IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. WR-79,318-02
EX PARTE LEROY EDWARD COTY, Applicant
ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
IN CAUSE NO. 1264113 FROM THE
180TH DISTRICT COURT OF HARRIS COUNTY
P RICE, J., filed a concurring opinion.
CONCURRING OPINION
I agree with the Court that it has been a mistake on our part heretofore to presume that
a violation of due process has inhered in any and every case that involves testing by Texas
Department of Public Safety technician Jonathon Salvador. Such a categorical approach pays
insufficient heed to the possibility that, on the facts of a given case, any misconduct that
Salvador, or any other demonstrated dry-labber, may have committed did not materially
affect the ultimate disposition of the case. After all, a showing of some degree of materiality
is an integral component of any claim of a due process violation predicated upon false
COTY — 2
evidence.1 I gather that it is for this reason that the Court today narrows the presumption to
entail, not a wholesale conclusion that due process has been violated, but simply that the
State has relied (at least in part) upon false evidence to obtain a conviction. Once the habeas
applicant is able to establish a pattern of misconduct by an agent of the State (here,
Salvador), then the burden shifts to the State to produce evidence to show that its agent did
not behave in accordance with this pattern of misconduct in the applicant’s particular case.
In the absence of such specific rebuttal, it may be said that the applicant has demonstrated
that false evidence was used against him. But even if the State cannot satisfy this shifted
burden of production, and the presumption of falsity therefore prevails, the due process
inquiry is not yet over. It remains incumbent on the applicant, as a prerequisite to relief, to
establish that the false evidence was material.
I write further only to caution that, on remand, the convicting court and the parties
take care not to conflate the two issues—falseness and materiality. For example, it would
be a mistake to believe that the State can satisfy its shifted burden to rebut the inference of
falsification with evidence that Salvador’s purported test results were later verified by Nacu.
Later verification does not necessarily serve to rebut the inference that a State agent who has
falsified evidence in the past also falsified evidence in the instant case. After all, the false
evidence is Salvador’s lab report itself, which falsely claims to have reached an accurate
1
E.g., Ex parte Napper, 322 S.W.3d 202, 241-44 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
COTY — 3
result from legitimate testing. Similarly, neither the fact that a drug dog alerted to the
evidence and Officer Jacobs believed it to be cocaine, nor the positive results of the field test,
say anything with respect to whether Salvador later falsified his own test results. That the
drug testing letter issued by the Department of Public Safety and signed by Salvador was
dated thirteen months prior to the applicant’s guilty plea likewise fails to prove that Salvador
did not report fraudulent test results. The right inquiry with respect to falsification would
simply be whether the State can offer specific evidence to rebut the inference that,
notwithstanding that he has falsified reports in the past, the State’s agent did not likewise
falsify his report in the instant case. An inquiry that is any broader than this—such as an
inquiry into the ultimate accuracy of the State agent’s purported testing results, or whether
they can later be verified by legitimate testing—is really part and parcel of the materiality
analysis. And that analysis is distinct from, and comes after (or alternatively to), an inquiry
into whether false evidence was used.
With these additional remarks, I join the Court’s opinion.
FILED: January 15, 2014
PUBLISH