IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA19-372
Filed: 3 December 2019
Catawba County, No. 16 CRS 1556
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
ANTONIO MORQUETT PHILLIPS
Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 31 August 2018 by Judge William
A. Wood II in Catawba County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 30
October 2019.
Attorney General Joshua H. Stein and Chief Deputy Attorney General
Alexander M. Peters for the State.
The Epstein Law Firm PLLC, by Drew Nelson, for defendant-appellant.
TYSON, Judge.
Antonio Morquett Phillips (“Defendant”) appeals from the jury’s conviction of
statutory rape of C.C., a 13-year-old female. See N.C. R. App. P. 42(b)(3) (initials are
used instead of a minor’s name in appeals filed under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-27
involving sexual offenses committed against a minor). We find prejudicial error, and
reverse and remand for a new trial.
I. Background
STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
C.C., then 13 years old, and her friend Justine Eckard, then 21 years old, were
at Defendant’s apartment on the evening of 8 December 2013. The first trial resulting
from the events of that evening ended in an acquittal on some charges and a mistrial
on this charge. At a second trial, C.C., Eckard, and Defendant each testified to
different versions of how the three individuals arrived at Defendant’s apartment, how
they left, and what happened while all three were there and afterwards.
A. C.C.’s Testimony
C.C. testified she and Eckard walked to a McDonald’s restaurant to access the
restaurant’s wireless internet. They encountered Defendant there and he invited
them back to his apartment. Eckard knew Defendant and told C.C. “it was a good
idea.” C.C. had previously met Defendant once before, and she trusted Eckard.
Defendant drove both of them to his apartment. They entered through the back door.
Defendant and C.C. smoked marijuana, while the three of them talked.
C.C. smoked “too much” marijuana, which caused her to “get really relaxed”
and “take down [her] guard.” Eckard had to leave the apartment around 9:00 p.m.,
Defendant called her a cab, and she left. C.C. was interested in staying with
Defendant and smoking more marijuana. C.C. relied upon Eckard and “knew she
wouldn’t leave me in a situation that I wouldn’t be okay in.”
Defendant told C.C. that “he wanted to treat [her] like a real man.” He bent
her over and initiated sexual contact with her after Eckard had left. C.C. told
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Opinion of the Court
Defendant she “was not comfortable with things that he did to [her].” Defendant
penetrated C.C. anally, orally, and vaginally. C.C. did not remember if Defendant
ejaculated, but she assumed he did when he finished.
Defendant then gave C.C. a black tank top he owned, called a cab for C.C., and
she left. C.C. told her mother she had been raped when she arrived home. Her
mother called the police, who responded. Paramedics also arrived and transported
C.C. to Frye Regional Medical Center. C.C. testified she had no sexual contact with
Eckard or any other person other than Defendant while at his apartment.
B. Eckard’s Testimony
Eckard testified she and C.C. had walked to McDonald’s “trying to find
something to do.” C.C. had Defendant’s phone number and had the idea to contact
him. Eckard agreed they should send Defendant a text message and go to his
apartment. Defendant picked them up and drove them to his apartment. They
entered through the front door. Eckard played a game on her phone and listened to
music, while C.C. and Defendant smoked marijuana. Eckard wanted to leave and get
home to comply with her mother’s curfew. She left Defendant’s apartment around
9:30 or 10:00 p.m. in a cab he had called for her. Although Eckard testified she had
“begged” C.C. to leave with her, C.C. chose to stay behind. Eckard also testified she
had no sexual contact with Defendant or with C.C. that night.
C. Defendant’s Testimony
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, age 36 at the time of the incident, testified he first saw C.C. and
Eckard walking up the sidewalk from his front porch. He had neither seen them at
McDonald’s, nor picked them up, and had not driven them to his apartment.
Defendant had not received a text message from them “because neither one of them
[had] my number.” On Defendant’s porch, he and C.C. smoked marijuana while
Eckard “play[ed] a little game on her phone.”
Eckard repeatedly asked Defendant for money, which irritated him, until he
asked her what she was going to do for the money. She said she would make it “worth
[his] while.” Eckard and Defendant walked into the apartment, leaving C.C. outside
on the porch. Eckard then performed oral sex on Defendant. Defendant ejaculated
during his contact with Eckard and went into the restroom to take a shower. When
he left the restroom, he found both Eckard and C.C. laying on his bed. Defendant
saw Eckard’s face and hands between C.C.’s legs, with Eckard’s finger “inside [C.C.]”
Defendant “snapped” and asked them what they were doing. Eckard asked for
her money, which Defendant gave her. He told them to get their stuff together and
leave. Eckard and C.C. left together. Defendant then saw C.C. walking back up the
street by herself. When Defendant asked her what she was doing, she said she needed
a ride home. Defendant called her a cab and she left. Defendant denied any sexual
acts or contact with C.C.
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
Defendant’s testimony at trial conflicted with previous statements he had
made to police during the investigation. During an interview with an investigator,
Defendant initially claimed he did not know “whether [C.C.] was legal or not,” but at
trial he admitted he knew C.C. was thirteen years old. He initially claimed neither
C.C. nor Eckard had entered into his apartment that night but had entered only the
building. When his DNA sample was taken, he insisted investigators would
“absolutely not” find his DNA in C.C.’s rape kit.
D. DNA Evidence
C.C. presented at the hospital in the same condition as she had arrived home,
because her mother did not allow her to change clothes, shower, wash, or use the
bathroom. A sexual assault nurse examiner collected a rape kit and examined C.C.
“head to toe.” She took oral, vaginal, and anal swabs from C.C., and gathered all of
C.C.’s clothing.
Dr. Melinda Wilson, a forensic biologist with the North Carolina State Crime
Lab, qualified as an expert witness in the area of DNA analysis, and testified at trial.
She received DNA profiles from C.C., Defendant, and Eckard, and tested C.C.’s
clothes and swabs for DNA.
The DNA testing process takes multiple steps. Dr. Wilson testified she
extracted DNA from very small samples of the evidence, quantified how much DNA
was potentially present in each sample, made “billions and billions and billions of
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Opinion of the Court
copies” of each sample to improve visibility, and then created a graphical
electropherogram (“graph”) of each unknown donor sample to compare with the
known donor samples. Because DNA is microscopic and not visible to the human eye,
the graphs represent between fifteen and twenty-seven locations on the DNA
molecule in each person’s DNA, “kind of like an address.” At each location on the
graph, Dr. Wilson sees a number representing an “allele,” which she testified “is a
result that I would see as part of a DNA profile.” Each graph is representative of a
DNA profile that comes either from an unknown sample of evidence or a known
sample profile.
Dr. Wilson testified a DNA “match” occurs when the alleles at every location
on an unknown sample are the same as all twenty-seven of the locations she views
on a known sample. If every location is not tested, there cannot be a “match.” If not
all the locations are tested, but all tested locations are the same, the unknown sample
is “consistent with” the known sample, which Dr. Wilson testified “is not an
exclusion.” An “exclusion” is the result when the unknown sample evidence “could
not come from the known standard” in the comparison.
A DNA profile is “conclusive” when it is of sufficient quality and quantity for
comparison purposes, and “inconclusive” when it is not. Dr. Wilson testified, when a
component is inconclusive, “you cannot include someone as a possible source of DNA
and you also cannot exclude them as a possible source of DNA.”
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
One of the five samples Dr. Wilson tested, C.C.’s external genitalia swab,
contained a “mixture of three contributors”: two “major” contributors and one “minor.”
Dr. Wilson presumed C.C. was one of the major contributors as the donor of the
sample and determined Defendant’s DNA profile was consistent with the other major
contributor. The minor contributor’s profile was “inconclusive due to complexity
and/or insufficient quality of recovered DNA.”
The prosecutor then asked Dr. Wilson if she was “able to see anything” about
that minor contributor’s profile. Dr. Wilson answered:
No. So when a profile is inconclusive, we are not allowed
by policy to make a comparison, period. So I can’t look at
it and say, well, this alleles that are there, or results that
are there in that profile, look like it’s this other person. You
can’t do that. So it’s just is what it is. It’s inconclusive and
we don’t make comparisons to it and don’t make
statements about it.
After a few questions about alleles, the prosecutor continued to ask Dr. Wilson to
make statements about the inconclusive minor contribution:
Q: Okay. And were you able to see any alleles in that minor
profile?
A: I did see alleles.
Q: How many did you see?
A: Six.
Q: Six alleles?
A: Uh-huh (Affirmative).
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Opinion of the Court
Q: Okay.
A: Yes.
Q: And looking at those six alleles, were you able to look at
Justine Eckard’s alleles at those same markers and
determine if she happened to have any of those same alleles
as those same markers?
A: No; because that’s against policy because it’s
inconclusive.
Q: Okay. If I asked you to look at those, are you able to do
it here?
A: If made to do so, yes.
Defendant’s counsel objected, but was overruled.
The prosecutor continued:
Q: Unfortunately, Ms. Wilson, I’m making you do that.
A: Okay.
Q: If you could tell me at those same markers if any of those
alleles are the same or different.
A: Okay. I’m going to do this and I'm going to preface this
with this is not scientifically accurate, so what I’m about to
do, we do not do at the State Crime Lab, the FBI does not
do it. No lab in this country, I’m assuming most labs in the
world, do not do this because it’s inconclusive. So you
cannot make a conclusion on an inconclusive component
regardless of whether the alleles are the same, that’s not a
match; if they’re different, it’s not an exclusion.
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Opinion of the Court
After Dr. Wilson’s preface, the court excused the jury sua sponte. The trial
court asked Defendant’s counsel: “you objected and I overruled your objection. Would
you like to be heard?” Defendant’s counsel argued, inter alia:
[Dr. Wilson] stated that this is not procedure; this is not
anything that anyone can follow; that it’s not anything that
anyone would use, but he can make her make this
comparison.
So I don’t know. Absent at least an offer of proof as
to what's going to come forward, Your Honor, and then you
make your ruling because I don’t know what’s about to
come on this. . . . [T]his is new science and this is not
accepted science so to me, I don’t understand -- I mean, I
don’t think that it’s going to -- it doesn’t meet the
standards.
The prosecutor responded, inter alia:
What I’m about to do is . . . because the sample is
not, for lack of a better term, not a good sample, they’re not
able to make any conclusions whether it is or isn’t
somebody. But just because it’s not a good sample doesn’t
mean they can’t see certain things, and what they’re seeing
is scientif -- is what they’re seeing. It is reliable. It’s based
on science.
So when she says she sees these alleles, she sees
those alleles. But because the sample is so . . . minimal or
not a good sample or not scientifically a good sample, they
don’t want to render an opinion. She’s not going to render
an opinion as to whether this is or is not someone. But
what she can do is look to see if the alleles there do or do
not match the alleles for any individual I ask her to do it.
The reason why I asked her to do it with Justine
Eckard is you know in the last trial [Defendant’s counsel]
argued with the samples that were inconclusive that this
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Opinion of the Court
could possibly be Justine Eckard. Justine Eckard’s saliva,
that’s what that is, ladies and gentlemen.
I think I have a right, knowing that that happened
in the other trial, to somehow try to show that that’s
unlikely. And I think it’s up to the jurors to determine,
based on the caveats that Ms. Wilson will give, as to
whether or not it’s possible. And Ms. Wilson will say she’s
not giving any opinion, so if there is a possibility -- but we
look and what we see are three of those alleles are not, are
not, Justine Eckard. And Justine Eckard has been
excluded from almost every other place.
That’s information I think they need to know. If I’m
not able to present that, then that allows her to argue that
that could be Justine Eckard without me arguing no, I don’t
think it is because what we see on there, even though it’s
not the most scientific thing, what we’re able to see, my
argument is, doesn’t show that it’s Justine Eckard.
And I just think that's fair.
The trial court then asked the witness for a proffer of the contested testimony.
The prosecutor asked Dr. Wilson to clarify if any of what he had just said was
inaccurate. Dr. Wilson answered:
The samples -- all I can say about the samples . . . is,
you see results that don’t match someone. I don’t know
that because I don’t make the comparison because per
policy I’m not allowed to, period.
So we have to be very careful in doing this, so I have
to preface to the jury, this is not something -- I would be in
big trouble if I did that in the Lab. I’m not allowed to do
this. So I don’t want them to think that just because three
alleles are not the same that it’s an exclusion because it’s
not.
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Opinion of the Court
I know like it sounds like it would be and it’s a hard
concept to understand, but it’s not an exclusion and it’s also
not inclusion.
The court requested Dr. Wilson’s proffer be taken as voir dire. In response to
a question about “seeing” the minor contributor’s alleles, Dr. Wilson again explained:
Yes. So it’s real DNA. It’s not that it’s not real DNA. It’s
absolutely real DNA. . . . It’s a person but we don’t know
who it is. You can’t include; you can’t exclude.
...
I hate to keep beating a dead horse, but the scientific
community does not do this. We do not do it. It’s not just
our Lab. The FBI doesn’t do it. The forensic community as
a whole cannot make comparisons because it’s not that
they're unreliable or that it’s inaccurate information, it’s
just some may be missing, and with sampling, meaning if I
run this sample several times, the three results that don’t
match could pop up and match.
So every time you run the sample you get a different
answer, and in validation studies that we do,
developmentally at the company that creates the kits we
use and also in-house at the Lab, has shown over and over
and time and time again, you cannot include or exclude
from these.
The prosecutor stated he would not ask Dr. Wilson to render an opinion, “but
you can look at those six alleles and determine if any of those alleles match any profile
that you have on file; is that correct?” Dr. Wilson replied: “I can if you ask me to, yes.
But that’s why I prefaced it with I want them to understand this is not a match; it is
not an exclusion. It is not anything. It is real DNA that’s there and I can’t say a
thing about it.”
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
The prosecutor led Dr. Wilson through the comparison of the six alleles of the
minor contributor with Eckard’s profile. Dr. Wilson testified that three of the alleles
were the same as Eckard’s profile, and three were different. The prosecutor
reiterated that Dr. Wilson was not rendering any opinion and was just stating facts
about the alleles.
Defendant’s counsel restated Dr. Wilson’s testimony and asked one question
emphasizing an analogy Dr. Wilson had used, that the evidence was like seeing two
people clearly standing under a street light and a third dimly in the shadows: “there
are three people on that street corner?” Dr. Wilson answered, “That’s correct.”
Defendant’s counsel asked no further questions.
The prosecutor asserted:
Your Honor, the State is asking her to say what is there.
We’re not asking her to do anything different; we’re not
preventing her from saying any caveats. We’re being
candid with this jury of what this is. But I think the jury
has a right to know fully everything what is there; what
can we see from that. That’s all I’m doing.
After discussion of discovery materials provided on this issue, the court asked
Defendant’s counsel if she wished to be heard any further on the minor contributor’s
alleles. Defendant’s counsel replied, “No, Your Honor, not as far as that. I mean,
that I have a fairly good understanding of.” After further voir dire of another issue,
the trial court issued its ruling: “With regard to the defendant’s objection to the
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Opinion of the Court
testimony about the alleles being present or absent from the mixture that the witness
was observing, that will continue to be overruled.”
The jury returned and Dr. Wilson’s testimony resumed. Dr. Wilson testified,
without further objection by Defendant’s counsel, “three of the six total alleles that I
see in the minor component of the external genitalia swabs, Justine Eckard shares
three of them and three she does not have.” The prosecutor, “in all fairness,” asked
Dr. Wilson to confirm, “[what] we’re talking about with the six is an inconclusive
[component]?” Dr. Wilson answered, “That’s correct. Yes.”
The jury returned a verdict finding Defendant guilty of statutory rape of a 13-
year-old. The court sentenced Defendant to a term of imprisonment of 420 to 564
months. Defendant gave notice of appeal in open court and also in a timely filing.
II. Jurisdiction
An appeal as of right lies with this Court pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-
27(b)(1) (2017).
III. Issues
Defendant argues the trial court erred by requiring Dr. Wilson to compare and
contrast the DNA profile of the minor contributor with Eckard’s DNA profile.
Defendant argues this testimony was inadmissible under N.C. R. Evid. 702(a) and
N.C. R. Evid. 403. Alternatively, Defendant argues the trial court committed plain
error by allowing this testimony.
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Opinion of the Court
Defendant also argues the testimony was misleading and had a material
impact on the verdict. Lastly, Defendant argues the State deprived him of due
process by presenting misleading testimony.
IV. Preservation
The State argues Defendant waived the issues presented on appeal by not
objecting to the challenged testimony in either a timely or specific manner when it
was presented to the jury. “In order to preserve an issue for appellate review, a party
must have presented to the trial court a timely request, objection, or motion, stating
the specific grounds for the ruling the party desired the court to make if the specific
grounds were not apparent from the context.” N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(1).
Generally speaking, the appellate courts of this state will
not review a trial court’s decision to admit evidence unless
there has been a timely objection. To be timely, an
objection to the admission of evidence must be made at the
time it is actually introduced at trial. It is insufficient to
object only to the presenting party’s forecast of the
evidence.
State v. Ray, 364 N.C. 272, 277, 697 S.E.2d 319, 322 (2010) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted).
In Ray, the defendant objected “only during a hearing out of the jury’s
presence. In other words, [the] defendant objected to the State’s forecast of the
evidence, but did not then subsequently object when the evidence was actually
introduced at trial.” Id. (citation omitted). Our Supreme Court held such an objection
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Opinion of the Court
was not timely and failed to preserve for appellate review the trial court’s decision to
admit the contested evidence. Id.
The State’s reliance upon Ray and other similar cases is misplaced.
Defendant’s first objection was made in the jury’s presence. Defendant’s counsel
objected after Dr. Wilson testified she could only answer the State’s questions about
the comparison of the minor contributor to Eckard’s profile “[i]f made to do so.” This
objection was made and overruled on the record and in the presence of the jury.
After Dr. Wilson’s subsequent, extensive preface quoted above, the trial court
paused the line of questioning, excused the jury sua sponte, and asked Defendant’s
counsel if she would like to be heard on the overruled objection. After extensive
discussion and further objections by Defendant during the voir dire, the trial court
held Defendant’s objection would “continue to be overruled,” confirming the
discussion and ruling related back to the first objection. Defendant’s objection was
timely made, renewed and preserved for appellate review.
The State also argues Defendant’s counsel did not state the specific grounds
for the objection, as is required by Rule 10. The Rules only require specific grounds
if “not apparent from the context.” N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(1). At the end of the
discussion out of the jury’s presence, the trial court specifically stated it was ruling
on Defendant’s “objection to the testimony about the alleles being present or absent
from the mixture that the witness was observing.” These specific grounds were
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Opinion of the Court
apparent from the context. Defendant’s counsel’s argument during the voir dire
discussion that the proffered testimony would not “meet the standards” of “accepted
science” further specifies the grounds for the objection.
Defendant’s objection to Dr. Wilson’s testimony about the minor contributor’s
alleles was timely made and the specific grounds were apparent from the context.
The Rule 702 objection is preserved. At oral argument, Defendant’s counsel conceded
both the Rule 403 and constitutional due process issues were not objected to at trial
and were not preserved for appellate review, even for plain error or harmless error.
V. Standard of Review
A trial court’s ruling on Rule 702(a) is reviewed for abuse of discretion. State
v. McGrady, 368 N.C. 880, 893, 787 S.E.2d 1, 11 (2016). “A trial court may be reversed
for abuse of discretion only upon a showing that its ruling was manifestly
unsupported by reason and could not have been the result of a reasoned decision.”
State v. Riddick, 315 N.C. 749, 756, 340 S.E.2d 55, 59 (1986) (citations omitted).
When the issue is whether “the trial court’s decision is based on an incorrect
reading and interpretation of the rule governing admissibility of expert testimony,
the standard of review on appeal is de novo.” State v. Parks, __ N.C. App. __, __, 828
S.E.2d 719, 725 (2019) (citation omitted).
VI. Analysis
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Opinion of the Court
Defendant argues Dr. Wilson’s testimony concerning the minor contributor’s
alleles violated Rule 702(a). The State argues Dr. Wilson’s testimony was not
improper scientific expert opinion testimony and was beyond the scope of Rule 702(a).
Alternatively, the State argues the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
admitting the testimony because any error to Defendant was not prejudicial.
A. Scope of Rule 702(a)
Rule 702(a) allows for testimony by qualified experts “in the form of an opinion,
or otherwise” if “scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge will assist the
trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.” N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 702(a) (2017). “In order to assist the trier of fact, expert testimony
must provide insight beyond the conclusions that jurors can readily draw from their
ordinary experience.” McGrady, 368 N.C. at 889, 787 S.E.2d at 8 (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted).
By contrast, lay testimony is “rationally based on the perception of the
witness.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 701 (2017). Lay witnesses may state
“instantaneous conclusions of the mind as to the appearance, condition, or mental or
physical state of persons, animals, and things, derived from observation of a variety
of facts presented to the senses at one and the same time.” State v. Broyhill, 254 N.C.
App. 478, 485, 803 S.E.2d 832, 838 (2017) (emphasis original) (quoting State v. Leak,
156 N.C. 643, 647, 72 S.E. 567, 568 (1911)).
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Opinion of the Court
“[W]hen an expert witness moves beyond reporting what he saw or experienced
through [her] senses, and turns to interpretation or assessment to assist the jury
based on his specialized knowledge, [she] is rendering an expert opinion.” State v.
Davis, 368 N.C. 794, 798, 785 S.E.2d 312, 315 (2016) (citation and internal quotation
marks omitted). “[D]etermining what constitutes expert opinion testimony requires
a case-by-case inquiry in which the trial court (or a reviewing court) must look at the
testimony as a whole and in context.” Id.
The State argues Dr. Wilson’s testimony concerning the objected-to testimony
was not expert opinion testimony, because she was not asked to render an opinion,
but only to state what alleles she could “see” in the minor contribution. We disagree.
Although Dr. Wilson testified to the alleles she “saw,” she made clear in her testimony
that DNA is invisible to the human eye. The alleles she “saw” were numbers on the
graphs she had prepared, using her expertise and experience as a forensic scientist.
Her testimony moved beyond reporting what she had seen through her senses and
turned to assessment and analysis based on her specialized knowledge. Despite the
State’s careful framing, and the State’s argument otherwise, she was asked and
rendered expert opinion testimony and interpretations subject to the requirements of
Rule 702(a).
B. Requirements of Rule 702(a)
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Under Rule 702(a), expert opinion testimony must be “based upon sufficient
facts or data[,] the product of reliable principles and methods,” and the expert witness
must “appl[y] the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.” N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 702(a)(1)-(3). Dr. Wilson’s testimony regarding the minor
contributor’s alleles was neither based upon sufficient facts or data nor was the
product of reliable principles and methods. As an admitted expert witness, she even
testified to this absence or omission of reliability herself.
Dr. Wilson testified the minor contributor’s profile was “inconclusive due to the
complexity and/or insufficient quality of recovered DNA.” She also testified an
“inconclusive” profile is not of sufficient quality and quantity for comparison
purposes. By repeatedly asking Dr. Wilson to break with the State Lab’s policy and
established scientific procedures and testify to the alleles she could see in the minor
contributor’s graph, the State asked Dr. Wilson to give expert opinion testimony
based upon admittedly insufficient facts or data in violation of the first prong of Rule
702(a).
The testimony also violated the second prong of Rule 702(a). Dr. Wilson
further disclaimed, repeatedly, that the testimony she was required to give was “not
scientifically accurate.” The State’s request was not something done by the State
Crime Lab, the FBI, any “lab in the country,” or “most labs in the world.” Given her
strenuous preface, this testimony cannot reasonably be considered the product of
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Opinion of the Court
reliable principles or methods. Id.; see also McGrady, 368 N.C. at 884, 787 S.E.2d at
5 (the 2011 amendments to N.C. R. Evid. 702(a) adopted the federal standards
articulated in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469
(1993) and other cases).
The challenged testimony, describing the alleles of the minor contributor, was
neither “based upon sufficient facts or data” nor “the product of reliable principles
and methods.” N.C. R. Evid. 702(a)(1)-(2). The trial court erred in allowing and
admitting this testimony over Defendant’s objection.
C. Prejudice to Defendant
[E]videntiary error does not necessitate a new trial unless
the erroneous admission was prejudicial. A defendant is
prejudiced by evidentiary error when there is a reasonable
possibility that, had the error in question not been
committed, a different result would have been reached at
the trial out of which the appeal arises.
State v. Wilkerson, 363 N.C. 382, 415, 683 S.E.2d 174, 194 (2009) (citations and
internal quotation marks omitted), cert. denied, 569 U.S. 1074, 176 L. Ed. 2d 73
(2010). Prejudicial error will not be found if the other unchallenged and properly
admitted evidence presented by the State against Defendant is overwhelming, or the
evidence erroneously admitted is of “relative insignificance.” Id.
The State argues the other unchallenged and properly admitted evidence in
this case overwhelmingly proves Defendant’s guilt to overcome any prejudice. The
State notes Defendant did not challenge Dr. Wilson’s testimony regarding her
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Opinion of the Court
analysis of the other DNA samples. A review of that testimony shows Dr. Wilson
reported her analysis of five samples:
1. In the rectal swab, she found two fractions of DNA: one was a sperm
fraction, with a mixture of two contributors. Dr. Wilson presumed C.C. was
one of the sources, as the known donor of the sample. After removing her
contribution, the “derived component” was consistent with Defendant’s
profile. The non-sperm fraction was consistent with a mixture of two
contributors. Dr. Wilson was able to match C.C. with the predominant
contributor to that fraction, but could make no conclusion regarding its
minor contributor “due to insufficient quality and/or quantity.” Eckard’s
profile did not match the conclusive contributors to either of these fractions.
2. The internal vaginal swab contained two fractions as well. The sperm
fraction matched Defendant. The non-sperm fraction was consistent with
a mixture of two contributors. Dr. Wilson matched C.C. with the
predominant contributor, but again could make no conclusion regarding its
minor contributor “due to insufficient quality and/or quantity.” Eckard’s
profile did not match either of these fractions.
3. A cutting from C.C.’s underpants was tested and, again, the results found
sperm and non-sperm fractions. The sperm fraction was consistent with a
mixture of two contributors. The predominant contributor matched
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, and the other contributor was consistent with C.C. The non-
sperm fraction matched C.C.
4. The tank top Defendant gave to C.C. was tested and also found to contain
sperm and non-sperm fractions. The sperm fraction matched Defendant.
The non-sperm fraction was consistent with a mixture of two contributors.
The predominant contributor matched Defendant, but no conclusion could
be made regarding the minor contributor “due to insufficient quality and/or
quantity.”
5. The external genitalia swab, which is at issue in this appeal, contained no
sperm and was interpreted as a mixture of three contributors. Dr. Wilson
presumed C.C. was one of the major contributors, and the other major
contributor was consistent with Defendant. The minor contributor profile
to this mixture was inconclusive, but Dr. Wilson was erroneously instructed
at trial to compare the specific alleles between it and Eckard’s profile.
Dr. Wilson was able to compare Eckard’s profile with each of the conclusive
contributors’ in each sample and it did not match any.
In summary: Dr. Wilson analyzed five DNA samples, four of which contain
mixtures of two contributors and one which contains a mixture of three. Defendant
is matched to or consistent with at least one contribution in each of the five samples.
C.C. is matched or consistent with at least one contribution in each, except for the
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
tank top. Eckard did not match any of the conclusive contributor profiles. Only one
sample, the underpants, does not contain an inconclusive contributor; the other four
all have an inconclusive contributor in at least one fraction.
The State argues Defendant’s theory of the case does not match the other four
samples and other physical evidence and asserts his testimony does not explain how
his DNA ended up in the rectal swab. Defendant’s testimony was merely that he saw
Eckard’s “face and her hands” between C.C.’s legs, and that he observed Eckard’s
“finger inside” C.C. Although nothing about this testimony explicitly implicates the
vaginal or rectal swabs, nothing about this testimony precludes them either.
We also note several inconsistencies in evidence between Defendant’s initial
interview with investigators and his subsequent trial testimony. Defendant’s initial
version of the events barely resembles his trial testimony. In addition to his initial
denials that C.C. and Eckard were inside his apartment or that he knew C.C. was a
minor, Defendant also made no mention whatsoever of any sexual contact between
any of the three individuals and told the investigator he would “absolutely not” find
his DNA in C.C.’s rape kit. Defendant’s testimony at trial changed from his initial
interview after learning his DNA was present.
However, these inconsistencies in Defendant’s versions of events, as well as
the inconsistencies between all three witnesses’ statements and testimonies, speak
to the witnesses’ credibility, issues that solely rest within the province of the jury.
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
“The jury is the lie detector in the courtroom and is the only proper entity to perform
the ultimate function of every trial -- determination of the truth.” State v. Kim, 318
N.C. 614, 621, 350 S.E.2d 347, 351 (1986) (citations omitted).
While these inconsistencies are relevant for our review of potential prejudice
to Defendant, we cannot conclude the witnesses’ testimony in this case is
overwhelming evidence of guilt to exclude the reasonable possibility that, had the
error in question not been committed, a different result would have been reached at
the trial.
The State also points to other, uncontroverted and properly admitted physical
evidence, namely that C.C. immediately presented at the hospital with red and
painful inner thighs, when she was examined after the events in question.
Undoubtedly, something occurred that night at Defendant’s apartment, which C.C.
reported immediately to her mother upon returning home. The uncontroverted and
admitted physical evidence in this case shows that C.C. had bruised and red thighs
following the events in question, that DNA matching or consistent with Defendant’s
profile was present in several internal swabs taken from C.C., and that at least one
of those DNA swabs showed the presence of a third person other than Defendant or
C.C.
The State’s likely, and also admitted, objective in presenting the challenged
testimony regarding the presence and identity of the minor contributor’s alleles
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
during its case-in-chief was to anticipate and undercut a key fact in Defendant’s
defense of the case. A third DNA contributor present in the external genitalia swab
raises the possibility that Eckard was the means by which his DNA was transferred
to and found on the swabs taken from C.C.’s body. The prosecutor admitted his
purpose to the trial court in the voir dire: “you know in the last trial [Defendant’s
counsel] argued with the samples that were inconclusive that this could possibly be
Justine Eckard.” If the State had not insisted on preemptively forcing Dr. Wilson to
state the unscientific and reluctant testimony that allowed the jury to more easily
infer Eckard could not have been the minor contributor, a reasonable possibility
existed a jury would have reached a different result at trial.
The prosecutor’s stated objective demonstrates this reasonable possibility. At
the first trial, Defendant argued the evidence of a third, inconclusive DNA
contributor. The previous jury acquitted Defendant on numerous related charges and
could not reach a unanimous verdict to convict Defendant on this charge. A different
result was reasonably possible without the erroneous admission of this testimony.
The State’s cases cited to argue the error was not prejudicial are unpersuasive.
The issues in State v. Williams, 190 N.C. App. 173, 660 S.E.2d 200 (2008), also dealt
with rape kit DNA analysis, but in the context of improper closing arguments, rather
than improper admission of prejudicial expert testimony. Id. at 175, 660 S.E.2d at
202. Two other cases the State cites dealt with challenges to the admission of expert
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
testimony. State v. Trogdon, 216 N.C. App. 15, 715 S.E.2d 635 (2011) (challenge to
bite mark analysis); State v. Berry, 143 N.C. App. 187, 546 S.E.2d 145 (2001)
(challenge to barefoot impression analysis). In both cases this Court held the “error
was harmless where the testimony was merely corroborative of other evidence.” Id.
at 206, 546 S.E.2d at 158; see also Trogdon, 216 N.C. App. at 24–25, 715 S.E.2d at
641.
Here, the challenged and improper testimony is not “merely corroborative of
other evidence”; it potentially discredits evidence that supports Defendant’s defense
and theory of the case. While the State presented other evidence tending to show
Defendant’s guilt than just this DNA evidence, the testimony regarding the minor
contributor’s alleles was more than merely corroborative of the State’s other evidence.
This evidence called into question the very inference that Eckard purportedly
transferred Defendant’s DNA to C.C., which Defendant’s defense reasonably relied
upon. Although Trogdon, Berry, and other cases show how errors in the admission of
expert testimony can be nonprejudicial, where there is additional inculpatory
evidence, the facts and testimony here deals instead with the erroneous admission of
expert testimony that both purposefully anticipates and undercuts potentially-
exculpatory evidence.
Our Supreme Court has recognized “the heightened credence juries tend to
give scientific evidence” in the specific context of erroneous admissions of expert
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
testimony. State v. Helms, 348 N.C. 578, 583, 504 S.E.2d 293, 296 (1998). This
“heightened credence” may be especially true concerning testimony where the expert
herself repeatedly warns of jury confusion if presented. Id.
Dr. Wilson went to great lengths to emphasize she did not “want [the jury] to
think that just because three [of the six] alleles are not the same that it’s an exclusion
[of Eckard] because it’s not. I know like it sounds like it would be and it’s a hard
concept to understand, but it’s not an exclusion and it’s also not inclusion.” She
further explained, “with sampling, meaning if I run this sample several times, the
three results that don’t match could pop up and match.”
The erroneously-admitted evidence was insisted upon by the State to allow the
jury to make an inference that these results discredited Defendant’s theory of the
case. Dr. Wilson’s testimony also suggests the evidence itself was of such insufficient
quality that the specific alleles the prosecutor wanted the jury to hear, that were not
attributable to Eckard, could have been different had the quality of the sample been
sufficient for analysis.
“The evidence presented at trial was clearly sufficient to send the case to the
jury and to support a jury finding of guilty . . . . However, that is not the question
before us. The question is not one of sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury
verdict.” Helms, 348 N.C. at 583, 504 S.E.2d at 296. The question on prejudicial error
is whether, “had the error in question not been committed, a reasonable possibility
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
exists that a different result would have been reached at trial.” Id. We conclude such
a reasonable possibility of a different result does exist in this case. Defendant was
prejudiced by the erroneous admission of the challenged testimony. This prejudice is
not overcome by the State’s other evidence tending to show Defendant’s guilt.
VII. Conclusion
Defendant’s objection before the jury to the admission of Dr. Wilson’s testimony
regarding the alleles of the minor contributor was properly preserved. This testimony
consisted of expert opinion testimony that is within the scope and requirements of
Rule 702(a). The challenged testimony was neither based upon sufficient facts or
data nor is the product of reliable scientific principles and methods. We all agree the
trial court erred in allowing and admitting this testimony which prejudiced
Defendant. The majority of us agree this admission also violates Rule 702(a).
The erroneous admission of the testimony was more than mere corroboration
of the State’s other evidence. It anticipated, pre-empted, and potentially discredited
evidence that corroborated Defendant’s anticipated theory of the case. It was not
offered in rebuttal.
A reasonable possibility exists that, had the erroneous testimony not been
admitted, a different result would have been reached at trial. Defendant was
prejudiced by the erroneous admission of this testimony. We reverse and remand for
a new trial. It is so ordered.
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STATE V. PHILLIPS
Opinion of the Court
NEW TRIAL.
Judge COLLINS concurs.
Judge DILLON dissents with separate opinion.
-2-
No. COA19-372 – State v. Phillips
DILLON, Judge, dissenting.
For each of the reasons stated below, I conclude that Defendant received a fair
trial, free from reversible error. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
I. Factual Background
Defendant was convicted of statutory rape of C.C., a 13-year old girl.
The State’s evidence at trial tended to show that Defendant had C.C. and a 21-
year old named Justine over to his apartment to smoke marijuana. After a while,
Justine left, and C.C. stayed to smoke more marijuana. Defendant then engaged in
multiple sex acts with C.C. C.C. left and reported the assault to her mother.
Defendant told an investigator that he did see C.C. and Justine on the night in
question, but that they never entered his apartment. Defendant’s DNA was found
inside C.C.’s vagina and anus as well as on her body.
In his defense, Defendant testified at trial, contradicting much of what he had
told the investigator. He explained how his DNA came to be found inside of and on
C.C. He admitted that C.C. and Justine did come back to his apartment but that he
engaged in a sexual act only with Justine, with her consent, an act which caused him
to ejaculate. He then went into his bathroom. When he came back out, he saw
Justine performing a sex act on C.C., during which his DNA wound up on and inside
of C.C.
II. Testimony Challenged on Appeal
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
On appeal, Defendant challenges certain testimony from the State’s DNA
expert, which he claims was inadmissible but likely was construed by the jury as an
attack on his version of the events.
A. DNA Expert’s Preliminary Testimony
During the trial, the DNA expert testified concerning: (1) the methodology in
matching DNA found on a victim against the DNA of a suspect and (2) her conclusions
about the DNA found on the swabs taken from C.C.’s body.
Each swab taken from C.C. contained samples from more than one DNA
profile; that is, each swab contained DNA from more than one contributor.
Whether a DNA profile contained on a swab can be matched against the DNA
of a known person depends on the completeness of the sample. If the sample is
complete enough, then enough “markers” from the sample can be compared with the
DNA of a known person to determine whether or not there is a match. However, if
the sample is not complete enough, that is, if there are not enough markers detectable
from the sample, then there is no attempt to try and match the sample with the DNA
of a known person, as any such attempt would be scientifically unreliable.
The swabs from inside C.C.’s vaginal and rectal areas and from the exterior of
C.C.’s genital area all contained sufficient amounts of DNA from two different profiles
to test for a match. One DNA profile found on all the swabs matched a sample of
2
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
C.C.’s own DNA. The other DNA profile found on all the swabs matched Defendant’s
DNA.
A sample from a third DNA profile, that is, the DNA from a third source, was
found on a swab taken from outside C.C.’s genital area, though this DNA profile was
not found on the swabs taken from inside C.C.’s vaginal or rectal areas. This third
profile sample, however, was not complete enough such that it could be scientifically
determined whether or not the DNA matched that of Justine or anyone else.
Specifically, this sample only contained six markers which could be compared with
markers from the DNA of a known person, not enough to be able to determine
someone as a match.
The State’s DNA expert explained that she did not try to match the third DNA
profile with that of Justine, because, with only six markers, the sample was simply
too small to make any scientifically reliable determination. She explained that she
could, if compelled, try to match the six markers with that of Justine, but the
potential matches would be scientifically insignificant since the sample was not large
enough.
B. Defendant’s Objection
The State asked the DNA expert if she could state how many of the six markers
from the third DNA profile matched the six markers taken from Justine’s known
sample. It seems that the State wanted its expert to say that not all of the markers
3
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
were a match so as to cast doubt on Defendant’s theory that the third DNA profile
could possibly be that of Justine.
Defendant’s counsel objected, not knowing exactly what information the State
was trying to elicit. The trial court sent the jury out and allowed a voir dire of the
DNA expert to be conducted. After conducting the voir dire, it became evident that
the DNA expert would state that three markers matched that of Justine, and three
did not, but that these results were scientifically insignificant. The State did not ask
the DNA expert for her opinion regarding whether or not she thought the profile
matched that of Justine.
In any event, the trial judge ruled that the testimony was admissible. The jury
was called back in; the State elicited the testimony that three of the six markers taken
from C.C.’s body matched three of the six markers taken from Justine’s DNA, but
that there was no match as to the other three markers. The DNA expert also testified
that the sample was too small for an opinion to be given as to whether Justine could
be included or excluded as the contributor of the third DNA profile sample.
Defendant’s attorney never objected after the jury came back in following the voir
dire.
III. Argument
I agree with the majority that the DNA expert’s testimony was improperly
admitted. However, I conclude that the error in admitting the testimony did not
4
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
constitute reversible error. I so conclude for three independent reasons, each stated
below.
A. Defendant’s Failure to Object on the Right Grounds-No Plain Error
Defendant concedes that he objected based on Rule 702, that the DNA’s expert
was not scientifically reliable, but not based on Rule 402, that the evidence was
irrelevant, or on Rule 403, that the evidence was unduly prejudicial.
I conclude that the testimony actually elicited did not violate Rule 702, as it
was scientifically accurate. North Carolina is now a Daubert state. State v. McGrady,
368 N.C. 880, 787 S.E.2d 1 (2016). As such, Rule 702 prohibits expert testimony
unless the testimony satisfies all three prongs of Rule 702(a), that:
(1) The testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data.
(2) The testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods.
(3) The witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of
the case.
Id. at 887, 787 S.E.2d at 7 (quoting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 702(a) (2011)). An
expert may testify “in the form of an opinion, or otherwise” if “scientific, technical or
other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or
to determine a fact in issue[.]” Id.
Significantly, here, the DNA expert was never asked to provide an opinion
about whether the third DNA profile matched that of Justine. Had she done so, she
5
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
would have violated Rule 702, as she admitted that it is widely accepted that a match
cannot be made based on such a small sample.
Rather, she was only asked whether any of the six markers from the sample
matched the six markers from Justine’s DNA. There is no indication that she did not
have the expertise to compare the markers that she had in front of her or that her
answers were not scientifically reliable on this narrow point. And, she further
explained that these results were variable, as another sample from Justine’s DNA
could produce different results and as the sample from the swab was simply too small
to make any reliable conclusions. I am confident that her answers, opinions, and
explanation were scientifically accurate.
However, though her testimony was scientifically accurate, her testimony on
this point was irrelevant. What difference does it make how many markers matched?
Any answer would not tend to prove or disprove whether the DNA on the swab
matched that of Justine. Therefore, it should not have been allowed under Rule 402.
Further, though her testimony was scientifically accurate, it was unduly
prejudicial. That is, though she explained the unreliability of three markers not
matching Justine’s DNA, it is possible that the jury took that to mean that the DNA
must not have belonged to Justine. Creating this impression was the reason the State
wanted the testimony admitted. Therefore, the testimony should not have been
allowed under Rule 403.
6
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
However, since Defendant did not base his objection on Rule 402 or 403, but
only on Rule 702, his objection is not preserved. We, therefore, only review for plain
error. And, here, because there was substantial evidence of Defendant’s guilt; e.g.,
his DNA found inside of C.C. and C.C.’s testimony, any error by allowing the expert’s
testimony did not rise to the level of plain error.
B. Defendant’s Failure to Object After Voir Dire-No Plain Error
Even if Defendant’s objection based on Rule 702 was proper, he failed to
preserve his objection when he failed to object at the time the testimony was actually
elicited.
It is well-settled that a defendant who objects during voir dire, outside the
presence of the jury, waives his objection if he fails to object when the evidence is
actually introduced to the jury. See State v. Ray, 364 N.C. 272, 277, 697 S.E.2d 319,
322 (2010). Here, though, Defendant admittedly did lodge an objection in the
presence of the jury when the State started questioning its DNA expert generally
about whether she could match the markers. It is a close question as to whether this
objection “counts.” Defendant admitted when making the objection that he did not
know exactly where the State was going with its questioning, and the State had yet
to ask the DNA expert about whether the six markers matched. Thus, Defendant
needed to object after the voir dire, when the State “actually introduced” its expert
testimony about her comparisons of the six markers. Id.
7
STATE V. PHILLIPS
DILLON, J., dissenting
C. No Prejudicial Error
Even if Defendant’s Rule 702 objection was properly preserved, I do not believe
that, based on the overwhelming evidence in this case of Defendant’s guilt, the error
was prejudicial. I do not think it is reasonably possible that the jury reached its
verdict based on the expert’s testimony concerning certain DNA found on a swab from
outside C.C.’s genital area. I believe that the jury convicted Defendant because of its
view of the other evidence. Defendant’s explanation of how his DNA was found on
and inside of C.C. is simply incredible, given that the DNA from the third source was
found only on a swab taken from the external area of C.C.’s genitals and that
Defendant changed his story between the time he spoke with investigators and the
time of trial.
8