United States v. Bill Watson

792 F.3d 1174, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11922, 2015 WL 4153859
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2015
Docket13-30084
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 792 F.3d 1174 (United States v. Bill Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bill Watson, 792 F.3d 1174, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11922, 2015 WL 4153859 (9th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Senior Circuit Judge:

We address whether new DNA tests that make previously useless DNA capable of identification amount to “newly discovered DNA evidence” under the Innocence Protection Act.

Facts

Bill Watson was indicted for knowingly attempting to engage in a sexual act with a person physically unable to communicate unwillingness, as well as for assault of the victim’s brother with a dangerous weapon. The case came to federal court because the indictment charged that Watson, “an Indian person,” committed the crimes “within the boundaries of the Rocky Boy’s Indian Reservation, being Indian Country.” He was convicted of the sex crime but not the assault, and sentenced to 178 months of imprisonment to be followed by five years of supervised release.

The alleged sex crime and assault occurred at a party at children and their friends had obtained two bottles of rum. J.M.B., then 14 years old, got so drunk that a friend and her brother were concerned about her choking on her vomit while she slept, and gagged her to make her throw up. After she vomited, they put her to bed in the master bedroom, her mother’s room. Watson went to that bedroom.

From there, the accounts diverged. J.M.B. was unable to give an account of what happened. She testified that she did not remember anything, from when she passed out to when her brother woke her up afterwards. She did not testify to any sexual contact with anyone.

Watson testified that he went to that bedroom because he needed to defecate. He did not want to use the downstairs bathroom because he “didn’t want to smell up the bathroom that everybody would go to, and I didn’t want to be laughed at.” He had to pass through the master bedroom to get to the upstairs bathroom. He testified that he never touched the sleeping girl. When J.M.B.’s older brother asked him what he was doing in the master bedroom, he said he was “coming from the bathroom,” and the brother said “bull,” and accused him of raping his sister.

The older brother testified that he went to the room periodically to check on his sister, and caught Watson with his pants down, having sex with his unconscious sister. He testified that Watson had “his penis in [his] sister’s vagina.” Watson had his pants and underpants down, his sister’s pants and underpants down, and was *1176 “pumping back and forth.” Since J.M.B. was unconscious, Watson would have had to have pulled down her pants and underpants. When the brother walked in, Watson withdrew and was visibly “aroused.” Watson said he was sorry.

The brother and Watson agree that they got in a brief fight after the brother encountered Watson in the bedroom, and then Watson went downstairs. Watson came back with a hammer and started swinging it at the brother. The brother told the police and the doctor the next morning that Watson had hit him with the hammer, but testified at trial that the hammer never touched him. The doctor who examined him testified that “he had bruises.”

Watson left the house after the fight. The brother and a girl who was friends with the brother and with J.M.B. woke J.M.B. up. The girl brought clothes not smelling of vomit, including the mother’s underwear from the bathroom floor, to put on J.M.B. J.M.B. testified that she had never worn those underwear before, and her mother testified that the underwear belonged to her.

The medical examination of J.M.B. was inconclusive. In the exhibits submitted with the motion for DNA testing, the emergency room physician stated that J.M.B.’s hymen was not torn. She noted “no evidence of injury or laceration to the vaginal wall,” and that “[t]he hymen appears only slightly patulous. 1 It is not torn. It accommodates a narrow speculum easily and the patient tolerates speculum examination really quite well.” The medical report stated that there was no injury to the vaginal walls. At trial, the physician testified that she had observed a one millimeter abrasion, four small skin tears, and bluish- discoloration that might be bruising or J.M.B.’s normal skin coloration of that skin, in the perineal area. . .

The older brother, who was the only eyewitness to the alleged rape, was drunk himself, having consumed rum from both bottles that night and three or four beers earlier in the day. And he testified inconsistently with his prior statement to the police that Watson had hit him with a hammer.

An FBI DNA examiner testified that there was no semen on the vaginal swabs. But she found semen in the underwear J.M.B. was wearing. The FBI examiner testified that “I was not able to determine the source of the semen in these underwear, because of the extremely small amount of male contribution that was identified by DNA analysis.” She testified that she could not exclude any male from being the source of the semen, because there was not enough of it to test. All she could determine from the science then available was that the DNA she could identify in the crotch of the underwear came from two women, evidently J.M.B. and her mother. That DNA was from one or two females, not any male. The male substance was the semen, but there was not enough of it to test, in 2006, for DNA.

The jury convicted Watson of attempted sexual assault. Seven years later, with the aid of the Innocence Project, which describes itself as “a national litigation and public policy organization dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted individuals through DNA testing and reforming the criminal justice -system to prevent future injustice,” 2 Watson filed a motion in the district court to order DNA testing of the underwear, clothes, and vaginal swabs. *1177 Watson and the Innocence Project propose to pay for the testing themselves, so the government will not be burdened with the expense.

An affidavit in support of the motion for DNA testing, by Dr. Greg Hampikian, a biology professor at Boise State University, says that DNA testing would now allow identification not only of the contributor of the tiny amount of semen in the underwear, but also of even tiny amounts of DNA from skin cells of anyone who had physical contact with the inside of J.M.B.’s vagina and even, from his hands, contact with her clothing. Scientists call this “touch” DNA testing, that is examining the DNA of someone who merely touched something with his skin, testing not possible when Watson was tried. Watson filed an affidavit saying “I am actually innocent” of the sexual assault, as he testified at trial, and argues that the DNA from the vagina, underwear, and outer clothing will show the absence of any contribution from him.

The district court held a hearing, and denied the motion as untimely. The reason for the ruling was that the statute makes a motion presumptively untimely if made more than three years after conviction. The presumption is overcome by “newly discovered DNA evidence.” The underwear, vaginal swabs and outer clothing were all available at the time of trial, so the district court deemed them not to be “newly discovered DNA evidence.” Watson appeals.

Analysis

We review the question of statutory interpretation de novo. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
792 F.3d 1174, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11922, 2015 WL 4153859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bill-watson-ca9-2015.