State v. Costa

2016 ND 65, 877 N.W.2d 46, 2016 N.D. LEXIS 64, 2016 WL 1031457
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2016
Docket20150248
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 ND 65 (State v. Costa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Costa, 2016 ND 65, 877 N.W.2d 46, 2016 N.D. LEXIS 64, 2016 WL 1031457 (N.D. 2016).

Opinion

McEVERS, Justice.

[¶ 1] Corey Costa appeals from a judgment entered after a jury found him guilty of gross sexual imposition. Costa argues the prosecutor’s closing argument misstated the evidence and improperly vouched for evidence.. We reject Costa’s arguments and affirm the judgment.

,1

[¶2] The State charged Costa with gross sexual imposition, alleging he was at least 22 years old and willfully engaged in a sexual act .with a person less than 15 years old on December 11,2012, According to the complainant, she met Costa through Facebook, they initially met in person on the night of- December 11, 2012, when he asked her to “hang out” with him, he picked her up at her residence, they went to a welding shop next to an apartment building where he lived, they stayed at the welding shop for about an hour while she had a glass of wine, they then went to Costa’s apartment where he “crushed” and “smoked, [a] pill”, and “inhaled it ... and blew it down [her] throat,” and he thereafter engaged in vaginal intercourse with her. The complainant testified she did not tell her mother about the incident until December 13, 2012, and she was then taken to a hospital for an .examination..

[¶3] Costa denied having intercourse with the complainant. According to Costa, he knew the complainant for about six months through Facebook, he texted her at about 6 p.m. on December 11, 2012, to “hang out,” he picked her up at her place and they went to his welding shop for about ten minutes while he welded a trailer, she asked to use a bathroom, he gave her the access code to get into his apartment building to use. his bathroom, she went into his apartment by herself, and she returned to the welding shop and shortly thereafter left the premises.

[¶4] During the medical examination on December 13, 2012, a sexual assault kit was collected from the complainant and was taken to the State Crime Lab on June 5, 2013. . At trial, Alexandria Gibbs, a forensic scientist from the State Crime Lab, testified about screenings she performed on items included in the sexual assault kit. Gibbs testified about a test for prostate specific antigen (PSA), a protein with high concentrations - in semen.. She testified oral and vaginal swabs from the complainant, were both negative for PSA, and she viewed the swabs under a microscope and saw no spermatozoa on the swabs. Gibbs *48 testified she also viewed clothing from the sexual assault kit under a microscope and did not visually observe spermatozoa on the clothing. She testified if spermatozoa had been observed, the test result would have been denoted “semen detected.” She testified a PSA test of cuttings from two pair of the complainant’s underwear were positive for proteins found in semen and were labeled “presumptively positive for semen.” Gibbs testified she was unable to microscopically see spermatozoa-on the underwear, but she did not rulé ’out the presence of semen on-the underwear. A report prepared by Gibbs and admitted into evidence at trial listed items in the sexual assault kit and said results on the two pair of the complainant’s underwear were “presumptively positive for semen.” The report on those two items included a note that “[t]he presence of semen could not be confirmed -by microscopic techniques” and “[a] positive p30[, PSA,] result could be attributed' to vasocetomized, azoospermic or pre-pubescent males; breast milk, urine, vaginal fluid, cancer, or postmortem samples.” -

[¶ 5] Jennifer Penner, a DNA analyst from the State Crime Lab, tested the cuttings from the two pair of the complainant’s underwear and testified she was unable to make a comparison on a minor contributor of DNA on the underwear using standard DNA testing. Penner testified she developed a Y-chromosomal partial profile-from one pah- of the underwear containing a mixture of at least two people, with the predominant Y-chromosomal profile matching a known sample from Costa. Penner testified that profile came from item 2A-P, the cutting that was labeled as from the complainant’s “underwear worn immediately after incident.” Penner testified Y-chromosomal testing specifically targets the- Y-chromosome, which only' males have, and explained:

The predominant Y-chromosome profile from item 2A-F[.] I was able to calculate' frequencies of occurrence in four different population groups. In the first one which was the African American population group, the frequency of occurrence is approximately 1 in 645. In the Caucasian population the frequency of occurrence is approximately 1 in 1,374. In the Hispanic population, the frequency of occurrence is approximately 1 in 535. And in the Native American population group, the frequency of occurrence is approximately 1 in 36.
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Basically what that means when the frequency of occurrence is 1 in 1,374. What that means is if I would randomly select 1,374 Caucasian individuals I would expect one person out of that group to have -DNA profile — a Y-chromosomal DNA profile that would match the predominant Y-chromosomal DNA profile from item 2A-F.

[¶ 6] During closing argument to the jury, -the prosecutor discussed the scientific evidence:

The laboratory analysis starts at. the basic level. First, we look for bodily fluids. That’s the AP process. If the bodily fluids are present, then we proceed to the next step which is the AP being the protein, PSA being the male-specific protein. ‘ And remember Ms. Gibbs testified that while it can show the test they use, that ’test card they use can show positives. Typically PSA, or P30, is only — is found in very high levels in semen. So if that finding is made, then further testing is done. And that is where the actual DNA analysis comes into play. The vaginal swabs showed no -semen. Those swabs were taken 24-36 hours after this event is alleged to have happened. Various factors come into play there, and you will see when you go *49 through these forms that were completed by the sexual assault nurse examiner. She talked about step 5A: prior to evidence collection, the patient has — and she checked various items. Urinated, defecated, genital wash, bath, shower, changed clothes. Those were all factors that the DNA analyst testified will effect how long semen stays in the vaginal cavity. And [the complainant] did, all of those things. So it’s ,no surprise that after 36-48 hours there’s nothing, left there. However, on the,, inside of the underwear that [the complainant] put on immediately ' after this assault — his. Gibbs testified it was in the crotch area on the inside of the underwear. It was presumptively positive for semen. The simple break down of Ms. Penner’s testimony is that the sample was positive for [Costa’s] Y-chromosomal DNA. So how did it get there? How did [Costa’s] DNA wind up inside [the complainant’s] underwear? Initially [Costa] said he was with her for twenty minutes, he told Lieutenant Sundbakken ‘I was with her for twenty minutes. We were never in my apartment.’ Now today he says T was with her for twenty minutes, she asked to go to the bathroom, I gave her the key to the secure door, she left and came back shortly and then ten minutes later she announced she was leaving.’ So apparently [Costa] would have you believe that after being with him for only ten minutes and watching him weld, [the complainant] went to his apartment, collected his semen containing his DNA, deposited it oh her- own underwear—
MR.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 ND 65, 877 N.W.2d 46, 2016 N.D. LEXIS 64, 2016 WL 1031457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-costa-nd-2016.