Wallace G. Mitchell v. United States , 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 795 ( 2013 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    Nos. 05-CO-1261 & 05-CO-1262
    WALLACE G. MITCHELL, APPELLANT,
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeals from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (FEL-3556-90)
    (Hon. James E. Boasberg, Motions Judge)
    (Argued November 1, 2012                          Decided December 12, 2013)
    Steven R. Kiersh for appellant.
    Angela G. Schmidt, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Ronald C.
    Machen Jr., United States Attorney, Roy W. McLeese III, Assistant United States
    Attorney at the time the brief was filed, and Elizabeth Trosman, Elizabeth H.
    Danello, Mary B. McCord, and Kacie M. Weston, Assistant United States
    Attorneys, were on the briefs, for appellee.
    Before OBERLY, BECKWITH, and EASTERLY, Associate Judges.
    BECKWITH, Associate Judge: Appellant Wallace Mitchell, serving a life
    sentence for murder and other crimes, appeals the Superior Court‟s denial of his
    second post-conviction motion. Among other claims, Mr. Mitchell requested that
    “blood evidence” left at the scene be tested for DNA, which then-Superior Court
    Judge James E. Boasberg construed as an application under the Innocence
    2
    Protection Act (IPA), 
    D.C. Code §§ 22-4131
     to -4135 (2012 Repl.)1—specifically,
    § 22-4133, which governs post-conviction DNA testing. Mr. Mitchell claimed that
    DNA testing would implicate his codefendant Floyd Calloway or someone else as
    the assailant and thus help establish his innocence, and he appeals the court‟s
    rejection of his application for testing. The government—quoting police testimony
    from the trial and attaching the police evidence report, both purporting to show that
    no testable material exists—asserts that Mr. Mitchell‟s application “fails at its
    inception . . . because the record does not indicate that any DNA evidence was
    collected from the crime scene.” We ordered supplemental briefing on this issue,
    and now hold that if the government responds to an application for post-conviction
    DNA testing by claiming not to possess biological material, it bears the burden of
    substantiating that claim, and the unsworn claim it has offered in this case does not
    satisfy that burden.
    As to whether the trial court erred in ultimately rejecting Mr. Mitchell‟s
    request for DNA testing, we conclude that the court properly construed the request
    as an application under the IPA, but required too much of Mr. Mitchell under the
    threshold requirements of § 22-4133 (b) and also erred in not applying the
    1
    All subsequent statutory references are also to D.C. Code (2012 Repl.).
    3
    “reasonable probability” evidentiary standard of § 22-4133 (d).       We therefore
    reverse the court‟s ruling denying Mr. Mitchell‟s application for DNA testing and
    remand that issue for consideration under the proper standard. We affirm the
    court‟s determination that all of Mr. Mitchell‟s remaining claims lack merit.
    I.     Background
    In 1991, a jury convicted Mr. Mitchell of armed premeditated murder, armed
    felony murder, armed first-degree burglary, armed assault with intent to kill, and
    possession of a firearm during a crime of violence. Mitchell v. United States, 
    629 A.2d 10
    , 11 (D.C. 1993). In the direct appeal from those convictions, we described
    the facts as follows:
    The government‟s evidence at trial revealed that
    on January 16, 1990, appellant, in the company of
    Mr. Floyd Calloway and Ms. [Rebecca] Halicki,
    drove from his residence in Youngstown, Ohio to
    the District of Columbia to “get [appellant‟s] wife
    [Ms. Denise Mitchell] in Washington, D.C.”
    Suspecting that his wife had taken up residence
    with Messrs. Nelson and Arrington who “won‟t let
    her go,” appellant was overheard stating: “I don‟t
    mind shooting somebody if I have to.” . . . At
    approximately 3:00 a.m., after some initial
    difficulty in finding the apartment building—
    which provoked appellant to “want to hurt
    someone that much more”—Ms. Halicki located
    the building where Nelson and Arrington
    4
    resided. . . . Upon entering the building, the trio
    proceeded to Nelson‟s door, whereupon appellant
    and Mr. Calloway positioned themselves on either
    side while Ms. Halicki proceeded to knock on the
    door. Mr. Arrington responded to the knock and,
    with the door closed, explained to Ms. Halicki that
    he did not know where to find Ms. Mitchell. After
    a brief conversation, Mr. Arrington opened the
    door and peeped out. At that moment, Halicki
    jumped to the side and Arrington, sensing trouble,
    slammed the door shut. Appellant fired two
    shotgun blasts through the door, striking Mr.
    Arrington in the arm and back. Mr. Arrington ran
    toward Mr. Nelson‟s room and informed Mr.
    Nelson that he had been shot and that the shooter
    was coming through the front door. While Nelson
    leapt from his bed and closed the bedroom door,
    Arrington hid in the closet. Appellant then fired a
    shotgun blast through the bedroom door hitting
    Nelson, entered the room, and began interrogating
    Nelson about Denise Mitchell‟s whereabouts.
    Although Nelson insisted that he did not know and
    pleaded for his life, appellant reloaded one of the
    guns and fired three more times. Mr. Nelson died
    from his wounds.
    
    Id. at 11-12
    .
    This second post-conviction motion under § 23-110 follows three habeas
    petitions in federal court—all pro se, none successful. Among other claims, Mr.
    Mitchell requested that “blood evidence” be tested for DNA. Acting pro se and
    “ignorant of the actual requirements of the IPA,” as he later explained, Mr.
    Mitchell framed his request for DNA testing as a § 23-110 motion for post-
    5
    conviction relief, instead of as a § 22-4133 motion for post-conviction DNA
    testing, and did not deliberately set out to meet the initial requirements of the IPA
    or the four specific requirements of § 22-4133 (b). That is, under § 22-4133 (a),
    the biological material must “be identified as evidence in the case,” be in the
    government‟s possession or have been carefully maintained, and not have been
    “previously subject to DNA testing” for any of four enumerated reasons. And
    under § 22-4133 (b):
    (b) The application shall:
    (1) Include an affidavit by the applicant, under
    penalty of perjury, stating that the applicant is
    actually innocent of the crime that is the subject of
    the application; . . .
    (2) Identify the specific evidence for which DNA
    testing is requested;
    (3) Set forth the reason that the requested DNA
    testing was not previously obtained; and
    (4) Explain how the DNA evidence would help
    establish that the applicant is actually innocent
    despite having been convicted at trial or having
    pled guilty.
    6
    The court ordered the government to respond to Mr. Mitchell‟s motion.2
    Among other arguments, the government pointed out alleged deficiencies in Mr.
    Mitchell‟s application for DNA testing and urged the court to deny it as improperly
    pled. Mr. Mitchell then undertook to respond to the government, again asking for
    counsel in order to “eliminate any deficiencies in these pleadings due to ignorance
    of the law.” Now aware of the § 22-4133 pleading requirements, he argued that he
    had fortuitously pled them “by chance,” except for the affidavit claiming
    innocence, which he then included.3
    The court determined that Mr. Mitchell had “failed to meet the requirements
    of § 22-4133,” explaining that Mr. Mitchell had “not submitted the proper affidavit
    stating that he is actually innocent of this crime” or “identified the specific
    evidence he seeks to have tested.” The court‟s “particular concern,” however, was
    Mr. Mitchell‟s “failure, in his detailed explanation of the need for DNA testing, to
    2
    The court took its cue from § 22-4133 (c): “Unless the application and
    files and records of the case conclusively show that the applicant is entitled to no
    relief, the court shall notify the prosecution of an application made pursuant to
    subsection (a) of this section and shall afford the prosecution an opportunity to
    respond.”
    3
    The government filed its opposition on June 15, 2005, and Mr. Mitchell
    replied two weeks later, in a filing dated June 30, 2005. The court evidently had
    not received Mr. Mitchell‟s reply before issuing its order on July 15, 2005.
    7
    adequately explain how such testing would help establish his actual innocence.” In
    the court‟s view, the IPA—specifically § 22-4135 (c)(2)—“requires specific, non-
    conclusory facts that demonstrate that the movant is actually innocent despite
    having been convicted at trial,” and there was “no explanation as to how the
    absence of Defendant‟s DNA at the scene or the presence of another party‟s DNA
    could provide specific evidence of actual innocence.”
    Mr. Mitchell asked for reconsideration and again explained how DNA
    testing would establish his innocence. The court again denied his request for DNA
    testing, stating that “Defendant reasserts arguments the Court has previously found
    unconvincing.”4 Mr. Mitchell appeals.
    II.    Analysis
    A. The Alleged Absence of Testable Biological Material
    We first address the government‟s suggestion on appeal that a court may
    deny a prisoner‟s application for post-conviction DNA testing of biological
    material based on the government‟s pronouncement that the sought-after material
    does not exist. The government contends, that is, that Mr. Mitchell‟s claim “fails
    4
    The court had by then received Mr. Mitchell‟s previous filings.
    8
    at its inception . . . because the record does not indicate that any DNA evidence
    was collected from the crime scene.” In support, the government cites the 1991
    trial testimony of the police officer who collected evidence at the crime scene.
    That officer testified that he recovered latent fingerprints as well as shotgun
    wadding, casings, and pellets. He also took photographs, which depicted blood,
    but as the government states, he “did not testify that he recovered any blood or hair
    from the crime scene.” Attaching the 1990 Crime Scene Evidence Report, which
    also does not record any biological material, the government concludes that Mr.
    Mitchell‟s application for DNA testing must fail “[b]ecause there simply is no
    DNA evidence from the crime scene to test.”
    The IPA, which enables D.C. prisoners to apply for DNA testing of
    biological material “at any time,” 
    D.C. Code § 22-4133
    , and which also allows
    petitioners to “move the court to vacate the conviction or to grant a new trial on
    grounds of actual innocence based on new evidence,” § 22-4135, was designed “to
    eliminate the absence of a judicial remedy for persons who obtain new evidence
    that affirmatively shows their innocence more than three years after conviction or
    plea of guilty,” Bouknight v. United States, 
    867 A.2d 245
    , 251 (D.C. 2005). Under
    section (d) of § 22-4133, the court “shall order DNA testing” if it determines that
    9
    the application satisfies the requirements of § 22-4133 (a) and (b) and if it
    determines that “there is a reasonable probability that testing will produce non-
    cumulative evidence that would help establish that the applicant was actually
    innocent of the crime for which the applicant was convicted or adjudicated as
    delinquent.”
    The IPA does not explain, and we have not addressed, how a court should
    proceed when the government opposes an applicant‟s request for DNA testing on
    grounds that the sought-after biological material does not exist or no longer exists.
    Mr. Mitchell claimed, without providing support, that “blood samples were
    retained.” The trial court did not determine—and was not asked to determine—
    whether any such material existed. We ordered supplemental briefing and asked
    the parties to address, among other things, “who shall have the burden of proving
    that testable material exists.”
    Both the statute‟s text and its purpose lead us to conclude that if the
    government responds to an application under the IPA for DNA testing by alleging
    that it possesses no testable biological material, it bears the burden of
    substantiating that claim.        The statute implicitly places the burden on the
    government, as § 22-4134 (a) requires law enforcement agencies to “preserve
    10
    biological material that was seized or recovered as evidence . . . for 5 years or as
    long as any person incarcerated in connection with that case or investigation
    remains in custody, whichever is longer.”5 Section 22-4133 (c) also directs that
    “[u]pon receiving notice of an application [for DNA testing], the prosecution shall
    take the necessary steps to ensure that any remaining biological material that was
    obtained in connection with the case or investigation is preserved pending the
    completion of proceedings under this section.” In addition, placing the burden on a
    non-custodian—the applicant—may thwart the purpose of the statute by rendering
    relief under the IPA almost impossible. See Jeffrey v. United States, 
    892 A.2d 1122
    , 1128 (D.C. 2006) (“We must also be mindful that our interpretation is not at
    variance with the policy of the legislation as a whole.”).
    Other states with statutes allowing post-conviction DNA testing based on
    claims of actual innocence have similarly determined that the government‟s
    obligation to preserve sought-after biological material carries a concomitant
    obligation to produce it or explain why it cannot be produced. The Maryland
    5
    The IPA allows that “[n]otwithstanding subsection (a),” the District of
    Columbia may dispose of biological material after 5 years if it first provides an
    opportunity for interested persons to apply for DNA testing. 
    D.C. Code § 22-4134
    (b).
    11
    Court of Appeals, for example, has held that “because the evidence has been in the
    custody of the State, the State has the burden of establishing that it no longer
    exists.” Blake v. State, 
    909 A.2d 1020
    , 1028 (Md. 2006) (collecting cases); see
    also People v. Pitts, 
    828 N.E.2d 67
    , 72 (N.Y. 2005) (“[I]t is the People, as the
    gatekeeper of the evidence, who must show what evidence exists and whether the
    evidence is available for testing.”).
    The government argues that “[p]lacing the burden on the applicant to
    establish that specific, testable material was acquired by the government as
    evidence in the case” would comport with the applicant‟s burdens to “[i]dentify the
    specific evidence for which DNA testing is requested” under § 22-4133 (b) and to
    prove materiality under § 22-4133 (d). We disagree. It is one thing to name
    testable evidence and to explain why it matters and another thing entirely to prove
    it exists. The government further argues that placing the burden on applicants
    would not render relief under the IPA almost impossible because applicants “are
    aware of the evidence that was introduced at their trials” or was disclosed through
    discovery. See Super. Ct. Crim. R. 16. But again, being aware of the evidence at
    one‟s trial, or of the evidence disclosed through discovery, does not enable an
    applicant to rebut the government‟s claim that the evidence never existed or no
    12
    longer exists. Finally, the government argues that placing the burden on the
    government would disturb the finality of the criminal conviction. With regard to
    DNA testing spurred by claims of actual innocence, however, disturbing finality
    may be the very point. See Bouknight, 
    867 A.2d at 251
     (explaining D.C. Council‟s
    aims in passing the IPA).
    Our supplemental briefing order also asked the parties to address “generally
    what kind of showing . . . would be sufficient to meet this burden.” We note at the
    outset that the procedure must comport with the applicant‟s “liberty interest” under
    the IPA. “The IPA has created a liberty interest in providing for post-conviction
    relief, and the District‟s procedures for vindicating that interest must satisfy due
    process.” Hood v. United States, 
    28 A.3d 553
    , 562 (D.C. 2011); see also Dist.
    Attorney’s Office for Third Judicial Dist. v. Osborne, 
    557 U.S. 52
    , 68 (2009)
    (“Osborne does, however, have a liberty interest in demonstrating his innocence
    with new evidence under state law.”). We recognize that a “state-created right can,
    in some circumstances, beget yet other rights to procedures essential to the
    realization of the parent right.” Connecticut Bd. of Pardons v. Dumschat, 
    452 U.S. 458
    , 463 (1981). Our procedures for implementing the IPA thus must be worthy of
    the “parent right.” Given the liberty interest at stake, a court cannot ratify the
    13
    government‟s representation that the biological evidence does not exist without
    providing the applicant with an opportunity to weigh in on the procedure the
    government employed in reaching that conclusion. See Arey v. State, 
    29 A.3d 986
    ,
    991 (Md. 2011) (Arey II) (“Arey still must be given the opportunity to probe,
    challenge, or otherwise respond to the statements in the affidavit before a decision
    can be rendered.”); Arey v. State, 
    929 A.2d 501
    , 510 (Md. 2007) (Arey I) (“[I]f the
    court determines that there is a genuine factual dispute as to whether the evidence
    exists, ordinarily the court should hold a hearing.”); Blake, 909 A.2d at 1030
    (citing Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 333 (1976)).
    In Blake, the Maryland Court of Appeals rejected the government‟s
    proffer—a police memorandum responding to a prosecutor‟s request, stating that
    “[t]he Evidence Control Section was checked by the undersigned, and there was no
    Evidence found for that case,” 909 A.2d at 1022—because “[t]here are many other
    likely places,” other than an evidence locker, “where the evidence may have been
    stored,” id. at 1031.6 The government says Blake is different because the applicant
    6
    See Postconviction DNA Testing: Recommendations for Handling
    Requests, National Institute of Justice, National Commission on the Future of DNA
    Evidence (Sept. 1999), https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/177626.pdf.          This
    national report urged prosecutors to avoid hastily dismissing prisoners‟ requests for
    (continued…)
    14
    there sought “DNA testing of scientific evidence used by the State at his trial,” id.
    at 1021, while Mr. Mitchell seeks DNA testing of material not used at his trial. It
    argues that the record here “does not indicate that any DNA evidence was collected
    from the crime scene.”
    Several factors suggest that the material‟s absence from the record, while
    probative, may not be dispositive of its nonexistence. The record, especially in the
    pre-DNA era, might not reflect when a garment or a weapon or other tangible
    evidence contains biological material. Police might have obtained material not
    ultimately included in the record, and, in such cases, that very absence from the
    record might have contributed to a wrongful conviction. Limiting the search to
    evidence in the record might also lead the government to check the record instead
    of its inventory.
    (…continued)
    DNA testing and recommended checking police evidence rooms, prosecutors‟
    offices (for evidence introduced at trial), crime laboratories, hospitals or clinics
    (for sexual assault kits), defense counsel offices, court evidence rooms, and the
    offices of court clerks and court reporters. Id. at 46. “Finding the evidence is the
    most difficult part of the process. . . . Many times all parties believe that the
    evidence has been destroyed, when in fact it has not.” Id. at 45.
    15
    Finally, the IPA‟s strictures dispel any concern that prisoners could compel
    police officials to needlessly search their inventories.     An applicant for post-
    conviction DNA testing must still meet the § 22-4133 (b) requirements and show,
    under § 22-4133 (d), “a reasonable probability that testing will produce non-
    cumulative evidence that would help establish that the applicant was actually
    innocent of the crime.” By the IPA‟s terms, Mr. Mitchell bears these burdens. But
    he does not carry the obligation to investigate whether the material exists. The
    government assumed that obligation to the extent it urged us to bypass
    consideration of § 22-4133 (b) and (d) and deny Mr. Mitchell‟s application for
    DNA testing because “there simply is no DNA evidence from the crime scene to
    test.”
    In sum, if the government asks the court to deny an application for post-
    conviction DNA testing—not by contesting whether the testing would yield
    exculpatory evidence but by asserting that the sought-after evidence does not
    exist—then consistent with the liberty interests at stake, we require a reasonable
    search for the evidence, meaning an extensive search in any place the evidence
    could reasonably be found. See Washington v. State, 
    37 A.3d 932
    , 945 (Md. 2012)
    (stating that “the State must check every location where the evidence could
    16
    reasonably be located”); Blake, 909 A.2d at 1031 (requiring “an extensive search
    for the evidence”). In this case, we do not know where the government checked,
    what it checked for, or whom it checked with—if it checked at all. In fact, the
    government appears to have relied exclusively on trial records. We do not know,
    merely by reviewing those records, whether the sought-after material once existed,
    and if it existed, whether it was retained.7 Absent such an accounting, we cannot
    say that Mr. Mitchell‟s application “fails at its inception.”
    On remand, if the government contends that the material does not exist or no
    longer exists, it must proffer evidence of a reasonable search—evidence that the
    defense might probe at a hearing—and the trial court should determine whether the
    government has reasonably searched for Mr. Mitchell‟s sought-after “blood
    evidence.” The trial court‟s inquiry is not whether the material does not exist or no
    longer exists, but whether the government has performed a “reasonable search.” If
    7
    In a series of recent decisions, the Maryland Court of Appeals has refined
    its parallel doctrine on post-conviction searches for biological evidence. See, e.g.,
    Washington v. State, 37 A.3d at 943-46(summarizing several prior decisions);
    Horton v. State, 
    985 A.2d 540
    , 549 (Md. 2009) (deeming the government‟s
    showing insufficient where it only showed “that [the] evidence was authorized for
    destruction,” not “that any evidence was actually destroyed”); Arey I, 929 A.2d at
    508 (requiring the government to “identify the protocol [for the destruction of
    evidence] that was in place from the time of the trial to the time of the request for
    testing, if possible, and see if that protocol was followed”).
    17
    the government cannot demonstrate that it has performed a reasonable search, the
    court can order it to take additional measures.          The locations and overall
    reasonableness of the search depend on the particular facts of the case.8
    B. The Requirements of § 22-4133 (b)
    We next consider whether Mr. Mitchell‟s request for DNA testing met the
    requirements of § 22-4133 (b). The trial court concluded that Mr. Mitchell “has
    not submitted the proper affidavit stating that he is actually innocent of this crime,
    8
    For reasonable searches, see, e.g., People v. Garcia, 
    886 N.Y.S.2d 110
    ,
    111 (N.Y. App. Div. 2009) (“The People presented detailed affidavits by the
    detectives and the prosecutor, based on personal knowledge, setting forth their
    diligent but unsuccessful efforts to locate certain items recovered in 1995 from the
    scene of a homicide. This satisfied the People‟s burden to show that the evidence
    on which forensic DNA testing was to be performed could no longer be located
    and was thus no longer available for testing.”); People v. Velez, 
    859 N.Y.S.2d 568
    (N.Y. App. Div. 2008) (“[T]he People met their burden of establishing that no such
    evidence is available for testing by submitting an official record indicating that the
    evidence was destroyed in 1994.”). For unreasonable searches, see, e.g., Horton,
    985 A.2d at 547 (concluding that the government had not met its burden where
    “the [hospital‟s] microbiology department, which might have screened the victim‟s
    samples for sexually-transmitted diseases, had not been searched”); People v. West,
    
    837 N.Y.S.2d 415
    , 416-17 (N.Y. App. Div. 2007) (determining that the
    government had not met its burden when relying “solely upon a State Trooper‟s
    affirmation that the evidence had been destroyed” because “it does not claim to be
    based upon personal knowledge of the evidence‟s destruction, does not state the
    source of the Trooper‟s knowledge or reveal when or where the evidence was
    destroyed,” and is “lacking . . . any reference to police records of the evidence‟s
    storage or disposal”).
    18
    nor has he identified the specific evidence he seeks to have tested.”9 The court
    noted that these “administrative requirements could be remedied through a
    properly filed application,” and we presume that the court would have afforded Mr.
    Mitchell an opportunity to remedy any deficiencies in his application if it believed
    Mr. Mitchell could meet the fourth pleading requirement to explain how the DNA
    results would help show innocence. But the court did not believe Mr. Mitchell
    could meet that fourth requirement. In its view, Mr. Mitchell “fail[ed], in his
    detailed explanation of the need for DNA testing, to adequately explain how such
    testing would help establish his actual innocence,” and it again rejected Mr.
    Mitchell‟s request for DNA testing after later receiving his affidavit.
    In our view, Mr. Mitchell‟s initial motion10—together with the affidavit filed
    with his later reply—met the four requirements of § 22-4133 (b). “To the extent
    that the statute affords the trial court discretion in its application of the IPA, we
    review for abuse of discretion.” Veney v. United States, 
    936 A.2d 811
    , 822 (D.C.
    2007). Whether the court applied the correct legal standard is a question of law
    9
    At the time of this order, the court had not received Mr. Mitchell‟s reply to
    the government‟s opposition, which included his affidavit claiming innocence.
    10
    Though we refer to one “initial” motion, there were actually two initial
    motions, both of which were received, according to the court‟s date stamp, before
    the court ordered the government to respond.
    19
    that we consider de novo. See Davis v. United States, 
    564 A.2d 31
    , 35 (D.C. 1989)
    (en banc).
    Section 22-4133 (b)(1) required Mr. Mitchell to state, under penalty of
    perjury, that he is actually innocent of the crime. Mr. Mitchell submitted an
    affidavit in his response to the government opposition. But even before doing so,
    he claimed to be “100% positive that such a test will exonerate” him. Section 22-
    4133 (b)(2) required Mr. Mitchell to identify the specific evidence for which he
    was requesting DNA testing. Contrary to the motion court‟s finding, Mr. Mitchell
    met this requirement in his initial motion by identifying “scatterings of blood
    leading from a rear bedroom, where the homicide occurred, to the front door of the
    apartment.” In his later response, he requested testing of “all blood samples
    collected at the crime scene, which was a small two bedroom apartment.” Given
    the finite crime scene in this case, “specific evidence” cannot be so specific as to
    require Mr. Mitchell to compile a literal laundry list of material—bloody sock,
    bloody carpet, bloody footprint. Such a strict requirement would obstruct the
    IPA‟s goal of exonerating wrongfully convicted prisoners.           Mr. Mitchell‟s
    application requesting testing of bloody material from the apartment met the
    requirements of § 22-4133 (b)(2).
    20
    Section 22-4133 (b)(3) required him to set forth the reason DNA testing had
    not previously been completed. He met this requirement by stating that “DNA
    testing was not available at the time of the original trial” in 1991.
    Section 22-4133 (b)(4) required Mr. Mitchell to explain how DNA testing
    would help establish his innocence. He met this requirement by explaining that
    “the assailant became involved in a scuffle with the decedent,” that “the depth of
    the battle” yielded a “high probability that the assailant himself was injured in the
    brawl,” and that given the government‟s single-shooter theory, and other evidence
    suggesting that a single person had committed the crime, “a DNA test will point a
    clear finger at the true perpetrator.” The court acknowledged that Mr. Mitchell had
    offered a “detailed explanation of the need for DNA testing.” But it erred in
    asking whether he had “adequately explain[ed]” how DNA testing would help
    establish his innocence. Section 22-4133 (b)(4) requires an applicant to “[e]xplain
    how the DNA evidence would help establish that the applicant is actually
    innocent”—not to explain adequately or sufficiently, just to explain.
    Except for the missing affidavit, Mr. Mitchell met the § 4133 (b)
    requirements entirely in his initial motion. The IPA identifies the evidentiary
    standard (“reasonable probability”) in a later section, § 22-4133 (d), suggesting
    21
    that § 22-4133 (b) is not the place to assess the plausibility of the explanation, but
    rather is a checklist of threshold requirements. Because § 22-4133 (b)(4) requires
    only a basic explanation, the trial court should have checked off § 22-4133 (a),
    which the government did not contest, checked off the requirements of § 22-
    4133 (b), and proceeded to evaluate Mr. Mitchell‟s application under § 22-
    4133 (d).
    C. The Evidentiary Standard of § 22-4133 (d)
    We next address whether the trial court assessed Mr. Mitchell‟s application
    for DNA testing under the evidentiary standard set forth in § 22-4133 (d)—namely,
    whether “there is a reasonable probability that testing will produce non-cumulative
    evidence that would help establish that the applicant was actually innocent.” We
    consider de novo whether the court used the correct “reasonable probability”
    standard of § 22-4133 (d). See Davis, 
    564 A.2d at 35
    .
    In denying Mr. Mitchell‟s application for DNA testing, the court stated that
    “the IPA requires specific, non-conclusory facts that demonstrate that the movant
    is actually innocent despite having been convicted at trial,” citing § 22-4135 (c)(2).
    It found “no explanation as to how the absence of Defendant‟s DNA at the scene or
    the presence of another party‟s DNA could provide specific evidence of actual
    22
    innocence.” Yet the IPA does not require an applicant for DNA testing to show
    “specific” evidence of innocence. The court appears to have mistakenly borrowed
    the pleading requirement of “specific, non-conclusory facts” from § 22-4135 (c),
    which governs motions “to vacate the conviction or to grant a new trial on grounds
    of actual innocence based on new evidence,” § 22-4135 (a), and assessed Mr.
    Mitchell‟s request against that requirement, as opposed to using the “reasonable
    probability” standard of § 22-4133 (d).11
    Rather than deciding ourselves whether Mr. Mitchell showed a “reasonable
    probability,” we remand his application for DNA testing to the trial court to give it
    an opportunity to parse alternative versions of the factual record and to apply the
    11
    The IPA requires a movant seeking to vacate a conviction to plead with
    greater specificity than a movant seeking DNA testing. Before a court can “vacate
    the conviction or . . . grant a new trial on grounds of actual innocence based on
    new evidence,” § 22-4135 (a), the movant‟s “motion shall set forth specific, non-
    conclusory facts: (1) Identifying the specific new evidence; (2) Establishing how
    that evidence demonstrates that the movant is actually innocent despite having
    been convicted at trial or having pled guilty; and (3) Establishing why the new
    evidence is not cumulative or impeaching.” § 22-4135 (c). The court must grant a
    new trial if it concludes “that it is more likely than not that the movant is actually
    innocent.” § 22-4135 (g)(2). The court must vacate the conviction and dismiss the
    relevant count with prejudice if it concludes “by clear and convincing evidence
    that the movant is actually innocent.” § 22-4135 (g)(3). A court‟s inquiry into an
    application for DNA testing thus differs from its inquiry into these other motions.
    The trial court applied the “specific, non-conclusory facts” requirement correctly
    with reference to Mr. Mitchell‟s other claims, discussed infra.
    23
    reasonable probability standard in the first instance.12 See Johnson v. Payless Shoe
    Source, Inc., 
    841 A.2d 1249
    , 1257 (D.C. 2004) (“A litigant is „entitled to have the
    trial judge exercise . . . discretion unfettered by erroneous legal thinking.‟ Where
    this has not occurred, we ordinarily remand for reconsideration of the ruling under
    the proper standard.” (quoting Wright v. United States, 
    508 A.2d 915
    , 919 (D.C.
    1986))).
    D. Mr. Mitchell’s Other Claims
    The trial court‟s other rulings concern Mr. Mitchell‟s alleged new evidence
    of actual innocence, alleged prosecutorial misconduct, § 23-110‟s constitutionality,
    the court‟s jurisdiction vis-à-vis the Bureau of Prisons, and the denial of a
    12
    According to Mr. Mitchell, the record shows that the assailant became
    bloodied from fighting the decedent. DNA testing on “blood evidence,” if it
    matched someone other than the decedent, could therefore identify the assailant.
    Cf. Cuffey v. United States, 
    976 A.2d 897
    , 899 (D.C. 2009) (finding that the
    applicant could not demonstrate a reasonable probability that “DNA testing of [the
    victim‟s] shirt would help establish appellant‟s actual innocence of the murder”
    because the presence of another person‟s blood on the shirt in addition to the
    applicant‟s own blood would not have helped establish the applicant‟s innocence).
    The government disputes whether the assailant would have emerged bloodied.
    And if the assailant left without spilling blood, DNA testing on blood evidence
    would reveal nothing. The relevant sections of the transcript have not been lodged
    in this appeal.
    24
    hearing.13 We address these claims in turn, and in each respect, we uphold the trial
    court‟s ruling.
    1. New Evidence
    Mr. Mitchell seeks to qualify several items as newly discovered evidence
    under the IPA.      The IPA defines “new evidence” as that which “[w]as not
    personally known and could not, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have been
    personally known to the movant at the time of the trial or the plea proceeding”;
    “[w]as personally known to the movant at the time of the trial or the plea
    proceeding, but could not be produced at that time” for several enumerated
    reasons; or “[w]as obtained as a result of post-conviction DNA testing.” § 22-4131
    (7). New evidence must demonstrate “actual innocence,” § 22-4135 (a), which is
    defined as a showing “that the person did not commit the crime of which he or she
    was convicted.” § 22-4131 (1). See also Bousley v. United States, 
    523 U.S. 614
    ,
    623 (1998) (“„Actual innocence‟ means factual innocence, not mere legal
    insufficiency.”).
    13
    On appeal, Mr. Mitchell has not pursued his earlier claim that his
    sentence violated Blakely v. Washington, 
    542 U.S. 296
     (2004).
    25
    Mr. Mitchell reports having been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and
    anti-social personality disorder while in prison and presents these psychiatric
    diagnoses as “new evidence” under the IPA. He argues that his mental illness,
    which he claims to have suffered from at the time of his trial, rendered him “not
    responsible for any of his actions during the time of the alleged crime” and “not
    competent to stand trial.” The IPA does not offer him relief, however, because, as
    the trial court concluded, “this information in no way establishes [his] actual
    innocence” and because, as he could describe symptoms “going back to his teens,”
    his illness is not “new” within the meaning of the IPA.
    Mr. Mitchell pursues this claim not just under the IPA but also under § 23-
    110, arguing that the trial court violated his due process rights to a fair trial when it
    did not question his competence or order a competency examination sua sponte.
    To test a defendant‟s competency to stand trial, we ask “whether he has sufficient
    present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational
    understanding” and “whether he has a rational as well as factual understanding of
    the proceedings against him.” Dusky v. United States, 
    362 U.S. 402
    , 402 (1960).14
    14
    In addition, as mandated by due process, see Gorbey v. United States, 
    54 A.3d 668
    , 678 (D.C. 2012), 
    D.C. Code § 24-531.01
     (1) defines “competence” to
    (continued…)
    26
    The record from Mr. Mitchell‟s trial undermines his claim by showing that he
    participated intelligently and vigorously in his defense. See Hargraves v. United
    States, 
    62 A.3d 107
    , 115 (D.C. 2013) (finding trial court did not err in finding
    defendant competent to stand trial); Bradley v. United States, 
    881 A.2d 640
    , 647
    (D.C. 2005) (finding trial court did not err in not ordering competency hearing sua
    sponte).
    Mr. Mitchell also presents as new evidence an affidavit from Denise
    Mitchell, dated June 8, 2005. The affidavit states that “some portions of my
    testimony and statement were not true,” and that she was forced to engage in
    sexual relations with two male detectives who gave her “financial assistance” and
    coached her on her testimony. Mr. Mitchell argues that while the affidavit does
    not assert his innocence, “the reasonable inference is clearly implied.” No doubt
    that these allegations, if true, constitute appalling conduct by the police. Even so,
    the allegations do not implicate Mr. Mitchell‟s innocence, much less meet the
    evidentiary burden in § 22-4135 (g)(2) or § 22-4135 (g)(3). The court did not
    (…continued)
    mean “that a defendant has sufficient present ability to consult with his or her
    lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and has a rational, as
    well as a factual, understanding of the proceedings against him or her.”
    27
    abuse its discretion in finding that Ms. Mitchell‟s affidavit does not establish Mr.
    Mitchell‟s innocence.
    Nor do Ms. Mitchell‟s allegations warrant relief under Brady v. Maryland,
    
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963).      Ms. Mitchell did not witness the crime.       Her trial
    testimony described the “repeated emotional and physical abuse by [Mr. Mitchell]
    throughout their marriage,” which went to Mr. Mitchell‟s motive for attacking the
    men he thought were living with her. Mitchell, 
    629 A.2d at 13
    . Her vague
    recantation—that “some portions of my testimony and statement were not true”—
    does not cast doubt upon the statement she gave to a female police interviewer,
    against whom she alleges no misconduct, in the hours immediately after the
    murder, where she also described Mr. Mitchell‟s extensive violence toward her.
    Given the limited scope of Ms. Mitchell‟s trial testimony and the government‟s
    untainted evidence corroborating its substance, we cannot say that these
    allegations, even if true, demonstrate a “reasonable probability” that the jury would
    have reached a different outcome had the government disclosed the alleged
    misconduct and enabled the defense to impeach Ms. Mitchell‟s testimony. See
    Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 434 (1995); Meade v. United States, 
    48 A.3d 761
    ,
    767 (D.C. 2012) (The complainant‟s “failure to repudiate or deny her
    28
    contemporaneous account of what happened makes it unlikely that her alleged
    recantation would lead to a different result.”); Ginyard v. United States, 
    816 A.2d 21
    , 32 (D.C. 2003) (“The burden is on the defendant to establish such a reasonable
    probability.”).
    Also as new evidence, Mr. Mitchell presents an affidavit from his
    codefendant Rebecca Halicki, dated October 2, 1995, recanting certain statements
    she made to the police after her arrest. Ms. Halicki did not testify at Mr. Mitchell‟s
    trial and the parties dispute whether she testified at the grand jury. Mr. Mitchell
    did not raise this claim in his first § 23-110 motion, filed in 1996, despite taking
    the stand at the 1997 evidentiary hearing granted on that motion and despite
    knowing that Ms. Halicki had recanted. In an effort to show cause for this failure,
    he claims that he did not physically possess the affidavit—a state of affairs he
    attributes to Ms. Halicki‟s “multiple housing moves and arrests,” which made
    “locating and communicating with her impossible at times.”           But where Mr.
    Mitchell was aware of the content of the affidavit and yet failed to raise it in his
    testimony at his evidentiary hearing nearly two years later, the court did not abuse
    its discretion in declining to find “cause” and deeming the claim procedurally
    29
    barred.15 See Bradley, 
    881 A.2d at 646
     (“To establish sufficient cause for failing to
    assert his current claims in his previous motion, appellant must show that he „was
    prevented by exceptional circumstances‟ from doing so.”); Washington v. United
    States, 
    834 A.2d 899
    , 902 (D.C. 2003) (“[W]hen, as in this case, the defendant has
    already launched several collateral attacks on his conviction, the reasons
    supporting the application of the cause and prejudice test are even more
    compelling.” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)).
    Finally, Mr. Mitchell presents as new evidence his February 1990 phone bill,
    showing calls in Ohio on the night before and morning after the murder. Mr.
    Mitchell claims that “this evidence could not have been obtained sooner through
    due diligence” due to his arrest and the home‟s vacancy. The court did not abuse
    its discretion in rejecting his claim that no one could have gained access to the
    15
    The trial court also expressed doubt that Ms. Halicki‟s recantation—
    which contradicted her testimony at her own trial incriminating Mr. Mitchell,
    Halicki v. United States, 
    614 A.2d 499
    , 500-01 n.8 (D.C. 1992)—“would probably
    produce an acquittal in a new trial.” See Meade v. United States, 
    48 A.3d at 766
    (denying an IPA claim in part because the complainant‟s recantation “would, at
    best, have been used to impeach her initial account of the events”); United States v.
    Kearney, 
    682 F.2d 214
    , 219 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (“Recanting affidavits and witnesses
    are looked upon with „the utmost suspicion‟ by the courts.”). Under the IPA, a
    court must conclude “that it is more likely than not that the movant is actually
    innocent” before granting a new trial. § 22-4135 (g)(2).
    30
    records and in concluding that Mr. Mitchell did not meet the due diligence
    standard for newly discovered evidence, especially considering that Mr. Mitchell‟s
    parents owned and could enter the house.          See Bouknight, 
    867 A.2d at 255
    (discussing the due diligence standard). The court also did not abuse its discretion
    in finding that the records do not establish innocence because they “do not identify
    the person who made or received the phone calls.” In addition, as the government
    notes, Mr. Mitchell could have driven from Ohio to D.C. and back to Ohio
    between phone calls.
    2. Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Mr. Mitchell alleges that the government committed misconduct by
    knowingly offering false testimony from Rebecca Halicki and Denise Mitchell and
    by obtaining Ms. Halicki‟s testimony under threat of prosecution. The court did
    not abuse its discretion in ruling that Mr. Mitchell had “failed to provide any actual
    evidence whatsoever of government misconduct in his case.”
    Ms. Halicki, who was not a witness at Mr. Mitchell‟s trial but may have
    testified at the grand jury, does not allege prosecutorial misconduct in her affidavit,
    and Mr. Mitchell has not substantiated this claim as to her. Ms. Mitchell, by
    contrast, at least states that she told the prosecutor that “some portions of my
    31
    testimony and statement were not true” and that the prosecutor “told me it would
    still be alright.” The affidavit does not indicate what parts of her testimony were
    false. Nor does it challenge the descriptions of domestic violence that she gave on
    the morning of the murder to a police officer whom she does not accuse of
    misconduct—statements that were consistent with her trial testimony. In addition,
    Mr. Mitchell has not shown cause for not bringing these claims in his previous
    collateral attack. See Washington, 
    834 A.2d at 902
    ; Head v. United States, 
    489 A.2d 450
    , 451 (D.C. 1985).
    Mr. Mitchell also claims that the government withheld police notes that
    supposedly identified two eyewitnesses, thereby violating its obligations under
    Brady v. Maryland. But in ruling on Mr. Mitchell‟s first § 23-110 motion, the trial
    court, after a hearing, found that Mr. Mitchell‟s trial counsel had received the notes
    among the discovery materials and, having taken other steps to locate
    eyewitnesses, was not ineffective for failing to pursue those leads. In considering
    this most recent § 23-110 motion, the court therefore did not abuse its discretion in
    denying Mr. Mitchell‟s claim that the government withheld certain police notes.
    Nor did the court abuse its discretion in rejecting Mr. Mitchell‟s argument
    that the government‟s ballistics evidence was “flawed and based upon „junk
    32
    science‟” and that “the government knew of these short-comings in their evidence
    gathering . . . and did nothing to correct” them.16 He neither substantiates these
    allegations nor explains how the ballistics evidence, even if flawed, contributed to
    his conviction.
    3. Constitutional Challenge to § 23-110
    Mr. Mitchell‟s equal protection challenge to § 23-110—a statute that indeed
    treats D.C. prisoners differently from other “state” prisoners—is foreclosed by
    Swain v. Pressley, 
    430 U.S. 372
     (1977). See also Garris v. Lindsay, 
    794 F.2d 722
    ,
    726 (D.C. Cir. 1986). In Swain, the Supreme Court considered whether § 23-110
    “denied persons convicted in [D.C. courts] equal protection of the laws” given that
    these persons “must assert any collateral attack on their convictions before Art. I
    judges, whereas persons convicted under general federal law are allowed to attack
    their convictions before Art. III judges.” 
    430 U.S. at
    379 n.12. The Court held
    that § 23-110 did not violate equal protection because “[a] rational basis for the
    classification is found in the purpose behind the Court Reform Act.” Id. This
    16
    The government considered this claim “abandoned” because Mr. Mitchell
    did not address it in his opening brief, which he prepared pro se. His court-
    appointed counsel argued the issue in his reply brief. Considering Mr. Mitchell‟s
    pro se status, we choose to address it.
    33
    rational basis also undercuts Mr. Mitchell‟s unsubstantiated allegation that § 23-
    110 was “intended to cause racial discrimination.”
    4. Presentence Investigation Report
    Mr. Mitchell argues that the D.C. Superior Court has jurisdiction to correct
    the Federal Bureau of Prisons‟ reliance on a flawed presentence report and
    separation order. Reviewing this jurisdictional claim de novo, United States v.
    Crockett, 
    861 A.2d 604
    , 607-08 (D.C. 2004), we conclude that the court properly
    construed this claim as a petition for writ of habeas corpus because it concerns “the
    executive department‟s execution of sentence, not the trial court‟s imposition of
    sentence.” Alston v. United States, 
    590 A.2d 511
    , 514 (D.C. 1991). As we have
    explained, it therefore “may not be raised under § 23-110,” id., and must be raised
    in federal court against the custodian. Crockett, 
    861 A.2d at 607
     (no jurisdiction to
    direct the BOP on implementing prisoner‟s sentence).17
    17
    The trial court still sought to provide Mr. Mitchell‟s penitentiary with a
    copy of the amended presentence report and the trial court‟s earlier order
    rescinding the troublesome separation order. We note that Mr. Mitchell would not
    be asking the federal court to alter records prepared in another jurisdiction, but
    rather to lodge with his custodian already-corrected records.
    34
    5. Hearing
    For claims under the IPA, “the question whether a hearing is required is
    confided to the sound discretion of the trial court.”      Meade, 
    48 A.3d at 765
    (citation omitted). Consistent with our discussion of the trial court‟s rulings,
    though the court may hold a hearing concerning DNA testing on remand, we
    conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Mr.
    Mitchell‟s claims fit into the “three categories of claims that do not merit hearings:
    (1) vague and conclusory allegations, (2) palpably incredible claims, and (3)
    assertions that would not merit relief even if true.” Ramsey v. United States, 
    569 A.2d 142
    , 147 (D.C. 1990). See also 
    D.C. Code § 22-4135
     (e)(l) (requiring no
    hearing under the IPA where “the motion and files and records of the case
    conclusively show that the movant is entitled to no relief”); Bell v. United States,
    
    871 A.2d 1199
    , 1201 (D.C. 2005) (“The standard for when a hearing must be held
    under the IPA mirrors exactly the standard for a hearing required by 
    D.C. Code § 23-110
     . . . .” (internal citation omitted)).
    III.   Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand
    for further proceedings.
    35
    So ordered.