IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
September 2017 Term
FILED
November 9, 2017
released at 3:00 p.m.
No. 16-1007 EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
OF WEST VIRGINIA
RALPH TERRY, ACTING WARDEN,
MT. OLIVE CORRECTIONAL COMPLEX
Respondent Below, Petitioner
v.
PHILLIP A. WARD,
Petitioner Below, Respondent
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cabell County
The Honorable Alfred E. Ferguson, Judge
Civil Action No. 10-C-326
REVERSED AND REMANDED
WITH DIRECTIONS
Submitted: October 4, 2017
Filed: November 9, 2017
Patrick Morrisey, Esq. Connor Robertson, Esq.
Attorney General WESTON ROBERTSON
Scott E. Johnson, Esq. Huntington, West Virginia
Assistant Attorney General Counsel for the Respondent
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for the Petitioner
JUSTICE WORKMAN delivered the Opinion of the Court.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. “In reviewing challenges to the findings and conclusions of the circuit
court in a habeas corpus action, we apply a three-prong standard of review. We review the
final order and the ultimate disposition under an abuse of discretion standard; the underlying
factual findings under a clearly erroneous standard; and questions of law are subject to a de
novo review.” Syl. Pt. 1, Mathena v. Haines, 219 W. Va. 417, 633 S.E.2d 771 (2006).
2. “A prisoner against whom a West Virginia State Police Crime
Laboratory serologist, other than Fred Zain, offered evidence and who challenges his or her
conviction based on the serology evidence is to be granted a full habeas corpus hearing on
the issue of the serology evidence. The prisoner is to be represented by counsel unless he or
she knowingly and intelligently waives that right. The circuit court is to review the serology
evidence presented by the prisoner with searching and painstaking scrutiny. At the close of
the evidence, the circuit court is to draft a comprehensive order which includes detailed
findings as to the truth or falsity of the serology evidence and if the evidence is found to be
false, whether the prisoner has shown the necessity of a new trial based on the five factors
set forth in the syllabus of State v. Frazier, 162 W. Va. 935, 253 S.E.2d 534 (1979).” Syl.
Pt. 4, In re Renewed Investigation of the State Police Crime Lab., Serology Div., 219 W. Va.
408, 633 S.E.2d 762 (2006).
ii
3. “A circuit court that receives a petition for a writ of habeas corpus from
a prisoner against whom a West Virginia State Police Crime Laboratory serologist, other than
Fred Zain, offered evidence, and whose request for relief is grounded on the serology
evidence, is to hear the prisoner’s challenge in as timely a manner as is reasonably possible.”
Syl. Pt. 5, In re Renewed Investigation of the State Police Crime Laboratory , Serology
Division, 219 W. Va. 408, 633 S.E.2d 762 (2006).
4. “A prisoner who was convicted between 1979 and 1999 and against
whom a West Virginia State Police Crime Laboratory serologist, other than Fred Zain,
offered evidence may bring a petition for a writ of habeas corpus based on the serology
evidence despite the fact that the prisoner brought a prior habeas corpus challenge to the
same serology evidence, and the challenge was finally adjudicated.” Syl. Pt. 6, In re Renewed
Investigation of the State Police Crime Lab., Serology Div., 219 W. Va. 408, 633 S.E.2d 762
(2006).
5. “‘“A new trial will not be granted on the ground of newly-discovered
evidence unless the case comes within the following rules: (1) The evidence must appear
to have been discovered since the trial, and, from the affidavit of the new witness, what such
evidence will be, or its absence satisfactorily explained. (2) It must appear from facts stated
in his affidavit that [defendant] was diligent in ascertaining and securing his evidence, and
iii
that the new evidence is such that due diligence would not have secured it before the verdict.
(3) Such evidence must be new and material, and not merely cumulative; and cumulative
evidence is additional evidence of the same kind to the same point. (4) The evidence must
be such as ought to produce an opposite result at a second trial on the merits. (5) And the
new trial will generally be refused when the sole object of the new evidence is to discredit
or impeach a witness on the opposite side.” Syllabus Point 1, Halstead v. Horton, 38 W. Va.
727, 18 S.E. 953 (1894).’ Syllabus, State v. Frazier, 162 W. Va. 935, 253 S.E.2d 534
(1979).” Syl. Pt. 3, In re Renewed Investigation of the State Police Crime Lab., Serology
Div., 219 W. Va. 408, 633 S.E.2d 762 (2006).
iv
Workman, Justice:
This case is before the Court upon the appeal of Ralph Terry, Acting Warden,
Mt. Olive Correctional Complex (“the State”),1 from the circuit court’s decision granting the
amended petition for writ of habeas corpus filed by Respondent Phillip A. Ward
(“Respondent Ward” or “the respondent”), vacating his conviction for felony murder and
ordering a new trial. The focus of the circuit court’s decision was serology test results on
three pieces of evidence – a $20 bill, a $5 bill, and a $1 bill – which results linked the money
to the victim during Respondent Ward’s underlying trial. The serology evidence at issue was
ordered to be retested by the circuit court in 1994,2 and the circuit court made specific
findings regarding the evidence in a prior omnibus proceeding brought by Respondent Ward.
The issue now before the Court is whether the previously adjudicated 1994 DNA results
concerning the serology evidence constituted “newly discovered evidence” at the most recent
omnibus hearing in 2015 that resulted in the circuit court granting Respondent Ward a new
trial. Based upon our review of the parties’ briefs and arguments, the appendix record, and
all other matters before the Court, we find the circuit court erred in granting Respondent
1
Since the filing of the petition in this case, the warden at Mount Olive Correctional
Complex has changed and the acting warden now is Ralph Terry. The Court has made the
necessary substitution of parties pursuant to its rules. See W. VA. R. App. P. 41. We
therefore refer to the Petitioner simply as “the State.” See, e.g., Tex S. v. Pszczolkowski, 236
W. Va. 245, 248 n.2, 778 S.E.2d 694, 697 n.2 (2015).
2
See In re Investigation of the West Virginia State Police Crime Lab., Serology Div.,
190 W. Va. 321, 438 S.E.2d 501 (1993) (“Zain I”).
1
Ward a new trial based upon newly discovered evidence.3 We reverse and remand the case
for reinstatement of the 1987 conviction for felony murder for which Respondent Ward was
sentenced to life without mercy.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
A. Underlying Trial
In order to have a full understanding of the issue before the Court, it is
necessary to begin with the underlying facts proven at the criminal trial.4 On the night of
May 3, 1987, Carol Carter, a night manager at a Wendy’s restaurant in Huntington, West
Virginia, was brutally murdered when she was beaten in the head with a cinder block during
a robbery of the restaurant. Ward, 188 W. Va. at 382, 424 S.E.2d at 727. Respondent Ward,
who was an inmate in the Huntington Work Release Center (“HWRC”), was also working
at the restaurant that night, although his shift ended at 11:30 p.m. Respondent Ward and
another employee, Craig Sigler, left Wendy’s at the end of Respondent Ward’s shift only to
return to the restaurant about ten minutes later. They knocked on the window and Ms. Carter
3
Because the Court reverses on this assigned error, we do not expressly discuss the
State’s other assigned errors that the circuit court erred in failing to apply res judicata
concerning the issue of Zain’s testimony and the circuit court erred in making findings of fact
that were clearly erroneous, including finding the serology evidence to be false, finding Mr.
Zain did the serology testing and determining that the existence of a third party’s DNA on
the money was exculpatory. But a discussion of erroneous factual findings made by the
circuit court is incorporated into the discussion of newly discovered evidence.
4
Facts are taken from this Court’s decision in State v. Ward, 188 W. Va. 380, 424
S.E.2d 725 (1991), and the trial transcript, which is part of the appendix record.
2
let them into the restaurant. Id. Sometime around 12:15 a.m., all three employees decided
to leave Wendy’s, but Ms. Carter went back inside the restaurant. Mr. Sigler testified that
Respondent Ward was still leaning against his vehicle in the Wendy’s parking lot when Mr.
Sigler was leaving the parking lot. Id.
Around 5:45 a.m., a Wendy’s store manager discovered a bloody scene at the
restaurant. The manager testified that he saw Ms. Carter’s vehicle still in the parking lot
when he arrived. He also noticed Ms. Carter’s keys on the sidewalk just outside the
restaurant’s unlocked front door. The manager notified law enforcement and waited for them
to arrive. When he entered the store with law enforcement, the manager found approximately
$1348.09 missing from a safe in the office area of the restaurant. Ms. Carter’s body was
discovered behind a furniture store adjacent to the restaurant. Id.
Also that same morning around 6:40 a.m., Karen Spoor, an employee of the
West Virginia Department of Corrections who was working at the HWRC, saw Respondent
Ward at an area gas station. When she asked Respondent Ward why he was not at home as
required by the HWRC, he told her that he had been called back into work because his
employer wanted to speak with him. Ms. Spoor testified that she had seen police vehicles
at the Wendy’s and directed Respondent Ward to call her as soon as he left the Wendy’s.
Respondent Ward failed to comply with her instructions and did not contact her until 3:55
3
p.m. that day. Respondent Ward was at his mother’s home, with whom he was living, at the
time he called Ms. Spoor. Ms. Spoor kept him on the phone while an HWRC administrator
went to the home. When the administrator arrived, after some initial questioning regarding
Respondent Ward’s failure to obey Ms. Spoor’s instructions, Respondent Ward excused
himself for a moment and went upstairs in his mother’s home. When Respondent Ward failed
to return within a few minutes, the administrator went upstairs and discovered that he had
fled the home. Respondent Ward was found about twenty minutes later two blocks from his
mother’s house. Id. at 383-84, 424 S.E.2d at 728-29.
There also was evidence that Respondent Ward had financial difficulties. Prior
to May 4, he and his girlfriend had no money, had the electric service disconnected at their
apartment because of nonpayment of the bill, and had moved back into Respondent Ward’s
mother’s home. Id. at 383, 424 S.E.2d at 728. Yet, on May 4, Respondent Ward and his
girlfriend purchased a new car stereo with cash, paid for the stereo to be installed and paid
an overdue electric bill in cash. Id.
Regarding the evidence at issue in this case, a $20 bill obtained from the
electric company’s night cast deposit had a bloodstain on it. A $5 bill that had a bloodstain
was found in Respondent Ward’s wallet. Finally, a knapsack containing items belonging to
4
the respondent was found in a garbage can next to a neighbor’s home. Inside the knapsack
was paper box containing thirty-five $1 bills, one of which had a bloodstain.5 Id.
The serology evidence was tested at the West Virginia State Police Crime
Laboratory (“State Police Crime Lab”). Fred Zain testified at trial that Ms. Carter’s blood
sample showed she was Type B and that only 9 in every 10,000 of the general population of
West Virginia have Type B blood characteristics. Concerning the evidence in question in
this case, Mr. Zain testified that blood stain evidence found on a $20 bill from the electric
company, a $1 bill from the knapsack and the $5 bill taken from Respondent Ward’s wallet
all contained blood characteristics that were consistent with Ms. Carter’s blood
characteristics. But on cross-examination, Mr. Zain testified that he could not identify
“whose [sic] blood it is for sure.” Further, Mr. Zain stated that the bloodstains on the bills
could have been on those bills for at least two months and could have come from anyone and
anywhere in the world.
5
There was other money, including seven $20 bills and two $100 bills, as well as
rolled and loose coins found inside the knapsack. Id. at 383 n.7, 424 S.E.2d at 728 n.7. The
rolled coins were wrapped in Wells Fargo wrappers, which were the same type of wrappers
that Wendy’s used for coins.
5
At the close of all the evidence, Respondent Ward was convicted of felony
murder and sentenced to life without mercy. This Court affirmed his conviction on direct
appeal. Id. at 393, 424 S.E.2d at 738.
B. Habeas Proceedings
On December 1, 1993, following Zain I,6 Respondent Ward filed a petition for
habeas relief in this Court seeking to have DNA testing of “any forensic evidence” still
available in his case due to “the involvement in my prosecution of former West Virginia
State Police serologist Fred Zain.” By order entered December 8, 1993, this Court remanded
the matter to the circuit court for proceedings consistent with Zain I.
Following the Court’s directive, on April 22, 1994, the circuit court ordered
the re-testing of any of the evidence in the criminal trial being disputed under Zain I.7 The
6
In Zain I, this Court addressed the results of a court-ordered investigation of Fred
Zain, a State Trooper who worked in the State Police Crime Lab and had a “long history of
falsifying evidence in criminal prosecutions.” 190 W. Va. at 323, 438 S.E.2d at 503. As part
of the recommendations for resolving Zain issues, the Court provided for DNA testing of
serology evidence at issue. Id. at 327, 438 S.E.2d at 507. The Court indicated that “the only
issue is whether the evidence presented at trial, independent of the forensic evidence
presented by Trooper Zain, would have been sufficient to support the verdict.” Id. at 362,
438 S.E.2d at 506. Further, we held in syllabus point two of Zain I that “[a]lthough it is a
violation of due process for the State to convict a defendant based on false evidence, such
conviction will not be set aside unless it is shown that the false evidence had a material effect
on the jury verdict.” Id. at 322, 438 S.E.2d at 502.
7
The circuit court, by order entered July 20, 1994, consolidated three separate habeas
(continued...)
6
DNA testing was performed by Roche Biomedical Laboratories (“Roche”), which issued a
report dated December 1, 1994.8 On or after September 15, 1995, Respondent Ward began
arguing for a new trial based upon the DNA test results. First, Respondent Ward filed a
document entitled “Motion and memorandum[,]” which was one paragraph requesting “a
new trial in view of newly discovered evidence[.]” Respondent Ward also filed a document
entitled “Newly Discovered Evidence: DNA Test Results are Inconsistent with and are
Contradictory of the State’s Evidence and Argument at Trial” wherein he argued that “[t]he
findings of Dr. Bing are incongruent with those of Zain and if they had been put before a jury
at trial, in view of the professional qualifications of Dr. Bing, would, in . . . [Respondent
Ward’s] view, have raised sufficient reasonable doubt to have resulted in an acquittal.”
Finally, Respondent Ward filed a document entitled “Memorandum” in which he argues that
Fred Zain lied, entitling him to a new trial and that there was a “‘legitimate possibility’ that
some or all of the ‘evidence’ offered by the prosecution in the Ward case was actually never
tested by Fred Zain.”
7
(...continued)
petitions that had been previously filed by Respondent Ward and included a challenge to the
State’s knowing “use of perjured testimony of Fred Zain.”
8
The serology evidence was also sent to CBR Laboratories, Inc., but there apparently
was insufficient material left for testing. Consequently, Respondent Ward’s expert, Dr.
David H. Bing, Ph.D., analyzed the Roche results and reports in rendering his opinion.
7
The State filed its opposition arguing that the DNA results9 from the testing
done by Roche were “consistent with the original findings in the case.” According to the
State, the Roche report did not eliminate Ms. Carter as a possible source on the $20 bill, there
was just not enough of the 2 allele10 present to be reported. Further, the DNA testing by
Roche found that Ms. Carter’s DNA type was found on the $1 bill. Also, unlike the serology
testing, the DNA testing in the Roche report also indicated that Respondent Ward’s DNA
type was present on both the $20 and $1 bills. As the State argued, “all of the test results
obtained by Roche corroborate the earlier work of the State Police lab and the testimony at
trial.” Finally, the State argued that even if the serology testing was excluded, there was still
sufficient evidence to convict.
On March 28, 1996, the circuit court conducted an omnibus hearing. At the
beginning of the hearing, counsel for Respondent Ward noted that there had been an
agreement reached between counsel to allow affidavits from three technical experts,
including Ted Smith, who were involved in the DNA testing “to submit questionnaires that
had to do with their reports[.]” And the circuit court considered the questionnaires submitted
by Dr. Bing, then-Sgt. Ted Smith and Marcia Eisenberg in deciding the habeas petition
9
As explained by the State in its response, “unlike the original serology work, which
tested only the blood on the money, the . . . [DNA] testing, being much more sensitive, can
also pick up sweat, dropped skin cells, etc. . . .”
10
Ms. Carter’s DNA profile consisted of DQ Alpha alleles 2 and 4.
8
before it. Further, the State argued that when Respondent Ward’s own expert, Dr. Bing, was
asked whether the DNA results were inconsistent with the findings that Zain reflected in his
testimony, Dr. Bing responded in the negative. Also, Sgt. Smith indicated in regard to the
serology testing performed on the evidence: “The work is right. The numbers are right.
Zain didn’t do it [referring to the serology testing]. He just testified about it.” Finally, the
State argued at the hearing: “Both Ted Smith and Marcia Eisenberg say that the DNA testing
– the PCR DNA testing and the results obtained therefrom do not differ in any way or
contradict any of the matters to which Sergeant Zain testified.”
By order entered June 13, 1996, the circuit court denied habeas relief.11 Of
particular importance to the instant appeal, the circuit court found:
1) The opinion by Judge Holliday which gave rise to the
Supreme Court opinion indicates the main issue of concern in
these cases is testing done by Sergeant Zain at the lab as
opposed to cases where he testified about testing done by others,
at least where his testimony is consistent with the test results
found by others.
2) In this case all or virtually all of the serology testing
performed on the items of money in issue was done by either
Sergeant Ted Smith or Trooper Brent Myers and Sergeant
Zain’s testimony at trial was consistent with those test results.
3) Sergeant Smith has reviewed the testimony of Sergeant Zain
regarding the items of money in issue and has affirmed that his
testimony was accurate in this case based on the tests he (Smith)
performed on said money.
4) The work performed and analyzed by the experts from both
the State’s lab and petitioner’s lab do not exclude and therefore
11
The Court refused Respondent Ward’s appeal from this order.
9
include both the victim and petitioner as possible donor’s of the
DNA found on the items of money in this case.
5) The affidavits of all the experts in this case, reflected by their
answers to the questionnaires presented to them in lieu of
courtroom testimony, make it clear that DNA results can never
conclusively establish the guilt of a defendant, as the most such
testing can ever do is include or exclude a particular person as
a possible donor of a particular sample.
6) The work of the experts from both labs do not contradict
either the work of the CIB lab, namely Sergeant Smith or
Trooper Myers, regarding the money in issue, or the testimony
of Sergeant Zain relating thereto.
7) In the event it is necessary to exclude the serology evidence
and Sergeant Zain’s testimony in this case, this Court is of the
opinion that there was sufficient additional evidence to convince
reasonable minds beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the
petitioner. . . .
(Emphasis added).
Following the 1996 determination of Respondent Ward’s state habeas, he filed
a federal habeas in the United States District Court for the Southern District of West
Virginia. Ward v. Trent, 19 F. Supp. 2d 608, 612 (S.D.W.Va. 1998). The district court
found it could not grant any habeas relief because of the circuit court’s determination that
even if the serology evidence were excluded, the criminal conviction was proper. Id. at 613.
Respondent Ward appealed the district court’s decision to the Fourth Circuit. See Ward v.
Trent, 188 F.3d 505, 1999 WL 638606 (4th Cir. 1999) (unpublished disposition), cert denied,
529 U.S. 1055 (2000), which affirmed the district court. The Fourth Circuit concluded, after
examining all the evidence offered against Respondent Ward during his trial, that
10
[w]hile the serology evidence was no doubt compelling, we find
that the above-detailed evidence presents a clear picture of guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt, and that there is no reasonable
likelihood that the jury would have acquitted had it received
only this foregoing account of events. The addition of the
serology evidence serves only to remove all doubt from the
issue, a burden that the state need not carry in order to convict.
Id. at *6 (citation omitted).
Respondent Ward filed another habeas petition in state court on April 17, 2002,
wherein he claimed that he received ineffective assistance of counsel, in part, due to Fred
Zain’s “perjured testimony” and his trial counsel’s failure to raise the issue that “Zain did not
perform said serology tests[;]” that there was “newly discovery evidence” based on the fact
that Sergeant Smith and Trooper Myers did the serology testing; and that Fred Zain testified
falsely that he did the testing. The State moved to dismiss this petition because
[i]n order to warrant a new trial, the Petitioner would have to
show the court that his ‘newly discovery evidence’ did in fact
exist and that it would have changed the outcome of his trial.
The Petitioner has raised these issues in various guises in every
court available to him and each time, the verdict of guilt has
been upheld.
By order entered November 15, 2002, the circuit court denied Respondent
Ward habeas relief on his claim of “newly discovered evidence,” finding that it had already
determined that the independent testing performed by Roche and
CBR did not contradict the test results introduced in the original
trial, but that even excluding said evidence in its entirety, “that
there existed sufficient additional evidence to convince
11
reasonable minds beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the
Petitioner.”
Further, the circuit court found that Respondent Ward failed to show that “‘newly discovered
evidence’ did in fact exist and that it would have changed the outcome of his trial.”
In another petition for habeas corpus filed by Respondent Ward on July 1,
2004, he again claimed that “[h]abeas corpus counsel failed to present the states (sic) known
use of perjured testimony of Fred Zain[.]” By order entered January 6, 2005, the circuit
court again found the claim to be without merit, stating “[t]he Zain issue was fully and finally
adjudicated after an exhaustive hearing on the merits in Civil Action No. 93-C-2557.”
On July 6, 2006, Mr. Ward filed another petition for habeas corpus. This
petition was based upon this Court’s decision in In re Renewed Investigation of the State
Police Crime Laboratory, Serology Division, 219 W. Va. 408, 633 S.E.2d 762 (2006) (“Zain
III”),12 wherein the Court received the report from a third investigation into the Serology
12
In In re Investigation of the West Virginia State Police Crime Laboratory, Serology
Division, 191 W. Va. 224, 445 S.E.2d 165 (1994) (“Zain II”), the Court held in syllabus point
three that
[s]erology reports prepared by employees of the Serology
Division of the West Virginia State Police Crime Laboratory,
other than Trooper Fred S. Zain, are not subject to the
invalidation and other strictures contained in In the Matter of an
Investigation of the West Virginia State Police Crime
Laboratory, Serology Division, 190 W. Va. 321, 438 S.E.2d 501
(continued...)
12
Division of the State Police Crime Lab on the specific issue of whether serologists other than
Fred Zain had falsified evidence in criminal trials. In Zain III, the Court provided a prisoner
means to challenge the testing performed by a serologist with the West Virginia State Police
Crime Laboratory, other than Fred Zain. Id. at 409, 633 S.E.2d at 763, Syl. Pt. 4. Despite
Respondent Ward’s request for review under Zain III, by order entered November 20, 2007,
the circuit court summarily denied his petition.
On November 25, 2008, Respondent Ward filed another petition for habeas
corpus in which three of the five grounds raised involved issues related to Fred Zain and the
serology testing introduced at his trial, including ineffective assistance of counsel claims
relating to those issues, and a challenge to his conviction under Zain III. In a ten-page order
entered February 10, 2009, the circuit court recounted a factual summary of Respondent
Ward’s conviction and petitions for habeas corpus, as well as all the prior grounds alleged
by him. The circuit court then stated:
In the Court’s prior orders, this Court made extensive
findings of fact and law with reference to each and every ground
raised by Petitioner. The Petitioner was represented by highly
qualified, trial-experienced, capable attorneys. Two independent
laboratories re-examined the physical blood evidence. Error
could not be shown to exist sufficient to raise a doubt as to its
12
(...continued)
(1993).
Thus, there was no procedure adopted by the Court, like that in Zain I, which entitled an
individual to additional review of serology evidence.
13
reliability. But even so, the Court has already ruled specifically
that taking away any consideration of any of the serology
evidence, there remained more than enough evidence to
convince a jury of the defendant’s guilt.
This Court refused Respondent Ward’s petition for appeal.
On April 22, 2010, Respondent Ward filed his ninth petition for habeas corpus,
which is the subject of the instant appeal, again arguing that Fred Zain offered “prejudicially
tainted and misleading trial testimony, based on evidence developed by other serologists at
the laboratory” and because of this he was entitled to a Zain III hearing. After counsel was
appointed to represented Respondent Ward, an amended petition was filed wherein he
asserted that
the subsequent testing of the $20.00 bill found in the AEP
deposit box and the $1.00 bill found in the backpack show that
the blood characteristics assigned to those bills by Trooper
Smith and Trooper Myers and testified to by Trooper Zain are
inaccurate and therefore tainted and, therefore, constitute newly
discovered evidence.
Respondent Ward maintained that “this tainted and false evidence was discovered since the
time of the trial[,]” making it “newly discovered evidence.”
The State argued in its memorandum in response to the amended omnibus
petition for writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum that
[i]t is the State’s position that the testimony of Zain is res
judicata as it was raised and addressed in the Petitioner’s
previous habeas corpus petition being Cabell County Civil
14
Action No. 93-C-2557. Further, the Petitioner appealed the
action taken in said 93-C-2557 habeas hearing to the West
Virginia Supreme Court, which was refused.
Further, the State argued that the “Roche report is wholly consistent with and corroborative
of the State’s original testing and testimony in this case.” Thus, the serology testing was not
false.
A full omnibus hearing was held on October 30, 2015.13 Jim Scheidler, Ted
Smith14 and Howard Brent Myers, all of whom handled the serology in Respondent Ward’s
case, testified. Similar to what was before the circuit court in 1996, Respondent Ward was
focused upon serology evidence connected with three pieces of evidence – a $20 bill found
in the American Electric Power nightly deposit; a $5 bill found in Respondent Ward’s wallet;
and a $1 bill found in a knapsack belonging to the respondent. Significantly, this focus arose
out of the report issued on December 1, 1994, by Roche – the exact report that was the
subject of the 1996 habeas proceeding.
13
The State did not object to a full omnibus hearing.
14
It is important to note that Ted Smith and Brent Myers signed affidavits and issued
letters to the prosecutors as part of the March 1996 habeas proceeding.
15
Specifically, at the omnibus hearing,15 Mr. Smith testified that the DNA is
identified through genetic markers and is designated as a series of numbers. As Mr. Smith
explained, “[a] person can be either one type or two types, depending on what they inherit
from their parents. They designate them as a 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 3, 4, and 2. So a person can be
any combination of those designations.” Mr. Smith testified that the DNA test results from
the 1994 report for the $20 bill showed the presence of the “[a] 1.1, 1.2, 3, and 4” alleles.16
He stated that the report indicated “that the presence of the 2 [allele] is indicated, but it failed
to meet interpretation standards and, thereby, could not be reported.” Mr. Smith testified that
“where the number 2 allele was present but not strong enough to be indicated[,] . . . Carol
Carter was not excluded . . . by the DNA. . . .” In other words, Mr. Smith unequivocally
testified that the DNA testing did not prove that the serology testing was false as the victim
“can’t be excluded as contributing to the DNA[.]” Further, Mr. Smith testified that despite
the DNA test results indicating that the presence of a 3 allele on the $20 bill, which indicated
that there was a third party contributor of DNA on the $20 bill, this did not contradict the
serology. As was indicated by Mr. Smith’s testimony, other people can handle money and
their serology not be on it, but DNA may be found.
15
Respondent Ward’s expert, Dr. Bing, did not testify at this omnibus hearing as he
had died. All the circuit court had before it was the same evidence from Dr. Bing that had
been presented at the 1996 omnibus hearing.
16
Respondent Ward’s DNA profile consisted of a DQ Alpha type of a 1.2 and 4 allele.
As previously mentioned, Ms. Carter’s DNA profile consisted of DQ Alpha alleles 2 and 4.
See supra note 10.
16
Turning to the DNA testing of the $5 bill, the Roche report indicated that there
were no alleles detected. Mr. Smith testified that it was entirely possible that no alleles were
found because the entire area of the stain could have been consumed when the serology
testing was done. Mr. Smith also stated concerning the $20 bill and $5 bill, that Fred Zain
“accurately reported what we advised him that we found when we did the analysis of those
particular items.”
Finally, the DNA testing on the $1 bill confirmed the serology testing involving
the victim’s blood being on the bill.17 Further, the DNA testing showed that Respondent
Ward’s DNA characteristics were also present on the $1 bill even though the serology
evidence did not show that his blood type was on this bill. According to the testimony, this
was not an inconsistent finding, it was just that the DNA testing showed more than the
serology as DNA originates from more sources than just blood. For example, DNA is found
in skin cells, sweat and tears. The DNA testing on the $1 bill also showed a third contributor
that the serology did not show. Again, this is not inconsistent, it is just that the DNA showed
more possible contributors than the serology testing. Further, Mr. Smith stated that the DNA
test results did not exclude Respondent Ward and did not exclude the victim.
17
The evidence showed that Mr. Myers did the testing on the $1 and he confirmed that
the DNA found on that bill was consistent with the victim’s.
17
By order entered September 29, 2016, the circuit court granted habeas relief
to Respondent Ward, vacating his underlying conviction and ordering a new trial.
Specifically, the circuit court found regarding the forensic evidence that Fred Zain’s
testimony before the jury was false, that the $1 bill was excluded “as a matter of law pursuant
to the Zain I opinion . . . ,” and that the $20 bill was excluded “as false,” because “Dr. Bing,
an unbiased and accredited scientist, authored an opinion that the DNA completely excluded
Ms. Carter’s DNA profile from the twenty-dollar bill.” The circuit court found that “there
was an insufficient amount of blood evidence” remaining on the $5 bill for DNA testing and
therefore it had “no opinion” as to that piece of evidence.18 Further, the circuit court
determined that this evidence is “newly discovered” because it was “discovered after the
Petitioner’s criminal trial.” Finally, the circuit court determined that the evidence would
likely produce a different result at trial. It is from this order, the State now appeals.
II. Standard of Review
We have set forth the following standard of review for habeas proceedings:
In reviewing challenges to the findings and conclusions
of the circuit court in a habeas corpus action, we apply a
three-prong standard of review. We review the final order and
the ultimate disposition under an abuse of discretion standard;
18
The circuit court also found that there was a $50 bill that was not offered into
evidence in the underlying trial that had the blood type of a third party, not that of the victim
or the respondent. The circuit court found that this piece of evidence supported Respondent
Ward’s theory that there was a third party present; however, the circuit court ignored the
testimony that DNA testing provides more information than serology testing.
18
the underlying factual findings under a clearly erroneous
standard; and questions of law are subject to a de novo review.
Syl. Pt. 1, Mathena v. Haines, 219 W. Va. 417, 633 S.E.2d 771 (2006). Under these
standards, the Court examines the issues before us.
III. Discussion
The determinative issue now before the Court is whether the previously
adjudicated 1994 DNA results constituted “newly discovered evidence” at the most recent
omnibus hearing in 2015, which resulted in the circuit court granting Respondent Ward a
new trial. The State argues that the circuit court erred in holding that the DNA evidence
proves that the serology evidence was false and the DNA evidence was not newly discovered
evidence under the five factor test set forth in the syllabus of State v. Frazier, 162 W. Va.
935, 253 S.E.2d 534 (1979).
Conversely, Respondent Ward argues that the circuit court’s findings are
supported by the record. Respondent Ward also contends that the evidence is newly
discovered evidence because all that is required of the rule is that “the DNA evidence was
not discovered at the time of trial.” According to Respondent Ward, “[t]here is no need to
speak of prior habeas petitions. Again, Zain III allowed a new review of the evidence and
therefore prior petitions are not relevant.” The Court disagrees.
19
In Zain III, the Court enacted the following procedure:
A prisoner against whom a West Virginia State Police
Crime Laboratory serologist, other than Fred Zain, offered
evidence and who challenges his or her conviction based on the
serology evidence is to be granted a full habeas corpus hearing
on the issue of the serology evidence. The prisoner is to be
represented by counsel unless he or she knowingly and
intelligently waives that right. The circuit court is to review the
serology evidence presented by the prisoner with searching and
painstaking scrutiny. At the close of the evidence, the circuit
court is to draft a comprehensive order which includes detailed
findings as to the truth or falsity of the serology evidence and if
the evidence is found to be false, whether the prisoner has
shown the necessity of a new trial based on the five factors set
forth in the syllabus of State v. Frazier, 162 W. Va. 935, 253
S.E.2d 534 (1979).
219 W. Va. at 409, 633 S.E.2d at 763, Syl. Pt. 4. Further, the Court held in syllabus points
five and six of Zain III:
A circuit court that receives a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus from a prisoner against whom a West Virginia State
Police Crime Laboratory serologist, other than Fred Zain,
offered evidence, and whose request for relief is grounded on
the serology evidence, is to hear the prisoner’s challenge in as
timely a manner as is reasonably possible.
A prisoner who was convicted between 1979 and 1999
and against whom a West Virginia State Police Crime
Laboratory serologist, other than Fred Zain, offered evidence
may bring a petition for a writ of habeas corpus based on the
serology evidence despite the fact that the prisoner brought a
prior habeas corpus challenge to the same serology evidence,
and the challenge was finally adjudicated.
Id. at 410, 633 S.E.2d at 764, Syl. Pts. 5 and 6.
20
According to this Court’s decision in Zain III, “a prisoner who challenges his
or her conviction must prove that the serologist offered false evidence in his or her
prosecution.” 219 W. Va. at 415, 633 S.E.2d at 769 (emphasis added). Also, the prisoner
must satisfy the following standards indicating that a new trial is warranted:
“‘A new trial will not be granted on the
ground of newly-discovered evidence unless the
case comes within the following rules: (1) The
evidence must appear to have been discovered
since the trial, and, from the affidavit of the new
witness, what such evidence will be, or its
absence satisfactorily explained. (2) It must
appear from facts stated in his affidavit that
[defendant] was diligent in ascertaining and
securing his evidence, and that the new evidence
is such that due diligence would not have secured
it before the verdict. (3) Such evidence must be
new and material, and not merely cumulative;
and cumulative evidence is additional evidence of
the same kind to the same point. (4) The evidence
must be such as ought to produce an opposite
result at a second trial on the merits. (5) And the
new trial will generally be refused when the sole
object of the new evidence is to discredit or
impeach a witness on the opposite side.’ Syllabus
Point 1, Halstead v. Horton, 38 W. Va. 727, 18
S.E. 953 (1894).” Syllabus, State v. Frazier, 162
W. Va. 935, 253 S.E.2d 534 (1979).
Zain III, 219 W. Va. at 415, 633 S.E.2d at 769 and Syl. Pt. 3. (emphasis added). Further, we
have recognized that “[a]ll five factors must be proven before a new trial will be awarded.”
Anstey v. Ballard, 237 W. Va. 411, 422, 787 S.E.2d 864, 875 (2016). Consequently, under
the foregoing, Respondent Ward must prove two things before being entitled to a new trial:
21
1) the serology evidence offered during his trial was false; and 2) the five standards set for
in Frazier for granting a new trial based upon newly discovered evidence are met.
We begin our analysis of the instant case under Zain III by first determining
whether Respondent Ward proved that the serology evidence offered against him at the
underlying trial was false. Despite the circuit court’s findings to the contrary, the Court
finds that, based upon review of the appendix record, Respondent Ward did not prove that
the serology evidence was false. What is readily discerned from the appendix record is that
Respondent Ward failed to offer any new evidence that demonstrated that the serology
evidence was false. Instead, the evidence offered at both the omnibus hearing in 1996 and
again in 2015 was the same. The circuit court, with a different judge presiding, had already
determined in 1996 that the DNA test results at issue in the instant habeas proceeding were
not inconsistent with the serology test results that were introduced in Respondent Ward’s
underlying trial. Yet, in the instant habeas proceeding, Respondent Ward failed to offer any
new testimony or evidence proving the falsity of the serology evidence. Likewise, the circuit
court failed to offer any explanation as to why it was now determining that the prior findings
made by the circuit court, albeit a different judge, were in error or, based upon new evidence
being offered, were now proven to be false. All the circuit court did was re-evaluate the
evidence previously adjudicated and make different findings and conclusions. Thus, the
Court concludes that the circuit court clearly erred in its findings that contravene the weight
of the evidence in this case. See Mathena, 219 W. Va. at 418, 633 S.E.2d at 772, Syl. Pt. 1.
22
Next, the Court addresses the five factors set forth in Frazier, all of which
Respondent Ward had to prove in order to be granted a new trial. Frazier, 162 W. Va. at
935-36, 253 S.E.2d at 534-35. First, the newly discovered evidence “must appear to have
been discovered since the trial.” Id. The circuit court found that this factor was clearly met
as “[i]t wasn’t until 2006 when the West Virginia Supreme Court afforded the Petitioner a
right to bring the Habeas challenge. Additionally, the DNA testing wasn’t performed until
1994, well after the Petitioner’s criminal trial.” If this habeas proceeding were the first time
the serology evidence had been subjected to DNA testing or if the serology evidence had
undergone additional DNA testing as part of the 2015 omnibus proceeding, then Respondent
Ward would have been able to prove this first factor. But both Respondent Ward and the
circuit court ignored all the prior litigation concerning the 1994 DNA testing of the serology
evidence wherein the state court had found the serology evidence not to be false and both the
state and federal courts had found that even if the serology evidence were excluded, the
remaining evidence against Respondent Ward was sufficient to convict. In other words,
there was nothing new that was discovered since the trial. Id. This simple fact was
catastrophic to Respondent Ward’s request for relief. As such, Respondent Ward’s claim
fails on factor one of the Frazier test. See id.
23
Regarding the third factor19 in Frazier, Respondent Ward had to prove that the
newly discovered evidence was “new and material.” Id. The circuit court determined “[t]his
evidence is new as it was not obtained until after the time of trial and could not have been
obtained until after the investigation was performed.” But the circuit court again ignored the
fact that the evidence had been obtained in 1994 and litigated in the 1996 omnibus hearing.
Succinctly stated, the “newly discovered” evidence in this case was not, and is not, new
evidence. What was litigated at the most recent habeas proceeding is the same serology and
DNA evidence, including the same reports and witnesses, that was the subject of the 1996
omnibus hearing.
Finally, Respondent Ward had to prove that “[t]he evidence must be such as
ought to produce an opposite result at a second trial on the merits.”20 The circuit court found
that “[n]ot only does this evidence exclude . . . [Respondent Ward] from the twenty dollar
bill, it identifies the presence of a third party contributor to the blood. This, at a minimum,
would have afforded . . . [Respondent Ward] with an opportunity to discredit Mr. Zain.” The
analysis by the circuit court of this factor completely fails to consider the determinations
19
The State concedes that Respondent Ward proved the second Frazier factor,
requiring him to act diligently in securing the evidence. Frazier, 162 W. Va. at 935-36, 253
S.E.2d at 534-35.
20
Because Respondent Ward failed to prove three of the first four Frazier factors, it
is unnecessary to address the fifth factor. Id.; see Anstey, 237 W. Va. at 422, 787 S.E.2d at
875.
24
previously made by the circuit court, albeit a different judge, and the federal courts that even
if the serology evidence and Mr. Zain’s testimony were excluded, there was sufficient
evidence to convict Respondent Ward beyond a reasonable doubt. See Ward, 1999 WL
638606 at *6 (“[W]e find that the above-detailed evidence presents a clear picture of guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt, and that there is no reasonable likelihood that the jury would
have acquitted had it received only this foregoing account of events.”). In light of all the
evidence introduced against Respondent Ward at his trial,21 which the circuit court failed to
address, we agree with the prior determinations by the circuit court and federal courts that
even if the serology evidence were excluded, there was sufficient evidence presented to the
jury to support Respondent Ward’s conviction.
IV. Conclusion
Based upon the foregoing, the Court reverses the decision of the circuit court
and remands the case for reinstatement of Respondent Ward’s conviction and sentence.
Reversed and remanded
with directions.
21
See discussion supra under subsection I. A.
25