State of Louisiana v. Kevin D. Bolden

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 2011
DocketKA-0011-0237
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Kevin D. Bolden (State of Louisiana v. Kevin D. Bolden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Louisiana v. Kevin D. Bolden, (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

11-237

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

KEVIN D. BOLDEN

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 08K3059C HONORABLE ALONZO HARRIS, DISTRICT JUDGE

OSWALD A. DECUIR JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Oswald A. Decuir, and Jimmie C. Peters, Judges.

CONVICTIONS AND SENTENCES REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Earl B. Taylor District Attorney Twenty-Seventh Judicial District P. O. Drawer 1968 Opelousas, LA 70571 (337) 948-0551 Counsel for Appellee: State of Louisiana

Jennifer Ardoin Assistant District Attorney Twenty-Seventh Judicial District P. O. Drawer 1968 Opelousas, LA 70571 (337) 948-0551 Counsel for Appellee: State of Louisiana Mark O. Foster Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 2057 Natchitoches, LA 71457 (318) 572-5693 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: Kevin D. Bolden DECUIR, Judge.

Defendant, Kevin D. Bolden, was convicted of two counts of aggravated

rape and was sentenced to two terms of life imprisonment without benefit of parole,

probation, or suspension of sentence. The sentences are to run concurrently.

Defendant alleges the trial court erred by denying his motion in limine and in

allowing the State to use the results of certain DNA tests at trial without testimony

from the individuals who generated the profiles. He contends the error was not

harmless because the evidence would have been insufficient to convict him without

these test results.

FACTS

Two aggravated rapes were committed in St. Landry Parish in 1998 and

1999. Evidence from the crime scenes was collected and submitted to the

Acadiana Criminalistics Laboratory (ACL). Neither victim could identify her

attacker. Evidence from the 1998 rape was submitted to ACL on November 30,

1998. ACL did not do DNA testing at that time, and “the case was kind of set

aside.”

When a serial killer appeared in Southwest Louisiana, ACL and the State

Police Lab received a grant from the Louisiana legislature to investigate unsolved

sexual assault cases in an effort to find a living victim of the murderer. ACL was

“swamped with working suspect samples” in connection with that investigation, so

it chose Orchid Cell Mark (OCM) in Nashville, Tennessee, and two other labs to

help ACL evaluate samples.

Carolyn Booker and Winnie Kurowski, ACL forensic scientists, went

through ACL‟s old cases in 2003. On August 25, 2003, evidence concerning the

1998 rape was submitted to OCM for DNA testing. OCM generated a DNA profile based on that evidence but did not identify the contributor of the evidence

samples. ACL staff had no idea, and no way to know, of any connection between

the 1998 and 1999 rapes. When a national DNA database, the Combined DNA

Index System (CODIS), was implemented, ACL gained the ability to check DNA

profiles against others, both within and outside the lab.

OCM was a private laboratory whose test results were owned by ACL.

OCM‟s tests were performed according to a contract that dictated how the tests

were to be done. ACL set out how OCM should go about generating the DNA

profile, what kind of instruments OCM should use, how ACL wanted the report

generated, and how ACL wanted the charts formed.

The FBI set the protocol for all DNA labs. Accredited labs followed an

accredited procedure using universal software, and they all followed the same

standards, insuring their quality of work. CODIS was able to exist because

different labs which ran the same information would produce the same answer.

CODIS is controlled by the FBI, and information must meet FBI standards before

it is entered into the system. All data must be reviewed before it is entered into

CODIS.

Ms. Kurowski explained the analyst‟s role at the hearing of the motion. The

analyst chooses the sample and extracts the DNA from it. He then identifies how

much DNA is present in the sample, and he carries it forward into the separation

stage. The DNA is then put into an instrument and channeled through a software

program. The analyst then interprets the data produced by the software. The

procedure for placing the sample into the machine is “pretty much universal

throughout . . . different labs.” Analysts must meet a certain level of qualification

before they can conduct DNA analysis using the universal software.

2 At trial, Ms. Kurowski explained the process that analyzed DNA markers.

Samples were amplified and placed into the instrument that separated the DNA

fragments. Software assigned a marker called an allele, and generated a printout of

electropherograms. An analyst then examined the printout to evaluate the profile

and verify the validity of the alleles. OCM and ACL used software that analyzed

the information the same way and produced the same outcome.

Arthur Young, an analyst and former ACL employee, examined the

evidence from the 1999 case and generated a DNA profile. He did not identify the

donor of the male DNA fractions in the samples. Mr. Young trained Ms. Kurowski

at ACL. While the reports of Mr. Young and OCM were admitted into evidence at

the hearing of the motion, only one page of Mr. Young‟s report was admitted at

trial; this was the printout of electropherograms. Mr. Young did not testify at trial.

Ms. Kurowski was not present at OCM when the 1998 evidence profile was

generated there or at ACL when Mr. Young generated the profile in the 1999 case.

One of Carolyn Booker‟s job responsibilities at ACL was administration of

the CODIS database, overseeing the entry of DNA profiles into the database. She

made certain the FBI standards and guidelines were followed. The database

contained DNA profiles of known and unknown references that were compared to

each other. Ms. Booker searched the local databases to see if there were any case

to case matches. She uploaded the local information to the state system, and a

statewide search was done. The State uploaded all the profiles entered by labs

throughout the state, and a national search was performed.

Regarding the 1998 and 1999 rapes, Ms. Booker reviewed the profiles

generated by OCM and by Mr. Young at ACL before Ms. Kurowski entered them

into the CODIS database. She interpreted the product of their work herself and

independently evaluated the profiles. George Schiro, the technical leader at ACL, 3 also reviewed the OCM and Young profiles. Ms. Kurowski reviewed the data

generated by OCM and by Mr. Young. When the profiles, reviewed three times,

were entered into CODIS, the system indicated a match, and the donor of the DNA

was identified.

This identification, however, was not what was relied on at trial. On June 12,

2008, Lieutenant Donald Thompson of the Opelousas City Police Department,

obtained a swab from the interior of Defendant‟s mouth for the purpose of DNA

testing, and he arranged for the swab‟s transfer to ACL. Ms. Kurowski generated a

profile from that sample and compared it to the DNA profiles generated by others

from the 1998 and 1999 cases. Her conclusion was that to a reasonable degree of

scientific certainty, the same person gave the reference sample, left semen on the

victim‟s bed sheet in the 1998 case, and left semen in the victim‟s vagina in the

1999 case. That conclusion was based on the technical work performed by OCM

and Mr. Young because she had to look at their reports. Ms.

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