State v. Savoy

109 So. 3d 910, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1326, 2012 WL 1521516, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 575
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 2012
DocketNo. 11-1326
StatusPublished

This text of 109 So. 3d 910 (State v. Savoy) 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 v. Savoy, 109 So. 3d 910, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1326, 2012 WL 1521516, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 575 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

DECUIR, Judge.

| defendant, Joseph Savoy, was convicted of aggravated kidnapping, a violation of La.R.S. 14:44, at a bench trial on July 26, 2011. He was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence, consecutive to any other sentences he was already serving. This was Defendant’s eighth felony; he was previously convicted of obscenity, simple burglary (twice), molestation of a juvenile, first degree robbery, aggravated rape, and armed robbery. Defendant appeals his conviction, alleging the trial court erroneously allowed DNA evidence to be introduced at trial without the testimony of the technician who cut the samples from which the DNA was extracted. Defendant’s conviction is hereby affirmed.

[912]*912FACTS

On June 28, 1994, Defendant forced his way into the home of the forty-four year-old victim, J.S., and forced her to perform oral sex on him. After Defendant ejaculated on her, she wiped her face on her shirt. Defendant moved J.S. into a closet in her bedroom, closed the door, and moved a large chest of drawers and a bed in front of the door. Defendant took J.S.’s purse, stole her car, and fled the scene.

J.S. was unable to pick out Defendant from a photo lineup on November 24, 2008, more than fourteen years after the attack. At trial, however, she testified she did not know how she did not identify him from the lineup because his identity was so obvious to her at trial. She recognized “[t]hat round head and those sunken eyes,” “that smirky look on his face,” “[a]nd the size of him” with “not a shadow of a doubt” when she saw him in person.

[;>At trial, J.S. identified the shirt she was wearing at the time of the attack. The shirt, when exhibited at trial, contained holes that had been cut in it that were not present when J.S. last wore it. The evidence revealed that, in 1994, Arthur Young, of the Acadiana Crime Lab (ACL), had cut out pieces of the shirt which appeared to contain semen stains. The cuttings were stored as evidence in the case and were later submitted for DNA testing. Eventually, the DNA profile generated from the cuttings was matched to Defendant, and he was implicated in this crime.

As his sole assignment of error in this appeal, Defendant contends the trial court violated Defendant’s constitutional right to confront -witnesses by allowing DNA evidence to be introduced without Mr. Young’s testimony. For the following reasons, we find no merit to this assignment of error.

EVIDENCE

Carolyn Booker, forensic DNA analyst and administrator of the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) database at the Acadiana Crime Lab in New Iberia, testified CODIS “contains DNA profiles from evidence and from individuals.” DNA profiles of individuals convicted of felony offenses in Louisiana are entered into CO-DIS. Also entered are the DNA profiles generated from physical evidence recovered at the scene of a crime. Searches are performed using the database “in order to solve unsolved cases” by matching the DNA evidence.

When a serial killer appeared in Louisiana in 2002 and 2008, ACL and the State Police Lab received a grant from the Louisiana Legislature to review “old unworked sexual assaults” in an effort to find a living victim of the ^murderer.1 ACL went through its files of unsolved crimes back to 1986 that “had evidence or a potential for evidence to get a DNA profile.” ACL outsourced approximately three hundred of the cases. When the work was completed, ACL reviewed the DNA profiles generated and entered them into CODIS.

When ACL gets a “hit” or a match on a profile it has entered into CODIS, Ms. Booker notifies the State Police Lab that ACL is interested in knowing the name of the convicted felony offender associated with the database number. The State Police Lab then retests its sample to verify that the same profile is generated. If it is, ACL is given the name, and ACL provides the name to the law enforcement agency that submitted the case. That agency ob[913]*913tains a new sample from the individual, and ACL works it to make sure it generates the same DNA profile. ACL does not rework the initial sample obtained from the victim.

Each case submitted to ACL by a law enforcement agency is assigned a number. When a sample comes into ACL and a number is assigned, the evidence custodian puts a chain of custody form with it and both are stored in a vault. The sample is assigned to a technician, such as Arthur Young, and a chemist. At some point, the technician does a preliminary examination of the sample; if there is anything to be removed or obtained from the item, the technician cuts it out and stores it “for now and perpetuity.” Only cuttings are saved; the original items are returned to the submitting agency.

14 One of the items selected for analysis as a result of the Derrick Todd Lee case was a semen stain from J.S.’s shirt. Cuttings from the shirt had been taken by Mr. Young of ACL in 1994, given case number 94-2195, and stored until Ms. Booker sent them to DNA Reference Laboratories (DRL) in San Antonio, Texas for workup in J.S.’s unsolved case. Mr. Young’s work, which did not involve DNA testing, was done before Ms. Booker and George Schi-ro, the DNA technical leader at ACL, were employed there.

Dr. Nasir Butt of DRL personally examined the cuttings from 94-2195 and generated a DNA profile that he subsequently submitted to ACL. The examination included an analysis that detected the presence of seminal fluid. Dr. Butt was confident the profile was accurate and scientifically valid. Mr. Schiro entered into CODIS the profile generated by Dr. Butt. The CODIS system indicated “a match or a hit” with “an individual in the [CODIS] data base” who was initially identified by a number.

Pursuant to this match, on September BO, 2004, Detective Bobby Howard of the Lafayette City Police Department obtained a search warrant for Defendant’s blood sample. James Coley, a medical laboratory technician, drew Defendant’s blood at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola. Mr. Coley’s practice was to verify a donor’s identity, collect the sample, label it in the donor’s presence, and place it in a sealed, tamper-proof container. He testified he collected Defendant’s blood sample according to the protocol for seizing DNA evidence.

Mr. Schiro analyzed the blood stain card, made from Defendant’s blood sample and assigned ACL number 04-4883, for DNA. He knew a CODIS match had been made with the sample from ACL number 94-2195. He [..¡specifically looked to see if the blood from 04-4883 showed the same DNA profile as 94-2195. Mr. Schiro had a lot of confidence in the CODIS match “[b]ased on the quality control that is in place for that system,” but he did not accept it without his own analysis. He found “[t]he DNA profile obtained from the — the shirt matched the DNA profile obtained to — to the reference blood sample of [Defendant].” He then determined “[t]o a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, [Defendant] was the source of the — of the DNA from the sperm fraction in that piece of shirt.”

When Mr. Schiro testified at trial about the cuttings Mr. Young had taken, Defendant’s counsel moved to exclude any testimony about “anything done on that shirt.” He argued Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 So. 3d 910, 11 La.App. 3 Cir. 1326, 2012 WL 1521516, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-savoy-lactapp-2012.