MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO EXCLUDE FIREARM IDENTIFICATION EVIDENCE
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Defendant Taylor’s Motion to Exclude Firearm Identification Evidence [Doc. 277], The Court held a Daubert hearing on this motion on September 2nd and 3rd, 2009, at which the Court heard the testimony of Defense expert Adina Schwartz, Ph.D. (Dr. Schwartz), and Government expert Ron G. Nichols (Mr. Nichols). Having considered the parties’ written and oral arguments, the testimony of Dr. Schwartz and Mr. Nichols, and the applicable law, the Court finds that Defendant’s motion is not well taken and shall be DENIED. However, the Court will limit certain parts of Mr. Nichols’ opinion testimony, as described below.
INTRODUCTION
On July 8, 2005, deputies were dispatched to the Causey, New Mexico home
While in the custody of the New Mexico Department of Corrections, Defendant developed a relationship with Donnie Wilson, an Aryan Brotherhood member who had begun cooperating with the FBI and who had been placed, at the request of the FBI, in a cell adjacent to the cell where Defendant was being housed. Wilson was asked to determine whether Defendant had any involvement in the murder of Mr. Chunn. Defendant eventually admitted to Wilson that he killed Mr. Chunn, and told him that he used a .30-.30 caliber rifle in the murder. Defendant also told Wilson that a number of weapons, including the murder weapon, were hidden and needed to be disposed cf. Wilson told Defendant about another Aryan Brotherhood member on the outside who could dispose of the weapons. In reality, this other Aryan Brotherhood member was an undercover law enforcement officer. Thereafter, without any prompting from Wilson, Defendant drew Wilson a map showing the location of the hidden weapons. The FBI used that map to obtain a search warrant for the abandoned house where Defendant said he hid the weapons. When the warrant was executed, the officers found, along with other weapons, a .30-.30 caliber rifle matching the description Defendant gave Wilson of the weapon he used to kill Mr. Chunn.
The recovered rifle and the projectile removed from Mr. Chunn’s refrigerator door were presented to Steve Guerra, a firearms examiner with the New Mexico Department of Public Safety, for firearms identification analysis. On April 20, 2009, the Government filed an Amended Notice of Expert Testimony [Doc. 235], declaring its intent to call Mr. Guerra to offer expert opinion testimony based on the results of his analysis. However, the Government subsequently withdrew Mr. Guerra as a witness and instead, on August 5, 2009, notified Defendant of its intent to offer the expert opinion testimony of Ronald G. Nichols, a firearm and tool-mark examiner with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, who also performed an examination of the recovered rifle and the bullet believed to have killed Mr. Chunn [Doc. 425]. Mr. Nichols will testify that in his opinion there is a match between the recovered bullet and the recovered rifle. In the instant motion Defendant seeks to have all firearms identification evidence excluded, arguing that it is unreliable, invalid, and does not meet the requirements for admissibility of expert testimony. See Deft. Brf. [Doc. 277] at 1.
I. Mr. Nichols’ Qualifications
Mr. Nichols is currently employed as a firearm and toolmark examiner with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives in Walnut Creek, California. He graduated from the State University of New York at Buffalo with a bachelor of science degree in forensic science. He was employed with the Oakland, California Police Department from approximately 1999
II. Applicable Legal Standard
The admissibility of expert opinion testimony is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 702, which codified the Supreme Court’s decision in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence, or to determine a fact on issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
See also United States v. Baines,
Daubert
itself was limited to scientific evidence,
see Baines,
Should the trial court find that the general methodology underlying the proposed expert testimony is both relevant and sufficiently reliable, it must then evaluate the proposed vehicle for that testimony: the expert himself. The court must determine whether the expert is qualified by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education to be a proponent of the specialized methodology. Fed.R.Evid. 702. The court must further determine whether the witness has reliably applied that methodology to the facts of the particular case. Id.
The United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts has clearly articulated the competing policy interests that must be balanced in the evaluation of proposed expert testimony; “The Court’s vigilant exercise of this gatekeeper role is critical because of the latitude given to expert witnesses to express their opinions on matters about which they have no firsthand knowledge, and because an expert’s testimony may be given greater weight by the jury due to the expert’s background and approach.”
Monteiro,
DISCUSSION
I. Brief Overview of Firearms Analysis
Firearms, like most tools, are produced through a manufacturing process. The field of firearms identification is based on the theory that this manufacturing process will leave unique microscopic markings on each gun, some number of which will be transferred to a bullet fired from that gun. These markings will fall into one of three categories. They will either be “class characteristics,” which arc markings that appear on all bullet casings fired from the same type of weapon, “subclass characteristics,” which are left on all bullet casings fired from one of a group of guns mass-produced at the same time, or “individual characteristics,” which are unique to a single gun.
See United States v. Green,
The firearms examiner uses a comparison microscope to examine the markings on at least two bullets, one of which is known to have been test fired from a particular weapon. If the individual markings on the two bullets show sufficient similarity, the examiner can conclude that the bullets were fired from the same weapon. Sufficient similarity exists when the bullets, viewed by a trained and experienced firearms examiner, evince sufficient duplication of markings that they can be considered individual characteristics, and the likelihood that another gun could have made them is so remote that it can be discounted.
The dispute with respect to Mr. Nichols’ proposed testimony is not whether Mr. Nichols himself accurately and faithfully applied the methodology used by firearms examiners in the field. The dispute is, rather, whether the pattern-based methodology employed by firearms examiners, including Mr. Nichols, is sufficiently reliable to be admissible under Rule 702 and Daubert/Kumho.
II. Daubert Analysis
The use of firearm identification evidence in criminal trials is hardly novel. “For decades, both before and after the Supreme Court’s seminal decisions in
Daubert
and
Kumho Tire,
admission of the type of firearm identification testimony challenged by the defendants has been semi-automatic; indeed, no federal court has yet deemed it inadmissible.”
United States v. Monteiro,
(a) Whether the particular theory can be and has been tested
The basic theory underlying firearm identification, and all toolmark identification for that matter, is that each individual tool leaves unique marks which can be used to identify it to the exclusion of all other tools. Defendant argues that this theory is both false and unfalsifiable.
According to a recent National Academies Report, “The validity of the fundamental assumptions of uniqueness and reproducibility of firearms-related toolmarks has not yet been fully demonstrated.”
Ballistic Imaging, Committee to Assess the Feasibility, Accuracy, and Technical Capability of a National Ballistics Database,
National Research Council of the National Academies, 3 (2008). That report went on to state, “A significant amount of research would be needed to scientifically
Nonetheless, the Committee went on to say, “Not withstanding this finding, we accept a minimal baseline standard regarding ballistic evidence. Although they are subject to numerous sources of variability, firearms-related toolmarks are not completely random and volatile; one can find similar marks on bullets and cartridge cases from the same gun.” Id. This conclusion is supported by a variety of studies that have been referenced before this Court demonstrating that the methods underlying firearms identification can, at least to some degree, be tested and reproduced. For example, in his article, The Scientific Foundations of Firearms and Tool Mark Identification—A Response to Recent Challenges, 16-17, CACNews 2nd Quarter 2006, Mr. Nichols makes reference to several studies in which hundreds or even thousands of bullets were fired from the same gun. In each case examiners found that, while some changes were observed over the course of the numerous firings, it was nonetheless possible to identify the first and last bullet as having been fired from the same gun. Id. Admittedly, these do not appear to have been “blind” studies. It seems the examiners who found that an identification was possible knew the bullets had all been fired from the same gun. Nonetheless, these kinds of results do suggest at least some level of reproducibility.
Furthermore, Mr. Nichols testified that industry standards generally require an examiner to document in detail, through note-taking and photographs, the basis for his findings. Mr. Nichols also testified that industry standards require confirmation by at least one other examiner when the first examiner reaches an identification.
See also Monteiro,
(b) Whether the theory has been subjected to peer review and publication
The Supreme Court in
Daubert
explained that “publication in a peer reviewed journal [is] a relevant, though not dispositive consideration in assessing the validity of a particular technique or methodology on which an opinion is premised.”
Daubert,
(c) The known or potential rate of error
Daubert
directs that, “in the case of a particular scientific technique, the
In his testimony at the Daubert hearing in this case, Mr. Nichols agreed that no actual error rate has been calculated for the field at this point. However, both Mr. Nichols and the Grzybowski article, cited by the Government, make reference to proficiency testing done by the Collaborative Testing Service (CTS), from which potential error rates may be derived. Data from CTS testing done between 1978 and 1991 suggest that the rate of false identification is less than 1%. However, both Mr. Nichols and the Grzybowski article acknowledge that uneven test administration, make-up, and level of difficulty significantly limit the usefulness of this result. Nonetheless, this number at least suggests that the error rate is quite low.
(d) The existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique’s operation
Arguably the biggest obstacle facing any firearms examiner is that there is no such thing as a “perfect match.” Even two bullets known to have been fired consecutively from the same gun will display some differences. See Alfred A. Biasotti, A Statistical Study of the Individual Characteristics of Fired Bullets, 4 Forensic Sci. 34, 44 (1959). Even more problematic, bullets fired from different guns may have significantly similar markings, reflecting class or sub-class, rather than individual, characteristics. The practice in the field, therefore, as embodied in the AFTE Theory of Identification, calls on examiners to declare an identification only “when the unique surface contours of two toolmarks are in ‘sufficient agreement.’ ” The AFTE Theory continues: “This ‘sufficient agreement’ is related to the significant duplication of random toolmarks as evidenced by the correspondence of a pattern or combination of patterns of surface contours.... Agreement is significant when it exceeds the best agreement demonstrated between toolmarks known to have been produced by different tools and is consistent with agreement demonstrated by toolmarks known to have been produced by the same tool.”
The AFTE Theory, thus, does not provide any uniform numerical standard examiners can use to determine whether or not there is a match and, indeed, Mr. Nichols indicated in his testimony that most AFT examiners do not use any numerical standard. Instead, the AFTE theory is circular. An examiner may make an identification when there is sufficient agreement, and sufficient agreement is defined as enough agreement for an identification.
See Monteiro,
A Committee of the National Academy of Sciences acknowledged this problem in a 2009 report. “AFTE standards acknowledge that these decisions involve subjective qualitative judgments by examiners
(e) Whether the technique has achieved general acceptance in the relevant scientific or expert community
The AFTE Theory appears to be widely accepted by trained firearms examiners, although it is not universally followed.
Monteiro,
(f) Additional Problem
One additional problem with firearms examination, not necessarily neatly encapsulated by any one of the
Daubert
factors, bears mentioning. Generally, as was done in this case, the examiner is handed only one suspect weapon and the recovered projectile or projectiles. As one district court has pointed out, this method of testing is, “in effect, an evidentiary ‘show-up,’ not what scientists would regal’d as a ‘blind test.’ ”
Green,
III. Recent Case Law
The above discussion is intended to show that, while there is a method underlying firearms identification evidence, and while that method has long been accepted both by the forensic science community and by courts, several significant criticisms have been levied against the field. These criticisms are serious enough that Mr. Nichols himself has felt compelled to defend his craft in writing. They are also serious enough that courts have increasingly paid attention to them. In a 2008 case in the Southern District of New York,
United States v. Glynn,
Judge Rakoff resolved the problem by sending the case back for retrial and ordering that “the ballistics opinions offered at the ... retrial may be stated in terms of ‘more likely than not,’ but nothing more. Similarly, in
United States v. Diaz,
Judge Alsup allowed the firearms identification expert testimony, but ordered that “[t]he experts may not ... testify to their conclusions ‘to the exclusion of all other firearms in the world.” They may only testify that a particular bullet or cartridge case was fired from a firearm to a ‘reasonable degree of certainty in the ballistics field.’”
CONCLUSION
This Court adopts the reasoning of the courts in
Green, Monteiro, Diaz,
and
Glynn.
The evidence before the Court indicates that when a bullet is fired from a gun, the gun will impart to the bullet a set of markings that is, at least to some de
In sum, the Court finds that the proffered expert opinion testimony with respect to firearms identification is admissible under Rule 702 and Daubert. However, the Court will impose limitations on that testimony, as described in this Memorandum Opinion and Order. THEREFORE, Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Firearms Identification Evidence [Doc. 277] is hereby DENIED and Mr. Nichols shall be permitted to give expert testimony subject to the above-described limitations.
