FILED
OCTOBER 9, 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. 31578-9-III
Respondent, )
)
v. )
)
ANTHONY LAMAR ALLEN, SR, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
Appellant. )
FEARING, J. - Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing is a relatively new
technology, but the many benefits of DNA testing have caused the use of these methods
to explode in a wide variety of applications. Some of the most well-known benefits of
DNA testing have been seen in the arena of criminal justice. The guilty are found and
convicted, and the innocent are exonerated, all on the basis of microscopic evidence that
is more unique than a fingerprint. DNA evidence is particularly helpful when a victim
misidentifies an assailant he or she did not know.
A jury convicted Anthony Allen of the crimes of kidnapping and assault. Anthony
Allen filed a motion for postconviction DNA testing. Allen contended that (l) negative
DNA results would, in combination with other evidence, raise a reasonable probability
No. 31578-9-111
State v. Allen
that Allen did not commit the crimes; or (2) positive results would, in combination with
other evidence, show that he is innocent on a more probable than not basis. From the
trial court's denial of the motion, Allen appeals. We affirm the trial court. Although
DNA testing serves a worthwhile purpose, its employment is not helpful here, since the
victims of the crimes were acquaintances of Anthony Allen and would not misidentify
him. Thus, the statutory basis to compel DNA testing is not satisfied.
FACTS
This court addressed Anthony Allen's direct appeal in State v. Allen, noted at 2009
WL 2999187 (Wash. App. Div. 3). The following facts and procedure below are drawn
from that unpublished opinion and supplemented by the current record.
On August 19,2007, Karla Jones and Dewey Hudson went to Hudson's Spokane
house to retrieve Jones' dog. Unknown to Jones and Hudson, Anthony Allen and two
other assailants, Uriah Allen and Wanda Phillips, waited inside Hudson's house. Hudson
and Jones had known Anthony Allen for many years.
When Karla Jones and Dewey Hudson reached the porch of the house, Anthony
Allen opened the door and pulled Jones into the entryway. Allen and his companions
attacked Jones. Hudson tried to intervene, but Allen knocked him down, slapped him in
the face with a butcher knife, and hit him in the jaw with the butt of the butcher knife.
Allen then used the butcher knife to slash Jones' hair. Allen threatened to kill Jones if
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State v. Allen
she "messed" with his aunt again. Clerk's Papers at 112. Allen hit Hudson with a pistol.
He and the two other assailants then left Hudson's house.
Dewey Hudson begged Karla Jones not to call the police; but Jones took her dog,
ran home, and called the police. Officer Eugene Baldwin went to Jones' home within 10
minutes of Jones' phone call. Officer Baldwin saw injuries to Jones' head and face.
Jones told Officer Baldwin that Allen and another man assaulted her and Hudson.
Officer Baldwinjoumeyed to Dewey Hudson's house and found Hudson
unconscious in his living room with a swollen and bloody face. Hudson first told
Baldwin nothing happened. Then recanting, Hudson told Officer Baldwin that he and
Jones were assaulted. Hudson told Officer Baldwin that Allen hit him in the face and
head with a handgun when he had tried to intervene. Officer Baldwin recovered the
butcher knife from the home. The butcher knife had blood on the blade. Two blood
swabs of that blood were taken, but DNA testing was not conducted.
PROCEDURE
On September 25, the State of Washington charged Anthony Allen with first
degree kidnapping and two counts of second degree assault with a deadly weapon.
Dewey Hudson's testimony at trial differed from his statement to Officer Baldwin
at the scene of the crime. Hudson testified that he incurred his injuries when he tried to
remove Karla Jones from his house. Hudson further testified that he did not remember
talking to Officer Baldwin and denied that Anthony Allen assaulted him.
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Officer Baldwin testified that, after he described to Dewey Hudson, on the day of
the assault, the extent of Karla Jones' injuries, Hudson grew receptive to telling the truth.
Officer Baldwin repeated for the jury Hudson's earlier version of events, in which
Hudson intervened to protect Jones, but Allen hit him with a handgun.
On December 20, a jury found Anthony Allen guilty of first degree kidnapping
and two counts of second degree assault with a deadly weapon. By special verdict, the
jury found that the deadly weapon was not a firearm.
On November 29, 2012, Anthony Allen moved, under RCW 10.73.170, for
postconviction DNA testing of the blood found on the knife. The trial court denied his
motion on the ground that testing could not prove his innocence on a more probable than
not basis.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
RCW 10.73.170 allows a convicted person currently serving a prison sentence to
petition the trial court for postconviction DNA testing. The petitioner must satisfY both
procedural and substantive requirements of the statute. RCW 10.73.170(2), (3). The
statute, adopted in 2000, reads in pertinent part:
(1) A person convicted ofa felony in a Washington state court who
currently is serving a term of imprisonment may submit to the court that
entered the judgment of conviction a verified written motion requesting
DNA testing, with a copy of the motion provided to the state office of
public defense.
(2) The motion shall:
(a) State that:
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State v. Allen
(i) The court ruled that DNA testing did not meet acceptable
scientific standards; or
(ii) DNA testing technology was not sufficiently developed to test
the DNA evidence in the case; or
(iii) The DNA testing now requested would be significantly more
accurate than prior DNA testing or would provide significant new
information;
(b) Explain why DNA evidence is material to the identity of the
perpetrator of, or accomplice to, the crime, or to sentence enhancement; and
(c) Comply with all other procedural requirements established by
court rule.
(3) The court shall grant a motion requesting DNA testing under
this section if such motion is in the form required by subsection (2) of this
section, and the convicted person has shown the likelihood that the DNA
evidence would demonstrate innocence on a more probable than not basis.
(5) DNA testing ordered under this section shall be performed by the
Washington state patrol crime laboratory. Contact with victims shall be
handled through victim/witness divisions.
RCW 10.73.170. The statute was adopted to qualifY Washington State for federal
funding under the Justice For All Act of 2004. Pub. 1. No. 108-405, 118 Stat. 2260,
2261-62. The Washington statute is modeled after the federal DNA testing statute, 18
U.S.C. § 3600(a). State v. Riofta, 166 Wn.2d 358,368,209 P.3d 467 (2009).
Procedurally, the petitioner must: state that DNA testing would provide significant
new information; explain why DNA evidence is material to the identity of the
perpetrator; and comply with applicable court rules. RCW 1O.73.107(2)(a)-(c). Here, the
trial court properly determined that Allen met the procedural requirements ofRCW
10.73.170(2)(a)(iii), since DNA testing was not done prior to trial.
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At issue is whether Anthony Allen satisfied the substantive requirements ofRCW
10.73.170. In contrast to the statute's lenient procedural requirements, its substantive
standard is onerous. State v. Riofla, 166 Wn.2d 358,367,209 P.3d 467 (2009). RCW
10.73.170(3) provides, "The court shall grant a motion requesting DNA testing under this
section if ... the convicted person has shown the likelihood that the DNA evidence
would demonstrate innocence on a more probable than not basis." A motion for testing is
not decided in a vacuum. State v. Riofla, 166 Wn.2d at 367-68. The statute requires a
trial court to grant a motion for postconviction testing when exculpatory results would, in
combination with the other evidence, raise a reasonable probability the petitioner was not
the perpetrator. Riofla, 166 Wn.2d at 367-68. The legislature intended to restrict the
availability of postconviction DNA testing to a limited class of extraordinary cases where
the results could exonerate a person who was wrongfully convicted of a crime. Riofla,
166 Wn.2d at 369 nA.
Case law supports using a favorable presumption when deciding whether to grant
a motion for post-conviction DNA testing. We formally hold that this presumption is
part of the standard in RCW 10.73.170. A court should look to whether, considering all
the evidence from trial and assuming an exculpatory DNA test result, it is likely the
individual is innocent on a more probable than not basis. If so, the court should grant the
motion and allow testing to be done. Only then can it be determined whether the DNA
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No. 31578-9-III
State v. Allen
actually exculpates the individual and if the results could be used to support a motion for
a new trial.
In other words, a court should evaluate the likelihood of innocence based on a
favorable test result, not the likelihood of a favorable test result in the first place. There
is no indication that the trial court used a standard that included use of a favorable
presumption. In its conclusions of law, the trial court stuck to the statutory language, with
no mention of a presumption of favorability or hypothetical inferences from an
exculpatory test result. Since we have found that this presumption is part of Washington
law and should be applied, we are forced to assume the trial court did not apply the
proper standard and therefore abused its discretion.
In 1993, a 75-year-old widow living alone in Bremerton was repeatedly raped by
an intruder. State v. Crumpton, 172 Wn. App. 408,410,289 P.3d 766 (2012), review
granted, 177 Wn.2d 1015,306 P.3d 960 (2013), rev'd, 332 P.3d 448 (2014). The woman
was awoken at around 3: 15 a.m. and saw a man standing in her room. Id. The man
covered her head with bedding and raped her five times, four times anally and once
vaginally. Id. In between each rape, he rummaged through different rooms in the house
for valuables. Id. The woman was unable to give a good description of the rapist due to
the dark room and her head being covered during the encounter. Id.
Anthony Allen argues that DNA evidence would show that he was mistakenly
identified as the assailant. The Riofla court accepted that mistaken eyewitness
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No. 31578-9- III
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identification is a leading cause of wrongful conviction. 166 Wn.2d at 371; see also
Brandon L. Garrett, Judging Innocence, 108 COLUM. L. REv. 55, 60 (2008). The court
addressed mistaken eyewitness identification by analyzing both the impact of a favorable
DNA test and the likelihood of misidentification.
Riofta controls our decision. Alexander Riofta stole a vehicle in which he found a
white hat. He wore the white hat when he, accompanied by two others, pulled up to the
house ofVeasna Sok. Sok previously agreed to testify against Riofta for gang-related
activity. When Sok's little brother, the victim, exited the house, Riofta fired three shots
at him, missing each time. The victim recognized Riofta as his neighbor of four or five
years. Riofta fled the scene leaving behind the white hat and revealing his shaved head.
The hat was later identified as belonging to the owner of the stolen vehicle. The State did
not analyze the hat for DNA evidence. Riofta was found guilty of first degree assault
with a firearm. Riofta then petitioned for postconviction DNA testing of the white hat.
The Riofta court analyzed the impact of DNA testing by recognizing that other
people's DNA could be found on the hat, and that Alexander Riofta's DNA may not be
found on the hat. Most likely, Riofta was not the only person to wear the hat. The hat's
original owner could have worn the hat along with either of the two accomplices in the
car. The presence of other's DNA would not show the defendant's innocence on a more
probable than not basis.
Perhaps more importantly, the Riofta court underlined the fact that the victim
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No. 31578-9-III
State v. Allen
knew Alexander Riofta. The two lived in the same neighborhood and had known each
other for four or five years. Riofta had visited the victim's home several times to meet
with his brother. The victim had ample time to recognize both Riofta and his voice at the
time of the attack. When police first interviewed Sok, he promptly provided Riofta's
name and an accurate physical description.
Riofta should be juxtaposed with State v. Thompson, 173 Wn.2d 865, 271 P.3d
204 (2012). In the latter case, the state high court reversed the denial of Bobby Ray
Thompson's request for DNA testing of vaginal swabs. Thompson had been convicted of
first degree rape. The victim was unsure of her ability to identifY the attacker and her
tentative description did not match Thompson.
We review a trial court's decision on a motion for postconviction relief for abuse
of discretion. State v. Hardesty, 129 Wn.2d 303, 317, 915 P.2d 1080 (1996); Riofta, 166
Wn.2d at 370. The lower court did not abuse its discretion under the facts ofthis case,
Just as the lack of DNA or the presence of other person's DNA on the hat in Riofta
did not make the defendant's innocence more probable; the lack of or the existence of
Anthony Allen's DNA on the knife does not make it more probable than not that Allen is
innocent. Allen argues that the presence of his blood on the knife would make it unlikely
that he wielded the knife during the assaults. He alternatively argues that, if DNA testing
excludes him as a contributor to the DNA, the exclusion would exonerate him as the
assailant. Both arguments are illogical.
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No. 3 I 578-9-III
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The presence of Anthony Allen's DNA on the knife would only show that Allen
was close enough to the altercation to be involved. Allen does not claim to be a victim.
Therefore, the presence of his DNA would further implicate him as the assailant. If
Allen's DNA is not found on the knife it would merely show that his DNA was not
transferred; it would not show that he did not wield the knife. If another person's DNA
was found on the knife, it would only show that at some point prior to the assault
someone else handled the knife. Allen was one of three assailants, all of whom were in
Hudson's house and could have handled the knife before it ultimately ended up in Allen's
hands. A kitchen utensil is often used by multiple people and would have multiple
sources of DNA.
Anthony Allen argues that DNA evidence would show that he was mistakenly
identified as the assailant. Like Riofta, the evidence in this case shows that Dewey
Hudson and Karla Jones knew Allen for many years. Hudson and Jones identified Allen
as the assailant during the initial investigation, and Jones identified him at trial. Since
Jones testified that Allen threatened to kill her, hearing his voice further confirmed an
identification. The prior relationship between Hudson, Jones, and Allen reduced the
possibility that Allen was mistakenly identified as the assailant.
We must view the evidence in the light that the DNA testing will be favorable
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No. 31578-9-III
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STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL GROUNDS (SAG)
Anthony Allen brings two claims in his SAG. First, Allen claims the trial court's
denial of his motion for postconviction DNA testing violates his due process rights under
the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 3 of the
Washington Constitution. This court rejected this same argument in Riofta v. State, 134
Wn. App. 669, 692,142 P.3d 193 (2006), review granted in part, 161 Wn.2d 1001, 166
P.3d 718 (2007), ajJ'd, 166 Wn.2d 358, 209 P.3d 467 (2009).
Second, Anthony Allen claims he was not afforded effective assistance of
appellate counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution
and article I, section 22 of the Washington Constitution. If Allen believes he received
ineffective assistance on appeal then he should file a personal restraint petition with this
court pursuant to RAP 16.4. The current record is insufficient to address this issue.
Allen's SAG presents no error for which this court could provide relief.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court's denial of Anthony Allen's petition for DNA testing.
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
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RCW 2.06.040.
WE CONCUR:
~)~
Brown, A.C.J.
~(\
Lawrence-Berrey, J.
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