UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Mark JORDAN, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 08-1431.
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Feb. 11, 2010.
594 F.3d 1265
Appellant‘s limited request for a certificate of appealability is GRANTED and the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Paula Marie Ray, Paula M. Ray, P.C., Denver, CO, appearing for Appellant.
John M. Hutchins, Assistant United States Attorney (David M. Gaouette, United States Attorney, David Conner and Gregory Holloway, Assistant United States Attorneys, with him on the brief), Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Colorado, Denver, CO, appearing for Appellee.
Before TACHA, LUCERO, and HARTZ, Circuit Judges.
TACHA, Circuit Judge.
Mark Jordan appeals the district court‘s denial of his mоtion for DNA testing
I. BACKGROUND
The following facts are taken from this Court‘s opinion affirming Mr. Jordan‘s convictions, which he does not dispute.
Mr. Jordan was accused of murdering a fellow prisoner at the United States Penitentiary in Florence, Colorado. The crime occurred on the afternoon of June 3, 1999 in the maximum-security prison‘s recreational yard.
The victim, inmate David Stone, sat at a picnic table in the prison yard wearing only shorts and tennis shoes. Numerous other prisoners were exercising, congregating, and playing games in the outdoor sun. Near Stone were three other inmates, including Mark Jordan and Sean Riker. Both Jordan and Riker were observed walking away from the table. Minutes later, someone stabbed Stone three times. Two of the wounds were superficial, while the third was fatal. Stone was able to run across the yard before collapsing. Later that night he died.
Two inmates saw the stabbing. Gary Collins was in the recreational yard at the time of the stabbing. He obsеrved Jordan, oddly dressed considering the heat in a khaki shirt and pants, in the vicinity of Stone. Collins saw Jordan walk behind Stone and stab him in the back. Collins described Jordan‘s action as “swinging a bat” in Stone‘s lower back. After Collins watched Jordan make other stabbing motions, Stone “[t]ook off running.” He also witnessed Jordan start running after Stone, but Stone was far ahead.
Another inmate, Tyrone Davis, was also in the yard and observed the stabbing. He saw Jordan standing by Stone, then watched as Jordan pushed or punched Stone in the back side in an underhanded manner. According to Davis, Stone then started running and Jordan gave chase. He then saw Stone on the ground near a crowd of people, but lost sight of Jordan.
Overlooking the recreational yard is the lieutenant‘s patio. There, Norvel Meadors, an assistant warden at the prison was taking a cigarette break. While he was smoking, he saw “two inmates sprinting across the yard out on the sidewalk.” From his vantage point, Meadors could not identify the inmates, but he noticed one was wearing only shorts and no shirt and the other was in the standard prison attire of a khaki shirt and pants. Meadors immediately recognized that the two inmates were involved in a chase, with the shirtless inmate ahead of the fully clothed one. Over the rаdio, he ordered a compound officer to direct the inmates to cease their action.
Meadors then observed the pursuing inmate stop, while the other one continued running and eventually collapsed to the ground. Meadors saw the inmate in the khaki shirt and pants throw “an object” on top оf a housing unit and then sit down at a picnic table. Meadors watched as a compound officer approached this inmate at the picnic table, patted him down, and then took him into custody.
The officer who responded to Meadors‘s radio call was Benjamin Valle. After Meadors‘s call, he observed two inmates running, with one about fifteen yards behind the other. Valle watched the trailing inmate stop and then start walking back to a housing unit, throw something up on the roof of the housing unit,
Another corrections officer, Fares Finn, Jr., observed the same incidents in nearly identical detail to Valle. A video surveillance camera also captured some of the events that afternoon, among other things (1) four inmates, including Jordan and Stone, sitting at a concrete bench aрproximately eleven minutes before the stabbing, (2) Jordan approaching where Stone sat immediately before the stabbing, and (3) the subsequent chase between Stone and Jordan. Because of the camera angle, it did not capture the fatal encounter. United States v. Jordan, 485 F.3d 1214, 1216-17 (10th Cir. 2007) (internal record citations omitted). Later, authorities discovered a bloody knife or shank with its handle wrapped in cloth on the roof of the housing unit and a blood-stained glove in the prison yard. Mr. Stone‘s DNA was on the shank and cloth, and a small amount of DNA that did not belong to Mr. Jordan was also on those objects. Scientists could not determine the source of this DNA. Nor could they determine the source of the blood on the glove, or even whether that source was human.
Mr. Jordan was charged with second degree murder, in violation of
In his defense, Mr. Jordan did not dispute that he handled the shank that fatally wounded Mr. Stone, that hе was the man prison employees saw running across the yard, or that he threw the murder weapon on the roof of the housing unit. Instead, Mr. Jordan denied killing Mr. Stone and claimed Mr. Riker, who was also at the scene of the stabbing, was the actual assailant. According to Mr. Jordan, Mr. Riker stabbed Mr. Stone and then forced thе knife on Mr. Jordan, who, in the confusion, started running in panic and then threw the knife on the roof. In support of his defense theory, Mr. Jordan pointed to evidence admitted during the government‘s case that Mr. Riker was sitting at the same picnic table with Mr. Stone immediately prior to the stabbing, that Mr. Riker had given Mr. Jordan the shank to “hit” Mr. Stоne, and that the unidentifiable DNA found on the shank suggested that someone else possessed it. The jury found Mr. Jordan guilty on all four counts, and we affirmed his convictions and sentences on direct appeal.
Then, in August 2008, Mr. Jordan filed a motion for DNA testing and a subsequent motion to preserve evidence under the IPA. In the DNA motiоn, Mr. Jordan
II. DISCUSSION
A. Motion for DNA Testing
The IPA requires the court that entered the defеndant‘s judgment of conviction to order post-conviction DNA testing of specified evidence if ten prerequisites are met.
Mr. Jordan suggests that DNA testing of the shank, the cloth, and the bloody glove may reveal Mr. Riker‘s DNA on those objects, and that this evidence would raise a reasonable probability that Mr. Jordan did not stab Mr. Stone. We disagree. Suсh evidence would only show that Mr. Riker handled those items at some point, which is not at all inconsistent with the government‘s theory of the case such that it calls into question the strength of the evidence against Mr. Jordan. Cf. United States v. Fasano, 577 F.3d 572, 578 (5th Cir. 2009) (ordering DNA testing under the IPA when favorable results would cause a “strong case” against the defendant tо “evaporate[ ]“).
Indeed, we fail to see how the presence of Mr. Riker‘s DNA on the murder weapon or other items would undermine the strength of the government‘s case in any meaningful way. Two eyewitnesses testified that Mr. Jordan stabbed Mr. Stone; no eyewitness testified that someone else committed the crime. Three prison employees also testified, and Mr. Jordan does not dispute, that after the stabbing Mr. Jordan chased Mr. Stone and later threw the murder weapon onto a housing unit. Furthermore, Mr. Jordan made suspicious statements after the incident and there was evidence of a plausible motive. The strength and reliability of this evidence would not be diminished by the presence of Mr. Riker‘s DNA on the murder weapon or the other items because such evidence would demonstrate, at most, that Mr. Riker touched or handled those items at some point. It would not, however, suggest that Mr. Jordan could not have similarly handled them or thаt he could not have used them to commit the murder. Indeed, Mr. Jordan appears to concede that he handled the shank by claiming that Mr. Riker forced the weapon on him. Furthermore, the presence of Mr. Riker‘s DNA on these items would not “explain away” the evidence of Mr. Jordan‘s motive, his curious statеments after the crime, the uncontested fact that he chased the victim and then discarded the murder weapon, or the eyewitness testimony that Mr. Jordan stabbed Mr. Stone. Moreover, the government never relied on DNA evidence as part of its case, and the jury was explicitly informed that a third person‘s DNA—and not Mr. Jordan‘s—was discovered on the shank and cloth.1 Under these circum-
Finally, we note that the district judge considering a motion under
B. Motion to Preserve Trial Evidence
Mr. Jordan also appeals from the denial of his motion to preserve evidence. Shortly after filing his motion for DNA testing, Mr. Jordan filed a “Motion to Preserve the Trial Exhibits and Other Evidence.” After the district court denied the DNA motion, it also denied the motion to preservе evidence as moot. After that order, however, Mr. Jordan initiated habeas proceedings under
III. CONCLUSION
The order denying DNA testing is AFFIRMED. We DISMISS as moot Mr. Jordan‘s appeal of the motion to preserve evidence.
LUCERO, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree with the majority‘s analysis and result. I write separately only to comment on what I consider the proper standard of review for denial of a motion for DNA testing brought pursuant to the Innocence Protection Act (“IPA“),
In drafting the IPA, Congress intended to provide prisoners with a clear-cut mechanism for acquiring post-conviction DNA testing. Pursuant to the IPA: “Upon a written motion by an individual ... the court that entered the judgment of conviction shall order DNA testing of specific evidence if the court finds that all of the following apply.”
Routinely, a district court will engage in fact-finding before determining whether the IPA requires testing. When a court does so, we afford deference to those factual findings and review for clear error.
In this case, the district court ruled that Jordan failed to meet the requirements of
Sеction 3600(a)(8)(B) requires a district court to make a reasonable probability determination akin to that conducted under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). A defendant‘s due process rights are violated under Brady if evidence suppressed by the government is both “favorable to the accused” and “material” to guilt or punishment. Id. at 87. “Evidence is material [under Brady] only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39, 57 (1987) (quotation omitted).
Similarly, an applicant is entitled to DNA testing under the IPA only if she can show that new evidence “raise[s] a reasonable probability that the applicant did not commit the offense.”
Accordingly, I would review the district court‘s ultimate decision to deny Jordan‘s motion for DNA testing de novo. For the reasons stated by the majority, Jordan‘s motion fails under this standard. I thus concur in the panel‘s judgment.
