People v. Taylor

828 N.E.2d 799, 357 Ill. App. 3d 220, 293 Ill. Dec. 489, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 376
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 19, 2005
Docket5-03-0214
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 828 N.E.2d 799 (People v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Taylor, 828 N.E.2d 799, 357 Ill. App. 3d 220, 293 Ill. Dec. 489, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 376 (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JUSTICE CHAPMAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant, Bryan Taylor, was convicted of three counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault and was sentenced to three consecutive 30-year terms of imprisonment, to run consecutively to a 55-year sentence he was serving at the time of the trial. He seeks the reversal of his convictions on the basis that the State failed to lay an adequate foundation for DNA evidence and expert opinion testimony, the only direct evidence linking him to the sexual assault. Our review of the record reflects that Taylor failed to preserve the error for review. Accordingly, his argument is waived and we affirm his convictions.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1999, Taylor was charged by an amended information with three counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault for the 1995 assault of Sandra Thompson in Williamson County. Thompson, who had accidentally locked herself out of her mobile home, was attacked by Taylor as she walked toward town to use a pay phone. Taylor dragged her to a wooded area, laid her facedown, tied her hands to a tree with security ties, and assaulted her. Her infant, whom he had placed next to her, was unharmed. She wriggled loose and ran for help. Even though she saw her attacker approach from quite a distance, she never really saw his face because he attacked her from behind and wore a ski mask during the assault. It was also late in the evening and Taylor had removed her glasses from her face during the assault. As a result, Thompson was unable to identify her attacker from a police photo array in which Taylor was included.

The only evidence of the crime was Thompson’s testimony, bruises and abrasions visible on her back, the security ties left at the scene, and fluid swabbed from her face that was later identified as semen. Hairs were found on some of the items at the scene, but they were never tested. Initially, the State conducted only limited testing and analysis of the semen because no suspect had been identified. Taylor was identified as a potential suspect almost five years later, at which time a DNA profile was developed from his blood. Further testing was also conducted on the semen swabbed from Thompson’s face.

Our disposition in this case requires only a brief and general discussion of the DNA evidence. The preliminary DNA analysis of the semen swabbed from Thompson’s face identified a profile consisting of four numerical loci (segments of DNA described by numbers). The profile was entered into a database to search for a consistent profile among known persons or pending the identification of a suspect in the future. Years later, after Taylor was identified as a suspect, additional testing was performed on the same semen sample. A fifth numerical locus was developed. Scientists also developed a five-loci profile from Taylor’s blood. The DNA profile developed from the facial swabbing was compared to Taylor’s DNA profile and deemed to be consistent.

Five forensic witnesses testified for the State at Taylor’s trial: Glenn Schubert, Stacie Speith, Angela Riech, Joanna Olson, and Donna Rees. Only the last three provided technical DNA testimony regarding restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), and only Olson and Rees were qualified as DNA experts by the trial court. Taylor’s appeal involves the foundation laid by the State for the testimony given by Riech, Olson, and Rees. He also claims that a reversal is warranted because the State failed to put on the technician who performed the DNA testing after Taylor was identified as a suspect.

Angela Riech

Riech performed limited testing on the facial swab prior to Taylor becoming a suspect in the case. She testified about the purpose and process of RFLP and that it was used in research and at other forensic laboratories. When asked what measures she followed in the lab to ensure the quality of her results, Riech testified that generally the Illinois State Police follows a strict quality assurance program incorporating standards and various controls. Her test results identified from the facial swab a four-loci DNA profile not belonging to Thompson. Taylor did not pose any objection to Riech’s testimony on direct examination and performed only a very brief cross-examination.

Joanna Olson

Olson was the State’s primary DNA expert, yet she provided almost no foundation for her findings and opinion. Olson testified that she had obtained Riech’s file, which consisted of Riech’s test results, not the actual DNA sample. Olson performed her own testing using RFLP on Taylor’s dried blood sample she had received from another source. She then compared Riech’s results on the semen with her results on Taylor’s blood. On direct examination she testified that she analyzed the same five loci that Riech had analyzed, and she opined that the semen swabbed from Thompson’s face was consistent with having originated from Taylor. It was revealed during cross-examination, however, that Riech’s report provided only a four-loci profile, not five — so the question posed was how Olson could compare five areas of DNA when Riech had developed only four. This irregularity was referred to by Taylor at the trial as an inconsistency in the evidence.

It was later determined (outside the jury’s presence) that in 1999, after Taylor had been identified as a suspect, steps were taken to test and interpret a fifth locus. A scientist named Donna Rees had requested that additional testing be done to the membrane created by Riech from Thompson’s facial swab. A technician (Rebecca Logeman) added a reactive agent to the membrane to develop the fifth locus, and those results were analyzed and interpreted by Rees in a different lab. A data sheet was produced as a result of Logeman’s work but never made it to the case file; thus, its existence was not known by the State, and it was not provided to Taylor before the trial. Rees’s report, however, did make it to Riech’s case file, which was subsequently reviewed and relied upon by Olson. Essentially, Olson had stated in her report and at the trial that she had relied on Riech’s report only (which involved only four loci), and she should have also cited Rees’s report (which involved a fifth locus). These issues were resolved during the trial outside the presence of the jury through intense and lengthy examination by the trial judge. They were later explained to the jury through additional direct examination and cross-examination.

The irregularity in Olson’s report and initial testimony set the framework for Taylor’s defense and provided the impetus for him to refrain from objecting to the weak foundation laid by the State. In fact, Taylor’s counsel stated upon questioning by the trial judge that the “inconsistency” between Riech’s and Olson’s reports and testimony provided the backbone of his client’s defense and that he refrained from examining the State’s witnesses regarding lab procedures, analyses, and methodologies because he wanted the witnesses’ testimony to remain inconsistent. In addition to capitalizing on the irregularity highlighted by Olson’s testimony, Taylor claimed at the trial that he had not been aware of the testing performed by Loge-man and that the State should have disclosed the log entry. This alleged discovery violation, and not the inadequate foundation of Riech’s, Olson’s, and Rees’s opinions, formed the grounds for his motions and objections to follow.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
828 N.E.2d 799, 357 Ill. App. 3d 220, 293 Ill. Dec. 489, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-taylor-illappct-2005.