Thomas Pope, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia

729 S.E.2d 751, 60 Va. App. 486, 2012 WL 3104792, 2012 Va. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 31, 2012
Docket2558102
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 729 S.E.2d 751 (Thomas Pope, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Pope, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 729 S.E.2d 751, 60 Va. App. 486, 2012 WL 3104792, 2012 Va. App. LEXIS 250 (Va. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ALSTON, Judge.

Thomas Pope, Jr. (appellant) appeals his convictions for rape and first-degree murder. He assigns a mixture of eight errors to the trial court’s judgment encapsulated as follows: 1) a Batson challenge; 2) chain of custody; 3) hearsay evidence; 4), 5), and 6) presentation of the database match probability statistic; 7) DNA certificates of analysis; and 8) a post-trial motion for a subpoena duces tecum. Finding no error in any aspect that appellant alleges, we affirm his convictions and sentence.

*492 BACKGROUND

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, as we must when the Commonwealth prevails at trial, see Maxwell v. Commonwealth, 275 Va. 437, 442, 657 S.E.2d 499, 502 (2008), the evidence indicated that a woman was raped and strangled in her home in Emporia, Virginia, on January 2, 1975. Despite her injuries, the victim managed to call 911 and report that she had been assaulted. When Emporia Police Lieutenant Clyde Harrell (Harrell) arrived at the victim’s house, he found the eighty-eight-year-old woman seated in a chair, nude from the waist up. She told Harrell that “a negro man had torn her clothes off and had choked her.” Because the victim was in a state of shock and having difficulty breathing, Harrell did not ask her any more questions while they waited for an ambulance to arrive. The victim was transported to the hospital where she died approximately one hour after she reported the attack.

Harrell “obtained all the evidence that [he] could find in helping to solve this case” from the victim’s residence. The next day, January 3, 1975, Virginia State Police Trooper T.J. Roseberry, II (Trooper Roseberry) collected the evidence from Harrell and identified each item in his notes: “A[,] panties; B, slips, plural, two of them; C, a blouse, flowered, red, green, and brown”; and a piece of rug that Harrell cut out. 1 Trooper Roseberry then went back to the victim’s home and collected additional evidence. Trooper Roseberry secured all the evidence in his cruiser and took it to the state laboratory on January 10,1975.

Joan Faunce, an employee of the Division of Forensic Science (“DFS”) 2 in 1975, received the evidentiary items directly from Trooper Roseberry. In her examination of the *493 items, Faunce detected sperm, spermatozoa, and seminal fluids on a number of them. Faunce also received vaginal and cervical smears from the victim via Dr. Wiecldng of the Medical Exam Section of the Division. Faunce identified the possible presence of seminal fluid in the vaginal smears. Faunce performed a serological 3 examination of the fluids. Curtis Jasper Moore was later developed as a suspect in the attack, but the evidence of the serological examination did not implicate Moore because he was a non-secreter. 4 When Faunce completed her testing of each item, she placed the sample on the appropriate laboratory worksheet and secured the sample to the sheet with “Scotch” tape. Once Faunce finished with each piece of evidence, she returned that piece to Trooper Roseberry but for the sample taped to the worksheet. The worksheets were retained by DFS with the case file. Faunce never worked with the case file again.

Within one week of the rape and murder of the elderly victim, police questioned Moore about his possible involvement in the crimes. Moore eventually confessed and was tried and convicted. His conviction was later overturned when a federal court granted his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, holding that his confession was obtained in violation of his Fifth Amendment rights. See Moore v. Ballone, 488 F.Supp. 798, 808 (E.D.Va.1980). 5

The police investigation of the crimes remained open and unsolved, and on June 20, 1986, DFS eventually sent its case records to the State Record Center of the Library of Virginia for storage.

In 2005, Governor Warner ordered a review of all the serology case files worked between 1973 and 1988. The *494 purpose of this review was to locate files that contained evidence and, in cases where the listed suspect was convicted, to have DNA testing conducted on that evidence. As a result of that order, the evidentiary samples from this victim’s rape and murder were removed from storage by DFS on June 4, 2007, and sent to a contract laboratory, Bode Technology (“Bode”), for analysis. Analysts at Bode extracted and amplified DNA present in the vaginal smear and oral swab taken from the victim in 1975 to develop a profile of the victim’s DNA. The same analysts extracted and amplified DNA from the evidence that Faunce affixed to her worksheets to develop a DNA profile of the perpetrator. The lead analyst prepared a report on the analysis and sent the report, the generated data, and the evidence back to DFS.

Lisa Schiermeier-Wood, a senior analyst at DFS, received the report and the data. She reviewed the data and the analysis done at Bode, formed her own conclusions, and wrote an additional report summarizing her conclusions. As part of Schiermeier-Wood’s report, she generated a certificate of analysis which included a profile of the victim’s DNA and the DNA of her assailant. Schiermeier-Wood then searched the Virginia database of convicted felons’ DNA profiles. From this search, she identified a DNA profile of appellant that was consistent with the DNA profile of the victim’s assailant. Next, Schiermeier-Wood requested and obtained a buccal swab from appellant and developed a DNA profile of him that she compared to the previously developed evidentiary profile. Schiermeier-Wood concluded that appellant could not be eliminated as the contributor of the DNA from the crime scene. She performed a statistical analysis of the evidentiary DNA profile and determined its rarity: 1 in 1.1 billion in the Caucasian population, 1 in 81 million in the African-American population, and 1 in 1.7 billion in the Hispanic population. Schiermeier-Wood’s analysis led to appellant’s indictment for the rape and murder of the victim. On August 11, 2008, appellant was arrested.

*495 A. Motion to Suppress DNA Evidence— Challenge to Certificates of Analysis

On March 19, 2009, appellant filed a motion to suppress the certificate of analysis dated July 21, 2008, that SchiermeierWood produced and signed. In his motion, appellant asserted that this certificate did not comply with the requirements of Code § 19.2-187 because it was not signed by the person who performed the examination of the DNA.

In late April 2009, the trial court held a hearing on the motion to suppress. In his opening statement at the hearing, appellant referred to an additional certificate of analysis dated August 20, 2008, and argued that DFS had impermissibly created its own definition of what it means to “analyze” the data.

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729 S.E.2d 751, 60 Va. App. 486, 2012 WL 3104792, 2012 Va. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-pope-jr-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2012.