Osborne v. District Attorneys Office for the Third Judicial District

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2008
Docket06-35875
StatusPublished

This text of Osborne v. District Attorneys Office for the Third Judicial District (Osborne v. District Attorneys Office for the Third Judicial District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. District Attorneys Office for the Third Judicial District, (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

WILLIAM G. OSBORNE,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No. 06-35875 DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S  D.C. No. CV-03-00118-RRB OFFICE FOR THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT; ADRIENNE BACHMAN,* OPINION District Attorney, Defendants-Appellants.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Alaska Ralph R. Beistline, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 10, 2007—San Francisco, California

Filed April 2, 2008

Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Melvin Brunetti, and William A. Fletcher, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Brunetti

*Adrienne Bachman is substituted for former District Attorney Susan A. Parkes as appellant pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2).

3359 OSBORNE v. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE 3363

COUNSEL

Nancy R. Simel, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, Alaska, for the defendant-appellant.

Peter J. Neufeld and Colin Starger, Innocence Project, Benja- min N. Cardozo School of Law, New York, New York; Ran- 3364 OSBORNE v. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE dall S. Cavanaugh, Kalamarides & Lambert, Anchorage, Alaska; and Robert C. Bundy, Dorsey & Whitney LLP, Anchorage, Alaska, for the plaintiff-appellee.

OPINION

BRUNETTI, Circuit Judge:

William Osborne, an Alaska prisoner, brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to compel the District Attorney’s Office in Anchorage to allow him post-conviction access to biological evidence—semen from a used condom and two hairs—that was used to convict him in 1994 of kidnapping and sexual assault. Osborne, who maintains his factual inno- cence, intends to subject the evidence, at his expense, to STR and mitochondrial DNA testing, methods that were unavail- able at the time of his trial and are capable of conclusively excluding him as the source of the DNA.

In a prior appeal, Osborne v. District Attorney’s Office, 423 F.3d 1050, 1056 (9th Cir. 2005) (hereinafter Osborne I),1 we held that Heck v. Humphrey does not bar Osborne’s § 1983 action because, even if successful, it will not necessarily dem- onstrate the invalidity of his conviction. We also remanded for the district court to address in the first instance whether the denial of access to the evidence violates Osborne’s feder- ally protected rights.

In this post-remand appeal, we affirm the judgment of the district court that, under the unique and specific facts of this case and assuming the availability of the evidence in question, Osborne has a limited due process right of access to the evi- dence for purposes of post-conviction DNA testing, which 1 There are three prior “Osborne” appellate opinions, one by this court and two by the Alaska Court of Appeals. The two state opinions are both titled Osborne v. State and will be referred to as State I and II. OSBORNE v. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE 3365 might either confirm his guilt or provide strong evidence upon which he may seek post-conviction relief.

I

A

Following a March 1994 jury trial in Alaska Superior Court, Osborne was convicted of kidnapping, assault, and sexual assault, and was sentenced to 26 years imprisonment, with 5 years suspended. The charges arose from a March 1993 incident in which the victim, a female prostitute named K.G., after agreeing to perform fellatio on two male clients, was driven to a secluded area of Anchorage and brutally attacked. See generally Jackson v. State, Nos. A-5276, A- 5329, 1996 WL 33686444, at *1 (Alaska Ct. App. Feb. 7, 1996) (consolidated direct appeal).

At gunpoint, K.G. was forced to perform fellatio on the driver while the passenger vaginally penetrated her with his finger and penis. The driver did not wear a condom, but the passenger wore a blue condom that K.G. had brought with her. When K.G. later refused their orders to get out of the car, the driver hit K.G. in the head with the gun, and at the driver’s urging the passenger choked her. K.G. eventually attempted to flee, but her attackers pursued and beat her with an axe handle. As she lay in the snow in the fetal position and played dead, she heard the gun fire and felt a bullet graze her head. Though she could not see her attackers’ faces, judging from their pants and footwear she believed it was the passenger who shot her. The attackers then partially covered K.G. with snow and fled in the car, leaving her for dead.

K.G. heard the car drive away but continued to lie under the snow until she was sure her attackers had gone. She then got up, walked to the main road, flagged down a passing car, told its occupants what had happened, and—hoping to avoid the police—asked only for a ride home. The following day, 3366 OSBORNE v. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE however, a neighbor of one of the car’s occupants notified the police, who contacted K.G. Though initially uncooperative, K.G. eventually described the incident.

K.G. underwent a physical examination, during which hair and blood samples were collected. A vaginal examination was not performed, however, because the passenger-rapist had worn a condom and K.G. had bathed repeatedly since the attack. At the crime scene, Anchorage Police recovered from the snow a used blue condom, part of a condom wrapper, a spent shell casing, and two pairs of K.G.’s grey knit pants stained with blood. The blue condom and shell casing were found “very near” each other and in close proximity to bloody patches of snow and the disturbed berm of snow where K.G. had been partially buried. A layer of new snow, which had fallen the morning after the attack, aided the police in distin- guishing between tire tracks made the night before by the assailants’ car and tracks made the following day by two known vehicles. Those cars were owned by K.G.’s rescuers and their neighbor, who had visited the crime scene the day after the incident before contacting the police.

A week later, military police stopped Dexter Jackson for a traffic infraction. When Jackson opened his glove box to retrieve his registration, the officer spotted a gun case, which proved to hold a .380 caliber pistol. A further search of the car revealed a box of ammunition and a pocketknife. Observing that Jackson, his car, and his passenger at the time (who was not Osborne) resembled composite sketches that had been cir- culated after the assault on K.G., the military police contacted the Anchorage Police, whom Jackson told that Osborne was his accomplice on the night of the assault.

K.G. later identified Jackson and Osborne from photo- graphic arrays. In identifying Jackson’s accomplice, K.G. indicated that Osborne’s and another person’s photos were the “most familiar” to her and Osborne was “most likely” to have been the passenger who raped and shot her. K.G. also identi- OSBORNE v. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE 3367 fied Jackson’s car, and the police matched tire tracks at the crime scene to Jackson’s car. K.G. also identified the pocket- knife found in Jackson’s car as hers, and ballistics tied the spent shell casing found at the crime scene to Jackson’s pistol.

The State’s crime lab subjected sperm found in the used condom to “DQ Alpha” DNA testing, which, similar to ABO blood typing, reveals the alleles present at a single genetic locus. The results excluded K.G., Jackson, and James Hunter (presumably Jackson’s passenger when he was arrested), and showed that the sperm had the same DQ Alpha type as Osborne. That same DQ Alpha type is shared, however, by 14.7 to 16 percent of African Americans and thus can be expected in one of every 6 or 7 black men.

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