Lead Opinion
¶ 1. Jеssica M. Weissinger appeals from a judgment convicting her of causing great bodily harm by intoxicated use of a motor vehicle while having a detectable amount of a restricted controlled substance in the blood, Wis. Stat. § 940.25(l)(am) (2011-12),
FACTS
¶ 2. On July 6, 2009, the vehicle Weissinger was driving struck a motorcycle, severely injuring the operator of the motorcycle. At the scene, the police did not suspect Weissinger of being under the influence of an intoxicant. Weissinger was not arrested. Nevertheless, the police asked Weissinger to consent to give a blood sample, which she did.
¶ 3. An officer took her to the hospital, without arresting her and without handcuffs, and hospital personnel drew Weissinger's blood. The blood sample was sent to the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, where it was tested on July 13, 2009. The sample showed no alcohol. The lab report indicated that the "[s]pecimen(s) will be retained no longer than six months unless otherwise requested by agency or subject." On August 7, 2009, Weissinger's blood was tested again, this time for drugs. The test revealed a detectable amount of tetrahydrocannabinols (THC). A February 24, 2010 test confirmed the presence of THC in Weissinger's blood.
DISCUSSION
¶ 5. Weissinger argues that the trial court erred in allowing the State to present evidence of the blood test results because Wis. Stat. § 971.23(5) gave her the right to retest the blood sample and because the failure to preserve the blood sample denied her due process.
¶ 6. The State responds that Wis. Stat. § 971.23 does not allow for discovery of the blood sample itself, but rather only the blood test results. Weissinger's due process rights were not violated because she had the opportunity to have an additional test and to challenge the test results on cross-examination. Finally, argues the State, Weissinger has not shown that the blood sample was apparently exculpatory or that the State acted in bad faith in destroying the blood sample.
Standard of Review
¶ 7. We review the trial court's evidentiary decisions for an erroneous exercise of discretion. State v. Munford,
United States Supreme Court Cases Regarding Destruction of Potentially Useful Evidence
¶ 8. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that criminal prosecutions conform to fundamental notions of fairness and that criminal defendants are given "a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense." California v. Trombetta,
¶ 9. In Trombetta and Arizona v. Youngblood,
¶ 12. The United States Supreme Court took the case and reversed. Id. at 545. The Court reiterated the necessity of a finding of bad faith in order to show a due process violation when potentially exculpatory evidence has been destroyed. Id. at 547-48. "We have never held or suggested that the existence of a pending discovery request eliminates the necessity of showing bad faith on the part of police." Id. at 548. "We also disagree that Youngblood does not apply whenever the contested evidence provides a defendant's 'only hope for exoneration' and is 'essential to and determinative of the outcome of the case.'" Id. (citation omitted). The applicability of the Youngblood bad-faith requirement deрends on whether the evidence was exculpatory or just potentially useful, not on whether the evidence was central to the state's case. Fisher,
¶ 13. Fisher tells us that Youngblood applies to Weissinger's case even though the destruction of the evidence prevented an independent test and the blood sample test result arguably determined the outcome of the case.
¶ 14. Under Youngblood, Greenwold I, and Green-wold II, Weissinger has shown no due process violation. The Greenwold II court expressly rejected the argument that, in an evidence destruction case, the due process clause of the Wisconsin Constitution affords greater protection than that of the United States Constitution. Greenwold II,
¶ 15. Weissinger argues that, under preYoungbloodlGreenwold Wisconsin precedent, her due process rights were violated when the state lab destroyed the blood sample before she was charged. Although decided before the Youngblood analysis was set forth by the Supreme Court, in State v. Disch,
Wisconsin Stat. § 971.23
¶ 16. First, the supreme court rejected an argument Weissinger makes here: that the blood sample— evidence that she hoped would aid in her defense — was destroyed in violation of her right under Wis. Stat. § 971.23(5) "to inspect and perform tests on any physical evidence the State had in its possession." Disch,
Admissibility Under Wis. Stat. § 885.235
¶ 17. The Disch court also noted that blood test results for alcohol were statutorily admissible per se under Wis. Stat. § 885.235 (1979-80), and it would be error to exclude the results from evidence. Disch,
Ability to Challenge Testing Procedure as Due Process Safeguard
¶ 18. The Disch court went on to hold that due process is afforded by the disclosure of the blood test results and the right to cross-examine regarding the accuracy and credibility of the analysis. Disch,
¶ 19. Weissinger was able to cross-examine persons in the chain of custody as well as persons involved in the testing of her blood sample. Additionally, the trial court allowed Weissinger to examine the State's witnesses regarding the destruction of the blood sample. Thus, the only difference between this case and Disch and Ehlen is that in those cases the defendants were arrested and advised of their ability to obtain further tests. See Wis. Stat. § 343.305(2)-(4). Weissinger was not under arrest, and thus the officer was under no obligation to advise her regarding additional tests. That factual difference does not compel a different result here. Youngblood, Greenwold I, and Greenwold II establish the test we must apply to determine whether there has been a due process violation by the destruction of evidence. Weissinger has not shоwn that the destroyed test was apparently exculpatory or that the test was destroyed in bad faith.
CONCLUSION
¶ 20. The dissent cites articles suggesting that laboratory results are not always reliable. Weissinger points to nothing to suggest that her test results were unreliable. If the general reliability of routine blood testing on samples that are likely to be outcome determinative is questionable, then the supreme court or the legislature is the proper body to address this issue. Justice Bablitch urged, in his concurrence in Ehlen,
¶ 21. Weissinger maintains that her due process rights were violated when the State introduced test results from a blood sample that had been destroyed. Weissinger has not shown that the blood sample was apparently exculpatory and therefore has not shown a violation of due process. The trial court properly admitted the blood test results.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2011-12 version unless otherwise noted.
Additional blood tests were done that detected the presence of oxycodone, fluoxetine and norfluoxetine, all at therapeutic levels. These drugs did not form the basis of the charges against Weissinger.
The dissent attempts to distinguish Illinois v. Fisher,
Evidence that has been tested by government agents and appears to be inculpatory is not apparently exculpatory. Elizabeth A. Bawden, Here Today, Gone Tomorrow — Three Common Mistakes Courts Make When Police Lose or Destroy Evidence With Apparent Exculpatory Value, 48 Clev. St. L. Rev. 335, 343 (2000). See also, e.g., Fisher,
Weissinger's reliance on State v. Hahn,
In its due process analysis, the Disch court also focused on whether the defendant could show that the missing evidence was material at the time the defense requested it. State v. Disch,
Concurrence Opinion
¶ 22. (concurring). I certainly understand where the dissent is coming from. The defendant, Weissinger, was not initially arrested following a bad accident. She voluntarily had her blood tested and she heard nothing for months. During that time, the blood first was tested for alcohol and came back negative. Three weeks later, in August 2009, the blood was screened for drugs and came back positive for THC. The State did nothing with this result at that time. In September and October 2009, and then in January 2010, additional drug screenings were run to detect and measure levels of various prescription drugs. Finally, in February 2010, another test of the sample confirmed the presence of THC. Then, in April 2010, the sample itself, which had undergone six different tests, was
¶ 23. As I read the dissent, it is contending that, if the State was going to test a sample multiple times without Weissinger's knowledge and before deciding to press charges, the sample should have been preserved so that Weissinger could test it once. By not giving her notice of what the State was doing and giving her a chance to test the sample herself, I read the dissent as saying that the State blindsided her.
¶ 24. I agree that what the State did and the way the facts unfolded is troubling. But Weissinger did not raise bad faith as an issue, and the dissent cannot therefore use the term "bad faith" in its separate opinion.
¶ 25. Why is this term important? It is important because Arizona v. Youngblood,
¶ 26. The dissent makes a valiant attempt to distinguish Youngblood on its facts. Of primary importance, the dissent notes that, unlike in other destroyed blood test cases such as State v. Disch,
¶ 27. The other factor that the dissent claims distinguishes Youngblood is that the blood evidence in this case was so critical to the prosecution. However, as a recent article in the magazine of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers observed, the vast majority of courts reject the view that Youngblood applies differently when evidence is especially critical:
Not surprisingly, when evidence is lost it is usually deemed potеntially exculpatory because, as in Youngblood, it is hard to prove that the evidence could help exonerate the accused without possessing the evidence in order to test it. At least one court, however, has looked at how critical the evidence is in determining its materiality. Specifically, in United States v. Belcher, [762 F. Supp. 666 , 672 (W.D. Va. 1991)], the Western District of Virginia applied the Trombetta materially exculpatory standard to destroyed marijuana plants because they were critical to the government's case and used in its case in chief. But. . . the majority of courts have rejected this approach and would find such evidence only potentially exculpatory and thus subject to the Youngblood bad faith analysis.
¶ 28. In my view, the dissent is taking the same tack as the court did in Belcher. That is a lonely existence and one that is, in the view of almost every other court, inconsistent with what Youngblood stands for. No matter how much the dissent tries to limit Youngblood to its facts, practically every other court that has faced a Youngblood issue sees the strength of that case for what it is. Many courts do not like it. But they do not try to get around it. They reject it and rely on state constitutional law to arrive at a different test.
¶ 29. I must say that I do not like Youngblood. I simply do not understand how a person can show that the destroyed sample was apрarently exculpatory when the sample cannot be tested to determine whether the sample has exculpatory value. It sets up an illusion. It would have been okay if the test was whether the sample could be shown to be "potentially useful." But that test does not have applicability unless the defen
¶ 30. I am not alone in my distaste for Young-blood. Several courts and commentators have criticized the case, and a number of states have held that their state constitutions require a balancing test instead.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Henderson,
See also Norman C. Bay, Old Blood, Bad Blood, and Youngblood: Due Process, Lost Evidence, and the Limits of Bad Faith, 86 Wash. U. L. Rev. 241, 247 (2008) (explaining that "the bad faith standard imposes an almost insurmountable burden upon the accused" and that in "two decades, only a handful of courts have found due process violations"); Teresa N. Chen, The Youngblood Success Stories: Overcoming the "Bad Faith" Destruction of Evidence Standard, 109 W. Va. L. Rev. 421, 422 (2007) (stating that "what was initially hailed as an almost 'impossible' standard by critics has almost proven to be just that," and finding in 2007 that in more than 1500 published cases citing Youngblood, only seven found bad faith); Daniel R. Dinger, Note, Should Lost Evidence Mean a Lost Chance to Prosecute?: State Rejections of the United States Supreme Court Decision in Arizona v. Youngblood, 27 Am. J. Crim. L. 329, 365 (2000) (quoting criminal law
As the dissent points out, in view of the defendant Youngblood's ultimate exoneration of the vicious crimes via DNA evidence, and the fact that the real perpetrator was thereafter brought to justice, "[i]ronically, the rule of law established by [Youngblood] was founded upon the conviction of an innocent man." Bay,
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 31. (dissenting). A criminal justice system that allows the government to destroy the sole evidence of a person's guilt priоr to notice, charging, or a meaningful opportunity for the accused to inspect the State's evidence is fundamentally unfair. The State charged Weissinger with having something in her blood, but then destroyed the blood prior to giving Weissinger any meaningful opportunity to inspect the blood. It is a perversion of justice that we apparently accord more due process evidentiary protection to our property than we accord to our liberty interests. I respectfully dissent
¶ 32. In civil court, we impose a duty upon every party or potential litigant to preserve evidence essential to a claim that will likely be litigated. Sentry Ins. v. Royal Ins. Co. of Am.,
¶ 33. By supporting the State's destruction of evidence in this criminal case, the majority makes two critical errors: (1) it misreads Arizona v. Youngblood,
Youngblood Does Not Sanction the Precharging Destruction of Inculpatory Evidence
¶ 34. The majority's misapplication oí Youngblood becomes apparent when examining the three types of evidence that are collected by the government in build
¶ 35. Another type of evidence is all that material that is collected by the State in the course of its investigatiоn, but which is not used at trial. It is this second type of evidence that was at issue in Youngblood. The evidence in Youngblood was clothing that the government had not properly refrigerated such that scientific testing was not possible. Youngblood,
¶ 37. The majority justifies the precharging destruction of inculpatory evidence in Weissinger's case by relying on a series of factually distinguishable cases. In Illinois v. Fisher,
¶ 38. The proper reading of Youngblood and its cohorts is not as permitting the precharging destruction of inculpatory evidence, but as an unwillingness to impose "an undifferentiated" duty on the government to retain and preserve "all material that might be of conceivable evidentiary significance in a particular
¶ 39. We often say that a criminal defendant is "entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect trial." State v. Hanson,
¶ 40. We recently released State v. Luedtke,
(1) Was observed at the scene of the accident stuffing syringes and a metal spoon down a sewer drain;
(2) Was found to have syringes, a brown prescription bottle containing a white powder, and a metal spoon in his car;
(3) Admitted to a police officer he had injected morphine;
(4) Showed evidence of impairment on field sobriety tests to the extent that he could not drive safely;
(5) Was arrested;
(6) Was read the Informing the Accused and advised that he could take an alternate test free of charge or have a test conducted by a qualified person at his own expense;
(7) Was handcuffed;
(8) Was examined by a drug recognition expert at the hospital;
*572 (9) Had his blood drawn at the hospital on April 27, 2009;
(10) Was charged in a criminal complaint on December 18, 2009; and
(11) Had his blood destroyed "per state laboratory protocol" on February 4, 2010.
Id., ¶¶ 2-4.
¶ 41. Luedtkе received notice of his right to an alternate test and had numerous meaningful opportunities to challenge the blood evidence against him. This case is the polar opposite of Luedtke. The investigating officer had neither reasonable suspicion nor probable cause to believe that Weissinger was under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time of her accident or that her ability to operate a motor vehicle was impaired. The investigating officer asked Weissinger for a voluntary blood sample as a matter of department policy. Weissinger was never arrested or taken into custody on July 6. Weissinger was never given Miranda
¶ 42. The majority acknowledges that due process requires that criminal defendants be given "a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense," Majority, ¶ 8, but asserts that Weissinger's right to due process is protected by her ability to cross-examine the State's witnesses, id., ¶ 19. This due process protection is inadequate.
¶ 44. Nor is reliance on the cross-examination of the State's expert meaningful as the State's experts are not infallible. About the time Weissinger's blood was tested, the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene received a failing score from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services' Division of Quality Assurance and was required to enact and "submit a corrective action plan showing root cause analysis and ensuring implementation of effective corrective action." Letter from Barbara J. Saar to Charles D. Brokopp (July 15, 2010) available at http://walworthbar.org/wp-content/uploads /2012/0 l/WSLH_AI_June-2010-PT_Corrective-ActionDocuments-22. pdf. The Division of Quality Assurance found that, in a testing event in June 2010, the lab had a score of forty percent, which was a "failing event score."
¶ 46. Additionally, the majority errs when it places the burden on Weissinger to show that the State's inculpatory evidence (her blood) was "appar
¶ 47. Consider that instead of Weissinger's blood, the evidence at issue was a bag of powder found in Weissinger's car. Police had no circumstantial evidence indicating that the powder was a controlled substance and Weissinger exhibited no sign that she was using or had used illegal substances or was impaired. The police asked Weissinger if they could take the bag of powder as it was "department protocol." The State crime lab then had an expert test the powder and the expert opines/tells the prosecutor that the powder is cocaine. The prosecutor, because of work load does not charge Weissinger until after the crime lab has thrown away the bag of powder because it was too expensive for the crime lab to store evidence for more than six months.
¶ 48. Simply put, the majority reads Youngblood too broadly. Youngblood is not a bright-line test when examining whether the fundamental fairness requirement of the Due Process Clause has been violated. As Justice Stevens noted in his concurrence in Youngblood-. "[Tjhere may well be cases in which the defendant is unable to prove that the State acted in bad faith but in which the loss or destruction of evidence is nonetheless so critical to the defense as to make a criminal trial fundamentally unfair." Youngblood,
Which begs the question: why would the government engage in the bad faith destruction of evidence that has value to the government and no exculpatory value to the defendant?
Miranda v. Arizona,
The blood sample in this case was received by the State Laboratory of Hygiene in July 2009, the test used against Weissinger was performed in February 2010, the report introduced into evidence that documented the test result was gen
The reason the blood was destroyed in Weissinger's case was not because it was no longer testable or material to the case; the reason the blood was destroyed was because the laboratory instituted a six-month retention period in response to the high volume of samples that it receives. I disagree that
