234 Pa. Code Rule 574
(b) Notice.
(c) Demand.
(d) Extension. For cause shown, the judge may:
(e) Certification.
(6) the report accurately reflects the findings and opinions of the person who performed the analysis or examination regarding the results of the analysis or examination.
Comment:
This rule was adopted in 2014 to address the issues raised by the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 557 U.S. 305 (2009), that held that the 6th Amendment confrontation right precluded presentation of laboratory reports without a live witness testifying in the trial. In Melendez-Diaz, the U.S. Supreme Court noted with approval the use of ‘‘notice and demand’’ procedures as a means of permitting routine laboratory reports to be admitted without the expense of supporting the admission by live expert testimony while protecting a defendant’s confrontation rights.
This rule provides a ‘‘notice and demand’’ procedure for Pennsylvania. Under the rule, the attorney for the Commonwealth may seek to admit a forensic laboratory report as evidence without the testimony of the analyst who performed the testing that was the subject of the report if notice requirements are met and no demand for the presence of the analyst is made. If the defendant makes such a demand, the analyst would be required to testify before the report could be admitted into evidence.
Nothing in this rule is intended to preclude a stipulation agreed to by the parties for the admission of the laboratory report without the analyst’s presence.
Nothing in the rule would prevent further stipulation by the parties in light of the admission of the report and certification.
Nothing in this rule is intended to change the requirement for the provision of discovery under Rule 573.
Under subdivision (d), the trial judge may permit filing of the notice or demand after the time period required in the rule if the party seeking the late filing shows cause for the delay. In the situation where the judge permits the late filing of the notice, the defendant still has 10 days in which to make the demand for the live testimony of the analyst. This may necessitate a continuance of the trial.
The certification in subdivision (e) does not require a description of the actual tests performed for the analysis. This information more properly belongs in the report itself. Since one of the goals of this rule is to permit the defendant to make an informed decision regarding whether to demand the live testimony of the analyst, the report should provide information sufficient to describe the methodology by which the results were determined.
For purposes of this rule, a laboratory is ‘‘accredited’’ when its management, personnel, quality system, operational and technical procedures, equipment and physical facilities meet the ISO/IEC 17025 standard in the forensic field of testing as determined by an International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation recognized accreditation organization that has been evaluated to meet the ISO/IEC 17011 standard and that has expertise in the forensic laboratory accreditation field.
The person who performed the analysis or examination that is the subject of the forensic laboratory report shall complete a certification in which the person shall state:
The provisions of this Rule 574 adopted February 19, 2014, effective April 1, 2014, 44 Pa.B. 1309; amended September 11, 2023, effective January 1, 2024, 53 Pa.B. 5885. Immediately preceding text appears at serial pages (409882) to (409884).