 for appraisal as a possible trade-in vehicle. The Nissan Pulsar was returned to the dealership sometime between 7 and 7:30 p.m. on the evening of November 28, 1986. Marvin J. Thomas then spent some time talking to Tim Suder, who is a salesman for Parkersburg Nissan. Mr. Thomas then left the dealership driving his own vehicle, which is a 1980 Datsun 510, blue in color. Marvin John Thomas then proceeded to the Olympic Sports World complex and the Players Lounge. When asked why he chose to go to the Players Club on that date, Mr. Thomas stated that he was going there to meet a friend named Jill Barber. Marvin John Thomas stated that upon his arrival at the Players Club he attempted to locate Ms. Barber but was unable to do so. Investigation has shown that Jill Barber claims to have followed Marvin John Thomas to the Parkersburg Nissan dealership when he went to pick up his own vehicle and returned the test vehicle and then had proceeded to the Players Club with him. It should be noted that in interviewing Tim Suder, the salesman at Parkersburg Nissan, he stated that Mr. Marvin John Thomas had not purchased the vehicle test driven and that the reason for this was that Mr. Thomas's insurance rates were high due to previous motor vehicle accidents that he had been involved in and also because he had received two traffic citations. During the interview of Marvin John Thomas at police headquarters, Mr. Thomas stated that he had had no contact with law enforcement officials of any type other than in the investigation of these two prior motor vehicle accidents. He stated to Detectives Waybright and Spellacy that at no time had he received any traffic citations. A check of the West Virginia Department of Motor Vehicle files revealed that Mr. Thomas had indeed received two traffic citations for speeding. The conviction dates for both of these citations were in the year of 1985. Marvin John Thomas further stated that he arrived at the Players Club sometime between 9 and 9:30 p.m., stopping only briefly at a reception area in the health club before entering the bar. Marvin John Thomas says that he observed Janet S. Miller entering the bar approximately 15 to 30 minutes after her had arrived there. He states that during this time the bar where he sat near and spoke with Kenny Litton and some friends of Kenny Litton. Mr. Thomas is associated with Mr. Litton through pickup basketball games that they had played together in the Southwood Park area of the City of Par-kersburg. Mr. Thomas states that he bought Janet S. Miller and two other female persons in the bar drinks. Mr. Thomas also stated that he had watched Janet S. Miller for quite some time, however, he later stated that he had observed nothing and could recall very little about her appearance. Marvin John Thomas stated that he had asked no other person in the bar to dance with him that night. Nancy Black has stated to Detective J. M. Spellacy that Marvin John Thomas did indeed ask her to dance with him and that she turned him down. Marvin John Thomas further stated that he had observed Janet S. Miller talking with Jeffrey Mosier and that he believed that those two persons were in the bar to meet each other yet he still persisted in asking Janet S. Miller to dance with him. Mr. Thomas states that during the time that he and Janet Miller were dancing they did not speak to each other other than to exchange first names. Marvin John Thom
as states that he did not notice any physical attributes or articles of clothing that Janet S. Miller was wearing other than to state that she was wearing a white or light colored blouse. Marvin John Thomas
On the morning of Friday, December 12, 1986, Sgt. T. A. Dent of the Parkersburg Police Department contacted the Psychological Evaluation Unit of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is located in Quantico, Virginia. Sgt. Dent provided that agency with information collected in reference to this homicide and from this information a psychological profile of the perpetrator was provided. Characteristics given in this profile are as follows: (1) the beating of the victim about the head and face severely indicates that there is a high probability that the victim knew or was acquainted with her assailant, (2) the assailant has deep hatred for women and does not develop long term relationships with them. This person would also tend to use women in order to show his superiority. This is consistent with reports from various sources which indicate that Marvin John Thomas was a “loner”, who did not associate well with females. (3) Jennifer More-head, a recent girlfriend of Marvin John Thomas, bears a close physical resemblance to the victim in this case. Through investigation it had been learned that the relationship between Marvin John Thomas and Jennifer Morehead was ended by Jennifer Morehead. The psychological profile indicates that these facts are very consistent with the aggression shown in the physical assault on the victim in this case. (4) The agressiveness, impulsiveness and hot temper exhibited by Marvin John Thomas and is documented by Michael Hayden is indicative of violent tendancies which would be consistent with the actions surrounding the death of the victim. (5) Marvin John Thomas has been described by associates as a loner with few friends. The psychological profile indicates that a person with few friends of either sex and inability to initiate and maintain friendships is a clear indicator of deep inferiority feelings within that person. (6) Arrogant actions and displays of implied superiority are consistent with the personality of Marvin John Thomas as indicated by acquaintances. (7) These same feelings of inferiority which breed the inability to maintain relationships and also an arrogant attitude also cause a person to develop possessiveness and jealousy as results in this person’s giving gifts to other people to prove himself and to help relieve these inferior feelings. This was clearly demonstrated in the buying of drinks for a number of persons within the Players Club
Also on December 12,1986, a green blanket, similiar in description to that described by Marvin John Thomas and into which he states he vomited, was located at the Sun-downer Drive Inn. This blanket bore what appeared to be human vomit and some other fluid.
For these reasons your affiant respectfully requests the issuance of a search warrant for the above described vehicle. /s/Detective G. A. Waybright AFFIANT
Taken, subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of December, 1986. /s/Arthur N. Gustke Circuit Court Judge, Wood County, West Virginia
APPENDIX B
AFFIDAVIT SUPPORTING 12 DECEMBER 1986 SEARCH WARRANT FOR SEIZING JEFFREY L. MOSIER’S CAR *
The foregoing facts tending to establish probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant are as follows.
On this 12th day of December, 1986, came forth before Judge Arthur N. Gustke, Detective J. Michael Spellacy, heretofore known as your affiant.
Your affiant states that he is a police officer in and for the City of Parkersburg, Wood County, WV. Your affiant further states that part of his duties as a police officer are to investigate crime. Your affi-ant states that he is currently investigating the crime of murder, the murder of one Janet S. Miller, a white female, age 22. The circumstances surrounding the murder are as follows.
Miss Miller was a resident of Greens-burg, Indiana, and had been engaged to one Jeffrey L. Mosier, formerly of Greens-burg, Indiana, and currently residing at 405D Lakeview Estates, Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia. On November 28, 1986, Janet Miller arrived in Par-kersburg, Wood County, WV, in the late afternoon hours and checked into the Up-Towner Inn in Parkersburg and later on in the evening hours of 11/28/86 at approximately 9:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. arrived at
For these reasons your affiant respectfully requests the issuance of a search warrant for the aforementioned vehicle.
/s/J. M. Spellacy Affiant
Taken, subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of December, 1986.
/s/Arthur N. Gustke Circuit Court Judge, Wood County, West Virginia
JMS/db-5
Notes
. "Boyfriend" is used loosely. It was apparent that Mr. Mosier and Ms. Miller were not on good terms by the evening in question. An excerpt from Mr. Mosier's testimony should make this clear:
I said, "Hi, how are you, what are you doing here?” ... she said, “How long did you think it would take before I showed up?” I said, “What do you mean?” She said, "You haven’t called, we haven’t communicated.” ... She said she had heard I was with another lady and she wanted to know what was going on and all kinds of things, and I told her it wasn’t true. She was upset. She said she had heard that and she wanted to know, and she was mad.
Transcript at 638-639.
. See Appendix A and Appendix B for the way in which the Parkersburg police employed the same psychological profile to implicate Mr. Thomas and Mr. Mosier.
. In its brief, the State requests that we hold that a
Frye
hearing is no longer necessary in future cases involving electrophoresis. “When senior appellate courts have concluded that a test is generally accepted by the scientific community, a trial court may take judicial notice of a test’s reliability." Syl. Pt. 2,
State v. Woodall,
There is no controversy that the electrophoresis test, in general, is a reliable test. See Bruce Budowle and Robert C. Allen, Electrophoresis Reliability: I. The Contaminant Issue, 32 J. Forensic Sci. 1537 (1987); Sensbaugh, Response to "The Misapplication of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science", 29 J. Forensic Sci. 12 (1984). At the same time, much research has been done into the limits of the test and ways to correct for types of contamination. See, e.g., Denault, Taki-moto, et al., Detectability of Selected Genetic Markers in Dried Blood on Aging, 25 J. Forensic Sci. 479 (1980). Most of the dissent from support of the test is not focused on the test itself but on methods for controlling it. See, e.g., Juricek, The Misapplication of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science, 29 J. Forensic Sci. 8 (1984); Juricek, Electrophoresis: A Continuation of the Discussion, 29 J. Forensic Sci. 704 (1984).
Accordingly, no Frye-type hearing will be required in the future for judicial notice of the reliability of the test
in general.
This does not mean that a full cross-examination of the results of a test should be hindered in any way.
See Woodall,
. See George F. Sensbaugh, Response to "The Misapplication of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science," 29 J. Forensic Sci. 12 (1984). Sens-baugh oversimplifies Dr. Juricek’s criticism in his defense of the use of electrophoresis in forensic science by drawing the conclusion that her belief is that it should never be used. The proper conclusion to draw from the criticism and the responses is that electrophoresis can be performed correctly, but there are many confounding factors that might interfere with a correct analysis. See also, Bruce Budowle, Ph.D. and Robert C. Allen, Ph.D., Electrophoresis Reliability: I. The Contaminant Issue, 32 J. Forensic Sci. 1537 (1987).
. Diane K. Juricek, Electrophoresis: A Continuation of the Discussion, 29 J. Forensic Sci. 704 (1984).
. "We now hold that suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused ... violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment.”
Brady v. Maryland,
. Appellee’s Brief at 15.
. In
People v. Garries,
.Realistically, the State would not go through the inconvenience and expense of performing an electrophoresis examination on a blood stain if it were not important to its case.
Furthermore, in this case there are two suspects for which the evidence can almost equally be made to fit. An examination of the two search warrants issued on December 12 clearly show that all of the circumstantial evidence can easily be made to fit either Mr. Mosier or defendant. See Appendices A and B. The primary evidence that links defendant to the crime to the exclusion of Mr. Mosier is the electrophoresis test. The test is clearly material evidence.
. Our ruling today does not change our holding in
State v. Fortner,
. In the exchange of letters in 29 J. Forensic ScL 8-16 (Jan.1984), the merit of using electrophoresis in forensic science is sharply debated. However, both sides did agree on one thing: that photographs can and should be taken of electrophoresis tests so review can be conducted:
Dr. George Sensbaugh (in his letter defending the forensic use of electrophoresis) wrote:
The quality assurance programs operating in most crime laboratories prevent analysts from employing a marker until they have developed the critical judgment to work with that marker. In addition, many laboratories have an established policy that typing judgments require independent assessments by two or more analysts. It is also the rule in most laboratories that typing gels are documented photographically. These safeguards are in effect to minimize risk of analyst error. [Emphasis added.]
Id. at 13.
. Although a defendant may he entitled to photographic documentation of test results, we do not hold today that a defendant is necessarily entitled to the camera angles of his choice. In general, we do not want extended litigation over the sufficiency of documentation. If the State reasonably documents the results of the test, then that will be sufficient to overcome any constitutional infirmities with the admission of test results into evidence.
. Dr. Simon J. Baxter commented in his letter, Electrophoresis in Forensic Sciences, 30 J. Forensic Sci. 994, 995 (1985):
[T]he only truly scientific way of testing the crime lab work is to retain relevant material where possible, at ultra-low temperatures so that any independent scientist can actually analyze the material personally. This has the advantage that the independent verifier has as complete a knowledge as possible of the sample and also such an expert can be vigorously tested in court as to his competence, experience and so forth.
. For example, defendant cites the following as a material omission:
The affidavit of Officer Waybright also stated that it was learned "through investigation" that Janet S. Miller had come to Parkersburg. Although he knew that this information could be supported by statements given to himself and other police officers, by Ms. Miller’s parents, brother and people at the Uptowner Inn, the officer chose not to include the source of the information in his affidavit.
Appellant’s Brief at 14. This information is just background; it can hardly be considered material to a determination of probable cause. Investigation of what "through investigation” entails would not have aided the judge in determining whether probable cause was present.
. In his affidavit, Detective G.A. Waybright stated, "[yjour affiant has reason to believe and does believe that Marvin John Thomas was involved in the abduction, assault and subsequent murder of Janet S. Miller. [Emphasis added]”
In an affidavit sworn in front of the same judge at approximately the same time, a different officer, Detective J.M. Spellacy swore in his affidavit, “[yjour affiant believes and has cause to believe that the crime of first degree murder of Janet S. Miller was committed by one Jeffrey L. Mosier. [Emphasis added]" See Appendices A and B for full text of the warrants.
.We have previously adopted the
Gates
"totality-of-the-circumstances” standard.
See
Syl. Pt. 4,
State v. Adkins,
. The hair was admitted into evidence at trial; no error was assigned to this Court about that admission.
.
See State v. Farmer,
.Defendant also alleges three instances of jury misconduct. The trial judge held a hearing on the matter and determined that no significant misconduct had occurred. We find no reason to disturb that decision.
The text in this Appendix has been reproduced verbatim from the actual affidavit submitted to the Wood County Circuit Court. No misspellings, typographical errors, or syntax errors have been corrected.
The text in this appendix has been reproduced verbatim from the actual affidavit submitted to the Wood County Circuit Court. No misspellings, typographical errors, or syntax errors have been corrected.
