IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 93-KA-00228-SCT
JACKIE LEE HULL
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/22/93
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. HOWARD Q. DAVIS JR.
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: SUNFLOWER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: RABUN JONES
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: JOLENE M. LOWRY
NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 12/19/96
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: 1/10/97
MANDATE ISSUED: 3/4/97
BEFORE PRATHER, P.J., ROBERTS AND MILLS, JJ.
MILLS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. On February 4, 1993, a jury in the Circuit Court of Sunflower County convicted Jackie Lee Hull
of the forcible rape of his fourteen-year-old stepdaughter. The trial judge sentenced Hull to the
custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections for twenty years with the last ten years
suspended. On appeal to this Court, Hull assigned as error the following issues:
I. Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That Other
Scientists Had Verified That His Work Was Properly Done and That the DNA Patterns
Matched in Violation of Mississippi Rule of Evidence 802 and the Confrontation Clauses
of the United States and Mississippi Constitutions.
II. Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That a Former
Defense Expert Agreed That a DNA Match Existed in Violation of Mississippi Rule of
Evidence 403.
III. Whether the Trial Court Erred in Not Granting a Mistrial Based on a Judicial
Comment During Voir Dire and Prosecutorial Misconduct During Closing Argument.
IV. Whether the Trial Court Erred in Granting Instruction S-2 and Denying Instruction
D-14.
V. Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Evidence of a DNA Match Without
Statistical Evidence Where Such Evidence Is Irrelevant and Whether the Trial Court
Erred in Allowing Testimony That Matches Were Extremely Rare Despite its Prior
Ruling That Probability Evidence Was Inadmissible.
VI. Whether Hull's Rights to a Speedy Trial under Section 99-17-1 of the Mississippi
Code, Federal and State Constitutions Were Violated.
FACTS
¶2. Jackie Lee Hull married Gwendolyn Butler, who had a fourteen-year-old daughter by another
man. Hull and Butler shared a bedroom in their home in Indianola. Butler's daughter stayed in a
bedroom across the hallway. A distance of approximately seven feet separated the two bedroom
doors.
¶3. On Saturday, May 5, 1990, Butler and her fourteen-year-old daughter were at home. Hull, who
was employed as a truck driver, telephoned Butler at approximately 9:30 p.m to say he was out of
state and would not return home until 1:30 a.m. Actually, Hull made this telephone call from
Indianola after completing his route. Hull then went to a friend's home where he played cards until
12:15 or 12:30 p.m. Butler and her daughter went to bed after receiving Hull's phone call.
¶4. Sometime between midnight and 1:30 a.m., Butler's daughter awoke to find Hull beside her twin-
sized brass bed. Hull told the young woman to be quiet or he would cut her throat. The young girl
stated that Hull had an object in his hand, which she later described as a knife. Hull undressed himself
and removed the victim's shorts and panties. Hull stated that if the victim could have sex with some
other boy, she could also have sex with him. Hull then had sexual intercourse with the victim without
her consent. The victim stated she submitted because Hull had told her he would cut her throat.
¶5. At approximately 1:30 a.m., Butler awoke to go to the restroom. She went out in the hallway and
saw Hull's keys on a counter and his boots by the door. Hull, in the meantime, donned his clothes
while the victim dressed herself. Butler then entered the victim's bedroom and turned on the light.
She saw Hull behind the victim's door with a gun in his hand. Butler asked him why he had a pistol in
his hand. Hull explained that he had heard a noise and was investigating. Butler testified nothing else
seemed awry in the room and that she soon returned to bed.
¶6. The next morning the victim reported to her mother the events of the night before. Butler took
her daughter to the police station where they filed a report with Officer Elvis Pernell. The victim was
then taken to South Sunflower County Hospital where an examination was performed and rape kit
samples were collected.
¶7. The next day, having been informed that the police were seeking him, Hull spoke to his brother-
in-law, Roger Mitchell, a Baptist minister. Mitchell testified that Hull confessed that he had sexual
relations with the victim.
¶8. Deborah Haller, a forensic scientist at the Mississippi Crime Lab, testified that seminal stains on
the victim's shorts came from a B-type secretor. Hull is a B-type secretor.(1) Haller further testified
that seminal stains on the victim's shirt and panties could not have been left by Hull. Haller was
unable to determine any ABO grouping (i.e. grouping of blood types A, B, AB, or O) from vaginal
and rectal swabs.
¶9. The evidence was then forwarded to the FBI Crime Laboratory for deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
analysis. Agent Jack Quill testified that using Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP)
analysis, the DNA in Hull's known blood sample matched the DNA pattern found in the vaginal swab
taken from the victim.
I.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That Other Scientists
Had Verified That His Work Was Properly Done and That the DNA Patterns Matched in
Violation of Mississippi Rule of Evidence 802 and the Confrontation Clauses of the
United States and Mississippi Constitutions.
¶10. Hull argues three separate sub-issues dealing with hearsay and the right to confrontation. The
first issue deals with the cross-examination of Dr. Lavette, a defense expert, about the writings of a
Dr. Sensabaugh, who was not present at trial. The second two sub-issues concern the direct
testimony of FBI Agent Jack Quill, who testified his work was reviewed by other FBI agents and a
former defense expert who agreed with his results. Each sub-issue is discussed separately below.
A.
Dr. Sensabaugh
¶11. Dr. Lavette was a defense expert who testified to the effect that the FBI improperly found a
match in the DNA evidence, even using their own protocol. During the State's expert voir dire of Dr.
Lavette, the following exchange occurred.
Q. Then, you and a number of other people have published something on Herpes Simple[x]
Virus?
A. That's correct.
Q. Is that an article?
A. Yes.
Q. "The Misuse of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science," published in The Journal of Forensic
Sciences.
A. Yes.
Q. Was that an article?
A. It was submitted as an article, however, it was published as a letter to the Editor.
Q. And, so it was not peer reviewed, was it?
A. It was very definitely peer reviewed and in fact, a peer review appeared immediately after
and in the text of my article. So, not only was it peer reviewed, the peer review was published.
Q. There was a response to your letter to the editor is what it was?
A. No, it wasn't a response. It was a solicited response that is not published one or two issues
later. It was published immediately in the text bound. Which is a highly unusual situation I
might add in academic publishing.
Q. That was by Dr. Sensabaugh?
A. I believe it was.
Q. He was highly critical of your letter, is that correct?
A. That is correct. I am highly critical of Dr. Sensabaugh also.
Q. Dr. Sensabaugh says Dr. Juricek's letter quote --
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, she is quoting hearsay material into the record at this point and this is going far
beyond a voir dire of an expert's qualifications as an expert witness and we object on those
grounds.
BY THE COURT:
I believe, Counsel, with the curriculum vitae list these as her qualifications and I think Ms.
Bridges is questioning what is in the curriculum vitae, is that not correct?
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Yes, sir.
BY THE COURT:
I am going to overrule that objection.
Q. Tell me if this is a correct quotation. "Dr. Juricek's letter to amend application of genetic
analysis and forensic science presents a naive and often erroneous characterization of genetic
typing analysis in both the research and forensic science context. This is most charitably
explained by presuming that Dr. Juricek has no real familiarity with the actual practice of
genetic typing. One's charity --
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, I hate to interrupt but what she is quoting is a letter written by somebody else.
The letter is not listed on this lady's CV. It is bringing an article out of the air, a letter written
about something that she has published. I don't think it is even proper cross-examination, much
less proper voir dire of an expert witness and we continue to object
BY THE COURT:
Let me ask Dr. Lavette, is this -- I don't have your CV in front of me. I am just assuming that
this is something that was listed in your curriculum vitae, right?
A. No, I do not list Dr. Sensabaugh's publications in my CV. Furthermore, this does not even
deal with DNA.
BY THE COURT:
I now have what is marked as D-12, the curriculum vitae and listed as Academic Journal
Publications #11, list Juricek, D.K. "The Misuse of Genetic Analysis in Forensic Science," The
Journal of Forensic Sciences 29: 8-12 (1984). Is this the article that she is now asking you
about?
A. She is quoting from an article by Dr. Sensabaugh that is written in response to that particular
article.
BY THE COURT:
What is listed here as an Academic Journal Publication. So as I understand the voir dire is a
question as to whether, in fact, this was an Academic Journal Publication or whether it was
published as a letter to the Editor and criticized by --
A. That is correct and I would like to reiterate that it doesn't even deal with DNA.
BY THE COURT:
I think the point has been made that that is not a publication but a letter to the editor as
published and that the publisher of the journal took issue with what was contained in the article.
A. That is correct. He also published it.
Q. (Ms. Bridges continuing) Who is Dr. Sensabaugh?
A. Dr. Sensabaugh holds a position at the University of California, Berkeley. I don't know the
exact title of his position. He has been for years, perhaps even the 60s, definitely into the 70s
and 80s involved in forensic science exclusively, I believe, on the prosecution side. He has been
consulted by the FBI on a number of cases and his position is fairly well known within those
groups of scientists who call themselves forensic scientists as being very very proforensic
science techniques and technology.
Q. What is the NRC?
A. It is National Research Council.
Q. What does it do?
A. The National Research Council was set up by Congress, I believe, to act as an advisory unit
in terms of drafting legislature.
Q. Dr. Sensabaugh is a member of NRC, is he not?
A. That is correct. I might also state that I had communication with the head of the committee
at the NRC with regard to Dr. Sensabaugh's being on that committee. I had some concerns in
terms of several things. For instance, he testified twice in California vs. Linda Axel which was
a DNA case that he had no financial compensation from Cellmark Corporation who had done
the DNA testing and then was confronted with his contract with Cellmark Corporation
indicating that he was getting paid. And, so I forwarded that information on to the NRC. Dr.
Sensabaugh and I have been at odds for years as you can guess from this article. We disagree
very, very strongly with each other's position. And, as far as I am concerned, that indicates that
there is considerable -- it is one indication of many that there is considerable debate in the
scientific community about what is being done in forensic science laboratories.
¶12. Hull argues that the use of Dr. Sensabaugh's letter/article was improper voir dire and constituted
hearsay evidence which the defendant was unable to cross-examine. In Lanier v. State, 533 So. 2d
473 (Miss. 1988), this Court faced a situation in which a lay witness was purportedly cross-examined
concerning the extreme mental disturbance of the defendant through the use of a letter which
contained a conclusion of medical doctors that the defendant was sane. Lanier v. State. The Court
stated:
A party does not have the right, under the guise of cross-examination, to introduce evidence
that is wholly irrelevant to the issues nor will he be permitted to introduce evidence which under
the rules governing admissibility of evidence is incompetent. [Incompetent evidence may not, on
cross-examination, be placed before the jury under the guise that it impeaches or discredits the
witness,] nor may a witness on cross-examination be asked questions calling for merely hearsay
evidence.
81 Am. Jur.2d Witnesses 47 at 481 (1976).
One point bears emphasis at the outset. The prosecution did not use the Whitfield report for
impeachment. Rather, the effect (and, we presume, the purpose) of the prosecution's use of the
report was to place before the jury a substantive conclusion different from that offered by the
witnesses. This the prosecuting attorney may attempt to do on cross-examination, provided
evidence of the conclusion has already been received or he has a well-founded basis for
believing he can establish independently the conclusion with which he confronts the witness, see
Hosford v. State, 525 So.2d 789, 792 (Miss.1988); Foster v. State, 508 So.2d 1111, 1115
(Miss. 1987), and he later offers such evidence.
Impeachment tests the believability of the witness on any subject. The conventional methods for
impeaching a witness involve showing the interest or bias of the witness, his character, or prior
inconsistent statements. By way of contrast, here the prosecution tried to suggest that others
(more competent than the witness) disagreed with the witness' conclusion -- for the purpose of
disproving the witness' conclusion. The cross-examination attacked the weight and worth of the
witness' testimony. What the prosecuting attorney did comes close to merely arguing with the
witness.
Lanier, 533 So. 2d at 487; see also Balfour v. State, 598 So. 2d 731, 753 (Miss. 1992) (holding that
defendant's confrontation clause rights were violated by the prosecutor's "parade" of "testimony" of a
silent witness); Bobb v. Modern Products, Inc., 648 F.2d 1051, 1055 (5th Cir.1981) ("cross-
examination which attempts to impeach by slipping hearsay evidence into trial shall not be
permitted").
¶13. There are several critical distinctions between this case and the above cited cases. First,
Sensabaugh's letter did not introduce hearsay evidence that there was a match between Hull's DNA
and the DNA found on the victim. His opinion was merely that Dr. Lavette's work was naive and
erroneous. Thus, the State did not introduce any evidence which was of value in proving a match did
or did not exist, whereas in Lanier the prosecutor introduced hearsay evidence that the jury could use
substantively to prove the defendant was not suffering from an extreme mental disturbance. Also,
while the State did not seek to offer this evidence under another hearsay exception, it might be
possible to admit these statements under the learned treatise exception which expressly includes
"periodicals." Miss. R. Evid. 803(18). In any event, Dr. Lavette effectively overturned the table set
by the prosecutor by serving her own course of hearsay of Dr. Sensabaugh's alleged perjury in a
California case.
¶14. This Court finds this line of questioning was not improper.
B.
Other FBI agents
¶15. Jack Quill, FBI agent, testified that a match existed between Hull's DNA and the DNA
recovered from the seminal fluid found in the victim's vagina. The following colloquy ensued:
Q. We have talked a lot about peer review of articles and things of that nature. Has your work
in this particular case been reviewed by other scientists?
A. Yes, It has.
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, I object on the grounds of hearsay if she goes any further than that.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Your Honor, I think it is relevant.
BY THE COURT:
Ladies and gentlemen, I am going to let you step back to your jury room again.
(JURY RETIRED TO JURY ROOM.)
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, may I state for the record what the nature of my objection is?
BY THE COURT:
Yes, sir.
BY MR. JONES:
I think that the Assistant District Attorney is getting ready to ask the witness whether other
scientists, other people, have looked at his work and whether they criticized him or said
anything was wrong with it, whatever, and that is hearsay -- or approved it. That is hearsay
evidence. If they want somebody to say I have looked at it and it was okay, bring them into
Court.
¶16. The court then allowed a proffer in which it was determined that the State sought to show that
various persons had peer reviewed Agent Quill's work and determined that a match existed. Also, the
State sought to use the testimony of Dr. Acton, a former defense expert who had testified in a
previous hearing of this cause and who agreed with Agent Quill's finding of a visual match. The
Court then ruled as follows:
BY THE COURT:
The Court finds that as long as Agent Quill is testifying about what the FBI procedure is and
that FBI procedure was followed in his case, that the fact that the case was reviewed by Dr.
Harold Deadman and by the Unit Chief, would certainly not be hearsay. He has a right to testify
about what the FBI procedure is and how it was followed. The Court also finds that the
testimony of Dr. Acton in this Court, while employed by Jackie Lee Hull, concerning the work
he had done while in that employment, concerning the review of the FBI's work and, in
particular, Agent Quill's work in this case, would be admissible. As to Dr. Tracy, I don't know
who Dr. Tracy is or where he comes from.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
He was sitting here at counsel table with us back in March of last year.
BY THE COURT:
That is a long time ago. My mind doesn't go back that far.
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, just for the purpose of the record, we respectfully -- if this evidence comes in, we
respectfully move for a mistrial at that point and I would just like to have a continuing objection
so I don't have to keep standing up and objecting to this line of testimony.
BY THE COURT:
You have a continuing objection. The Motion for a Mistrial will be denied because I think it is
proper according to the Rules of Evidence. Let's have the jury.
(JURY RETURNED AND THE FOLLOWING PROCEEDINGS WERE HAD IN THEIR
PRESENCE.)
DIRECT EXAMINATION CONTINUING BY MS. BRIDGES:
BY THE COURT:
You may proceed, Ms. Bridges.
Q. Agent Quill, I believe I had asked you if your work in this particular case, your match in this
particular case, had been reviewed by other scientists?
A. Yes, it has.
Q. What is the procedure for reporting out your work, your findings, in your DNA analysis?
A. Upon completion of all my work, it has to be reviewed by another DNA Profiler in the Unit.
All of my work, all of my statistical inter- pretations, all of my visual interpretations are
reviewed by another. That individual has to sign and date that he reviewed my work and that he
agrees and confirms the matches that I had made in -- for example, in this particular case. I put
together the package with my dictation. I get the report typed. All of my results and work,
notes, then go to the Unit Chief of the DNA Analysis Unit, who then reviews my report once
again, looks over my data, and then he will sign off if he feels that everything is right and
correct. Then, it is mailed back to the contributor and that is my final work product is my report
that goes out and returns to a particular contributor.
Q. Who were the two people -- who were the -- I believe you said the head of the agency--
A. The head of the DNA Analysis Unit is David Bigbee, the Unit Chief of DNA Analysis Unit.
Q. Who is the other scientist who reviewed your work at the FBI Laboratory?
A. Harold Deadman.
Q. What is his title?
A. He is a supervisor, Special Agent, like myself. He also has his Ph.D.
Q. Has your work been reviewed by other scientists?
A. Yes, it has.
Q. This particular case?
A. Yes, it has.
Q. As to the match quality -- excuse me -- as to the factor of the match, who were the other
people who have reviewed it?
A. The other people that have reviewed it was a Dr. Acton, Dr. Martin Tracy, and Dr. Lavette.
Q. Who is Dr. Acton?
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, I object on the grounds of hearsay unless he can show by personal knowledge.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
He was here, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT:
I think he can probably show by personal knowledge who Dr. Acton is. The objection will be
overruled.
A. Dr. Acton is from the University of Alabama and he uses the FBI protocol and procedures in
his own testing. He uses the same biological scissors that the FBI uses. He produces pieces of X
ray film very similar to what the FBI produces. He reviewed my work and he offered testimony
in a prior hearing.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
. . . prior hearing.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, if Ms. Bridges wants to testify, that will be fine. I think he can testify on his own.
BY THE COURT:
Sustained.
A. . . . in a prior hearing here back in March of '91 -- actually, March, '92. It was last year.
Almost a year ago. He agreed with my match at that time. His concerns were in the area of the
population genetics which are not an issue in this particular case.
Q. Did he agree with the match that you found of the DNA as to the defendant himself?
A. Yes, he did in his review of my pieces of X ray film.
¶17. The defense first argues that Agent Quill's testimony that other FBI personnel reviewed his work
and agreed a match existed is hearsay and denied him his right to confront those witnesses against
him. Hull agrees that experts are allowed to rely on hearsay evidence as long as it is "relied upon by
experts in the particular field in forming opinions." Miss. R. Evid. 703. He notes, however, that
Agent Quill did not testify that he regularly relied on these experts nor did he use their knowledge to
form his own opinion. Hull relies predominately on Kim v. Nazarian, 576 N.E.2d 427 (Ill. App. 3d
1991), where the court stated:
Rule 703 allows an expert to base his opinion on the opinions of others which are not in
evidence so long as experts in the field ordinarily rely on such opinions in forming their own
opinions. For example, a psychiatric expert may rely on the reports of a patient's psychiatric
history in arriving at his diagnosis. In such circumstances, the opinion of the nontestifying
expert would serve simply as a premise supporting the testifying expert's opinion on a broader
issue. In the instant case, however, the opinions of the nontestifying experts do not serve as
merely a narrow premise upon which the testifying experts' opinions are based. Instead, the
nontestifying experts offered corroborating opinions on the same issue as that addressed by the
testifying experts.
Accepting for the moment, arguendo, defendants' contention that their experts reasonably relied
on their consultation with other experts in forming their opinions, we believe that neither
Wilson nor Rule 703 allows an expert's testimony to simply parrot the corroborative opinions
solicited from nontestifying colleagues.
576 N.E.2d at 433-34.
¶18. We agree with the State that this testimony only related to standard FBI procedures and controls
and did not introduce the expert opinions of other personnel. Thus, the statements are not hearsay as
they were not offered to prove that a match, in fact, existed, but rather were offered to show whether
proper testing procedures were followed.
¶19. This is not to say that such evidence might be used improperly to bolster a witness's testimony
by showing that other experts were in complete agreement that the DNA samples matched in a
manner which constitutes hearsay and impermissibly bolsters the State's witness. While it would be
better to question the expert on the efficacy of the procedures used by a given laboratory prior to the
time of his delivering the opinion, in this case the State did not use Quill's testimony as hearsay.
¶20. As to the confrontation clause question, Hull cites Hall v. State, 611 So. 2d 915 (Miss. 1992),
and Barnette v. State, 481 So. 2d 788 Miss. 1985), to argue he was denied his right of confrontation.
It is true that Hall notes the vital correlation between the rule prohibiting the admission of hearsay
evidence and the right of a defendant to confront those witnesses against him. 611 So. 2d 915, 922
(Miss. 1992). However, Hall offers no support here. Hall was concerned with the right of a
defendant to face his accuser. Id. In the present case, Hull had the opportunity to cross-examine the
victim.
¶21. Hull's other citation, while more analogous, also misses the point. In Barnette v. State, this
Court reversed, holding a defendant's confrontation clause rights were violated where the analyst
who performed certain tests was not available to testify. 481 So. 2d at 791. Here, Hull faced the
scientist who actually performed the tests, i.e., Agent Quill.
¶22. Although the State may not impermissibly bolster an expert's conclusion through irrelevant
repetitions of corroborative opinions solicited of nontestifying colleagues, the value of face-to-face
confrontation in this scenario is low, and this Court declines to create a mechanical confrontation rule
in the expert opinion arena. This line of questioning appears to have come closer to the line than was
necessary. However, even though it would be preferable to review the methodology of a lab without
reference to the testifying expert's conclusions concerning a piece of evidence, the testimony here
was adequately linked to the testing methodology of the DNA analysis unit.
C.
Dr. Acton
¶23. Dr. Acton was a defense expert who withdrew from the defense team when the trial court
ordered the release, pursuant to a subpoena, of a DNA database he developed in conjunction with an
educational institution in Alabama. Dr. Acton's testimony would have been that a "match" was not an
absolute, and that probabilities needed to be assigned to make the significance meaningful.
Furthermore, to make the statistical probabilities meaningful, the DNA must be collected from the
local geographic area and separated for various demographic features. Dr. Acton would have testified
that no such database of DNA samples of the relevant Mississippi population existed. In conclusion,
Dr. Acton would have testified that the DNA evidence in this case, even though correctly portrayed
as a "match," did not incriminate the defendant in a conclusive manner as the State contended.
¶24. On appeal the defendant argues that State's use of Dr. Acton's testimony was improper on
several distinct evidentiary fronts. In the present context, Hull argues that Agent Quill's repetition of
Dr. Acton's conclusion was hearsay, not within any exception.
¶25. Under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(D), a statement is not hearsay if the statement is
offered against a party and is "a statement by his agent or servant concerning a matter within the
scope of his agency or employment, made during the existence of the relationship." As to this portion
of Hull's argument, we find the statements of a retained expert are admissions pursuant to Rule
801(d)(2)(D).
II.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That a Former Defense
Expert Agreed That a DNA Match Existed in Violation of Mississippi Rule of Evidence
403.
¶26. In his attack on the prosecution's use of Dr. Acton's agreement with the FBI that a visual match
existed as to Hull's DNA, Hull relies on Mississippi Rule of Evidence 403. While he admits that in his
objection he did not specifically mention Rule 403, Hull states that the ground of his objection is clear
when he stated to the trial court:
Your Honor, the danger with the testimony is the fact that they are going to leave an impression
with the jury that we have an expert witness that sides with the other side of the case and that
he is out of this case because either we fired him or either we don't want him back in the
courtroom. That is just totally devastating to the defendant and it is reversible error as far as I
am concerned.
¶27. Hull argues that testimony that Dr. Acton agreed that a match existed implied that the defense
fired Dr. Acton because he agreed with the prosecution, thereby inferring that Dr. Lavette was a
hired gun. This idea was allegedly planted earlier when the prosecution asked Dr. Lavette the
following questions.
Q. Dr. Lavette, are you aware that Dr. Acton was originally hired as the defense expert in this
case?
A. Yes, I am.
Q. Are you aware that he refused to come when the Court ordered him to give up his data?
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, may we approach the bench on this?
BY THE COURT:
Yes, sir.
(COUNSEL APPROACHED THE BENCH OUT OF THE HEARING OF THE JURY.)
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, she is putting in testimony that is not in the record and implying that we have a
witness that we are trying to hide something and I think it is highly improper and possibly
grounds for a mistrial.
BY THE COURT:
What is the relevancy of anything dealing with Dr. Acton?
BY MS. BRIDGES:
This is cross-examination, Judge.
BY THE COURT:
Let's limit your cross-examination to something else and move it on and try to get her out of
her.
(BACK BEFORE THE JURY.)
BY THE COURT:
Objection will be sustained and the jury will disregard that last comment.
¶28. This last instruction by the trial court to the jury served to limit the danger of unfair prejudice of
the testimony regarding Dr. Acton. We hold the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding,
pursuant to the language of Rule 403, that the danger of unfair prejudice of the evidence did not
substantially outweigh its probative value.
III.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Not Granting a Mistrial Based on a Judicial Comment
During Voir Dire and Prosecutorial Misconduct During Closing Argument.
¶29. During voir dire, the trial court stated:
Let me explain that if you listened to the grand jury charge, that a criminal case comes on for
hearing by way of an indictment or charge returned by the grand jury. Please understand that
the indictment by the grand jury is no indication whatsoever that a person charged with the
crime is guilty. You heard me charge the grand jury. You heard me tell them that they would
hear only one side of the case; that the State would present its evidence. The defense does not
present its evidence. The defendant is not present at the grand jury proceeding. And, anyone
who is being investigated by the grand jury testimony would be a very suspect before the grand
jury. So, they hear one side of the case and their only job is to determine whether there is
sufficient evidence presented in that one side to cause that case to come to trial so that the
defendant can have his day in Court. So, you should not consider the fact that this defendant or
any other defendant and when I say defendant, I mean the person charged with the crime, is in
anywise guilty simply because he has been charged by the grand jury of Sunflower County. The
law in the State of Mississippi presumes, and anywhere in this country, that a defendant is
innocent at the time the trial begins. That is a principle of law which is dear to this country and
which you will apply in this case and every other case. Can each of you tell me that you will
presume the defendant to be not guilty as we start this case. Can everybody tell me that?
A. No response.
Q. Can anybody not tell me that?
A. No response.
Q. Let's see your hands if you can tell me if you will presume the defendant to be not guilty as
we start this case?
A. Everybody raised their hands.
Q. Let's see your hands if you can't tell me that?
A. No one raised their hands.
(Emphasis added by appellant's brief.)
¶30. After completion of voir dire, but prior to the seating of the jury, the defense stated:
(THE FOLLOWING PROCEEDINGS OCCURRED IN CHAMBERS OUT OF THE
PRESENCE OF THE JURY:)
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, before we pick the jury, we have a motion to make and before -- it is a Motion for
a Mistrial and before I make the Motion for a Mistrial, I would ask that the court reporter read
a statement into the record and for the Court to listen what it said earlier and I would like to
make my motion respectfully. I have asked the court reporter to get to a specific area and this
was in the voir dire --
BY THE COURT REPORTER (Reading from notes):
The State would present their evidence and the defendant would not be present. The defendant
is not present at the grand jury proceedings and anyone who is being investigated by the grand
jury, their testimony would be a suspect before the grand jury."
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, comes now the defendant and moves for a Mistrial and part from this trial would
ask that the statement that has just been read into the record be made a part of this particular
Motion.
BY THE COURT:
Was that the statement and the charge to the grand jury?
BY MR. DYER:
Yes, sir. I would like to first state to the Court that in the statement you charged the grand jury
that the other jurors were present and were in the courtroom at the same time the Court was
addressing the grand jury. The statement in and of itself suggesting that a defendant who ended
up testifying in front of the grand jury, his testimony would be suspect. The only reasonable
inference that I can make from the Court's remarks to the grand jurors and we feel under the
circumstances and in light of the fact, the defendant in this case would testify that could very
well taint the view points of the potential jurors that we select in this case since they have
already heard it said by the Court that any person, in affect, had business before the Court is not
worthy to believe or words of that nature.
BY THE COURT:
Anything further?
BY MR. DYER:
No, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT:
First of all, the charge to the grand jury provided for specifically of the Uniform Criminal Rules
and the Court read specifically from those rules. That statement has to do with people charged
with a crime appearing before the grand jury because defendants do not appear before the grand
jury. In this case, there was no suggestion of error at any time during the voir dire so that the
Court could explain that comment more fully. The Rule is if there is not a contemporaneous
objection to error, then, that error is not preserved. Granted that the charge to the grand jury
was prior to the empaneling of this jury. The Court finds that the Motion is not well taken and
is, therefore, denied.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, for purposes of the record, would the Court state on the record that this statement
was made when the other jurors were present in the courtroom.
BY THE COURT:
For the purpose of the record, the petit jury was still seated in the jury room when the charge to
the grand jury was read.
¶31. The defense argues that the trial judge impugned the presumption of innocence in the
emphasized portion above. In keeping with the theory that jurors are more apt to be persuaded by
comments of the trial judge, the defense asks this Court to hold that these statements constitute
reversible error. Cone v. State, 271 So. 2d 453 (Miss. 1973); see Collins v. State, 99 Miss. 47, 54
So. 665 (1911).
¶32. This Court notes that the trial court's statements were not contemporaneously objected to. We
find the defendant's failure to object bars a review of this comment. King v. State, 615 So. 2d 1202,
1205 (Miss. 1993).
¶33. During closing, the prosecution argued:
The only person with any motive to lie, ladies and gentlemen, is this defendant. And, he has
every reason to lie. And, he has lied to you.
BY MR. DYER:
Object to the defendant had every reason to lie, Your Honor. That is an improper statement for
her to make and I object to that and ask the Court to ask the jury to disregard that statement.
BY THE COURT:
Overruled.
MS. BRIDGES (CONTINUING):
He does have every reason to lie, ladies and gentlemen. He is on the line here.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, the record has got my objection, continued objection to this.
BY THE COURT:
All right.
MS. BRIDGES (CONTINUING):
Nobody else has a motive to come in here and endure what has been going on here for four
days except this defendant to get out of this. You know, he lied to Gwen when he told her he
would not be home that night. He lied to her the next day when he told her he was in Belzoni.
And, I remember, ladies and gentlemen, his testimony from yesterday about if he had caught a
man in his house, he would have killed him. You may remember that. That is something that
you can reflect on. I think he has lied to you, ladies and gentlemen, about what he did.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, I object to the district attorney's statement about what she thinks. It has got to be
based on testimony, not what she thinks, Your Honor. -- her opinion.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
I will rephrase it, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT:
All right.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Do you think he lied to you? That is your decision. Go back in the jury room, ladies and
gentlemen, and take a vote. Nowhere in the law does it tell you if he was drunk, it is an excuse.
Nowhere in the law does it tell you that this child has got to fight him with every ounce of
blood in her body. But, if you believe that she submitted to sexual intercourse with this man,
this one right here(points to defendant), because she was afraid, and that he actually had sexual
intercourse with her, then, this man is guilty, ladies and gentlemen. He is guilty of rape. I ask
you to go vote guilty. I think you know who is telling the truth. I think you know who is telling
the truth. Thank you.
BY THE COURT:
Ladies and gentlemen, you have now heard everything there is for you to hear about this case.
It is time for you to retire to your jury room to discuss with the end of trying to reach a verdict
if you can do so without violence to your individual judgment. You will be given all the Exhibits
offered and received. You will be given a yellow pad on which to write your verdict. Should
you reach a verdict in this case, write it on that yellow pad and knock on the door and tell the
bailiff that you have reached a verdict and we will call for you when we are ready. Mr. Powell
and Mrs. Hill, if you will keep your seats and the rest of you may step into the jury room.
(JURY RETIRED TO DELIBERATE A VERDICT.)
BY MR. JONES:
Your Honor, I need to make a Motion on the record.
BY THE COURT:
Just a minute. Let the Court Reporter get the Exhibits all together for the jury.
BY MR. JONES:
Comes now the defendant, Jackie Hull, and moves the Court for a mistrial on the grounds
stated during the argument of the Assistant District Attorney, the argument referring to the
defendant is one that would have a motive for lying simply because he was the defendant. And,
the other statements that she made along those lines that were objected to during the course of
her argument. And, we also renew our previous motions for a mistrial.
BY THE COURT:
The Court notes it sustained the objection to motive for lying and I certainly would not grant a
mistrial. Motion is denied.
¶34. Hull argues that it is reversible error for a prosecutor to argue that for the sole reason a person
is a defendant, he has a motive to lie. Hull links this argument to the one above arguing the comment
strips him of his presumption of innocence. Hull further expresses astonishment that the trial court
"notes it sustains the objection to motive for lying" when the record shows the opposite. Hull cites
the case of Sumrall v. State, 343 So. 2d 481 (Miss. 1977) where this Court stated:
The right accorded an accused to testify in his own defense would be of little value if the trial
court itself might blight his testimony by instructing the jury that in deciding upon the credibility
of the witness, it should consider the interest the witness has in the outcome of the case, since
only the accused has such an interest and such interest is obvious and vital to him and to him
alone.
343 So. 2d at 482.
¶35. Sumrall, however, is readily distinguishable as it dealt with a jury instruction advising the jury to
weigh the motives and interests of the defendant in assessing credibility. A court's instruction to the
jury is different from a prosecutor's argument that the defendant has a motive to lie.
¶36. Hull mischaracterizes the State's argument as one in which the State argues that because he is a
defendant, he is therefore a liar. Rather, the argument was grounded in the facts admitted and
expressly mentioned in the closing argument regarding the fact that Hull lied to his wife about his
whereabouts earlier on the evening in question. It is not improper for a prosecutor to comment that
the defendant was lying when the contention is supported in the record. Shell v. State, 554 So. 2d
887, 899-900 (Miss. 1989); Simpson v. State, 497 So. 2d 424, 431-32 (Miss. 1986).
IV.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Granting Instruction S-2 and Denying Instruction D-
14.
¶37. The Court granted Instructions S-2 and D-9 which read:
INSTRUCTION S-2
The Court instructs the Jury that in a case involving rape, physical force on the part of the
assailant, or physical resistance on the part of the victim, is not necessary; that the act is said to
be forceful if the proof shows beyond a reasonable doubt that th e female surrendered because
of fear arising out of a reasonable apprehension of great bodily harm. If the female fails to resist
the attack of her assailant because she is put in such apprehension and fear, the act of the
assailant may be rape under the law. If you believe from the evidence in this case beyond a
reasonable doubt that on the date testified about the Defendant, Jackie Lee Hull, did unlawfully,
wilfully, feloniously and forcibly have sexual intercourse with Yolanda Butler, a female person
over the age of fourteen years, against her will and without her consent, and that Yolanda
Butler surrendered to said sexual act because of fear arising out of a reasonable apprehension of
great bodily harm then it is your sworn duty to find the Defendant, Jackie Lee Hull, guilty as
charged.
INSTRUCTION NO. D-9
The Court instructs the Jury that if after a consideration of all the evidence in this case you
believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Jackie Hull had sexual relations with [the victim];
nevertheless, you must still find him not guilty of raping [the victim] unless you also find,
beyond a reasonable doubt:
1. That [the victim] did not consent to such sexual intercourse, but that she instead used all
reasonable physical resistance available to her under the circumstances then and there existing
to prevent the sexual intercourse, or
2. That [the victim] submitted to such sexual intercourse because she reasonably feared that if
she did not submit, she would suffer great bodily harm,
If the evidence falls to convince you, beyond a reasonable doubt in this regard, then it is your
sworn duty to find the Defendant, Jackie Hull, not guilty.
¶38. The trial court refused instruction D-14, which reads:
INSTRUCTION D-14
You are instructed that the victim of an alleged rape is under a duty to use all reasonable
physical resistance available to her, under the circumstances then and there existing, to prevent
the rape unless the proof also shows, beyond a reasonable doubt, that she surrendered because
she reasonably feared that if she did not, she would suffer death or great bodily harm. A mere
tactical surrender by an alleged rape victim in the face of assumed superior force is not enough.
In other words, the complaining witness must resist with all physical resources reasonably
available to her under the existing circumstances.
Consequently, you are instructed that even if you find beyond a reasonable doubt that Jackie
Hull engaged in sexual intercourse with [the victim] on May 6, 1990, you may still not convict
him of rape unless you also find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that such act was done forcefully
and against the will of [the victim]. In this regard, if after a consideration of all the evidence in
this case, you still have a reasonable doubt as to whether or not [the victim] resisted with all
physical resources reasonably available to her under the circumstances, then it is your duty to
find the Defendant not guilty.
Standard of Review
¶39. This Court's standard in reviewing jury instructions is to read all instructions together and if the
jury is fully and fairly charged by other instructions, the refusal of any similar instruction does not
constitute reversible error. Lee v. State, 529 So. 2d 181, 183 (Miss. 1988). This Court does not
review jury instructions in isolation. Malone v. State, 486 So. 2d 360, 365 (Miss. 1986). Refusal of a
repetitive instruction is proper. Allman v. State, 571 So. 2d 244, 252 (Miss. 1990).
¶40. On appeal, Hull argues that Instruction D-2 took the element of force out of the jury's
consideration and that the jury was not properly instructed on the victim's duty to resist.
¶41. As to Instruction S-2, Hull argues that one of the elements of rape is that it is done "without
consent and by force," thus instruction S-2 failed to define the necessary elements of rape to the jury.
Hailey v. State, 537 So. 2d 411, 414 (Miss 1988); Miss. Code Ann § 97-3-65(2) (1972). While this
is true, this Court stated in Stewart v. State, 466 So. 2d 906 (Miss. 1985):
The well-settled rule is that in a prosecution for rape, physical force on the part of the assailant
or physical resistance on the part of the victim is not necessary if the proof shows beyond a
reasonable doubt that the victim surrendered because of fear arising out of a reasonable
apprehension of great bodily harm.
466 So. 2d at 909 (Miss. 1985). See Clemons v. State, 460 So. 2d 835 (Miss. 1984); Davis v. State,
406 So. 2d 795 (Miss. 1981); Fields v. State, 293 So. 2d 430 (Miss. 1974). In the present case, the
victim stated that the defendant had a dark object in his hand, which she thought was a knife. She
testified the defendant told her to be quiet or he would cut her throat. We find that there was no error
in granting this instruction as the jury could find the victim acted out of a reasonable apprehension of
great bodily harm.
¶42. Hull's support for Instruction D-14 comes from Christian v. State, 456 So. 2d 729, 733 (Miss.
1984), in which this Court found such an instruction to be a correct statement of the law. However,
Christian undercuts Hull's argument in that the Court there held that the trial court properly refused
the "tactical surrender" instruction, "because it fails to indicate, as in Davis, that force is not a
necessary ingredient of rape if the failure of the victim to resist resulted from reasonable apprehension
that she would be greatly injured or killed if she resisted." 456 So. 2d at 733. Thus read, Hull's
argument fails under the authority he cites in support of his contention.
¶43. Moreover, the trial court instructed the jury as to the amount of resistance the victim needed to
offer if she was not under threat of serious bodily injury. In D-9, the court instructed the jury that the
victim must use "all reasonable physical resistance available to her under the circumstances then and
there existing to prevent the sexual intercourse." We find that no error occurred in the denial of
Instruction D-14.
V.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Evidence of a DNA Match Without
Statistical Evidence Where Such Evidence Is Irrelevant and Whether the Trial Court
Erred in Allowing Testimony That Matches Were Extremely Rare Despite its Prior
Ruling That Probability Evidence Was Inadmissible
¶44. This case presents this Court with its second opportunity to pass upon the propriety of DNA
evidence and its usage in our courts. In Polk v. State, 612 So. 2d 381, 393 (Miss. 1992), this Court
held that evidence of a DNA match using Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP)
analysis was admissible. 612 So. 2d at 393 (Miss. 1992). In Polk, the trial court refused to admit
population statistics, and this Court did not discuss on appeal the admissibility of those statistics
because of that ruling. 612 So. 2d at 390. However, the Court did mention, in dicta, that an expert's
testimony as to those statistics went to its credibility. Id. at 393.
¶45. Polk was tried in 1990. Since then the National Research Council (NRC) has released a report
on populations statistics and its use with DNA analysis. The NRC was set up by Congress to act as
an advisory unit in terms of drafting legislature.
[T]he National Research Council (NRC), an organization administered jointly by the National
Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine,
appointed a committee to address the issues surrounding forensic DNA testing. In April 1992,
the committee released a report entitled "DNA Technology in Forensic Science."
State v. Vandebogart, 616 A.2d 483 (N.H. 1992). The report stated as follows:
Can DNA typing uniquely identify the source of a sample? Because any two human genomes
differ at about three million sites, no two persons (barring identical twins) have the same DNA
sequence. Unique identification with DNA typing is therefore possible provided that enough
sites of variation are examined.
However, the DNA typing systems used today examine only a few sites of variation and have
only limited resolution for measuring the variability at each site. There is a chance that two
persons might have DNA patterns (i.e., genetic types) that match at the small number of sites
examined. Nonetheless, even with today's technology, which uses 3-5 loci, a match between
two DNA patterns can be considered strong evidence that the two samples came from the same
source.
Interpreting a DNA typing analysis requires a valid scientific method for estimating the
probability that a random person might by chance have matched the forensic sample at the sites
of DNA variation examined. A judge or jury might appropriately weigh the significance of a
DNA match between a defendant and a forensic sample if told, for example, that the pattern in
the forensic sample occurred with the probability that it's not known exactly what is less than
one in a thousand. Saying that two patterns match without providing any scientific data test in
at least an upper bound of frequency with which the match might occur by chance is
meaningless.
Substantial controversy has arisen concerning the methods for estimating the population
frequency of specific DNA typing patterns. . . .
616 A.2d at 493 (emphasis added).
¶46. In the present case, the trial judge ruled exactly the same way, holding that evidence of a match
was admissible, but evidence of population statistics was not. During trial in the course of examining
FBI Agent Quill, the following evidence came before the jury.
Q. I want to ask you if you agree with some other statements out of this publication.
A. Sir, which publication is that?
Q. The NRC Report.
A. Okay.
Q. This is under Paragraph 1.4, Page 110 of this report.
A. Okay.
Q. The title of that paragraph is Population Genetics Relevant to the Interpretation of DNA
Typing.
A. I would have to see what you are going to be referring to.
BY THE COURT:
Agent Quill-- (hands report to witness).
A. Could you repeat that for me. I believe it was 1-10 wasn't it?
Q. Correct.
A. This is the pre-published --
Q. . . . pre-publication --
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Your Honor, may we approach the bench?
BY THE COURT:
Yes.
(COUNSEL APPROACHED THE BENCH OUT OF THE HEARING OF THE JURY.)
BY MS. BRIDGES:
I believe this has to do with statistics which I believe the Court has ruled that we are not going
to get into. This is Page 110, Paragraph 1.4.
BY THE COURT:
I don't know if he is qualified to give opinions because we are not dealing in statistics.
BY MR. JONES:
I was just going to ask him if he agreed or disagreed with the statement, Your Honor.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
To which we object, Your Honor. We have been prevented from bringing in our expert on
statistics and I think that is what this is dealing with and we object to it. Population genetics. I
had a population geneticist prepared to testify and the Court prohibited us from bringing that
expert in.
BY THE COURT:
I am going to overrule the objection and allow you to ask the question.
(BACK BEFORE THE JURY.)
Q. Agent Quill, look down three lines in that paragraph 1.4 and I just want to ask you if you
agree or disagree with this sentence? "If two samples are indistinguishable with regard to the
detected DNA patterns, two possibilities exist, the two samples came from the same person or
from identical twins, or the two samples came from different persons whose DNA patterns in
the target region investigated are the same." Do you agree with that or not?
A. Yes, I do.
....
Q. Would you agree with this statement. To say that two patterns match without providing any
estimate of the frequencies of the matches is just meaningless?
A. No, I don't agree with that statement.
Q. Do you realize that statement is on Page 3-1 of the NRC Report?
A. Well, I believe that a person can interpret results without a statistical assessment which
means -- you are referring to an issue of population genetics. But, to answer your question, that
is where one would want to give a probability statement. One can offer an opinion as to a match
or no match without a probability statement.
Q. So, you say where this report says to say there is a match without anything else, that is not
right?
A. My opinion is that a person can give an opinion of a match without a statistic.
Q. This report says, to say there is a match is meaningless. You just say that is not right?
A. No, I am saying it is visual and it is numerical. It just depends if a person wants to offer an
opinion to a match, a person can certainly do so.
Q. I will ask one or two more questions. My question to you is does the report say it is
meaningless?
A. If you can show me -- there are many things in the report -- if you want to do a direct quote,
that will be fine. I don't recall off-hand if it says that specifically.
Q. I just did a direct quote.
BY THE COURT:
You have the report available if you will refer him to the page. It is 3-1.
BY MR. JONES:
May I approach the witness, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT:
Yes.
Q. This paragraph right here. Does the report say that?
A. Yes, it does.
BY MR. JONES:
I tender the witness.
BY THE COURT:
Re-direct examination.
REDIRECT EXAMINATION BY MS. BRIDGES:
Q. Agent Quill, did you compute the statistical probabilities for this case?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. Have you been allowed to testify to that?
A. I have not.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, we object to that. That is the Court's ruling.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
That's right, Your Honor, and they brought it up.
BY THE COURT:
Counsel approach the bench.
(COUNSEL APPROACHED THE BENCH OUT OF THE HEARING OF THE JURY.)
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Your Honor --
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor, this is a ruling of the Court and we abided by the Court's ruling. This is what was
simply asked the Agent in the report does it state that a question of a match whether or not --
BY THE COURT:
This causes me great concern because he is not giving any statistical data that everything he has
said here is meaningless. I think the Court's ruling is that it is not meaningless. The Court is
bound by the Supreme Court Decision and I will allow her to ask if he has done a statistical
computation and he could give it but he is not being asked to give it. I think that is more
reasonable. I am going to overrule the objection.
BY MR. DYER:
Your Honor --
BY THE COURT:
I am not going to allow him to give it.
BY MR. DYER:
Let me see if I understand. The Court will allow Ms. Bridges to ask the question if he has
statistical data but he is not allowed because of the Court's ruling to give it.
BY THE COURT:
Yes.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
How are we going to clear this up, Your Honor?
BY THE COURT:
I am going to allow him to answer your question but not allow him to give the statistical facts.
(BACK BEFORE THE JURY.)
BY THE COURT:
Go ahead, Ms. Bridges.
Q. Agent Quill, did you compute the statistical probabilities of a source of a seminal fluid being
the defendant.
A. Yes, I did.
Q. Are you being allowed to testify to that?
A. No, I am not.
Q. Are you aware of any other experts which the State had engaged to testify about their
computations of statistical probabilities?
BY MR. DYER:
Objection, Your Honor. The same objection which was made before. This has gone way past
the original question.
BY THE COURT:
Ladies and gentlemen, I think the instruction to you at this point from the Court is necessary
and regardless of what the National Research Council prepublication copy of DNA Technology
in Forensic Science says, this Court has ruled that the Mississippi Supreme Court in a recent
case called Polk vs. State has set forth guidelines for the introduction of DNA testimony in this
state which guidelines do not include any ability to discuss population genetics. Therefore, this
Court is prohibiting in this case any testimony concerning population genetics or probabilities.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Thank you, Your Honor.
....
Q. Counsel asked you a question in the NRC Report on Page 1-10. You still got it.
A. Yes I do.
Q. He asked you if you agreed to that?
A. Yes.
Q. Can you explain this to the jury?
A. At this point, in the report--
BY THE COURT:
Excuse me, Agent Quill, for the sake of the jury it might be nice to read that quote again. There
have been a lot of quotes to the jury.
Q. There have been and I apologize, Your Honor. Would you like to read it?
A. If you can refresh my memory as to which one.
Q. It is on population genetics relevant to the interpretation of the DNA typing. I believe it is
the second sentence of paragraph 1.4.
BY THE COURT:
I think the line starts "however" --
A. (Reading) However, if two samples are indistinguishable with regard to the detected DNA
pattern, two possibilities exist. The two samples came from the same person (or from identical
twins) or the two samples came from different persons whose DNA pattern in the target regions
investigated are the same.
Q. Do you agree with this. Can you explain this to us?
A. Yes, that is why there can be other people having DNA profiles like yours at a specific
location. That is why you do four probing for four different chromosomes so that at four
different sites that you are looking at. That is why you do four different ones so you can see
that people are different and you are able to account for any similarities. At this point, with the
technology until one would have to continue to probe and probe and then it is based on
statistical calculations. What is the chance at random of another individual in the population
having a profile like a person. So, based on that, they are saying from the visual you either have
the same person, identical twins or you have someone who has the exact same DNA profile as
myself - for example - some other person. The way to account for this is to -- studies have been
done and I will refer back to the paper of Neil Risch and Bernie Delvin from science, February,
1992, where they have looked at the FBI database, Lifecodes' database and looked at all the
databases and found the chance to be extremely rare of finding two people having the exact
same two random individuals having the same DNA profile. This deals with statistics.
BY MR. JONES:
Object at this point. He is talking about probabilities.
BY MS. BRIDGES:
Counsel brought it up when he quoted it, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT:
I am going to overrule the objection at this point but I don't think he needs to go any further
than he has already gone.
¶47. Hull, on appeal, makes a two-fold argument.
¶48. First, Hull argues the trial court erred in admitting evidence of a match where such evidence is
meaningless. Hull argues that such evidence is irrelevant under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 401 and
is not helpful to the trier of fact under Rule 703. The State replies that this question has been
answered by Polk v. State. Indeed, this appears to be the same argument that was raised in Polk. This
Court holds that the evidence of a match was relevant for these purposes.
¶49. Hull next argues that when the trial court refused to allow population statistics, the evidence of
a match became substantially more prejudicial than probative. The unfair prejudice, Hull argues, is
that the FBI may argue that a match is "extremely rare," in the words of Agent Quill above, or, as the
prosecutor argued in closing, that "an innocent suspect has nothing to fear from DNA except an
equal twin. . . ." This type of testimony, Hull argues, leaves the jury with the impression that a match
is conclusive. This Court in Polk used the words "bordering on the absolute." 612 So. 2d at 388 n.1
¶50. Hull cites several cases, decided since the publication of the NRC report that have held that
DNA evidence should not be admitted at all unless reasonable probability estimates are also admitted.
New Hampshire v. Vandebogart, 616 A. 2d 483, 494 (N.H. 1992); State v. Cauthron, 846 P. 2d
502, 516 (Wash. 1993); Commonwealth v. Lanigan, 596 N.E.2d 311, 314 (Mass. 1992); People v.
Barney, 10 Cal. Rptr. 2d 731, 745 (Cal. App. 4th 1992) (abrogated by People v. Wilds, 37 Cal. Rptr.
351 (Cal. App. 4th 1995)).
¶51. Helpful to this Court is the consideration of this issue by the Wyoming Supreme Court, which
allowed the introduction of DNA matches without accompanying statistical evidence. See Rivera v.
State, 840 P. 2d 933 (Wyo. 1992). After being presented with the issue sub judice, however, the
Court Wyoming reconsidered and stated:
If we are to follow our previous applications of Stephens in Rivera then Agent Lynch's
testimony would be permitted only to the point that she declared a match of the DNA samples.
It would then be up to the jury to interpret the significance of this broad general statement.
Does a match mean that this defendant is the perpetrator? Could anyone else have possibly
contributed the sample. We must conclude, as did the Iowa court in Brown, that "the ultimate
results of DNA testing would become a matter of speculation" without statistical evidence.
Brown, 470 N.W. 2d at 33; see also Vandebogart, 616 A. 2d at 494 (finding that a "match is
virtually meaningless without a statistical probability expressing the frequency with which a
match would occur." We agree that:
[t]he statistical calculation step is the pivotal element of DNA analysis, for the evidence means
nothing without a determination of the statistical significance of a match of DNA patterns.
Barney, 10 Cal. Rptr. at 742.
Springfield v. State, 860 P. 2d 435, 448 (Wyo. 1994).
¶52. The parties in the instant case are in agreement that statistical evidence is analytically relevant.
The trial court appears from the record to have been very hesitant in allowing this evidence in the
absence of guidelines from this Court. Therefore, we now address this issue.
¶53. This Court reasons that if the witnesses can put the meaningfulness of a match in terms of strong
or weak, then it is unreasonable to prevent the parties from putting on statistical evidence to show
how strong or how weak the evidence is. Without this evidence, the ability of the jury to use this
evidence may be diminished to such a degree as to be unhelpful to the trier of fact under Rule 703, or
more prejudicial in that a jury may think it needs no evidence other than the "conclusion" that the
defendant's DNA was found upon the victim's person. Accordingly, we hold that where the trial court
finds that evidence of a DNA match is admissible as relevant, the court should also allow scientific
statistical evidence which shows the frequency with which the match might occur in the given
population. However, in light of the overwhelming evidence of guilt in the case sub judice, including
the eyewitness account by the victim and the corroborating admission of Hull as told by Roger
Mitchell, the failure of the trial court to admit such evidence did not so prejudice Hull's defense as to
constitute reversible error.
VI.
Whether Hull's Rights to a Speedy Trial under Section 99-17-1 of the Mississippi Code,
Federal and State Constitutions Were Violated.
¶54. Hull was arrested on May 7, 1990. One hundred eighty-two days passed until his arraignment on
November 30, 1990. Over two years passed until the time of Hull's trial on February 1, 1993. The
trial court found the following:
In addition to those dates set forth in Exhibit D-5, the Court thinks there's some additional dates
that need to reflect in this record, based on the file in this case. On February the 6th, 1991, the
Court had to rule on a defense motion seeking to obtain certain records -- medical records of
the victim in this cause. The case was set for trial on February the 21st, and the State's motion
for continuance was filed February the 13th of 1991, and there may be some overlapping here.
The reason given for that continuance was because of the blood work being in progress, that
being the same day the State filed it's motion for taking blood and saliva samples. The Court
found that that was good cause for continuance as it would have made it virtually impossible to
try Jackie Hull for this crime on February the 21st, even had there not been another case that
was tried, being the Charles Thomas case, and the Court will take judicial knowledge of the fact
that that case took approximately one full week, going into Saturday. On February the 25th,
1991, the Defendant filed a motion for additional discovery. On May 23rd the State requested a
continuance because the work done by the State Crime Lab was inconclusive, and the State
wished to have DNA testing done by the FBI. The order dated May the 27th found that the
samples had been sent to the Crime Lab at Quantico, Virginia, pursuant to the State Crime
Lab's request, but would not be completed by the September, 1991, Term, and found good
cause for continuance. The Court also in that order acknowledged that that delay could prove
exculpatory to the Defendant, depending on the results of the DNA testing. After the DNA
testings were furnished to the Defendant on or about July 25th, the Defendant made a motion
for additional discovery on August the 2nd. There was a hearing on that motion, and the motion
was denied on August the 22nd. On that date there was also a motion for additional discovery
made by the Defendant. On September the 3rd, 1991, the Defendant filed several other motions,
including a motion to extend the deadline for motions. On September the 9th of 1991, the
Defendant filed additional motions, and the affidavit of the Defendant's attorney attached to one
of those motions states in part that the investigation is still ongoing and that he had names of
additional witnesses which had not been furnished to the State, but would be furnished on
request. Then, on September the 27th, 1991, the Defendant filed a motion for continuance from
the October 8th setting, because his expert had not had time to investigate and prepare and
requested a setting in the February, 1992, term. On January the 6th of 1992, the Defendant filed
another motion for additional discovery. The critical date at this juncture is November the 30th,
1990, the date the Defendant was arraigned, and also the date of September the 27th of 1991,
being the date of the Defendant's filing of motion for continuance to the February term. Based
on the Defendant's calculations in Exhibit D-5, that is three hundred and one days, one hundred
and twenty of which were days in which the FBI was analyzing the samples furnished to them.
The State of Mississippi has no control over the FBI and could not speed up that testing that
the Court determined could have been exculpatory. Deducting a hundred and twenty days from
the three hundred and one days, that's a period of one hundred and eighty-one days. Likewise,
during that time there were defense motions filed which had to be disposed of, accounting for
additional delays which should be charged to the Defendant. The Court finds that any delays
chargeable to the State were reasonable and necessary and good cause shown therefor.
Therefore, the Court overrules the motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution within the two
hundred and seventy day period.
¶55. This Court has held that post-delay determinations of cause are permissible and, when supported
by substantial credible evidence, shall not be overturned. McNeal v. State, 617 So. 2d 999, 1007
(Miss. 1993); Folk v. State , 576 So. 2d 1243, 1247 (Miss. 1991); McGee v. State, 608 So. 2d 1129,
1132 (Miss. 1992). As to one of Hull's main complaints, that the State's investigation was improperly
handled, the trial court found there to be good cause shown. The other complaint is that when the
trial court issued a subpoena duces tecum against Dr. Acton, the delay in finding and preparing new
experts should be chargeable to the State because the subpoena was improperly issued. Hull does
not, on appeal, raise the subpoena issue independently of the 270-day motion. Thus, we find that the
ruling of the trial court was based on substantial credible evidence and this issue is without merit.
Constitutional Right to a Speedy Trial
¶56. The defendant also raises his right to a speedy trial. Below the court ruled as follows:
All right. The Court did previously rule on January the 10th that delays were shown for good
cause -- were for good cause shown, and there was a potential exculpatory evidence to be
gained by some of the delays. I think the Court should note that in the Barker v. Wingo case,
the delay in that case was five years, and the Supreme Court found that that was not a denial of
due process rights to a speedy trial, that there's no inflexible testing making that determination,
and, of course, the Federal Courts are now under a seventy-day limitation similar to our two
hundred and seventy day rule. But the Supreme Court in Henderson v. U.S., at 476 U.S. 321,
106 S. Ct. 1871, 90 L.Ed.2d 199, a 1986 case, stated all time between the filing of pretrial
motions and the end of hearing of those motions, whether the delay was reasonably necessary
or not is excluded from that seventy-day limitation. And I think that we are still dealing with
pretrial motions in this case, and because the U.S. Supreme Court has made that statement
concerning the speedy trial act, that certainly the same should be considered as part of the test
in determining the constitutional provisions of a speedy trial. The Court finds that that motion is
not well taken and will be denied.
¶57. Hull asserts that he was denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial where during the delay
from the time of his arrest on May 7, 1990, until the time of his trial on February 1, 1993, some 1,062
days (almost three years) passed. The delay being over eight months, the burden shifts to the State to
show the defendant has not been denied his right to a speedy trial. Smith v. State, 550 So. 2d 406,
408 (Miss. 1989). This Court analyzes this issue under the four Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514
(1972), factors as discussed below.
¶58. Length of Delay. One thousand sixty-two days passed in bringing the case to trial. This is a
presumptively prejudicial delay, which gives Hull's position some credence.
¶59. Reason for the delay. Some of this period is attributed to the time it took the FBI laboratory to
prepare potentially exculpatory DNA evidence. Other periods were spent in hearing and ruling on
pre-trial motions of the defense. This factor would seem to weigh very slightly, if at all, in favor of
Hull.
¶60. Defendant's Assertion of His Right. The defendant did not request a speedy trial, but only
moved to dismiss for a denial of a right to a speedy trial This factor thus weighs against the
defendant. Perry v. State, 637 So. 2d 871, 875 (Miss. 1994); Adams v. State, 583 So. 2d 165, 169-
70 (Miss. 1991).
¶61. Prejudice to the Defendant. While undoubtedly there is some anxiety and concern of the
accused, there is no other prejudice of which Hull complains on appeal. Thus, this factor has little
weight in favor of the defense.
¶62. Viewing our case law concerning the right to a speedy trial, this case fits somewhere between
Taylor v. State, 672 So. 2d 1246 (Miss. 1996), and Jenkins v. State, 607 So. 2d 1137 (Miss. 1992).
Taylor involved a defendant tried approximately 1,027 days following his arrest. 672 So. 2d at 1258.
Taylor was incarcerated while awaiting trial having had his parole revoked. This Court found Taylor
was not denied his right to a speedy trial. Id. at 1262.
¶63. On the other hand, in Jenkins, the defendant suffered a two and one-half year delay in the trial
of his case. 607 So. 2d at 1139. Jenkins suffered actual prejudice by the intervening death of the only
witness alleged to have tied defendant to the robbery. Id. at 1140.
¶64. We find that in light of these cases and of the four Barker factors discussed above, Hull was not
denied his right to a speedy trial.
CONCLUSION
¶65. Upon close examination of the issues presented in this case, we find merit only in the contention
that when the trial court admitted evidence of a DNA match, the court should also have admitted
statistical evidence of the frequency of such. However, in light of the overwhelming evidence of guilt
in this case, we find the resulting prejudice to Hull's defense to be insufficient to reverse on this issue.
Finding such error to be only harmless, we affirm.
¶66. CONVICTION OF CAPITAL RAPE AND SENTENCE OF TWENTY YEARS, WITH
THE LAST TEN YEARS SUSPENDED WITH CONDITIONS, IN THE CUSTODY OF THE
MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND PAYMENT OF ALL FEES AND
COSTS AFFIRMED.
PRATHER, P.J., PITTMAN, ROBERTS AND SMITH, JJ., CONCUR. LEE, C.J.,
CONCURS IN RESULT ONLY. SULLIVAN, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY McRAE, J; BANKS, J., JOINS EXCEPT FOR PART VI.
McRAE, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY SULLIVAN,
P.J., AND BANKS, J.
SULLIVAN, PRESIDING JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶67. I agree with the majority's finding regarding error number four that no error occurred in the
denial of Instruction D-14. However, I disagree with their conclusions regarding errors number one,
two, three, five and six. Therefore, I must respectfully dissent.
I.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That Other Scientists Had
Verified That His Work Was Properly Done and That the DNA Patterns Matched in Violation
of Mississippi Rule of Evidence 802 and the Confrontation Clauses of the United States and
Mississippi Constitutions.
A.
Dr. Sensabaugh
¶68. The first piece of the testimony that Hull correctly argues was inadmissable hearsay was an
excerpt of a published letter written by Dr. Sensabaugh. Dr. Sensabaugh wrote the letter in response
to a published letter by Dr. Lavette, an expert witness for Hull. Dr. Sensabaugh's letter characterized
Dr. Lavette's opinions on genetic typing analysis as naive and erroneous. Clearly this is hearsay, as
Dr. Sensabaugh's statement is offered to prove the truth of its assertion that Dr. Lavette's work is
naive and erroneous. As Hull points out in his brief, the argument that the excerpt was used for
impeachment supports the fact that the statement must have been offered to prove the truth of the
matter asserted; otherwise, it would have no impeachment value. The statement does not fall within
any of the hearsay exceptions set out in the Mississippi Rules of Evidence. Contrary to the majority's
finding, the testimony was not admissible under the learned treatise exception, because the proper
foundation was not laid to establish the reliability of the treatise, as is required by Rule 803(18).
¶69. Furthermore, Dr. Sensabaugh's letter was not proper impeachment testimony. It strays from the
traditional impeachment methods showing interest, bias, character, or prior inconsistent statements.
Lanier v. State, 533 So.2d 473, 487-88 (Miss. 1988). As in Lanier, this line of questioning was not
used for impeachment, but to "suggest that others (more competent than the witness) disagreed with
the witness' conclusion--for the purpose of disproving the witness' conclusion." Id at 488. Instead of
properly impeaching Dr. Lavette by testing her believability, this line of questioning "attacked the
weight and worth of the witness' testimony" and was used for "merely arguing with the witness." Id.
This Court has previously held that incompetent hearsay evidence may not be presented to the jury
under the guise of impeaching the witness. Id at 487. The majority finds that this case is
distinguishable from Lanier, because Dr. Sensabaugh's letter had no value in proving whether or not
Hull's DNA and the DNA found on the victim matched. However, this distinction does not lessen the
impact of Lanier in barring introduction of inadmissable, incompetent hearsay masquerading as
impeachment testimony. Id. Dr. Sensabaugh's letter constituted inadmissable hearsay, and the trial
court erred in allowing the prosecutor's line of questioning on the matter.
B.
Other FBI Agents
¶70. Hull next effectively argues the inadmissability of testimony by Agent Quill of statements by
other scientists verifying his work and conclusion that the DNA patterns matched. Agent Quill
testified that three doctors had reviewed his work and agreed with his conclusion that Hull's DNA
and the DNA found on the victim matched. This Court has previously held that hearsay testimony
may not be used to bolster a witness's in-court testimony. Jackson v. State, 423 So.2d 129, 130
(Miss. 1982). See also Henry v. State, 209 So.2d 614, 617 (Miss. 1968). The majority maintains that
these doctors' statements were not offered as hearsay, to prove the truth of the matter asserted, but
were instead used to show that Agent Quill properly followed standard FBI procedures and controls.
However, Agent Quill's testimony regarding the corroborative statements of other doctors is clearly
inadmissable hearsay used to bolster Quill's conclusion that a DNA match existed. Admission of these
hearsay statements was error on the part of the trial court.
C.
Dr. Acton
¶71. The third piece of testimony which Hull correctly categorizes as inadmissable hearsay is Quill's
statements about Dr. Acton agreeing that a DNA match existed. The majority concludes that these
statements are not hearsay, because having been a defense expert prior to his withdrawal, Dr. Acton
was an agent of Hull, thereby making his statements an admission and excluded from the definition of
hearsay. This conclusion is erroneous, because it is contrary to the traditional view of the difference
between an agent and an independent contractor. This Court has previously held that in determining
whether an individual acts as an agent or an independent contractor hinges on the question of control.
Fruchter v. Lynch Oil Company, 522 So.2d 195, 199 (Miss. 1988). Since there is no proof that Dr.
Acton was under Hull's control, Dr. Acton could not have acted as an agent of Hull, and therefore
Dr. Acton's statements are not attributable to Hull as an admission. The statements were inadmissable
hearsay, and the trial court erred in overruling Hull's objection to their admission.
Violation of the Confrontation Clause
¶72. In addition to violating the Mississippi Rules of Evidence, admission of these hearsay statements
also violated the confrontation clauses of the United States and Mississippi Constitutions. The
confrontation clause acts to preserve the right of a criminal defendant to confront witnesses against
him. U.S. Const. amend. VI; Miss. Const. art. 3, § 26. By its very definition, hearsay evidence
prevents the exercise of this right.
These confrontations clauses 'are in a sense hearsay rules elevated to constitutional status'
designed to prevent the admission of non-confronted out-of-court statements which lack
reliability, are not made under oath, and deny the accused defendant the opportunity to cross-
examine such a statement so as to test its truthfulness and reliability.
Williamson v. State, 512 So.2d 868, 873 (Miss. 1987) (quoting Mitchell v. State, 495 So.2d 5, 8
(Miss. 1986). Additionally, "the confrontation clause acts so as to even restrict proof which under
our evidence rules would be classified as 'admissible hearsay.'" Lanier, 533 So.2d at 488 (citation
omitted). Hull was given no opportunity to cross-examine the declarants of these hearsay statements,
thus violating the confrontation clause. "Few doubt that the essence of confrontation is the right to
cross-examine, that the best test of the truth of testimony is that it be cured in the crucible of cross-
examination." Williams v. State, 595 So.2d 1299, 1307 (Miss. 1990) (citing Hall v. State, 539 So.2d
1338, 1346 (Miss.1989); Prewitt v. State, 126 So. 824, 825 (Miss. 1930)). Clearly, then, in this case
the trial court's error in allowing inadmissable hearsay statements prevented Hull from exercising his
constitutional right to confront these witnesses against him.
II.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Agent Quill to Testify That a Former Defense
Expert Agreed That a DNA Match Existed in Violation of Mississippi Rule of Evidence 403.
¶73. In addition to being inadmissable hearsay, evidence of Dr. Acton's statements should also have
been excluded pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Evidence 403. Rule 403 allows relevant evidence to be
excluded if its prejudicial effect substantially outweighs its probative value.
[A] trial court presented with a Rule 403 objection to relevant evidence must engage in a
balancing process. The more probative the evidence is, the less likely it is that a 403 factor will
be of sufficient consequence to substantially outweigh the probative value. On the other hand,
the less probative value the evidence has, the less significant the 403 factor would have to be to
justify exclusion.
Foster v. State, 508 So.2d 1111, 1117 (Miss. 1987). During cross-examination, the prosecution
questioned defense expert Dr. Lavette about the circumstances of Dr. Acton's resigning as the
defense expert. The combined effect of Dr. Lavette's testimony elicited by the prosecution and Agent
Quill's testimony that Dr. Acton agreed with his findings was to leave the jury with the impression
that the defense had discarded Dr. Acton and replaced him with Dr. Lavette, a "hired gun." Such
improper testimony had the prejudicial effect of groundlessly bringing Dr. Lavette's credibility into
question and creating the impression that the defense was trying to conceal evidence. Evidence of Dr.
Acton's agreement with Agent Quill's finding of a DNA match was merely cumulative. Therefore its
prejudicial effect against Hull substantially outweighed any probative value, and it was error not to
exclude it.
III.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Not Granting a Mistrial Based on a Judicial Comment
During Voir Dire and Prosecutorial Misconduct During Closing Argument.
¶74. In addressing the jury before voir dire, the trial court stated, "The defendant is not present at the
grand jury proceedings and anyone who is being investigated by the grand jury, their testimony would
be a suspect before the grand jury." Hull correctly argues that this statement incorrectly informed the
jury that the testimony of any defendant appearing before a grand jury would automatically be
suspect. Such erroneous jury instruction had the effect of casting a shadow upon the defendant's
presumption of innocence.
¶75. The prosecution's comments characterizing Hull as a liar further denigrated Hull's presumption
of innocence. The prosecution argued, "The only person with any motive to lie, ladies and gentlemen,
is this defendant. And, he has every reason to lie. And, he has lied to you. . .He does have every
reason to lie, ladies and gentlemen. He is on the line here." This line of argument continued over
objection by Hull and had the effect of erroneously instructing the jury that as a criminal defendant,
Hull should be presumed a liar. Hull correctly asserts that these comments constituted prosecutorial
misconduct which removed his presumption of innocence and should not have been allowed.
The principle that there is a presumption of innocence in favor of the accused in a criminal
prosecution is 'fundamental.' Its enforcement lies at the foundation of the administration of our
criminal justice system. Though not expressly written into the Bill of Rights, the presumption of
innocence has long been recognized as the logical corollary of the principle that the prosecution
bears the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, a proposition which has been accorded
federal constitutional status. This Court has been sensitive to subtle erosions of the presumption
of innocence.
Hickson v. State, 472 So. 2d 379, 383 (Miss. 1985) (citations omitted). This Court has previously
held that tainting the presumption of innocence constitutes fatal error. See Cone v. State, 271 So.2d
453 (Miss. 1973). The combined statements of the trial court and the prosecutor worked to erode
Hull's presumption of innocence, resulting in fatal error.
V.
Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing Evidence of a DNA Match Without Statistical
Evidence Where Such Evidence Is Irrelevant and Whether the Trial Court Erred in Allowing
Testimony That Matches Were Extremely Rare Despite its Prior Ruling That Probability
Evidence Was Inadmissible.
¶76. I agree with the majority's conclusion that admitting evidence of a DNA match without allowing
statistical evidence to explain its meaning to the jury renders such DNA evidence nearly useless or
even unfairly prejudicial. It was therefore error on the part of the trial court in this case to admit
evidence of a DNA match between Hull's DNA and DNA found on the victim, without also admitting
statistical evidence to explain the strength or weakness of that evidence. However, I disagree with the
majority's flippant conclusion that the error was not prejudicial because of the overwhelming
evidence of guilt. Evidence of the DNA match was key to the prosecution's case. The opportunity to
attack the DNA evidence through the testimony of its own experts on statistics would have
significantly aided the defense. Therefore, to say that error in the court's decisions regarding the
admissibility of evidence related to DNA analysis was not prejudicial to Hull's case is illogical.
Furthermore justice is impugned by implying that evidence of a defendant's guilt negates the need to
protect his right to a fair trial. Even guilty defendants have rights which should be fervently protected
by this Court.
VI.
Whether Hull's Rights to a Speedy Trial under Section 99-17-1 of the Mississippi Code,
Federal and State Constitutions Were Violated.
A.
Section 99-17-1
¶77. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-17-1 states, "Unless good cause be shown, and a continuance duly
granted by the court, all offenses for which indictments are presented to the court shall be tried no
later than two hundred seventy (270) days after the accused has been arraigned." Hull was arraigned
on November 30, 1990. His trial began on February 1, 1993. 792 days passed between the time of
Hull's arraignment and the time of his trial, well exceeding the 270 day limit. As this Court pointed
out in Vickery v. State, 535 So.2d 1371, 1375-76 (Miss. 1988), delay caused by continuances
granted to the defendant should be subtracted from the time between arraignment and trial. As
discussed below, 369 days of the delay are attributable to the defense for continuances. That leaves
423 days of delay attributable to the State. Of that time period, the State only accounts for 120 days,
which the trial court found was necessary for analyzation of samples by the FBI crime lab. However,
as Hull points out, the State gives no explanation for its delay in conducting those investigations,
which could have begun even before Hull's indictment. Regardless, even if those 120 days were
reasonable continuances for investigatory purposes, there are still 303 days between Hull's
arraignment and trial which are unaccounted for by the State. Over 270 days elapsed between Hull's
arraignment and trial without sufficient showing of good cause. As a result, Hull's right to a speedy
trial was violated pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 99-17-1.
B.
Constitutional Right to a Speedy Trial
¶78. As a result of the near three-year delay between the time of his arrest and the time of his trial,
Hull was denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial. The majority is correct in applying the four
factors below set out in Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514 (1972), to analyze the speedy trial issue.
However, I disagree with the majority's analysis and conclusion under those factors.
¶79. Length of Delay. This Court has held that a delay of eight months or longer is presumptively
prejudicial. Smith v. State, 550 So.2d 406, 408 (Miss. 1989). Therefore, the majority is correct in
concluding that the delay in this case of approximately 1,000 days, or nearly three years, is
presumptively prejudicial, and this factor will weigh against the State.
¶80. Reason for the Delay. Part of the delay can be attributed to the defendant for disposal of pre-
trial motions and requested continuances. Approximately 480 days of the delay can be attributed to
continuances granted at the request of Hull. However, Hull correctly argues that the delay caused by
his second motion for continuance should weigh against the state, because the need for a continuance
was caused by what the court called "a bombshell in the midst of a trial" dropped by the State. That
"bombshell" included first-time disclosure by the State on the second day of trial of three vital pieces
of evidence: an answering machine tape containing confessions by Hull of his involvement with
Yolanda Butler, the fact that a butcher knife was found under Mr. and Mrs. Hull's bed shortly after
the rape, and Hull's confession to Roger Mitchell. Although the continuance was granted at Hull's
request, the reasons for this 111 day continuance being necessary were all caused by the State's
failure to disclose this evidence prior to trial. That leaves approximately 369 days of delay
attributable to the defendant and 631 days attributable to the State. In the similar case of Vickery,
423 days of a 1,283 day delay between arraignment and trial were attributable to the defendant, and
this Court found that the defendant's right to a speedy trial had been violated. 535 So.2d at 1373-78.
Even if some of the delay in bringing Hull to trial was due to the time necessary for handling pre-trial
motions, the limited number of court terms available in Sunflower County, or reasonable delay for
purposes of discovery and investigation, there still remains an unreasonable length of delay
unaccounted for by the State. "[W]here the defendant has not caused the delay, and where the
prosecution has declined to show good cause for the delay we must weigh this factor against the
prosecution." Id. at 1377 (citing Perry v. State, 419 So. 2d 194, 199 (Miss. 1982)). Since the State
cannot show good cause for a majority of the 1,062 day delay between Hull's arrest and trial, this
factor must weigh against the State.
¶81. Defendant's Assertion of His Right. Hull asserted his right on September 3, 1991 in his motion
to dismiss for failure to provide a speedy trial, approximately one week after the 270-day rule was
violated, i.e. approximately 277 days after Hull's arraignment. The fact that Hull did not make any
motion asserting his right to a speedy trial prior to that date does not weigh against Hull, because it is
the duty of the State, not the defendant himself, to bring the criminal defendant to trial. Vickery, 535
So.2d at 1377. The State must assume that the defendant wants a speedy trial and not presume that
he is waiving that right. Id. Also, the trial court noted that Hull had effectively asserted his right to a
speedy trial in its order denying the State's motion for a continuance on August 28, 1992. Hull then
reasserted his right by renewing his motion for dismissal for violation of his right to a speedy trial just
prior to his trial on February 1, 1993. Even if Hull had never asserted the right, his right to a speedy
trial would have been violated. This Court has previously held that where the only factor weighing
against the defendant was assertion of the right, the defendant's right to a speedy trial was violated.
Hull did effectively assert his right to a speedy trial, so this factor should weigh in favor of Hull.
¶82. Prejudice to the Defendant. The majority finds that this factor should not weigh heavily in favor
of the defense, because the only prejudice shown by Hull is some anxiety and concern. I disagree. In
Barker, the United States Supreme Court outlined three interests shielded by the speedy trial right.
407 U.S. at 532. Hull was prejudiced by the failure of the State to protect two of those interests--
prevention of oppressive pretrial incarceration and minimizing anxiety and concern of the accused.
"Moreover, it is clear that an affirmative showing of prejudice is not necessary in order to prove a
denial of the constitutional right to a speedy trial." Flores v. State, 574 So.2d 1314, 1323 (Miss.
1990) (citing Trotter v. State, 554 So.2d 313, 318 (Miss. 1989)). See also Moore v. Arizona, 414
U.S. 25, 94 S.Ct. 188 (1973). Even if Hull had made no showing of prejudice, he would not be
precluded from bringing an effective denial of speedy trial claim. See Burgess v. State, 473 So.2d
432 (Miss. 1985). However, Hull has shown prejudice in oppressive pretrial incarceration and anxiety
and concern, so this factor should weigh in his favor.
¶83. Hull has made an effective showing that all four Barker factors weigh in his favor. Applying the
balancing test set out in Barker, I find that Hull's constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated.
CONCLUSION
¶84. In light of the foregoing errors committed by the trial court in this case, Hull was denied a fair
trial and protection of his rights. I cannot agree with the majority's conclusion that these errors were
either non-existent or harmless. Therefore, I must respectfully dissent. I would reverse the conviction
of capital rape and reverse the sentence of twenty years in the Mississippi Department of Corrections
and remand the case to the Circuit Court of Sunflower County, Mississippi.
McRAE, J., JOINS THIS OPINION; BANKS, J., JOINS THIS OPINION EXCEPT FOR
PART VI.
McRAE, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶85. The majority's ruling today denies Mr. Hull the right to a fair trial on several fronts. The trial
court erroneously allowed the prosecution to voir dire a defense expert on hearsay evidence which
the defendant could not cross-examine. Further, the court incorrectly allowed Jack Quill to testify
that other scientists had verified his work as properly done and that DNA patterns matched his
conclusions. Both the prosecution's questioning of Dr. Layette and Quill's testimony violate the
Confrontation Clauses of our state and federal constitutions. Therefore, I respectfully dissent as to
points I and II.
Dr. Lavette
¶86. The State tried to damage the credibility of Dr. Lavette's testimony by cross-examining him
about a review published by Dr. Sensabaugh. This letter from Sensabaugh purported to criticize
Levette's claim that the FBI's protocol for examining evidence improperly found a DNA match on
Hull. The problem with the State's examination, however, is that it attempted to attack the credibility
of Levette on unimpeachable evidence. The article could not be cross-examined, and the author of
the article was not present to be cross-examined by Hull.
¶87. The majority asserts that the statements about Sensabaugh's letter could be admissible under the
learned treatise exception of our rules of evidence. However, the scope of that rule is limited. Levette
could have been cross-examined on the article only if he held the publication out to be authoritative.
No such statement was elicited from Dr. Levette at trial, and the record does not reveal that he felt
that way. Therefore, this line of questioning was improper.
Agent Quill
¶88. As a DNA profiler for the FBI, Quill testified that he was able to find a match between Hull's
DNA and the DNA from the seminal fluid found on the victim. He also gave testimony that other
scientists reviewed his analysis and findings, and that they agreed with his match. None of the
scientists or experts, except for Dr. Lavette, was present at trial.
¶89. This evidence was used improperly to bolster Quill's testimony by showing that other experts
were in complete agreement that the DNA samples matched. Although it would have been more
appropriate to question Quill on the correctness of the procedures used by his laboratory prior to the
examination of the DNA, in this case Quill's statements were clearly used to prove that a match
existed. Thus, the statements constituted hearsay and, as such, were not admissible. The State may
not impermissibly bolster an expert's conclusion through irrelevant repetitions of corroborative
opinions solicited from nontestifying colleagues.
¶90. Further, the testimony given by Quill violates the Confrontation Clause. Hull had no opportunity
to cross-examine the other experts who apparently did the DNA analysis. Quill gave hearsay evidence
that was not authenticated in any way. None of the scientists' reports were given in tangible form, and
Quill never even stated that he relied on the information to form his own opinion. Accordingly, Quill's
statements regarding review by other scientists should never have been admitted.
Dr. Acton
¶91. Admission or suppression of evidence is within the discretion of the trial judge and will not be
reversed absent an abuse of that discretion. Allowing the expert to testify would create the anomaly
that although a party cannot depose an adversary's non-testifying expert, a court can compel the
witness to testify at trial. Allowing the State to call Acton as a trial witness and to allude to the fact
that he had been retained and later dismissed by the defense would be highly prejudicial. Generally,
when an expert formerly retained by a party is allowed to testify for an adverse party, he is restricted
from mentioning the prior affiliation.
¶92. Dr. Acton withdrew from the defense team. The fact that he had been retained and later left the
defense is highly prejudicial. Testimony that Dr. Acton agreed that a match existed implied that the
defense fired him because he agreed with the prosecution, which further implied that Dr. Lavette was
a hired gun. His testimony, therefore, should not have been allowed.
¶93. For the above reasons, I accordingly dissent.
SULLIVAN, P.J., AND BANKS, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.
1. According to Haller, approximately one in every ten men is a B-type secretor.