Pierce v. Gilchrist

359 F.3d 1279, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989, 2004 WL 383245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 2004
Docket02-6241, 02-6351
StatusPublished
Cited by350 cases

This text of 359 F.3d 1279 (Pierce v. Gilchrist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce v. Gilchrist, 359 F.3d 1279, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989, 2004 WL 383245 (10th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Jeffrey Pierce spent fifteen years in Oklahoma state prison for a rape he did not commit. Because DNA analysis demonstrated that Pierce could not have been the source of the semen found on the rape victim, his conviction was vacated on May 7, 2001, and he was released from prison. Mr. Pierce now seeks compensatory and punitive damages from the system and individual actors who deprived him of fifteen years of his life.

The gravamen of Mr. Pierce’s complaint is that Ms. Joyce Gilchrist, a forensic chemist for the Oklahoma City Police Department (“OCPD”), fabricated inculpatory evidence and disregarded exculpatory evidence, which led prosecutors to indict and prosecute Mr. Pierce for the rape. He further alleges that Oklahoma City District Attorney Robert Macy fostered an environment within his office wherein questionable prosecutorial tactics, including reliance on unfounded forensic analysis, were routinely used to secure convictions. Mr. Pierce claims that working in concert, Ms. Gilchrist and Mr. Macy engaged in a pervasive pattern of railroading *1282 defendants through the Oklahoma courts and into extended prison sentences. While this system may have provided the citizens of Oklahoma with a false sense of efficient justice, if the allegations are correct, it deprived criminal defendants of basic constitutional rights and led to at least one unwarranted conviction.

This case reaches us at the motion to dismiss stage, and we thus recite the facts largely as detailed ,by Plaintiff Pierce in his complaint before the district court and his filings before this Court,. Although Mr. Pierce has named other governmental units as defendants in this action, only Defendants Gilchrist and Macy filed motions to dismiss before the district court. For this reason, our recitation of the facts, as well as our holding, are limited to the facts and legal issues bearing on the claims against Defendants Gilchrist and Macy.

Because Defendants raise only issues of law ih connection with 'their appeal of the district court’s denial of qualified immunity, this Court has appellate jurisdiction. Ramirez v. Dep’t of Corr., 222 F.3d 1238, 1240 (10th Cir.2000).

I. Factual Background

A. The Rape and Mr. Pierce’s Conviction

The events leading to this troubling case began on May 8,1985, with the rape of Ms. Sandra Burton, a resident of the Woodlake Apartment Complex' in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Mr. Piérce was employed as a landscaper at the Woodlake complex. [Compl. 5, App. 60.] He was 25 years old, married, with twin- boys on the way. While police were still on the scene, Mr. Pierce was taken by police to be viewed by the victim. At that time, Ms. Burton stated that Mr. Pierce was not the rapist. Two witnesses testified that he was elsewhere at the time of the rape.

In March of 1986, pursuant to an arrest warrant not challenged in this action, Mr. Pierce was arrested and taken into custody. The arrest warrant was supported by an affidavit filed by an OCPD officer stating that Ms. Burton had positively identified Mr. Pierce as the rapist from a photographic lineup. Once in custody, Mr. Pierce waived objections to a search of his body, and police collected body fluids and head and pubic hairs from his person. As a condition to the waiver, OCPD officers told Mr. Pierce that if the hairs did not match he would be released. Five minutes later, Mr. Pierce was told that a forensic chemist had matched his hairs to evidence collected from the Woodlake rape scene.

The forensic analysis was performed by Defendant Joyce Gilchrist. Ms. Gilchrist’s forensic analysis identified a total of 33 scalp and pubic hair samples from the crime scene as “microscopically consistent” with evidence taken from Mr. Pierce’s body, thus concluding that the hairs could have come from Mr. Pierce. According to Mr. Pierce’s amended complaint, those findings were false and without any scientific basis. Further, Mr. Pierce alleges that, with knowledge and deceit, Ms. Gilchrist (i) ’ concealed the fact that Mr. Pierce’s hair did not match the hairs found at- the crime scene, (ii) violated the district court’s order to deliver the hair samples in a timely manner for review by Mr. Pierce’s forensic expert, and (iii) disregarded her own findings that Mr. Pierce’s blood contained a particular enzyme, PGM-2-1, which conclusively precluded Mr. Pierce from being the source of the sperm found on the victim.

Thereafter, Mr. Pierce was charged with first degree rape, oral sodomy, second degree burglary, and assault with a dangerous weapon. Mr. Pierce alleges that Ms. Gilchrist’s fraudulent oral and written reports “became an inseparable basis” upon which the district attorney filed these charges. At trial, Mr. Pierce was found guilty and sentenced to 65 years in prison.

*1283 In April of 2001, the FBI released a report authored by Special Agent Deej drick reviewing the forensic work performed by Ms. Gilchrist between 1982 and 1991. The report examined Ms. Gilchrist’s work in eight investigations, including that of Mr. Pierce. Special Agent Deedrick found that at least five of the cases involved contrived and erroneous statements by Ms. Gilchrist regarding identification of persons, and that Ms. Gilchrist repeatedly made statements beyond the limits of forensic science. With regard to Mr. Pierce’s case specifically, Special Agent Deedrick concluded that none of the hairs taken from Plaintiffs body exhibited the same microscopic characteristics as those found at the crime scene.

Speculation regarding Ms. Gilchrist’s work apparently prompted the OCPD to send evidence from the Pierce case to the Serological Research Institute (SERI) in Richmond, California, for DNA testing. On May 7, 2001, the OCPD laboratory received a final report from SERI exonerating Mr. Pierce on the basis of its DNA analysis. On the same day, the district court for Oklahoma County ordered Mr. Pierce’s conviction and sentence “vacáted, set aside and held for naught because Petitioner Pierce is factually innocent of committing the crimes for which he was charged and convicted.”

B. Defendant Gilchrist

Beyond the facts immediately connected to his prosecution, Mr. Pierce alleges that Ms. Gilchrist’s and Mr. Macy’s behavior reflects a pattern and practice of the OCPD and the district attorney’s office in securing convictions on the basis of falsified or misleading evidence. Mr. Pierce points out that Ms. Gilchrist’s forensic analysis and testimony has been subject to numerous reprimands by the Oklahoma courts. For example, in McCarty v. State, 765 P.2d 1215, 1222 (Okla.Crim.App.1988), the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (“OCCA”), OMahoma’s court of last resort for criminal cases, reversed a death-penalty conviction secured on the basis of Ms. Gilchrist’s testimony. .The OCCA found that Ms. .Gilchrist improperly delayed sending her report as well as the raw data to the defense’s expert witness for independent examination. Id. at 1217. Further, the OCCA found ..that at multiple points during the trial, Ms. Gilchrist testified beyond her professional expertise and beyond the. state of the art of forensic science. Id. at 1218-20.

The OCCA reprimanded Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
359 F.3d 1279, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989, 2004 WL 383245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-gilchrist-ca10-2004.