Pettus v. United States

37 A.3d 213, 2012 WL 399997, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 22
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 2012
DocketNo. 08-CF-1361
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 A.3d 213 (Pettus v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettus v. United States, 37 A.3d 213, 2012 WL 399997, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 22 (D.C. 2012).

Opinion

FARRELL, Senior Judge:

A jury found appellant guilty of, among other things, first-degree felony murder (burglary) while armed, first-degree sexual abuse while armed, first-degree theft of a motor vehicle from a senior citizen, and related lesser included offenses. The principal issue on appeal is whether the trial judge erroneously admitted the expert opinion of an FBI forensic document examiner that a piece of handwriting left on the body of the murder victim had been written by appellant. Specifically, we must decide whether opinion evidence of this kind based on comparison of “known” and “questioned” handwritings, resulting in the opinion that the same individual wrote both documents, meets the test of “general acceptance of a particular scientific methodology,” Ibn-Tamas v. United States, 407 A.2d 626, 638 (D.C.1979); see Frye v. United States, 54 App.D.C. 46, 47, 293 F. 1013, 1014 (1923), required by this jurisdiction for the admission of forensic science evidence. Although appellant, joined by the Public Defender Service as amicus curiae, makes a spirited attack on the general acceptance of all such “pattern-matching” analysis in the light of a recent National Research Council Committee Report, we hold that forensic handwriting comparison and expert opinions based thereon satisfy the bedrock admissibility standard of Frye and Ibrtr-Tamas and may be put before a jury, where remaining issues of reliability may be argued, after cross-examination and any counter-expert testimony, as affecting the weight of the opinions.

Rejecting as well appellant’s remaining assignment of error, see part III., infra, we affirm the judgments of conviction except for those the parties agree must be vacated on remand under merger principles.

I.

The government’s proof allowed the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant sexually assaulted and killed 78-year-old Martha Byrd in her home (next to his family’s home) within a day or two before September 4, 2004, when her body was found lying in her bed. Ms. Byrd had been strangled from the rear and made unconscious with a cloth ligature wrapped around her neck, and stabbed five times from the front in the torso. Semen found on her thighs and material taken from her vagina contained sperm matching appellant’s DNA profile by an overwhelming statistical probability. His left ring-finger print was found on the inside frame of a sliding glass door that had been forced open to allow entry to the home. The night before Ms. Byrd’s body was found, appellant had been seen “[sjpeeding up and down the street” in her car, and his palm print was later lifted from the car interior. Pieces of black cloth found on the rear floorboard of the vehicle, in the opinion of a forensic fiber analyst, could have originated from the same textile garment as the ligature used to strangle the victim.

An envelope found on Ms. Byrd’s body contained a handwritten note that read: “You souldins [sic] have cheated on me.” [216]*216Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) document examiner Hector Maldonado later compared the handwriting on the envelope with 235 pages of appellant’s handwriting taken from his jail cell. Based on Maldonado’s observation of “an overwhelming amount of handwriting combinations ... in agreement with each other” and no significant differences, he opined that appellant was the author of the murder scene note. A conclusion of authorship, he explained, is not based on similarities between one, two, or three letters, but rather “on the combination of all the letters together and the words together, higher relationships, baseline arrangements, spacing between words and letters, initial strokes, ending strokes, [and] where the letters meet.”1 His conclusion, applying these criteria, was that there were “significant combinations of handwriting characteristics ... in agreement between the questioned writing and the known writing.” Cross-examined about examples of individual letters or combinations from appellant’s known writings that appeared pictorially different from the murder scene note, Maldonado maintained that those represented variations in appellant’s own handwriting, not “significant differ-enee[s].”2 Although significant differences will preclude a conclusion of authorship, intra-writer variations will not do so, in his opinion.

II.

The government’s case relied on multiple forms of forensic evidence comparison and resulting expert opinion testimony— DNA, fiber, fingerprint, and handwriting comparison (not to say medical examiner analysis) — but appellant and amicus challenge only the admissibility of Maldonado’s opinion that appellant wrote the note found on Ms. Byrd’s body. This challenge, however, particularly as made in the briefs of amicus (who chiefly represented appellant on this issue at oral argument), amounts to an attack on the “ ‘pattern-matching’ [forensic] disciplines in general” except for “nuclear DNA analysis.” Reply Br. for Amicus Curiae at 11-12. According to amicus, the recent NRC Report— which we discuss in part II. E., infra — has concluded that “none of the pattern-matching disciplines, including handwriting identification, satisf[y the basic] requirements” of science. Id. at 12 (emphasis by ami-cus ). But the issue before this division is the admissibility of expert opinions derived from one such discipline, forensic handwriting identification, and we imply nothing about whether other pattern-matching disciplines meet the foundational test for admissibility in this jurisdiction.

We first summarize the standards governing the admission of evidence of this kind; then recite in detail the evidence received by the trial court (Judge Kravitz) at the pretrial hearing on the issue, and explain our agreement with his conclusion that such evidence is admissible; and lastly discuss why the NRC Report, not available to Judge Kravitz at the time, does not alter our conclusion of admissibility.

[217]*217A.

“In the District of Columbia,” we explained recently,

before expert testimony about a new scientific principle [may] be admitted, the testing methodology must have become sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs. The issue is consensus versus controversy over a particular technique, not its validity. Moreover, general acceptance does not require unanimous approval. Once a technique has gained such general acceptance, we will accept it as presumptively reliable and thus generally admissible into evidence. The party opposing the evidence, of course, may challenge the weight the jury ought to give it.

(Ricardo) Jones v. United States, 27 A.3d 1130, 1136 (D.C.2011) (alteration in original; citations and internal quotation marks omitted). These principles ultimately derive from Frye v. United States, supra. Notably, however, “Frye only applies to ‘a novel scientific test or a unique controversial methodology or technique.’ ” (Ricardo) Jones, 27 A.3d at 1137 (quoting Drevenak v. Abendschein, 773 A.2d 396, 418 (D.C.2001)). Thus, the question arises initially whether the Frye

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 A.3d 213, 2012 WL 399997, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettus-v-united-states-dc-2012.