State Of Washington, Resp-cross v. Danny Giles, App-cross

385 P.3d 204, 196 Wash. App. 745
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 28, 2016
Docket72726-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 385 P.3d 204 (State Of Washington, Resp-cross v. Danny Giles, App-cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Of Washington, Resp-cross v. Danny Giles, App-cross, 385 P.3d 204, 196 Wash. App. 745 (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Dwyer, J.

¶1 Danny Giles appeals from the judgment entered on a jury’s verdict finding him guilty of murder in the first degree, committed while armed with a deadly weapon. He asserts that, by excluding evidence of three other suspects who purportedly committed the murder, the trial court deprived him of his right to present a defense. He also asserts that, by contravening a ruling in limine, a witness’s testimony denied him his right to a fair trial, notwithstanding that the trial court struck the offending testimony from the record and issued a curative instruc *748 tion, approved by his counsel, and notwithstanding that his counsel requested no other remedy. Finding no error, we affirm.

I

¶2 Patti Berry, a nude dancer at a nightclub, went missing after leaving work sometime after 1:30 a.m. on July 31, 1995. Her car was found the next day, parked between two moving vans at a nearby car wash. There was a significant amount of blood inside the car. A search of the surrounding area uncovered a bloodstained pair of jeans and a handbag, both appearing to belong to Berry. The police processed her car, removing, for the purpose of forensic testing, its steering wheel, the driver’s seat headrest, and a piece of the front passenger seat’s fabric containing a bloody handprint.

¶3 Nine days after she went missing, Berry’s body was found in a wooded area a few miles from the car wash. An autopsy of the body revealed that the cause of her death was blood loss from 16 to 18 stab wounds. A forensic pathologist’s analysis concluded that the rate of decomposition of her body was consistent with death occurring on July 31.

¶4 The police investigation identified several suspects, none of whom were Danny Giles. The police made no arrests. This remained so for many years.

¶5 Periodically, over the next many years, investigators conducted in-depth deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing of the evidence seized. The testing identified a partial match between the DNA of Danny Giles and the DNA samples taken from Berry’s jeans and handbag and her car’s steering wheel and driver’s seat headrest. 1 These matches indicated that Giles could not be excluded as a suspect and, *749 thus, were consistent with a theory that Giles had murdered Berry.

¶6 The DNA profile matches led the police to investigate Giles, uncovering additional evidence that he may have been the killer: on previous occasions, he had visited the nightclub where Berry worked; he had poor opinions of sex workers; he sometimes carried a knife; he lived in the area, frequenting a bar near the car wash where Berry’s car was discovered; and he worked for a landscaper near the wooded lot where Berry’s body was found.

¶7 During a police interview, Giles initially denied knowing Berry. However, after being confronted with the DNA profile partial matches, he said that it was possible that he had engaged in intercourse with her but could not explain why his DNA would be in Berry’s car. In addition, in 2012, a witness, Todd Horton, came forth to claim that in the early morning in question he had seen a man who looked like Giles washing out a car’s floor mats, back seat, and trunk, and that the substance being washed out looked murky, like blood.

¶8 Giles was charged with murder in the first degree, committed while armed with a deadly weapon, arising from the death of Patti Berry. Based on a separate investigation, Giles was also charged with murder in the first degree arising from the death of Tracey Brazzel. Prior to trial, Giles moved to sever the murder charges for trial. The trial court granted Giles’ motion.

¶9 As part of his defense, Giles sought to present evidence that someone other than himself had killed Berry. 2 In so doing, Giles identified 11 other individuals and sought permission to present to the jury the “other suspect” evidence for each individual. The trial court held hearings over the course of five days regarding the admissibility of this evidence. At the first such hearing, evidence pertaining to 5 of the individuals identified by Giles was excluded by the *750 trial court when Giles’ counsel admitted that he did not have sufficient evidence to warrant presenting any of those individuals to the jury as the true killer. Thereafter, the trial court permitted Giles to introduce evidence of 1 individual, Bryan Petitclerc, as the perpetrator and excluded evidence pertaining to the remaining 5.

¶10 At trial, on the 12th day of the State’s case in chief, Giles’ attorneys filed a motion in limine regarding the upcoming testimony of Kristopher Kern, the State’s expert witness. The State indicated that Kern would testify that he had familiarized himself with the facts of the case and had reviewed the DNA analyses regarding Giles’ DNA found inside Berry’s car and on Berry’s possessions. Based on his expertise and his familiarity with the facts, the State planned to have Kern testify regarding conclusions he had drawn as to the likelihood that Giles had been inside Berry’s car and touched those of her possessions found nearby. Giles’ motion requested that Kern be limited to testifying that the DNA evidence was “consistent with” the postulation that Giles touched Berry’s car and her belongings, not that it was “likely” that Giles did so. The court granted the motion, stating, “I guess I’m a little bit bothered by the term [‘likely’]. [Kern] could say his opinion, based on everything he reviewed, is this, but I don’t think he can quantify it as likely, but you can ask him his opinion, based on what he’s reviewed.”

¶ 11 During his testimony, however, Kern, in response to the prosecutor’s questions, testified that the DNA evidence established that it was “likely” that Giles was in Berry’s car and that it was “likely” that Giles touched some of her belongings. Before the jury, defense counsel objected to each statement, citing a lack of foundation but not referencing the trial court’s prior ruling. The trial court overruled each objection.

¶12 Immediately after Kern’s second answer, a recess was taken. At this time, defense counsel informed the court that her objections had been based on the trial court’s *751 previous ruling. The trial court left the bench to review its notes. Upon returning to the bench, the trial court ruled that Kern’s testimony violated its prior ruling. Defense counsel requested that a curative instruction be given to the jury. Defense counsel deferred to the trial court to draft the curative instruction and approved of the curative instruction composed by the court. The trial court inquired as to whether any other matters remained for decision. Defense counsel requested nothing further from the court.

¶13 The jury was brought into the courtroom. The trial court ordered the offending testimony stricken from the record. The curative instruction was then read to the jury.

¶14 After a 15-day trial, the jury found Giles guilty of Berry’s murder.

II

A

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.3d 204, 196 Wash. App. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-resp-cross-v-danny-giles-app-cross-washctapp-2016.