STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. STEVEN R. FORTIN (95-09-1197, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2020 )


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  •                        RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5929-17T2
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                                 June 22, 2020
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    STEVEN R. FORTIN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Argued telephonically April 29, 2020 –
    Decided June 22, 2020
    Before Judges Koblitz, Whipple and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Middlesex County, Indictment No. 95-09-
    1197.
    Tamar Y. Lerer argued the cause for appellant (Joseph
    E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Tamar Y. Lerer,
    Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on
    the briefs).
    Nancy A. Hulett argued the cause for respondent
    (Christopher L.C. Kuberiet, Acting Middlesex County
    Prosecutor, attorney; Nancy A. Hulett, Acting Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    Dana Delger, (Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom
    LLP) of the New York bar, admitted pro hac vice,
    argued the cause for amicis curiae Innocence Project
    Inc. (Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP,
    attorneys; Maura Barry Grinalds, Edward L. Tulin, and
    Benjamin J. Rankin, of counsel; Andrew Muscato,
    Vanessa Potkin, and Dana Delger, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    KOBLITZ, P.J.A.D.
    Defendant Steven R. Fortin, whom juries twice convicted of a brutal 1994
    sexual assault and murder, appeals from a May 4, 2018 order denying his motion
    for a new trial based on newly discovered scientific evidence that casts doubt on
    the reliability and scientific validity of bitemark identification. We affirm.
    In September 1995, defendant was indicted for first-degree knowing or
    purposeful murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1) and (2); first-degree felony murder,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3); first-degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1; first-degree
    murder while committing a sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3); and first-
    degree aggravated sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a). The State sought the
    death penalty.
    A-5929-17T2
    2
    Prior to defendant's first trial for the murder and sexual assault of M.P.,1
    the New Jersey Supreme Court affirmed, in an interlocutory appeal, the ruling
    allowing the State to introduce N.J.R.E. 404(b) evidence that defendant had
    committed a similar sexual assault against Maine State Trooper V.G. based on
    the unusual combination of bitemarks found on M.P.'s and V.G.'s chin and left
    breast. State v. Fortin (Fortin I), 
    162 N.J. 517
    , 519 (2000). The Court also held
    that Robert Hazelwood, the State's proposed expert on violent sexual crimes,
    could be qualified as an expert on the ritualistic and signature aspects of the
    crime under N.J.R.E. 702, but could not testify on the "ultimate issue" of
    whether the person who assaulted V.G. in Maine was the same person who
    murdered M.P. in New Jersey.
    Id. at 525-29.
    The Court found that Hazelwood's
    testimony could be helpful to the jury in showing that the evidence established
    an "unusual pattern," provided he could "from a reliable database offer evidence
    that a combination of bitemarks on the breast, bitemarks on the chin, and rectal
    tearing inflicted during a sexual attack is unique in his experience of
    investigating sexual assault crimes."
    Id. at 532.
    1
    We use initials to preserve the privacy of a victim of sexual offenses. R. 1:38-
    3(12).
    A-5929-17T2
    3
    In 2000 a jury convicted defendant and sentenced him to death for the
    1994 murder and sexual assault of M.P. Our Supreme Court reversed that
    conviction and remanded for a new trial, in part because Hazelwood failed to
    produce a "reliable database," let alone "any database," as required by Fortin I.
    State v. Fortin (Fortin II), 
    178 N.J. 540
    , 558, 586-90 (2004).
    Prior to the retrial, in an interlocutory appeal before our Supreme Court,
    the State sought to again introduce defendant's sexual assault of V.G. as N.J.R.E.
    404(b) evidence, to demonstrate that the bitemarks on V.G. "were akin to a
    signature that identified defendant as M.P.'s killer." State v. Fortin (Fortin III),
    
    189 N.J. 579
    , 584 (2007). The Court held that "the State is required to provide
    expert testimony . . . to explain the unique aspects of the [V.G.] and [M.P.]
    sexual assaults that would permit a jury to conclude that both crimes are the
    handiwork of the same person."
    Id. at 597.
    The State was also permitted "to
    present the bite-mark evidence in context and therefore material details of the
    [V.G.] sexual assault [could not] be censored," however, "[t]estimony
    describing that assault . . . is subject to specific jury instructions explaining the
    limited use of 'other crimes' evidence under N.J.R.E. 404(b)."
    Id. at 585.
    Lastly,
    the Court held that the State's experts must "provide defendant with a database
    of cases supporting" their testimony.
    Id. at 597-98.
    A-5929-17T2
    4
    In 2007 defendant was retried and convicted of murder, felony murder,
    and two counts of aggravated sexual assault. Although defendant's convictions
    carried a sentence of death, the death penalty was abolished in New Jersey prior
    to the penalty-phase trial. See N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3. After a penalty-phase trial
    before a new jury in 2010, defendant was sentenced to life without parole.2 We
    affirmed defendant's conviction and sentence. State v. Fortin, No. A-1163-10
    (App. Div. Oct. 20, 2015) (slip op. at 40-41), certif. denied, 
    224 N.J. 125
    (2016).
    Presented as an application for post-conviction relief in 2018, defendant
    moved for a new trial based on newly discovered scientific evidence regarding
    the reliability of bitemark evidence.       He argued that since 2007, several
    wrongful convictions based on bitemark identification had been overturned and
    a consensus had emerged disproving the fundamental premise underlying the
    forensic discipline.
    I. The State's 2007 case.
    In August 1994, defendant and his then-girlfriend, Dawn Archer, resided
    at the Douglas Motel, located in the close vicinity of a QuickChek, Bud's Hut
    2
    See State v. Fortin (Fortin IV), 
    198 N.J. 619
    , 632-33 (2009) (explaining why
    a penalty-phase trial was required and defendant's exposure to life without
    parole was appropriate.)
    A-5929-17T2
    5
    restaurant, and the Gem Motel, where M.P. resided with her boyfriend, Hector
    Fernandez, and her four young children.
    On the evening of August 11, Archer and defendant walked to visit a
    friend, Charles Bennett, who lived south of the two motels. They stopped at the
    QuickChek to buy cigarettes, arriving at Bennett's apartment around 9:00 p.m.
    They all drank alcohol together until defendant and Archer began to argue, when
    Bennet asked them to leave at about 10:30 p.m.
    According to Archer, they continued arguing after they left Bennett's
    apartment. Defendant became violent, threw her to the ground, and choked,
    kicked and cursed at her. She broke free and ran into Bud's Hut yelling:
    "Somebody call 911. He's beating me up." As Archer waited for the police, she
    left the restaurant "to see if [defendant] was still around" and saw him running
    back toward the Gem Motel.
    Bennett testified that at about 11:15 p.m., defendant returned to his
    apartment looking for Archer. Bennett noticed that defendant, who was wearing
    shorts and a tank top, had scratches on his legs, but not on his face or arms.
    Bennett asked defendant how he got the scratches, and defendant replied that he
    had had a fight with Archer in the Bud's Hut parking lot.
    A-5929-17T2
    6
    At about the same time, M.P. left the Gem Motel and walked to the
    QuickChek to buy food for her family. A time-stamped receipt showed that at
    11:29 p.m., M.P. purchased three cheese steak sandwiches and other food items.
    She then walked back towards the Gem Motel on the dirt trail commonly used
    by local residents.
    When M.P. did not return, her boyfriend Fernandez became concerned and
    went to look for her. He found groceries and M.P.'s sandals strewn on the
    ground on the dirt trail to the QuickChek. As he bent down to pick up the
    sandals, he saw M.P., who was naked from the waist down, lying in one of the
    four uninstalled concrete sewer pipes that had been placed on the ground. He
    pulled her out of the pipe and attempted to revive her.
    M.P.'s face was badly beaten, she had bloodstains on her face, arms, and
    hands and her shirt was soaked with blood. County investigators collected blood
    sample evidence, several loose hairs, and a Marlboro cigarette butt from inside
    the eight-and-one-half-foot-long pipe near M.P.'s body.
    The investigators also found the groceries M.P. had purchased from the
    QuickChek on the ground near her body, including the three cheese steak
    sandwich containers, one of which was empty, a bloody dollar bill, and the time -
    stamped receipt. The police found M.P.'s shorts, with her underwear still inside,
    A-5929-17T2
    7
    hanging in a tree on a nearby street, and a partially eaten cheesesteak sandwich
    a short distance from the shorts.
    Dr. Marvin Shuster, the chief medical examiner, arrived at the scene at
    2:10 a.m. and determined that M.P.'s death had occurred approximately two
    hours earlier. Dr. Geetha Natarajan, who had been both Chief Medical Examiner
    for Middlesex County and Acting State Medical Examiner, testified that the
    cause of M.P.'s death was asphyxiation, assault and strangulation, and that she
    had sustained injuries consistent with manual strangulation, including a
    fractured hyoid bone, hemorrhaging on the subcutaneous tissue, and abrasions
    to her neck. M.P. also sustained numerous injuries as a result of blunt force
    trauma, including injuries to her eyes, bruises to her face, the inside of her lips
    and chest, and a fractured nasal bone. Although no traces of semen were found,
    Natarajan concluded that M.P. had been sexually assaulted and her multiple anal
    lacerations were consistent with forceful penetration by a finger or hand.
    Natarajan further identified "two circular patterned abrasions on the left
    side of [M.P.'s] chin" as bitemarks, other "bitemarks on the upper quadrant of
    [her] left breast, and injury to her left nipple. Photos of the injury to M.P.'s left
    breast," one with her arm down and another with her arm extended, were taken.
    She testified that bitemarks were "uncommon" in sexual assault homicides, and
    A-5929-17T2
    8
    that in her thirty-years of experience as a medical examiner, in which she had
    performed between 6000 and 7000 autopsies and supervised four to five times
    that number, she had never seen that combination of bitemarks.
    On August 13, 1994, Archer saw defendant for the first time since their
    altercation. She noticed that defendant had scratches on his face, neck and arm.
    Archer testified that she had not scratched defendant during their argument, and
    that defendant did not have the scratches when she last saw him two nights
    before. Archer and defendant later reunited and traveled to Maine, where
    defendant's parents lived.
    About eight months later, on April 3, 1995, Maine State Trooper V.G. was
    off duty and driving home in a marked patrol car when she stopped to investigate
    a car parked on the shoulder facing in the wrong direction. The driver, later
    identified as defendant, produced a driver's permit and said he was lost. He
    could not find his registration or insurance. After detecting a strong odor of
    alcohol, V.G. asked him to take a seat in the front passenger side of her patrol
    car while she administered a series of sobriety tests. Defendant was initially
    "very cooperative." V.G. concluded that defendant was driving while under the
    influence and radioed for back-up assistance from an on-duty officer.
    A-5929-17T2
    9
    While waiting for back-up, V.G. and defendant "chitchat[ted]" as she
    wrote out his summonses. After defendant had been seated in the car for about
    forty-five minutes, he told V.G. that he had a "proposition" for her and suggested
    that she allow him to drive away and they "forget the whole thing." V.G.
    responded that the charges were serious and he would be arrested.
    V.G. testified that defendant "just explode[d]," grabbed her around the
    neck, and hit her head against the door of the car, causing her to lose
    consciousness. When she woke, she was naked from the waist down and her
    shirt had been pulled up exposing her breasts. Her eyes were nearly swollen
    shut, her face and lips were swollen, her nose had been badly broken, her
    esophagus was bruised, her vagina and anus were sore, and she had bitemarks
    on her left breast and chin.    Her vaginal bruising was consistent with the
    insertion of a finger or a thumb, and a large area of anal bruising was consistent
    with the insertion of multiple fingers or a thumb.
    Defendant was arrested later that night and charged with kidnapping,
    aggravated assault, assault on an officer, and attempted gross sexual assault.
    State v. Fortin, 
    318 N.J. Super. 577
    , 589 (App. Div. 1999), aff’d, 162 N.J. at
    A-5929-17T2
    10
    535. He later pleaded guilty to all charges.3 The Maine police found two packs
    of Marlboro cigarettes in defendant's car. As part of the investigation, the
    officers brought defendant to an orthodontist, who took photos and made stone
    cast and wax molds of defendant's teeth.
    On April 24, 1995, the New Jersey police went to Maine to speak to
    defendant, who was in custody. Defendant waived his Miranda4 rights and
    confirmed that he had been living with Archer at the motel in the summer of
    1994. He recalled going to Bennett's residence with Archer on the evening of
    August 11, 1994, but denied assaulting her, although when confronted with the
    police report from that evening, he admitted that she may have fallen after he
    pushed her.
    Defendant admitted that he read a newspaper account of M.P.'s murder
    but denied any involvement. The officers asked him about the scratches on his
    face that Archer had observed, which defendant claimed were old scars. He
    admitted smoking Marlboro cigarettes.
    3
    In November 1995, defendant was sentenced to an aggregate twenty-year term
    of imprisonment. 
    Fortin, 318 N.J. Super. at 589
    . Evidence of defendant's assault
    of V.G. was admitted into evidence in New Jersey at both the guilt-phase and
    penalty-phase retrials under N.J.R.E. 404(b). Fortin, slip op. at 9.
    4
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966).
    A-5929-17T2
    11
    After an officer told defendant that the bitemarks on M.P. matched his
    dental records, defendant said: "If the evidence shows that I did it, it would
    probably be the reason, and I must have been involved, I don't remember ." He
    also stated, "I'm not admitting anything. If the proofs show I did it, then I must
    have done it, I don't recall." He asked if he could be charged with manslaughter
    rather than murder and, if not, whether the officers could guarantee that he
    would not receive the death penalty. When the officers asked defendant for
    permission to record a formal, taped statement, defendant asked for an attorney
    and did not speak further.
    In March 1995, Cellmark, a private lab, tested the cigarette butt found at
    the scene of M.P.'s murder, revealing two sources of DNA, an unknown primary
    donor, and a secondary or minor donor. In May 1995, after the V.G. assault,
    Cellmark received a sample of defendant's blood and retested the items.
    Defendant could not be ruled out as the primary source of the DNA on the
    cigarette butt. However, testing from 1994 of the saliva on the cigarette butt by
    the State Police Laboratory was positive for amylase, a constituent of saliva and
    blood group A, which was not consistent with either defendant's or M.P.'s blood
    type.
    A-5929-17T2
    12
    Ten years later, before the retrial, the State resubmitted the cigarette butt
    to Cellmark to conduct more powerful and sophisticated Y-STR (short tandem
    repeat on Y-chromosome) testing—testing unavailable in 1995.             In 2005,
    polymerase chain reaction and Y-STR testing confirmed that defendant was the
    primary contributor to the DNA obtained from the cigarette butt; the frequency
    for that result was one in ten quadrillion thereby virtually eliminating any other
    source of the DNA. Cellmark could not reconstruct M.P.'s DNA, and thus could
    not determine if she was the secondary source of DNA on the cigarette butt.
    Several experts testified on behalf of the State at trial with regard to the
    bitemark evidence. Hazelwood, the State's expert in violent criminal behavior,
    did not testify as he had in the first trial about the unique similarities between
    the M.P. and V.G. assaults. He instead testified that every violent sexual crime
    has a modus operandi and the motivation is power and anger. Some sexual
    assault cases involve ritualistic behavior, and in a few cases a "signature," or a
    "unique combination of behaviors" run across a series of crimes.
    Adam J. Freeman, D.D.S., the State's expert in forensic odontology, who
    although not yet board certified in forensic dentistry, was Director of the
    Forensic Dentistry Program at Columbia University, a member of various
    professional organizations and the author of a number of scientific publications,
    A-5929-17T2
    13
    testified as to the rarity of the combination of chin and breast bitemarks alone.
    His testimony focused on an analysis he had conducted in 2003 on the results of
    a survey he sent to 1100 forensic dentists in twenty-six countries. See Adam J.
    Freeman et al., Seven Hundred Seventy Eight Bitemarks: Analysis by Anatomic
    Location, Victim and Biter Demographics, Type of Crime, and Legal
    Disposition, 50 J. Forensic Sci. 1436 (Nov. 2005). No cases in the survey
    reported bitemarks to the breast and the chin only.        Freeman agreed that
    bitemarks to the breast were relatively common in sexual assault cases, but
    bitemarks to the chin were not. No more than five cases involving bites to the
    chin were reported in the survey.
    Lastly, Dr. Lowell J. Levine, an American Board of Forensic Odontology
    (ABFO) Diplomate and board certified forensic odontologist, opined within a
    reasonable degree of scientific certainty that based on his review of the autopsy
    photos, M.P. had a bitemark on her left breast and multiple bitemarks on her
    chin. Levine compared the bitemarks to the impressions taken of defendant's
    teeth and concluded that the bitemarks on M.P.'s chin were consistent with
    having been caused by defendant, the injury to her nipple was consistent with a
    bitemark but he could not determine if it was caused by defendant, and that if
    M.P.'s arm was raised when the bitemarks to her breast occurred "then there is
    A-5929-17T2
    14
    a high degree of probability within reasonable scientific certainty it was done
    by [defendant]." If her arm was not raised, Levine concluded that the bitemark
    "could have been done by [defendant]," but he could not make that
    determination with "a high degree of probability."
    Levine also found, within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, that
    V.G. had multiple bitemarks on her chin and an egg-shaped bitemark on her left
    breast. The injury to her left nipple was consistent with having been caused by
    teeth, but he could not make that determination "with reasonable scientific
    certainty." He compared the bitemarks to the molds of defendant's teeth and
    concluded that defendant could have caused the bitemarks to V.G.'s chin, and
    that the bitemarks to her breast were "consistent" with defendant. Levine
    emphasized that while he could not "say with certainty [defendant] did it," he
    could not "exclude [defendant] either."
    Levine demonstrated for the jury how he made the comparisons by placing
    the edges of the model of defendant's teeth over the injury pattern depicted on
    the photos of M.P.'s and V.G.'s bitemarks, and then finding points of similarities
    between the model and the photos. He explained that bitemarks become visible
    through bruises that exhibit certain characteristics.
    A-5929-17T2
    15
    He stated that bitemark comparison theory is based on the idea that every
    individual has a unique set of teeth. He demonstrated that fact by comparing
    the mold of defendant's upper teeth, which were very straight with spaces
    between them, to the molds of three other individuals' teeth. He admitted it was
    not a precise science.
    Defense counsel questioned Levine about a previous case in which he
    testified that the bitemarks were to "a high degree of probability" caused by the
    defendant, but DNA evidence had exonerated that defendant.
    II. The defense at trial.
    Dr. Norman D. Sperber, a practicing dentist, forensic odontologist and
    ABFO Diplomate, testified as an expert in forensic odontology for the defense.
    Sperber testified that bitemark analysis has several serious limitations because
    skin is a poor medium for recording the pattern of teeth because it is "very
    movable" and "very unstable."        He explained that skin is elastic and thus
    indentations made by teeth will rebound, leaving a mark smaller than the biter's
    teeth.     Further complicating the analysis, bitemarks are generally bruises
    consisting of the diffusion of blood under the skin, and therefore do no t
    accurately depict teeth marks.
    A-5929-17T2
    16
    In contrast to identification by dental x-rays and DNA analysis, he
    maintained that bitemark evidence was not reliable nor a "true science" and was
    more useful in excluding than identifying suspects. He testified that bitemark
    analysis testimony had been responsible for many cases of misidentification,
    including a case in Arizona against a defendant, who had been nicknamed "the
    snaggletooth killer," and was eventually exonerated by DNA evidence.
    Despite his reservations about the reliability of bitemark evidence, he
    reviewed the autopsy photos and determined that the lesion on M.P.'s chin was
    "probably" a bitemark, but that the one on her breast was most likely not.
    Sperber demonstrated how he superimposed the overlay of defendant's bite
    pattern over the photograph of the marks on M.P.'s chin and breast, pointed out
    how the overlay and photograph did not match, and testified that based on that
    comparison, he concluded that defendant was "excluded absolutely" from
    having made the bitemarks.      Sperber admitted, however, that he had not
    reviewed V.G.'s bitemarks. He also admitted that he had testified in another
    case that bitemark evidence was helpful and reliable.
    Dr. Robert C. Shaler, Ph.D., the defense expert in DNA analysis, agreed
    with Cellmark's conclusion that defendant was the primary source of the DNA
    A-5929-17T2
    17
    on the cigarette butt, but testified that he had concluded that based on M.P.'s
    partial virtual DNA profile, she was not the secondary source of the DNA.
    III. Motion for a new trial.
    In support of his motion for a new trial, defendant submitted a certification
    and report by Dr. Charles M. Bowers, a board certified forensic odontologist,
    who opined that as a result of "the advancement of science since [the retrial in]
    2007," Levine's testimony was "irretrievably flawed," and the admission of
    bitemark evidence "would not now be considered acceptable as a means of
    human identification."
    Bowers set forth that Levine, as an ABFO Diplomate, was subject to the
    ABFO standards and guidelines relating to bitemark evaluations. He maintained
    that under the revised ABFO guidelines, Levine's 2007 testimony at defendant's
    retrial that there was a "high degree of probability within reasonable scientific
    certainty" that a bitemark was caused by a specific individual was no longer
    permitted.5 The revised guidelines limited bitemark linkage testimony to a
    5
    A revised 2018 Guideline provides that an ABFO Diplomate is prohibited
    from expressing a conclusion "unconditionally linking a bitemark to a
    dentition." See American Board of Forensic Odontology (ABFO), Standards and
    Guidelines for Evaluating Bitemarks (rev. Feb. 19, 2018), http://abfo.org/wp-
    content/uploads/2012/08/
    ABFO-Standards-Guidelines-for-Evaluating-Bitemarks-Feb-2018.pdf
    [hereinafter ABFO Guidelines].
    A-5929-17T2
    18
    conclusion that: "1) the suspect cannot be excluded[;] 2) the suspect is
    excluded[;] or 3) there is insufficient evidence for analysis." He claimed that
    those changes were "due to the growing number of DNA exonerations" since
    defendant's 2007 retrial.
    According to Bowers, "[t]he record of wrongful convictions associated
    with bitemark identification opinions has expanded extensively since . . . 2007."
    "As of 2018, there have been [twenty-eight] exonerations, case dismissals, and
    incarceration releases, where the wrongful conviction of indictment originally
    rested on bitemark evidence." Bowers had been involved in nine of those
    exonerations. Levine had been involved in two known wrongful convictions
    and indictments. Bowers emphasized that "[c]ases where defendants have been
    exonerated after [f]orensic dentists have, at trial, used the same terminology,
    techniques and non-science based assumptions" as Levine.
    Bowers set forth that since 2007, a number of independent scientific
    bodies have rejected the scientific basis used in bitemark analysis. First, Bowers
    cited to a 2009 report by the National Academy of Science (NAS), a private,
    nonprofit scientific society that advises the federal government on scientific and
    technical matters, which addressed the scientific validity of several forensic
    disciplines, including bitemark evidence. See Nat'l Research Council of the
    A-5929-17T2
    19
    Nat'l Academies, Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path
    Forward 173-76 (2009).6 In its report, the NAS stated that: "Although the
    identification of human remains by their dental characteristics is well
    established in the [f]orensic science disciplines, there is continuing dispute over
    the value and scientific validity of comparing and identifying bitemarks."
    Id. at 173
    (footnote omitted).
    The NAS listed the following basic problems inherent in bitemark analysis
    and interpretation:
    (1) The uniqueness of the human dentition has not been
    scientifically established.
    (2) The ability of the dentition, if unique, to transfer a
    unique pattern to human skin and the ability of the skin
    to maintain that uniqueness has not been scientifically
    established.
    i. The ability to analyze and interpret the scope
    or extent of distortion of bitemark patterns on human
    skin has not been demonstrated.
    ii. The effect of distortion on different
    comparison techniques is not fully understood and
    therefore has not been quantified.
    (3) A standard for the type, quality, and number of
    individual characteristics required to indicate that a
    6
    The         full         report        is            available           at
    https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/228091.pdf.
    A-5929-17T2
    20
    bitemark has reached a threshold of evidentiary value
    has not been established.
    [Id. at 175-76 (footnotes omitted).]
    The NAS summarized its assessment of bitemark analysis as follows:
    Despite the inherent weaknesses involved in
    bitemark comparison, it is reasonable to assume that the
    process can sometimes reliably exclude suspects.
    Although the methods of collection of bitemark
    evidence are relatively noncontroversial, there is
    considerable dispute about the value and reliability of
    the collected data for interpretation. Some of the key
    areas of dispute include the accuracy of human skin as
    a reliable registration material for bitemarks, the
    uniqueness of human dentition, the techniques used for
    analysis, and the role of examiner bias. The ABFO has
    developed guidelines for the analysis of bitemarks in an
    effort to standardize analysis, but there is still no
    general agreement among practicing forensic
    odontologists about national or international standards
    for comparison.
    Although the majority of forensic odontologists
    are satisfied that bitemarks can demonstrate sufficient
    detail for positive identification, no scientific studies
    support this assessment, and no large population studies
    have been conducted. In numerous instances, experts
    diverge widely in their evaluations of the same
    bitemark evidence, which has led to questioning of the
    value and scientific objectivity of such evidence.
    Bitemark testimony has been criticized basically
    on the same grounds as testimony by questioned
    document examiners and microscopic hair examiners.
    The committee received no evidence of an existing
    scientific basis for identifying an individual to the
    A-5929-17T2
    21
    exclusion of all others. That same finding was reported
    in a 2001 review, which "revealed a lack of valid
    evidence to support many of the assumptions made by
    forensic dentists during bitemark comparisons." Some
    research is warranted in order to identify the
    circumstances within which the methods of forensic
    odontology can provide probative value.
    [Id. at 176 (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).]
    Second, Bowers cited to a series of published scientific articles in which
    the authors, like defense expert Sperber, concluded that dentition is not unique
    and that human skin cannot accurately record human dentition. See Mary A.
    Bush et al., Statistical Evidence for the Similarity of the Human Dentition, 56 J.
    Forensic Sci. 118 (2011) ("statements of dental uniqueness with respect to
    bitemark analysis in an open population are unsupportable"); H. David Sheets
    et al., Dental Shape Match Rates in Selected and Orthodontically Treated
    Populations in New York State: A Two-dimensional Study, 56 J. Forensic Sci.
    621 (2011) ("[r]esults of studying these populations show that dental matches
    can occur, and that statements of certainty concerning individualization in such
    populations should be approached with caution"); Mary A. Bush et al.,
    Similarity and match rates of the human dentition in three dimensions:
    relevance to bitemark analysis, 125 Int. J. Leg. Med. 779 (2011) ("study suggests
    that there may not be a scientific basis for a general expression of dental
    A-5929-17T2
    22
    uniqueness when the incisal edges of the six anterior teeth are considered");
    Mary A. Bush et al., Inquiry into the Scientific Basis for Bitemark Profiling and
    Arbitrary Distortion Compensation, 55 J. Forensic Sci. 976 (2010) ("bitemark
    profiling and arbitrary distortion compensation may be inadvisable").
    Third, Bowers referenced a 2016 report by the Texas Forensic Science
    Commission (TFSC), a statutorily created body tasked with managing accredited
    forensic disciplines and ensuring the integrity and reliability of forensic
    evidence in Texas criminal courts. See Texas Forensic Sci. Comm'n, Forensic
    Bitemark Comparison Complaint Filed by National Innocence Project on Behalf
    of Steven Mark Chaney 1-17 (Apr. 12, 2016) (the TFSC Report). 7 In its report,
    the TFSC made two threshold findings: (1) "there is no scientific basis for
    stating that a particular patterned injury can be associated to an individual ’s
    dentition" and (2) "there is no scientific basis for assigning probability or
    statistical weight to an association."
    Id. at 11-12.
    The TFSC concluded that "[a]t the current time, the overwhelming
    majority of existing research does not support the contention that bitemark
    comparison can be performed reliably and accurately from examiner to examiner
    7
    Available at
    https://www.txcourts.gov/media/1440871/finalbitemarkreport.pdf.
    A-5929-17T2
    23
    due to the subjective nature of the analysis."
    Id. at 12.
    In reaching that
    conclusion, the TFSC found of "tremendous concern" a 2015 study titled,
    Construct validity of bitemark assessments using the ABFO Decision Tree,
    coauthored by Freeman, one of the State's experts. TFSC Report at 12. In that
    study, the authors asked ABFO Diplomates to review photographs of 100
    patterned injuries.
    Id. at 13
    . 
    "The study revealed an enormous spread of
    decisions among the Diplomates on the basic question of whether the patterned
    injury was in fact a bitemark."
    Ibid. The TFSC recommends
    that bitemark comparison not
    be admitted in criminal cases in Texas unless the
    following are established:
    1. Criteria for identifying when a patterned injury
    constitutes a human bitemark. This criteria should be
    expressed clearly and accompanied by empirical testing
    to demonstrate sufficient inter and intra-examiner
    reliability and validity when the criteria are applied.
    2. Criteria for identifying when a human bitemark was
    made by an adult versus a child. This criteria should be
    expressed clearly and accompanied by empirical testing
    to demonstrate sufficient inter and intra-examiner
    reliability and validity when the criteria are applied.
    3. Rigorous and appropriately validated proficiency
    testing using the above criteria.
    4. A collaborative plan for case review including a
    multidisciplinary team of forensic odontologists and
    attorneys.
    A-5929-17T2
    24
    [Id. at 15-16.]
    Lastly, Bowers cited to a September 2016 report by the President's
    Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). See President's
    Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, Forensic Science in Criminal
    Courts: Ensuring Scientific Validity of Feature-Comparison Methods (Sept. 20,
    2016) (the PCAST Report). 8         The PCAST Report concluded that "[f]ew
    empirical studies have been undertaken to study the ability of examiners to
    accurately identify the source of a bitemark. Among those studies that have
    been undertaken, the observed false positive rates were so high that the method
    is clearly scientifically unreliable at present."
    Id. at 87.
    PCAST cited to an Australian study 9 where fifteen odontologists were
    asked to comment "about six images of supposed bitemarks, [which resulted in]
    wide-ranging opinions among the practitioners on the origin, circumstance, and
    characteristics of the patterned injury for all six images."
    Id. at 85.
    The study
    found that "[s]urprisingly, [odontologists] with the most experience . . . tended
    8
    https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/
    PCAST/pcast_forensic_science_report_final.pdf.
    9
    Page M. Taylor & M. Blenkin, Expert interpretation of bitemark injuries – a
    contemporary qualitative study, 58 J. Forensic Sci. 664 (May 2013).
    A-5929-17T2
    25
    to have the widest range of opinions as to whether a mark was of human dental
    origin or not."
    Ibid. Bowers concluded that
    "[t]he totality of these scientific advances present
    a clear and compelling certainty that the bitemark testimony used in [defendant's
    2007 retrial] is now considered flawed and insufficient to meet current standards
    for scientific admissibility."
    The Innocence Project (IP) submitted a brief in support of defendant's
    motion, arguing that defendant was entitled to a new trial "untainted by the
    grossly unreliable bitemark evidence originally introduced against him." IP
    stated that a scientific consensus doubting the fundamental premises of the field
    had emerged, concluding that forensic odontologists cannot reliably 1) identify
    injuries as bitemarks because skin is an unreliable medium, 2) associate a
    bitemark with the teeth of an individual and 3) quantify the probability of the
    match. IP argued that after defendant's retrial in 2007, "every neutral scientific
    body to have examined bitemarks has rejected it as entirely unreliable," citing
    to the 2009 NAS Report, the TFSC Report, the PCAST Report, and the revised
    ABFO Guidelines.
    In opposition to the motion, the State cited to a series of reports by various
    associations that were highly critical of the PCAST Report for disregarding large
    A-5929-17T2
    26
    bodies of scientific evidence and legal precedence, discrediting the courtroom
    process to test the admissibility and weight of forensic evidence, and calling for
    an end to the use of most forensic evidence in criminal investigations and
    prosecutions. See, e.g., Jack D. Roady, The PCAST Report: A Review and
    Moving Forward—A Prosecutor's Perspective, 32:1 Crim. Just. 9 (2017).
    Then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch did not adopt the PCAST Report
    recommendations, reasoning, that "when used properly, forensic science
    evidence helps juries identify the guilty and clear the innocent, and the
    department believes that the current legal standards regarding the admissibility
    of forensic evidence are based on sound science and sound legal reasoning."
    Id. at 13
    (quoting Gary Fields, White House Advisory Council Report Is Critical of
    Forensics Used in Criminal Trials; U.S. Attorney General says Justice
    Department won't adopt recommendations, Wall St. J., Sept. 20, 2016).
    The State also argued that the list of cases cited by Bowers as examples
    of wrongful convictions due to bitemark evidence were distinguishable because
    "none of [those] cases . . . involved facts like those in this case, which include
    two sets of bitemarks on different victims, one set of which [was known to come]
    from defendant." In addition to the bitemark evidence, defendant's DNA was
    on the cigarette butt found in the pipe at the crime scene. Thus, the State
    A-5929-17T2
    27
    maintained that the key evidence in this case was both the bitemark and the DNA
    evidence. The State also argued that this was not newly discovered evidence
    because the reliability of the bitemark evidence was raised at the 2007 trial and
    could have been raised on direct appeal.
    Defendant raises the following issues on appeal:
    POINT I: NEW SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE HAS
    EMERGED SINCE THE TIME OF DEFENDANT'S
    TRIAL THAT DEMONSTRATES THAT BITEMARK
    ANALYSIS IS NOT A SCIENTIFICALLY VALID
    DISCIPLINE AND HAS NO PLACE IN THE
    COURTROOM. THAT SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE
    CONSTITUTES      NEWLY       DISCOVERED
    EVIDENCE. ON THE BASIS OF THAT EVIDENCE,
    WHICH IS MATERIAL TO DEFENDANT'S GUILT,
    DEFENDANT IS ENTITLED TO A NEW TRIAL.
    A.  THE NEW SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING
    THAT BITEMARK ANALYSIS IS UNRELIABLE
    AND ITS WIDESPEAD REJECTION AMONG
    SCIENTISTS OF THE FIELD IS NEWLY
    DISCOVERED EVIDENCE THAT COULD NOT
    HAVE BEEN DISCOVERED AT THE TIME OF
    TRIAL.
    B.  THE NEW SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING
    THAT BITEMARK ANALYSIS IS UNRELIABLE
    AND NOT GENERALLY ACCEPTD IS MATERIAL
    TO DEFENDANT'S GUILT. IN A NEW TRIAL
    WHERE THE BITEMARK EVIDENCE WERE
    PROPERLY EXCLUDED, THE JURY'S VERDICT
    WOULD PROBABLY BE DIFFERENT.
    A-5929-17T2
    28
    C.  IN THE ALTERNATIVE, THE CASE SHOULD
    BE REMANDED FOR AN EVIDENTIARY
    HEARING ON THE NEWLY DISCOVERED
    EVIDENCE.
    IV. Denial of motion for new trial.
    Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new
    trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence on the reliability and scientific
    validity of bitemark analysis. Rule 3:20 provides that a defendant's motion for
    new trial may be "made at any time" and should be granted "if required in the
    interest of justice."
    "[A] defendant may seek a new trial where advances in scientific
    methodology previously unavailable would likely have changed the result."
    State v. Armour, 
    446 N.J. Super. 295
    , 305 (App. Div. 2016). That is because
    "[s]cience moves inexorably forward and hypotheses or methodologies once
    considered sacrosanct are modified or discarded. The judicial system, with its
    search for the closest approximation to the 'truth,' must accommodate this ever -
    changing scientific landscape." State v. Behn, 
    375 N.J. Super. 409
    , 429 (App.
    Div. 2005).
    "[T]o qualify as newly discovered evidence entitling a party to a new trial,
    the new evidence must be (1) material to the issue and not merely cumulative or
    impeaching or contradictory; (2) discovered since the trial and not discoverable
    A-5929-17T2
    29
    by reasonable diligence beforehand; and (3) of the sort that would probably
    change the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted." State v. Carter, 
    85 N.J. 300
    , 314 (1981). "All three [prongs of the] test[] must be met before the
    evidence can be said to justify a new trial." 
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    . "The
    defendant has the burden to establish each prong is met." State v. Smith, 
    29 N.J. 561
    , 573 (1959).
    We review a motion for a new trial decision for an abuse of discretion.
    
    Armour, 446 N.J. Super. at 306
    . Questions of law are reviewed de novo. State
    v. Miles, 
    229 N.J. 83
    , 90 (2017).
    In denying defendant's motion for a new trial, the trial court found under
    prong two of the Carter test that this was not "newly discovered evidence." The
    court reasoned that although the ABFO Guidelines and some of the other
    information, including the 2009 NAS Report, the TFSC Report, and the PCAST
    Report, had been published after defendant's retrial in 2007, the substance of the
    reports was not "new" in that "the jury was made aware of the problems of
    bitemark evidence" through the testimony of Levine and Sperber. The court also
    found that the supporting evidence cited by Bowers could have been raised much
    earlier than 2018.
    A-5929-17T2
    30
    Under prongs one and three, the court found that the State's case against
    defendant was "extremely strong in terms of circumstantial evidence," notably
    that defendant's DNA was on the cigarette butt found in the pipe where M.P.
    was murdered, and defendant was in the area at the time and was scratched, and
    thus he was not convicted solely on the bitemark evidence. The court also found
    that the impact of the expert testimony on bitemark analysis was mitigated
    because "Levine was very conservative in his approach," and the jury was able
    to see the actual comparisons between the bitemarks and the molds of
    defendant's teeth.
    A. Prong two of the Carter test.
    "Prong two of the Carter test recognizes that judgments must be accorded
    a degree of finality and, therefore, requires that the new evidence must have
    been discovered after completion of trial and must not have been discoverable
    earlier through the exercise of reasonable diligence." State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    , 192 (2004). "The defense must 'act with reasonable dispatch in searching
    for evidence before the start of the trial.'" State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 550
    (2013) (quoting 
    Ways, 180 N.J. at 192
    ). "R[ule] 3:20-2 presents a viable means
    by which a defendant can seek a new trial" based on newly discovered scientific
    evidence "if he [or she] can now show that recently improved scientific
    A-5929-17T2
    31
    methodology, not available at the time of trial, would probably have changed
    the result." State v. Halsey, 
    329 N.J. Super. 553
    , 559 (App. Div. 2000).
    For example, in Behn, the defendant, who was convicted of felony murder
    in 1997, moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence regarding
    bullet lead 
    composition. 375 N.J. Super. at 413-14
    . At trial, the State's expert
    in bullet lead composition analysis, "[Charles] Peters testified that each source
    of lead used by a bullet manufacturer is unique and that there are millions of
    different sources of lead."
    Id. at 420.
    He stated that a comparison of the bullet
    fragments recovered from decedent's body with bullets found in defendant's
    possession revealed that they were "analytically, indistinguishable ."
    Id. at 421.
    He found "the fragments either came from the same box of bullets as those found
    in defendant's possession or other boxes that were manufactured on 'the same
    day' from the 'same source' of lead."
    Ibid. The defense "was
    not able to obtain
    an expert to refute the opinions of Peters, and ultimately Peters' trial testimony
    stood unrebutted."
    Id. at 419.
    We determined that the results of studies conducted by forensic
    metallurgists after the defendant's trial, "was newly discovered."
    Id.
    at 429.
    We
    cited to affidavits submitted in support of the motion in which the metallurgists
    stated that it "was not known until late 2002 that there existed no valid and
    A-5929-17T2
    32
    relevant database of bullet compositions, nor any meaningful or comprehensive
    studies, to permit interpretation of the forensic significance of an alleged 'match'
    of bullet compositions."
    Id. at 426.
    Thus, "no amount of reasonable diligence
    could have uncovered this information, since it did not exist previously."
    Id. at 429.
    Further, whatever any other experts, including those mentioned in two
    other prior out-of-state cases, "might have been able to say on the subject, none
    could have refuted Peters' testimony in the way that [the metallurgists] could,
    since the basis for the impeachment did not exist in April 1995 when defendant's
    trial was conducted."
    Ibid. (footnote omitted). See
    also Armour, 446 N.J.
    Super. at 312 (noting that given the undisputed advances in fingerprint
    identification systems, the evidence "would not have been reasonably
    discovered prior to or during trial").
    Similarly, in State v. Peterson, 
    364 N.J. Super. 387
    , 390-91 (App. Div.
    2003), the defendant brought a motion to obtain post-conviction forensic DNA
    testing of evidence under N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-32a. We held that the DNA testing
    qualified as newly discovered evidence "even though some early forms of DNA
    testing were in use at the time of defendant's trial in 1989, [because] DNA testing
    has become more common and more reliable in the intervening fourteen years."
    Id. at 398.
    We were satisfied that the DNA testing "was not 'discoverable by
    A-5929-17T2
    33
    reasonable diligence before defendant's trial.'" Ibid. (quoting 
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    ).
    In contrast, here, evidence was presented at trial on the substance of all of
    the new reports, except the revised ABFO Guidelines.              For example, in
    conformance with the 2009 NAS Report and PCAST Report, Sperber testified
    that bitemark analysis was not reliable or a "true science." Sperber also testified,
    in conformance with a series of scientific articles, that bitemark comparison
    analysis had serious limitations because skin is "very movable," and thus does
    not accurately depict teeth marks.        Further, Levine admitted that forensic
    odontology was "an art based on science," and that unless an individual had a
    "totally bizarre tooth," he "couldn't say with a hundred percent certainty that
    somebody caused a particular bitemark."            In conformance with Bowers'
    certification, both Levine and Sperber also testified that bitemark analysis
    testimony had been responsible for cases of misidentification. Sperber also
    testified that defendant was "excluded absolutely" from having made the
    bitemarks on M.P.'s chin and breast.
    Furthermore, at the time of the retrial in 2007, scientific articles critical
    of bitemark analysis evidence had been published, including a 2006 article by
    Bowers, and thus the substance of the new reports could have been discovered
    A-5929-17T2
    34
    through reasonable diligence. See C.M. Bowers, Problem-based analysis of
    bitemark misidentifications: The role of DNA, Forensic Sci. Int., 159 Supp. 1
    (2006) ("dental literature concerning bitemark methodology is surprisingly thin
    and sorely lacking in rigorous scientific testing"); D.K. Whittaker, Some
    laboratory studies on the accuracy of bitemark comparison, 25 Int'l Dent. J. 166
    (1975) (suggesting that because identification of bitemarks on pig skin was
    unreliable, similar difficulties may be encountered in identifying bites on human
    skin); I.A. Pretty & D. Sweet, The scientific basis for human bitemark
    analyses—a critical review, 41 Sci. & Justice 85 (2001) ("review revealed a lack
    of valid evidence to support many of the assumptions made by forensic dentists
    during bitemark comparisons"); I.A. Pretty, A web-based survey of
    odontologists' opinions concerning bitemark analyses, 48 J. Forensic Sci. 1117
    (2003) ("survey[ing] forensic dentists to obtain their views on a number of
    crucial components of bitemark theory and contentious areas within the
    discipline").
    The only entirely new evidence in this case was the 2016 revision to the
    ABFO Guidelines. The revised ABFO Guidelines provide that "[a]n ABFO
    Diplomate shall not express conclusions unconditionally linking a bitemark to a
    dentition." See ABFO Guidelines at 1. They also provide that an odontologist
    A-5929-17T2
    35
    should use only the following terms linking a dentition to a human bitemark:
    "[e]xcluded as [h]aving [m]ade the [b]ite[]mark"; "[n]ot [e]xcluded as [h]aving
    [m]ade the [b]ite[]mark"; and "[i]nconclusive."
    Id. at 3-4.
    "Stronger terms of
    attribution are not condoned by the ABFO."
    Id. at 5.
    Although the Guidelines
    have changed, in itself that change does not satisfy the second prong of the
    Carter analysis.
    B. Prongs one and three of the Carter test.
    Prong one of the Carter test provides that the new evidence must be
    "material to the issue and not merely cumulative or impeaching or
    contradictory." 
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    . Evidence is material if it "'would have
    some bearing on the claims being advanced,' and includes evidence that supports
    a general denial of guilt." 
    Nash, 212 N.J. at 549
    (quoting 
    Ways, 180 N.J. at 188
    ). "Determining whether evidence is 'merely cumulative, or impeaching, or
    contradictory,' and, therefore insufficient to justify the grant of a new trial
    requires an evaluation of the probable impact such evidence would have on a
    jury verdict." 
    Ways, 180 N.J. at 188
    -89 (quoting 
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    ).
    In that regard, prongs one and three are "inextricably intertwined." 
    Nash, 212 N.J. at 549
    .
    Therefore, the focus properly turns to prong three of the
    Carter test, whether the evidence is "of the sort that
    A-5929-17T2
    36
    would probably change the jury's verdict if a new trial
    were granted."      
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    .          The
    characterization of evidence as 'merely cumulative, or
    impeaching, or contradictory' is a judgment that such
    evidence is not of great significance and would
    probably not alter the outcome of a verdict.
    Ibid. However, evidence that
    would have the probable effect
    of raising a reasonable doubt as to the defendant's guilt
    would not be considered merely cumulative,
    impeaching, or contradictory.
    Ibid. [Ways, 180 N.J.
    at 189.]
    "The power of the newly discovered evidence to alter the verdict is the cen tral
    issue . . . ."
    Id. at 191-92.
    The evidence must be "evaluated in light of the . . .
    corroborative proofs in the record." See State v. Herrerra, 
    211 N.J. 308
    , 343
    (2012). "[T]he third prong of Carter presents a mixed question of law and fact,
    requiring that we give deference to 'supported factual findings of the trial court,
    but review de novo the lower court's application of any legal rules to such factual
    findings.'" 
    Behn, 375 N.J. Super. at 432
    (quoting State v. Harris, 
    181 N.J. 391
    ,
    416 (2004)).
    Under the first prong of the Carter test, the new evidence—the NAS
    Report, ABFO Guidelines, TFSC Report, PCAST Report and the various
    studies—is clearly material to the bitemark evidence, which was a "focal issue
    of the trial and must be considered material." See State v. Henries, 306 N.J.
    Super. 512, 531 (App. Div. 1997). The State focused on this evidence in its
    A-5929-17T2
    37
    opening and closing arguments, and presented four witnesses who testified about
    bitemarks: Hazelwood, Natarajan, Freeman and Levine.
    However, with the exception of the ABFO Guidelines, the new evidence
    was cumulative, in that comparable evidence impeaching the bitemark evidence
    and exonerations in other cases based on such evidence was offered at trial. The
    impact of this "new" evidence was "not of great significance and would probably
    not alter the outcome of a verdict." See 
    Ways, 180 N.J. at 189
    . Because the
    new evidence would not "effectively neutralize[] the State's expert testimony,"
    this situation stands in direct contrast to Behn. 
    See 375 N.J. Super. at 433
    .
    Further, even though the revised ABFO Guidelines are new, under prong
    three, the imposition of those guidelines are not "of the sort that would probably
    change the jury's verdict if a new trial was granted." 
    Carter, 85 N.J. at 314
    .
    Under the revised ABFO Guidelines, Levine could not "express conclusions
    unconditionally linking a bitemark to a dentition."     ABFO Guidelines at 1.
    During a new trial he would likely be limited to testifying that defendant's
    dentition is "[n]ot [e]xcluded as [h]aving [m]ade the [b]itemark" to both M.P.
    and V.G. ABFO Guidelines at 4. The jury knew, however, that defendant
    caused the injuries to V.G. because he pled guilty to the crimes against V.G. in
    Maine.
    A-5929-17T2
    38
    Under the new guidelines, ABFO Diplomates may identify a mark as a
    human bitemark and can testify as to the rarity of a certain combination of
    bitemarks. Thus, Levine could still testify that the marks on M.P.'s and V.G.'s
    chin and left breast were bitemarks; Natarajan, who was not an ABFO
    Diplomate, could still identify the marks on M.P.'s chin and left breast as
    bitemarks and could testify that in her thirty years' experience she had never
    seen that combination of bitemarks; and Freeman could still testify as to the
    results of his survey in which he found no cases that reported bitemarks to just
    the chin and the breast. As a result, although the jury would be presented at a
    new trial with less definitive testimony by Levine linking the bitemarks to
    defendant, the jury would still hear evidence that defendant could not be
    excluded as having caused the bitemarks and that the combination of bitemarks
    was highly unusual.     The new ABFO Guidelines would not preclude the
    admission of the N.J.R.E. 404(b) evidence of defendant's sexual assault o f V.G.
    Levine's testimony was, as the trial court found, "conservative" and did
    not unconditionally link the bitemarks to defendant. Moreover, as the trial court
    found, there was other strong evidence in this case besides the bitemark
    evidence, notably, defendant's DNA on the cigarette butt found inside the pipe
    where M.P. was killed. His attack on Archer placed him in the area at the time
    A-5929-17T2
    39
    of the murder, he had unexplained scratch marks on his face, neck and arms the
    night of the murder, he was agitated and angry with Archer at the time of M.P.'s
    murder, and he committed a very similar and highly unusual assault against V.G.
    just months after M.P.'s murder.
    Lastly, bitemark evidence is currently admissible in New Jersey. State v.
    Timmendequas, 
    161 N.J. 515
    , 624 (1999), cert. denied, 
    534 U.S. 858
    (2001).
    As defendant conceded, despite the evolving criticism by the scientific
    community as to the reliability of this evidence, to date no court in the United
    States has excluded expert testimony on bitemark identification. See Michael
    A. Saks et al., Forensic bitemark identification: weak foundations, exaggerated
    claims, 3 J. Law Biosci. 538 (2016). Courts have criticized the discipline, and
    overturned convictions based on DNA evidence or repudiated testimony, but
    have not overruled cases allowing admission. See In re Richards, 
    371 P.3d 195
    ,
    207-08 (Cal. 2016) (overturning the defendant's conviction where Sperber
    clearly repudiated his trial testimony that the autopsy photograph depict ed a
    human bitemark). Defendant failed to establish any of the three prongs of the
    Carter test. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for
    a new trial.
    A-5929-17T2
    40
    C. Evidentiary hearing.
    Defendant argues in the alternative that the motion judge erred in failing
    to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the reliability of the bitemark identification
    evidence. Our Supreme Court has held that bitemark identification evidence
    satisfies the requirements for admission under N.J.R.E. 702, Fortin 
    III, 189 N.J. at 593-94
    , 608-09, and the motion court properly considered the new reports in
    addressing defendant's motion for a new trial. A more extensive evidentiary
    hearing was not required.
    Affirmed.
    A-5929-17T2
    41