Clemons v. State

896 A.2d 1059, 392 Md. 339, 2006 Md. LEXIS 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 19, 2006
Docket70, September Term, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 896 A.2d 1059 (Clemons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clemons v. State, 896 A.2d 1059, 392 Md. 339, 2006 Md. LEXIS 192 (Md. 2006).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

This case presents us with the task of determining whether certain conclusory aspects of comparative bullet lead analysis (“CBLA”) are admissible under the standard enunciated in *344 Frye v. United States, 293 P. 1013 (D.C.Cir.1923), and adopted by this Court in Reed v. State, 283 Md. 374, 391 A.2d 364 (1978), which makes evidence emanating from a novel, scientific process inadmissible absent a finding that the process is generally accepted by the relevant scientific community. We determine here that the conclusory aspects of CBLA are not generally accepted within the scientific community and thus are not admissible under the Frye-Reed standard for admitting scientific expert testimony. Therefore, we reverse the decision of the Court of Special Appeals and remand the case to the Circuit Court for a new trial.

Background

On January 8, 2002, Kenya Bryant and his thirteen-year-old son Brandon were packing their vehicle outside Mr. Bryant’s home in Suitland, Maryland in preparation for Brandon’s return home to North Carolina after visiting his father during his winter break from school. Brandon went inside the house to retrieve more things, heard ten gunshots, and remained inside the home until the police arrived and informed him that his father had been killed.

Approximately eighteen hours after Mr. Bryant was shot, Lachrisha Williams notified Prince George’s County Police that she had witnessed the shooting. During her interview with police, Ms. Williams provided a description of the driver, although she did not know his name at the time.

Two days after the shooting, on January 10, 2002, District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department officers seized a Lorcin nine-millimeter handgun and bullets from an automobile in conjunction with an investigation of a traffic accident in the District of Columbia. Gemar Clemons, the petitioner, was a passenger in that vehicle and, among other offenses, was charged under the District of Columbia Code with the alleged possession of an unregistered handgun (the Lorcin) as well as possession of ammunition. 1 Clemons was subsequently acquit *345 ted by a jury of all charges associated with the traffic stop, including the charges involving the possession of the handgun and ammunition.

Thereafter, police were able to determine that the Lorcin handgun seized in the District of Columbia was consistent with that used to shoot Mr. Bryant, but could not conclusively identify it as the weapon. After Clemons was arrested in the District, Ms. Williams also was asked to view a photographic array, and she selected Clemons’s picture as that of the man who shot Mr. Bryant. Clemons was arrested on July 2, 2002, and on August 6, 2002 was charged with four counts related to the Bryant murder: murder under the Maryland Common Law, 2 robbery with a deadly weapon in violation of Maryland *346 Code (1957, 1996 Repl. Vol., 2001 Supp.), Article 27 Section 487, 3 theft in violation of Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl. Vol.), Article 27 Section 342, 4 and use of a handgun in a felony or crime of violence in violation of Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl. Vol.), Article 27 Section 36B (b). 5

*347 Prior to trial, when it became clear that the State would attempt to prove that the handgun recovered during the traffic stop when Clemons was the passenger in the District of Columbia was the same gun used in Mr. Bryant’s murder, Clemons filed a motion in limine to exclude the evidence of the gun that was recovered in the traffic stop premised upon his argument that admission of the evidence would violate the prohibition against double jeopardy because Clemons had previously been acquitted of possessing the gun. Moreover, Clemons asserted that, because of his acquittal in the traffic stop case, the State should be collaterally estopped from relitigating the issue of whether he “possessed” the handgun on January 10, 2002. The trial court denied the motion in a pretrial hearing, determining that double jeopardy did not apply because Clemons’s first trial was conducted in the D.C. federal courts whereas the case sub judice was conducted in state court in Maryland. Furthermore, the court noted, the doctrine of collateral estoppel was inapplicable because the crimes were separate and distinct, because the murder occurred in Maryland on January 8, 2002, while the D.C. gun violation occurred on January 10, 2002.

Clemons also filed another motion in limine in which he asked the court to exclude the testimony of the State’s expert witness, Charles A. Peters, a forensic chemist from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), who was represented to be an expert on CBLA, a three-step process that involves the comparison of the elemental composition of bullets in an effort to determine whether different bullets originated from the same vat of lead. In his motion, Clemons specifically challenged the admissibility of CBLA. At the pretrial hearing, Clemons agreed to the court’s decision to defer addressing the motion to exclude Peters’s testimony until trial. 6

*348 At trial, the State called Peters to testify as an expert witness. Immediately prior to Peters’s testimony, both parties *349 recognized that the scientific process providing the foundation for Peters’s testimony was subject to examination. 7 Clemons’s counsel requested that Peters’s voir dire occur outside the presence of the jury. The judge permitted the challenge to the admissibility of Peters’s testimony and required that it occur in the presence of the jury. During Peters’s voir dire examination, he described the methods that he employs in CBLA:

We find if we look at the composition of the lead bullet, these are elements that make up the leads of a bullet, we look at things like antimony, copper, bismuth, silver, cadmium, tin. We look at these various elements and if they’re in the same concentration in the victim bullet as in say cartridges left in a gun or partial box that can be related back to the suspect we can then narrow down and say they match in composition. We can say they’re analytically the same. We can’t tell them apart. That tells us that they were manufactured or they were likely manufactured in the same pot of lead at a bullet manufacturer. So out of the whole population of nine billion or so cartridges that are produced here in the United States, we can narrow it down to tens of thousands of bullets being produced that would have the same composition.

Peters’s further described the general ammunition manufacturing process:

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Bluebook (online)
896 A.2d 1059, 392 Md. 339, 2006 Md. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemons-v-state-md-2006.