In Re: Scott

824 S.E.2d 1
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 7, 2019
DocketRecord 171286
StatusPublished

This text of 824 S.E.2d 1 (In Re: Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Scott, 824 S.E.2d 1 (Va. 2019).

Opinion

OPINION BY JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN

Winston Lamont Scott (Scott) filed a petition for a writ of actual innocence based on biological evidence pursuant to Code § 19.2-327.2, et seq . Upon reviewing the totality of the evidence, including the records from the original case, the evidence presented at the original trial, the newly discovered DNA evidence, and additional factual proffers made by the petitioner and the Commonwealth, the Court is of opinion that the petition should be granted and the writ of actual innocence be issued.

BACKGROUND

A. Criminal Investigation

On July 24, 1975, at approximately 5:25 a.m., the Fairfax County Police Department received a telephone call about a rape that had occurred at an apartment in Reston, Virginia. A police unit arrived a few minutes later and interviewed the victim, JD, 1 about the attack.

According to a report completed by Investigator Larry Wilkins (Investigator Wilkins), he collected "the clothing that the victim wore during the attack and the clothing the victim put on after the attack," which were put in separate bags and marked. JD was transported to the hospital. The police unit put "all evidence and property ... in separate envelopes," including various samples taken from JD at the hospital, and placed them in the property room at the police station.

During the investigation, JD helped the police create a composite sketch of her attacker. The police presented an initial photo line-up, but JD was unable to identify a suspect.

On September 24, 1975, Fairfax police interviewed a witness regarding an unrelated crime. They showed the witness the composite sketch and asked her if she knew anyone resembling the person in the sketch. The witness suggested that the composite resembled Scott, her brother's friend. After retrieving a photo of Scott, the police arranged a photo line-up for JD on September 26, 1975, which included the photo of Scott. JD picked the photo of Scott. Scott was arrested on September 29, 1975.

B. Trial and Conviction

The Circuit Court of Fairfax County tried Scott on January 26, 1976 for one count of rape, one count of carnally knowing the victim with the mouth, and one count of burglary. Scott pled not guilty to all three counts.

At trial, JD testified that on the night before the attack, she left her balcony door open before she went to sleep, and that she was alone in the apartment because her only roommate spent the night elsewhere. JD said she woke up to see a man standing beside her bed at about 4:30 a.m. She testified: "He just told me if I did what he told me to do he wouldn't hurt me." She immediately felt "shocked and very frightened."

JD testified that her drapes were drawn, and the room was dark except for some light from a "pole light" outside. She did not get a good look at the man.

JD testified that he "walked over to the side of the bed ... pulled the bed covers off ... and shone his flashlight on me." She said he never put the flashlight on his face, however. JD was only wearing a flannel shirt which the attacker pulled up around her shoulders. JD testified that the perpetrator fondled her breasts with his mouth, put his tongue on her vagina for thirty seconds to a minute, and then penetrated her with his penis for about a minute before he climaxed. She testified that the perpetrator asked her several questions, but she could not speak because she was so frightened. The perpetrator took some money out of her purse and then he left. She assumed that he left through the balcony door. JD estimated that the whole episode lasted about 15 minutes.

JD testified that after her attacker left, she got up and called her boyfriend, RN, 2 who arrived about 25 minutes later. She said that RN called the police from her apartment. The police arrived at her apartment about ten minutes later. She identified Investigator Wilkins as one of the officers who eventually arrived at the scene. After the police conducted their initial investigation, JD testified that she went to the hospital and was examined by Dr. William Enos (Dr. Enos).

JD testified she subsequently helped the police create a composite sketch of her attacker using generic photographs and descriptions and that she was satisfied with the sketch. The sketch was admitted into evidence.

JD testified that Investigator Wilkins showed her some photographs of men fitting the description several days after the attack, but she did not identify any of the photographed men as her attacker. JD stated that Officer Donald Neese (Officer Neese) showed her a second photo line-up about a month or so later. She identified one of those photos as her attacker. It was a photograph of Scott. In the courtroom, JD identified Scott as her attacker.

Officer Neese testified that he conducted the second photo line-up on September 26, 1975. He stated that he presented JD with six photos of males similar to the composite sketch, and that she identified the photo of Scott as her attacker.

Dr. Enos, a pathologist at Northern Virginia Doctors Hospital and the designated forensic pathologist for the Commonwealth of Virginia, testified that he examined JD at about 9:30 a.m. on the morning JD was attacked. He testified that he found no evidence of recent trauma, such as lacerations or bruises, and his examination of JD's "labia, vaginal orifice, hymen, vagina, cervix, et cetera were essentially negative." He took a vaginal swab.

Dr. Enos said he found spermatozoa in JD's vagina. He stated that he "processed the material from the vaginal wall for a chemical known as acid phosphatase." The test suggested to him "that the semen had been deposited there within a relatively short period of time." He estimated that the semen was deposited within five hours of his examination of JD.

Dr. Enos testified that Investigator Wilkins brought Scott to Dr. Enos for a blood draw on November 10, 1975. Dr. Enos said both JD and Scott had blood type O.

At the conclusion of the Commonwealth's evidence, Scott moved to strike the evidence. The circuit court denied the motion.

As his first witness, Scott called Mary Jane Burton (Burton), 3 a forensic scientist who worked for the Commonwealth at the Bureau of Forensic Science in Richmond as the head of forensic serology. The court qualified Burton as an expert witness in "bodily secretions." She testified that she analyzed a vaginal swab from JD and a substance found in the crotch of the jeans "that were reportedly worn by the victim" after the attack. She identified the substance on the jeans as sperm.

When Scott asked about Dr. Burton's tests of the sperm, the Commonwealth objected to the chain of custody of the jeans. In response, Scott called Investigator Wilkins to establish the jeans' chain of custody.

Investigator Wilkins stated that the jeans were handed to him by police personnel in the apartment the morning of the attack. He said he put the jeans in a plastic envelope, the Criminal Investigation Division "bagged and tagged" them, and then the Division personnel stored them in the property room the same day as the attack.

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Bluebook (online)
824 S.E.2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-scott-va-2019.