Bartell v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 15, 2024
Docket450, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of Bartell v. State (Bartell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartell v. State, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MARK A. BARTELL, § § Defendant Below, § No. 450, 2023 Appellant, § § Court Below—Superior Court v. § of the State of Delaware § STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. 1511001595 (K) § Appellee. §

Submitted: September 6, 2024 Decided: November 15, 2024

Before VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and LEGROW, Justices.

ORDER

(1) The appellant, Mark A. Bartell, has appealed the Superior Court’s

denial of his motion for postconviction relief under Superior Court Criminal Rule

61. After careful consideration of the parties’ briefs and the record, we affirm the

Superior Court’s judgment.

(2) On November 3, 2015, Molly Bridges1 reported to police that her

husband, Bartell, had sexually assaulted her that morning. Bridges reported that the

incident followed a disagreement that had turned physical the night before, during

which Bartell had physically assaulted and threatened to kill her. Bartell was

arrested and subsequently indicted on two counts of first-degree rape and one count

1 The Court has assigned a pseudonym to the victim under Supreme Court Rule 7(d). each of fourth-degree rape, terroristic threatening, and offensive touching in

connection with those incidents. Later, Bartell was further charged with two counts

of second-degree criminal solicitation, based on allegations that while he was

incarcerated pending trial, he solicited two other inmates to murder Bridges so that

she could not testify against him.

(3) At trial, Bridges testified that she and Bartell were at home on the

evening of November 2, 2015, when they got into an argument about ordering pizza

and soda. Bartell became enraged; started screaming that he was going to kill

Bridges and make it a slow, painful death; and picked Bridges up by the sides of her

head and tossed her against the counter. Bartell was more than six feet tall and

weighed between 320 and 340 pounds; Bridges was five feet, two inches tall and

weighed approximately ninety-two pounds. The next day, Bridges was engaged in

her morning routine when Bartell entered her room, threw her on the bed, held her

down by pressing the back of her neck, and penetrated her anus and vagina with his

penis and fingers, while she squirmed, screamed, and begged him to stop.

(4) After Bridges reported the incident to the police, a sexual assault nurse

examiner (“SANE”) at Kent General Hospital, Dawn Culp, performed a sexual-

assault examination of Bridges. Culp testified that she observed an abrasion near

Bridges’ left clavicle, redness on the outside of her right knee, and bruises on the

inside of her right knee and on her upper right thigh. Culp also testified that she

2 observed redness or tears on various parts of Bridges’ genitals and anus. Culp also

swabbed areas of Bridges’ body for DNA testing.

(5) The defense called Kathleen Brown, Ph.D., as a SANE expert. Dr.

Brown, an experienced SANE examiner, professor, and women’s health nurse

practitioner, reviewed the records from Culp’s SANE examination of Bridges. She

testified that she did not see any injuries in many of the photographs that Culp took

to document her observations of injuries. Dr. Brown testified that, to the extent that

she did observe some redness in the photographs, there were many potential

explanations other than sexual assault, including constipation, wiping, or a reaction

to a hygiene product. Dr. Brown opined that the physical examination was not

compatible with Bridges’ description of the incident.

(6) A DNA analyst from the Delaware Division of Forensic Science

testified that testing of Bridges’ rectal swabs indicated the presence of spermatozoa;

stains on the comforter from Bridges’ bed indicated the presence of spermatozoa and

blood; Bridges’ vaginal swabs were inconclusive for spermatozoa; and Bridges’ oral

swabs were negative for spermatozoa. As for DNA testing, certain swabs produced

a single-source profile consistent with Bridges’ DNA. A stain on the comforter

produced a single-source profile consistent with Bartell’s DNA. Certain swabs,

including two rectal swabs, produced mixed-source profiles indicating at least two

individual contributors, at least one of which was male. The analyst testified that

3 the major contributor to those mixtures was consistent with Bridges’ DNA profile.

As to the minor contributor, the results either did not support a conclusion or Bartell

was “excluded,” which the analyst testified meant either that Bartell’s DNA was not

present or the amount of minor-contributor DNA was too low to identify him as a

contributor.

(7) An extract of one of the rectal swabs was then sent to Bode Cellmark

Forensics. Christina Nash, a DNA analyst at Bode Cellmark, testified that Bode

Cellmark conducted Y-STR testing on the extract. The technique involves

amplifying an evidence sample that includes male DNA by making millions of

copies of small segments of DNA on the Y chromosome. The DNA profile of those

locations on the Y chromosome in the evidence sample can then be compared to the

DNA profile of those locations on the Y chromosome in a reference sample. Nash

testified that the rectal swab Y-STR profile and the Y-STR profile of Bartell’s

reference sample were “a match.”2 She elaborated that “23 locations were tested”

and “[a]ll locations correlate[d].”3 Nash testified that the Y-STR profile of the rectal

swab was not seen in a database of 5,259 Y-STR profiles.4 She further testified

regarding the statistical weight of the testing, stating that “applying [a] 95 percent

2 Bartell v. State, Crim. ID No. 1511001595, Trial Transcript, Mar. 22, 2017, at C-31:18, C-32:8- 9 (Del. Super. Ct.). 3 Id. at C-29:21. 4 Id. at C-30:8-15.

4 confidence interval correlates to seeing that Y-STR profile [in] one in 1,757

individuals. So we are 95 percent confident that we would expect to see it once in

1,757 individuals.”5

(8) Two witnesses testified that Bartell solicited them to kill Bridges to

prevent her from testifying against him. James Hammond was housed on the same

tier as Bartell. Hammond testified that he, Bartell, and two other inmates were

playing cards together when Bartell said that he would pay any of the others $2,500

to kill Bridges to make the charges go away. Later, Bartell was irate after hearing

that Bridges’ boyfriend had moved in with her, and he offered Hammond an

additional $2,500 to kill Bridges’ boyfriend.

(9) F’Chante Robertson testified that he and Bartell were cellmates for two

or three months in pretrial detention. Robertson had been charged with first-degree

murder. He testified that Bartell frequently spoke about his charges, saying that he

did not rape Bridges and that he wanted to make the case go away by having her

murdered. Robertson testified that Bartell offered to help pay Robertson’s bail so

that Robertson could kill Bridges; Bartell would then sell his house and give half the

proceeds to Robertson. Robertson stated that Bartell provided him with a document

that included a hand-drawn diagram of Bartell’s house and details about Bridges’

family, work schedule, and daily routines. Robertson contacted the deputy attorney

5 Id. at C-30:20-31:1.

5 general who was handling Bartell’s case, reported Bartell’s offer, and provided her

with the document.

(10) Police tested the diagram for latent fingerprints. They did not find

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