In Re Bradford
This text of 165 P.3d 31 (In Re Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re the Personal Restraint of Ted Louis BRADFORD, Petitioner.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3.
Jacqueline Mc Murtrie, UW Law Clinic-Innocence Project NW, Felix G. Luna, Peterson Young Putra, Seattle, WA, for Petitioner.
Kevin Gregory Eilmes, Prosecuting Attorney's Office, Yakima, WA, for Respondent.
BROWN, J.
¶ 1 We grant the personal restraint petition of Ted Louis Bradford and reverse his 1996 rape and burglary convictions based upon newly discovered DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) evidence. Considering the disputed evidence, we agree with the conclusion reached by the reference hearing judge that a new trial is warranted even though the DNA evidence does not positively exclude Mr. Bradford. The new evidence, if fully accepted by a jury, would probably change the guilty verdict.
*32 FACTS
¶ 2 In 1996, a jury convicted Ted Louis Bradford of first degree rape and first degree burglary, finding he was the man in a nylon stocking mask who broke into the victim's house and sexually assaulted her. He appealed his convictions. The primary issue on direct appeal was the superior court's refusal to suppress the confession Mr. Bradford gave to police at the end of a lengthy interrogation. We affirmed. State v. Bradford, 95 Wash.App. 935, 978 P.2d 534 (1999), review denied, 139 Wash.2d 1022, 994 P.2d 850 (2000). The case facts are found in our previous opinion.
¶ 3 In 2005, after Mr. Bradford completed serving his confinement time,[1] the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab tested the mask the assailant had placed on the victim's face during the rape. The lab used DNA testing procedures not available in 1995. Petition, Appendix 11(d), Appendix 13 at 3. Philip Hodge is the scientist who conducted the test. He described the testing procedure and the results. The DNA tests excluded Mr. Bradford as a contributor; however, the DNA of another man, only identified as contributor B, was found on the face of the mask and on the sticky side of the tape placed over the mask's eye openings before the assault.
¶ 4 Mr. Bradford then filed this personal restraint petition. In response, our Chief Judge ordered a reference hearing, directing the superior court "to resolve the factual dispute of whether DNA evidence so reduces the possibility that Mr. Bradford is the perpetrator that, when considered with the other evidence admitted at Mr. Bradford's trial, it will probably change the result of that trial." Order for Reference Hearing (Feb. 21, 2006) at 5-6.
¶ 5 On September 12 and 13, 2006, the superior court conducted the reference hearing after reviewing the 1996 jury trial transcript and the documents filed with Mr. Bradford's personal restraint petition. The court heard testimony from Mr. Bradford, his former wife, Mr. Hodge, an expert (Dr. Richard Leo) who challenged the reliability of Mr. Bradford's confession, and the detective who took Mr. Bradford's confession.
¶ 6 We summarize the reference court's findings entered on October 25, 2006:
The victim was not able to identify Mr. Bradford as the perpetrator. No other eyewitnesses to the crime exist. No scientific analysis established the perpetrator's identity.
The assault occurred at 9:30 a.m. when Mr. Bradford was normally at work. At trial, evidence conflicted as to whether Mr. Bradford was at work that day. Mr. Bradford's co-employee witnesses keyed the crime date to the date of Mr. Bradford's vasectomy scheduled later that same day, and remembered joking with Mr. Bradford about the vasectomy.
The State's primary evidence was Mr. Bradford's confession that began, "I probably did it." Finding of Fact III. at 3. But his statement varied substantially with the details given by the victim and required consideration of its reliability and weight in light of numerous disagreements between the description and details given by Mr. Bradford and the victim.
Aside from his confession, the only other evidence linking Mr. Bradford to the crime was the testimony of the victim's neighbor who stated that at some point earlier she had seen Mr. Bradford driving around the neighborhood in a white car.
The reference judge discounted testimony by Dr. Richard Leo at the reference hearing that Mr. Bradford's confession was unreliable. The jury determined otherwise. And, the court stated there was no guarantee Dr. Leo's testimony would be admissible at a new trial. Therefore, the court gave "little or no weight" to Dr. Leo's testimony. Finding of Fact V. at 4.
Philip Hodge, a forensic scientist at the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab, conducted DNA testing on evidence collected at the crime scene, including *33 a mask the perpetrator put on the victim at the time of the assault. The mask had eyeholes over which tape had been placed, against the inside of the mask. The perpetrator brought the mask with him. The tape had not been disturbed. Mr. Hodge processed the tape in three parts. The sticky side was referenced as Tape A, the shiny side was referenced as Tape B, and the area of the tape exposed through the eyeholes was referenced as Tape C.
Mr. Hodge tried to clean the shiny side of the tape but could not clean all the residue off the tape. "Thus, any findings from the DNA analysis of the various parts of the tape would always have [the victim's] DNA as a major contributor because she had the most extensive contact with the tape on the mask." Finding of Fact IX. at 6.
On Tape A, Mr. Hodge's analysis revealed the presence of DNA from an unidentified male, contributor B. DNA from the same male was found on Tape C. Only the victim's DNA was found on Tape B, the shiny side of the tape that rested against the victim's face. Mr. Bradford's DNA was not present on any of the tape's surfaces. The court found that "[i]t makes commonsense that a jury could give weight to the proposition that the person who prepared the mask more likely than not is the person who committed the crime, or that Mr. Bradford, if present, would have left DNA on some surface of the mask. Although the proposition is not error-proof, it has substantial evidentiary appeal and weight to this Court." Finding of Fact XVI. at 8.
The court found Mr. Hodge's testimony "is evidence that a jury would consider and more probably than not, would cast some great and substantial doubt about whether Mr. Bradford was at the scene of the crime. This is so given all the disputed evidence of the alibi, for which there was strong evidence by the defense, but equally good evidence by the prosecution, the discrepancies between the statement given by Mr. Bradford and the victim's detailed description of the crime, and the difference between the description given of the perpetrator's height and Mr. Bradford's height." Finding of Fact XVII. at 8-9.
Finally, the court found that "Mr. Bradford has produced new evidence, not previously available, that when considered with the other evidence admitted at Mr. Bradford's trial, would probably change the result of that trial." Finding of Fact XVII. at 9.
¶ 7 Mr. Bradford and the State filed supplemental briefs with this court after the reference hearing. The State does not challenge the test results, that Mr. Bradford's DNA was not found on the mask, and that an unknown male contributor's DNA was found on the sticky or protected side of the tape.
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