Jude Joseph David Lovchik v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 20, 2020
Docket1094194
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jude Joseph David Lovchik v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Jude Joseph David Lovchik v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jude Joseph David Lovchik v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Malveaux and Athey UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

JUDE JOSEPH DAVID LOVCHIK MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1094-19-4 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX OCTOBER 20, 2020 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Penney S. Azcarate, Judge

Dawn M. Butorac, Public Defender, for appellant.

Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Jude Joseph David Lovchik (“appellant”) was convicted of statutory burglary, in

violation of Code § 18.2-90; four counts of robbery, in violation of Code § 18.2-58; four counts

of abduction with intent to defile, in violation of Code § 18.2-48; four counts of forcible sodomy,

in violation of Code § 18.2-67.1; and four counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a

felony, in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1. On appeal, he argues the trial court erred by denying

his motion to suppress DNA evidence obtained from his trash and from his person. For the

following reasons, we affirm the trial court.

I. BACKGROUND

On appeal of the denial of a motion to suppress, we consider the evidence introduced at

both the suppression hearing and the trial. Salahuddin v. Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 190, 202

(2017). Further, “[u]nder familiar principles of appellate review, we will state ‘the evidence in

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party in the trial court.’” Chavez

v. Commonwealth, 69 Va. App. 149, 153 (2018) (quoting Sidney v. Commonwealth, 280 Va.

517, 520 (2010)).

In June 1995, T.R. and her female friends J.P., C.R., and A.P. lived together in a Reston

apartment.1 In the early hours of June 6, a man wearing a black ski mask and gloves and

carrying a handgun entered the apartment and forced the four women into a bedroom. After

blindfolding the women and making them remove their clothes, the man compelled each of them

to perform fellatio.

T.R. testified that the man required her to swallow his semen. He then ordered her to

drink Gatorade, and she complied. The man eventually left the apartment after taking money

from the women.

The roommates contacted the police and went to the hospital. The Virginia Department

of Forensic Science (“VDFS”) analyzed an oral rinse sample obtained from T.R. at the hospital

and developed a male DNA profile from the rinse.

In 2001, T.R.’s oral rinse sample was reanalyzed by VDFS. Using the more advanced

testing systems available at that time, VDFS developed a more refined DNA profile and issued a

new certificate of analysis for the sample.

In November 2016, Kathrin Lovchik, appellant’s then wife, contacted police and told

them about a conversation she had with appellant in 2009. During that conversation, appellant

told Lovchik that he was “the Fairfax County rapist.” Appellant described assaulting numerous

women in their homes, sometimes during incidents involving multiple victims. He told Lovchik

that “his big thing was oral sex, so . . . he forced them to have oral sex with him.” He also

described ejaculating and making his victims drink Coke afterwards to eliminate evidence.

1 We use the victims’ initials, rather than their names, to protect their privacy. -2- Appellant showed Lovchik a black ski mask that he kept in a closet and claimed he had worn the

mask when assaulting his victims. He also told Lovchik that he had used a gun to keep his

victims quiet. According to Lovchik, appellant owned a pistol which he had buried in their

backyard.

Based upon Lovchik’s information, Fairfax County police began investigating appellant.

To obtain a sample of appellant’s DNA, police collected discarded trash and recyclables from

containers on the street outside appellant’s home. A detective examined the retrieved items to

identify those that might yield DNA and selected a beer bottle, a bag containing cigarette butts,

and a plastic cup containing shells from sunflower seeds.

VDFS developed a male DNA profile from the selected items. In its certificate of

analysis, VDFS concluded that the contributor of the DNA could not be eliminated as a

contributor of the male DNA developed from T.R.’s oral rinse sample in 2001.

After receiving the certificate of analysis, police secured a search warrant to obtain

buccal swabs and other biological samples from appellant. VDFS developed a DNA profile

from appellant’s buccal swabs and determined that appellant could not be eliminated as a

contributor of the male DNA profile developed from T.R.’s oral rinse sample in 2001. Further,

appellant could not be eliminated as a contributor of the DNA profile developed from the beer

bottle, cigarette butts, and shells. In its certificate of analysis, VDFS concluded that the

probability of randomly selecting a person unrelated to appellant with a DNA profile that

matched either of the two extant DNA profiles was 1 in greater than 7.2 billion.

Appellant was indicted for the 1995 offenses. He filed a motion to suppress the evidence

obtained through the “search of DNA” found on his trash and recyclables as well as the DNA

-3- evidence developed through the subsequent search warrant.2 Appellant argued that he had a

reasonable expectation of privacy in his DNA and thus the warrantless testing of DNA from his

trash and recyclables to develop a profile constituted a search under the Fourth Amendment.

The trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress. It characterized appellant’s

argument as “essentially asking the [c]ourt to rule that a person has a reasonable expectation of

privacy in his or her DNA regardless of the circumstances. Basically, an inher[en]t privacy . . .

right to [the] DNA profile regardless of where it is found.” The court noted that the police had

not invaded appellant’s person, houses, papers, or effects, but had simply collected trash and

recyclables that appellant had abandoned and held out to the public. Thus, appellant’s DNA had

been lawfully seized and “it was not a search under the Fourth Amendment, because it was

abandoned.” The court concluded that

there can be no reasonable expectation of privacy to the DNA profiling, if there’s not first a privacy right to the collection of the DNA. In this particular case, there was no reasonable expectation of privacy of the trash that contained the DNA on it. Therefore, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy with the identification test of the unknown DNA located on the abandoned trash.

This appeal followed.

II. ANALYSIS

Appellant argues the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress because even

though he had abandoned the items that carried his DNA, he still retained a reasonable

expectation of privacy in the information contained within his DNA. Thus, because the police

did not have a warrant to obtain a DNA profile, “any search of the extracted biological material

2 Appellant also moved to suppress the beer bottle, cigarette butts, and shells collected from outside his home, arguing that police had seized them from his curtilage without a warrant. The trial court disagreed, finding that the items had been placed on the street and thus were abandoned property from which appellant had relinquished any subjective and objective privacy interests.

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