Floyd Mike Jones III v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
Docket2005 SC 000879
StatusUnknown

This text of Floyd Mike Jones III v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Floyd Mike Jones III v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Floyd Mike Jones III v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2007).

Opinion

RENDERED : NOVEMBER 1, 2007 TO BE PUBLISHED

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LC _ ' Cr. .~.t C aJ FLOYD MIKE JONES III APPELLANT

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS CASE NUMBER 2003-CA-002422 MEADE CIRCUIT COURT NO. 01-CR-00117

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE MINTON

AFFIRMING IN PART AND

REVERSING AND REMANDING IN PART

I . INTRODUCTION.

Floyd Mike Jones III was convicted of one count of incest, thirteen counts of

sodomy in the third degree, eight counts of rape in the third degree, and one count of

bribing a witness. The victim of Jones's alleged sexual misconduct was his teenage

stepdaughter, M .G. The Court of Appeals affirmed Jones's conviction.

We granted discretionary review to consider the propriety of the trial court's

decisions to (1) limit the testimony of Jones's DNA expert ; and (2) permit the

Commonwealth to introduce pornographic images into evidence, despite the lack of a

nexus between those images and the testimony of M.G . We reverse and remand on

the first issue and provide direction on remand as to the second issue . II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY .

The grand jury indicted Jones on one count of incest, thirteen counts of sodomy

in the first degree, eight counts of rape in the third degree, one count of using a minor in

a sexual performance, one count of possession of matter portraying a sexual

performance by a minor, and one count of bribing a witness . At trial, numerous heated

disputes arose between Jones's counsel and the Commonwealth . Chief among those

disputes was Jones's counsel's attempt to present the testimony of a DNA expert,

Dr. Yuri Melekovets, and Jones's repeated, vehement objection to the Commonwealth's

showing the jury pornographic images allegedly copied from Jones's home computers .

A. Dr. Melekovets's Testimony .

Jones had furnished a copy of Dr. Melekovets's one-page report to the

Commonwealth as pretrial discovery several months before trial. The Commonwealth

reciprocated with a copy of the two-page report of its DNA expert, Benedict Arrey .

Arrey's report stated that "[t]he human DNA recovered from the male fraction of the

[v]aginal swab [taken from M .G.] . . . was a mixture of at least two contributors . [M .G.]

and Floyd Jones III . . . could be contributors to the DNA mixture . . . . The expected

frequency of possible contributors to the mixed profile in the male fraction is fewer than

1 in 15,000,000 (1 in 15 million) among Caucasian, Black[,] and Hispanic Americans ."

In contrast, Dr. Melekovets's report stated that he "did not find any traces of the Y-

chromosome or of the DNA profile from Exhibit 2A (bloodstain standard from Floyd

Jones III) on the vaginal swabs from [M.G .] ."

The trial court allowed Dr. Melekovets to testify about the contents of his report .

But the trial court did not allow Dr. Melekovets to testify about any perceived shortcomings in the Commonwealth's DNA expert's report or methodology because

Jones had not informed the Commonwealth during discovery that he intended for

Dr. Melekovets to criticize the Commonwealth's expert's methodologies . In other

words, the trial court essentially confined Dr. Melekovets's testimony to the four corners

of his report.

B . Introduction of the Pornographic Images Taken from Jones's Computers .

M .G. testified that Jones frequently showed her pornographic images of young

women engaged in sexual activity before his sexual encounters with her. But M.G . did

not testify that the pornographic images introduced by the Commonwealth, which were

copied from computers in Jones's home, were the actual images shown her by Jones .

Rather, these pornographic images were shown to the jury and introduced into evidence

via the testimony of a state police computer forensics expert who had copied the hard

drives from Jones's home computers onto a compact disc. The Commonwealth brought

a computer into the courtroom and used it to show numerous pornographic images to

the jury. Though the trial videotape did not definitively tell us which images the jury

saw, Commonwealth's Exhibit #8 (the compact disc containing dozens of pornographic

images ostensibly taken from Jones's home computers' hard drives) has numerous

hardcore images of nude females, some of whom appear to be multiple-amputees,

engaged in various sexually explicit activities, including urination and bestiality.

Although Jones's counsel lodged vehement objections to the admissibility of the

images in question, Jones's counsel did not specifically object to the lack of an evidentiary nexus between the images allegedly shown by Jones to M.G . and the

images shown by the Commonwealth to the jury.'

After several days of testimony, the jury convicted Jones of one count of incest,

thirteen counts of sodomy in the third degree, eight counts of rape in the third degree,

and bribing a witness . The jury found Jones not guilty of possession of matter

portraying a sexual performance by a minor, and the trial court granted the

Commonwealth's motion to dismiss the charge of using a minor in a sexual

performance.

In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the trial court sentenced Jones to

ten years for the incest offense, one year on each of the thirteen convictions for third-

degree sodomy, three years for each of the eight convictions for third-degree rape, and

five years for the conviction for bribing a witness. The sodomy, rape, and bribing a

witness sentences were ordered to run concurrently with the incest sentence, for a total

sentence of ten years' imprisonment.

Jones appealed to the Court of Appeals, claiming two errors: (1) the trial court

erred by limiting Dr. Melekovets's testimony to the four corners of his report, and (2) the

trial court erred by permitting the Commonwealth to introduce allegedly irrelevant and

prejudicial pornographic images into evidence when M .G . had not testified that the

images shown to her by Jones were the same images shown to the jury.

The Court of Appeals affirmed Jones's conviction, finding that the limitation of

Dr. Melekovets's testimony was proper because Jones's failure to disclose during

discovery Dr. Melekovets's theories regarding alleged errors made by the

' Curiously, Jones's counsel did successfully raise this lack of a nexus argument regarding an apparently sexually-oriented book found in Jones's home . Commonwealth's DNA expert ran afoul of the reciprocal discovery requirements set

forth in Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 7.24. The Court of Appeals also

held that Jones had not preserved his claim regarding the lack of a nexus between the

pornographic images shown to the jury and M.G.'s testimony ; and, in any event, any

error in introducing the pornographic images was harmless in light of the totality of the

evidence arrayed against Jones.

We granted discretionary review to consider the same two issues Jones raised

before the Court of Appeals . We hold that the trial court erred in limiting

Dr. Melekovets's testimony to the four corners of his report. Thus, since this case is

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