State of Washington v. Julio Josef Davila

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 21, 2014
Docket31238-1
StatusPublished

This text of State of Washington v. Julio Josef Davila (State of Washington v. Julio Josef Davila) 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 v. Julio Josef Davila, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

AUGUST 21, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 31238-1-II1 ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) JULIO J. DAVILA, ) ) Appellant. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, 1. - A jury found Julio Davila guilty of second degree

murder. The key piece of evidence tying Mr. Davila to the murder was a baseball bat

containing Mr. Davila's DNA.l During trial, Mr. Davila did not know that the forensic

analyst who tested the DNA had been fired from her job due to a long history of

incompetence in conducting DNA tests. The trial court denied Mr. Davila's motion for a

new trial based on the prosecution's failure to disclose this information. On appeal, Mr.

Davila contends the State's failure to disclose material evidence impeaching an important

witness for the State violates Brady. 2 He also contends the prosecutor committed

1 Deoxyribonucleicacid.

2 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 10 L. Ed. 2d 215 (1963).

No. 31238-1-111 State v. Davila

misconduct by arguing inconsistent theories of culpability at two separate trials.

We conclude that there was no Brady violation because there was no evidence of

DNA cross contamination in this case and, therefore, the nondisclosure of the information

was not materiaL We also conclude that no prosecutorial misconduct took place. A

prosecutor may argue inconsistent theories of culpability at separate trials when, as here,

new evidence comes to light after the first trial, which supports the second theory. We,

therefore, affirm.

FACTS

In the early morning hours of June 18,2007, Jeramie Davis called 911 to report

that he had discovered John G. Allen, the owner of an adult material bookstore, on the

store's floor. When Officer Brian Cestnik responded, he found Mr. Allen unconscious on

the floor with a baseball bat under his knees. After paramedics took Mr. Allen to the

hospital, Officer Cestnik placed the baseball bat on a shelf close to where Mr. Allen had

been found. Mr. Allen later died at a hospital due to blunt force trauma to the head.

Officer Cestnik interviewed Mr. Davis. Mr. Davis told the officer that he found

Mr. Allen on the floor earlier that evening, but thought he had passed out, so he left.

According to Mr. Davis, he later returned to the bookstore at the encouragement of his

sister and then called police. An investigator later swabbed four areas of the baseball bat

No.31238-I-III State v. Davila

and submitted the swabs, labeled A, B, C, and D, for testing at the Washington State

Patrol's Crime Laboratory (WSP crime lab).

Denise Olson, a forensic analyst for the WSP crime lab, tested the four swabs. Her

report stated that she used "a standard DNA extraction protocol" in evaluating the swabs.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 274. After extracting DNA from the swabs, she quantified them

for human DNA levels and then amplified them. She concluded that one of the swabs

contained DNA from Mr. Allen and excluded Mr. Davis. She obtained a "partial DNA

typing profile from swab D," which had been taken from the handle of the bat, and

concluded the swab was "a mixture of at least two individuals." CP at 275. Her report

stated: "The major contributor is an unidentified male, designated Unknown Individual

A.... Jeramie Davis is excluded as a contributor to this profile." CP at 275.

Mr. Davis was eventually charged with first degree murder for causing Mr. Allen's

death. At trial, two witnesses testified that Mr. Davis admitted that he stole some money,

checks, and pornography from Mr. Allen's store on the night of the murder. The

prosecution argued that the detectives had "ruled out any other suspect" other than Mr.

Davis. CP at 76. During closing argument, the prosecution also argued that Mr. Davis hit

Mr. Allen "over the head with the baseball bat" and then "clean[ ed] out the store." CP at

76. In response to Mr. Davis's argument that DNA on the bat showed someone else was

No. 31238-I-III State v. Davila

the killer, the prosecution countered that Mr. Davis had worn gloves while inside the

store. Mr. Davis was convicted of first degree murder for causing Mr. Allen's death.

This court affirmed the conviction in an unpublished decision. State v. Davis, noted at

151 Wn. App. 1047,2009 WL 2480132.

After Mr. Davis's conviction, detectives continued to get information about

individuals whose fingerprints matched previously unidentified fingerprints lifted from

Mr. Allen's store and truck. In 2011, a Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) search of

the" 'unknown Individual A'" swab was identified as matching the profile of Mr. Davila.

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 290; CP at 4. The State charged Mr. Davila with murder

under two different theories: first degree felony murder for working with Mr. Davis to

commit a robbery and thereby causing Mr. Allen's death; and, second degree felony

murder for causing Mr. Allen's death in the course of an assault or attempted assault in

the second degree. During questioning, Mr. Davila denied knowing Mr. Allen or Mr.

Davis or having any involvement in the murder.

At trial, State's witnesses carefully detailed the chain of custody of key pieces of

evidence. Detective Cestnik, who had become a detective after the Davis trial, testified

that Mr. Allen was lying in a pool of blood with magazines next to him. Detective

Cestnik stated that he wore gloves when he moved the baseball bat from the floor to

preserve any potential DNA evidence. During cross-examination, Detective Cestnik

admitted that he did not place the baseball bat in a paper bag and that the handle of the bat

was resting on top of some boxed DVDs.

Detective John Miller testified that he collected evidence from the crime scene.

He testified that some of Mr. Allen's relatives arrived during the investigation and

infonned him that Mr. Allen's truck was missing. Patrol officers later located the truck.

The detective directed forensic personnel, Carrie Johnson and Lori Preuninger, to gather

fingerprints from inside the truck and store. Fingerprints taken from a counter close to

where Mr. Allen was found matched Mr. Davila's.

Detective Timothy Madsen, the lead detective on the case, testified that he

investigated the interior of Mr. Allen's store after interviewing Mr. Davis. He removed

the baseball bat and had forensic personnel check for latent prints on countertops and

items inside the store. He also had forensic technicians swab the steering wheel of Mr.

Allen's truck. According to Detective Madsen, Ms. Preuninger swabbed four different

areas of the baseball bat. Detective Madsen then submitted those swabs to the WSP

crime laboratory. He explained that once the evidence was collected, it was placed in

sealed envelopes and then stored in the property room. Detective Madsen testified that he

personally took the evidence from the property room to the WSP crime lab for testing.

The State did not call Ms. Olson to discuss her initial testing of the evidence.

Instead, it called Lorraine Heath, the supervising forensic scientist for the WSP crime lab.

Ms.

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Brady v. Maryland
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