State v. Nefstad , 301 Or. App. 185 ( 2019 )


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  •                                        185
    Argued and submitted October 19, 2017, affirmed December 11, 2019, petition
    for review denied May 7, 2020 (
    366 Or 451
    )
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    STEPHEN LEROY NEFSTAD,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Multnomah County Circuit Court
    870331733; A161053
    456 P3d 294
    Defendant appeals an order denying his motion for a new trial. Defendant
    was found guilty of aggravated murder in 1987. Following his conviction, defen-
    dant obtained a court order directing police to conduct DNA testing of the jacket
    and boots that were used as circumstantial evidence to convict him. According
    to defendant, the DNA testing results were “exculpatory” in the sense that they
    were “favorable” to his case, and he was therefore entitled to file a motion for a
    new trial under ORS 138.696 (2013). The state disagrees, arguing that defendant
    misinterprets the term “exculpatory” and that, even under defendant’s definition,
    the results did not entitle him to a new trial. Held: The trial court did not err in
    denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. Even assuming that “exculpatory”
    means that the results are merely “favorable,” the results in this case did not
    meet that threshold.
    Affirmed.
    Julie E. Frantz, Judge.
    Lindsey Burrows, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Ernest G. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services. Lindsey Burrows and O’Connor Weber
    LLC filed the reply brief.
    Leigh A. Salmon, Assistant Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F.
    Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General.
    Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Powers, Judge, and
    Mooney, Judge.*
    ______________
    * Mooney, J., vice Garrett, J. pro tempore.
    186               State v. Nefstad
    ORTEGA, P. J.
    Affirmed.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                                  187
    ORTEGA, P. J.
    Defendant was found guilty of aggravated murder
    in 1987. At his trial, a criminalist for the state testified,
    based on chemical tests, that human blood was found on
    defendant’s jacket and boots. The jacket was believed to be
    the jacket that defendant was wearing when he left a tavern
    with the victim. Defendant eventually sought and obtained
    a court order directing police to conduct DNA testing of the
    jacket and boots with methods that were not used at the
    time of the trial. This appeal concerns the results of that
    testing. According to defendant, the results were “excul-
    patory” in the sense that they were “favorable” to his case,
    and he was therefore entitled to file a motion for a new trial
    under ORS 138.696 (2013).1 The state disagrees, arguing
    that defendant misinterprets the term “exculpatory” but
    that, even under defendant’s definition, the results did not
    entitle him to a new trial. For the reasons explained below,
    we agree with the state’s latter argument: Even assuming
    that “exculpatory” means that the results are merely “favor-
    able,” the results in this case did not meet that threshold.
    We therefore affirm the trial court’s order denying defen-
    dant’s motion for a new trial.
    I. UNDERLYING TRIAL
    We begin by providing the historical facts from the
    criminal trial, which are taken from State v. Nefstad, 
    309 Or 523
    , 
    789 P2d 1326
     (1990), and supplemented with undis-
    puted facts from the record.
    “Shortly after midnight on Friday, March 13, 1987,
    defendant Stephen Leroy Nefstad and co-defendant Reyes
    Miranda drove to the Acropolis Tavern in Portland. There
    defendant struck up a conversation with the victim, Steven
    A. Jackson. At about 1:45 a.m., Jackson told his compan-
    ions ‘that he would be right back’ and then stepped out-
    side the tavern with defendant and Miranda. Jackson was
    never seen alive again.
    1
    The statutes governing post-conviction DNA testing were amended in 2015
    and 2019. Or Laws 2015, ch 564; Or Laws 2019, ch 368. Because the 2015 amend-
    ments did not go into effect until January 1, 2016, all references to the post-
    conviction DNA statutes are to the version in effect at the time of the trial court’s
    ruling in November 2015.
    188                                              State v. Nefstad
    “A few miles away from the tavern at 2:37 a.m.,
    [co-defendant] Miranda used Jackson’s automatic teller
    bank card to withdraw $200 from Jackson’s account.
    Sometime during this period, Jackson was brutally mur-
    dered by repeated stab wounds to his chest, and his body
    was left off of a dead-end street. The front passenger area
    of Miranda’s vehicle was covered with blood; Miranda’s
    clothes were soaked with blood, and defendant also had
    blood on his clothes.
    “Defendant stated to his friends that ‘something heavy
    had gone down. That they [defendant and Miranda] had
    to take this guy out. That he was history.’ Miranda admit-
    ted that after the stabbing, his car looked like ‘Psycho III.’
    When the police took defendant in for questioning, defen-
    dant identified himself as ‘Johnson’ and gave a false date-
    of-birth. He told the police that ‘he didn’t know anything
    about the homicide.’ Defendant told the officers an exculpa-
    tory story. The jury, however, found that he and Miranda
    had killed Jackson.”
    Nefstad, 
    309 Or at 525
     (second brackets in original).
    During the trial, there was no forensic evidence
    connecting defendant to the car or murder. Some weeks
    after the murder, the state seized, among other evidence,
    defendant’s jean jacket and a pair of boots. A witness testi-
    fied that defendant was wearing a jean jacket when he was
    seen leaving the Acropolis Tavern with Jackson. Nefstad,
    
    309 Or 555
     n 20. At trial, criminalist Beth Carpenter testi-
    fied that she had identified a “small amount” of what testing
    confirmed was human blood on the boots. Carpenter also
    testified that there were several areas of what testing con-
    firmed was human blood on the jacket. As relevant to this
    appeal, Carpenter testified that one of those locations was
    the “outside of the left arm, elbow area.” Carpenter testified
    that she was unable to determine through chemical testing
    whose blood was on defendant’s jacket or boots. Nefstad, 
    309 Or at 544
    .
    Carpenter also testified that she was unable to
    determine, “[f]rom a scientific point of view,” whether the
    jacket was in the car at the time of the murder, but she
    opined that,
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                 189
    “Assuming that this jacket was in the car when * * * Jackson
    was killed, I believe it was worn by an individual who had
    his arm, his left arm, around the neck of * * * Jackson, pos-
    sibly and probably in the back seat.”
    
    Id. at 544-45
     (brackets in original).
    Defendant was convicted of aggravated murder and
    sentenced to death. 
    Id. at 525
    . The Supreme Court affirmed
    the conviction, but it reversed and remanded the case for
    resentencing. 
    Id.
    II. MOTION FOR DNA TESTING AND
    MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL
    To provide context to the parties’ arguments, we
    begin by discussing the applicable law. A person who is
    incarcerated after a conviction for aggravated murder may
    file a motion in the original criminal case requesting DNA
    testing of certain evidence obtained at the time of the origi-
    nal prosecution that resulted in the conviction. ORS 138.690;
    ORS 138.692. The person filing a motion under ORS 138.690
    must also submit an affidavit that includes, among other
    information, a statement that the person is “innocent of the
    offense for which the person was convicted.” ORS 138.692
    (A)(ii). The person requesting the testing “must present a
    prima facie showing that the DNA testing of the specified
    evidence would, assuming exculpatory results, establish
    the actual innocence of the person[.]” ORS 138.692(1)(b). If
    the court orders the specified evidence to be tested, ORS
    138.696 allows the person to file a motion requesting a new
    trial if the court concludes that the DNA results are “excul-
    patory.” Specifically, ORS 138.696 provides:
    “(1) If DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) testing ordered
    under ORS 138.692 produces inconclusive evidence or
    evidence that is unfavorable to the person requesting the
    testing:
    “(a) The court shall forward the results to the State
    Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision; and
    “(b) The Department of State Police shall compare
    the evidence to DNA evidence from unsolved crimes in the
    Combined DNA Index System.
    190                                                         State v. Nefstad
    “(2) If DNA testing ordered under ORS 138.692 pro-
    duces exculpatory evidence, the person who requested the
    testing may file in the court that ordered the testing a
    motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence.”
    Turning back to the facts of this case, on December 11,
    2001, the same year that the Oregon legislature passed the
    state’s first DNA-post-conviction statute, defendant filed a
    motion requesting that certain evidence seized at the time
    of his prosecution be tested for DNA. For reasons not related
    to this appeal, the hearing on defendant’s motion was not
    held until July 2014.2
    At the hearing, defendant requested, as relevant to
    this appeal, that the jean jacket and boots that Carpenter
    tested at the time of his trial be tested for DNA. In determin-
    ing whether to grant defendant’s motion and order the DNA
    testing, one of the contested issues before the trial court
    was the probative value of testing the jacket due to the risk
    that the jacket had been contaminated. After defendant’s
    trial, his jacket had been stored for over 20 years together
    with Miranda’s and Jackson’s bloody clothing. Both parties
    agreed that there was a risk of contamination. Ultimately,
    the court granted defendant’s motion and ordered the test-
    ing of the jacket and boots.3
    Following the results of the DNA testing, the state
    filed a “State’s Notice of DNA Testing Results and Motion
    for Finding of ‘Unfavorable’ Evidence.” Defendant responded
    by filing his objection to the state’s motion and subsequently
    filed a motion for a new trial. The court held a hearing on
    both motions.
    At this point, we give only a brief summary of the
    results because we provide a more detailed account below.
    The results from the boots identified the presence of blood in
    2
    For reasons also not relevant to this appeal, defendant ultimately filed a
    total of five motions requesting a court order for DNA testing.
    3
    The trial court also ordered the testing of “[a]ny frozen blood swabs” taken
    from defendant’s boots. Carpenter had created a liquid extract of blood taken
    from defendant’s boot, which had been stored in a freezer following defendant’s
    trial. There was no DNA profile obtained from the extract, which defendant con-
    cedes on appeal is an inconclusive test result. Because the testing results from
    the extract do not form the basis of the issues raised on appeal, we focus our
    discussion and analysis only on the testing results from the jacket and boots.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                             191
    several areas. Additionally, DNA from at least two contrib-
    utors, including defendant, was recovered from the boots.
    However, partially due to the low levels of DNA recovered,
    no conclusions could be drawn regarding the identity of the
    contributors of the DNA. Similarly, the jacket tested posi-
    tive for the presence of blood in multiple locations. However,
    unlike the boots, Jackson’s DNA was located on the jacket.
    And, although the testing showed that contamination of the
    jacket was possible, evidence was presented that it was more
    probable that Jackson’s DNA in one location of the jacket,
    the left elbow area, was deposited at the time of the murder
    and not the result of contamination.
    The trial court issued a written order detailing its
    factual findings and legal conclusions, which we also address
    in more detail below. The trial court found that the results
    from the boots were “inconclusive” because the testing of the
    boots “did not generate useable DNA profile results.” The
    court also found that, because Jackson’s DNA profile was
    located on the jacket, including the left elbow area, which
    was “consistent with the state’s theory [that defendant]
    wrapped his left arm in that sleeve around the neck of * * *
    Jackson to hold him in place while * * * Reyes repeatedly
    stabbed * * * Jackson in the front seat,” the results “link
    [defendant] to the crime scene” and were not exculpatory.
    The court then denied defendant’s motion for a new trial
    based on those findings.
    III.   ANALYSIS
    On appeal, defendant argues that the court erred in
    concluding that the DNA results were not exculpatory and
    in denying his motion for a new trial. Defendant first begins
    by arguing that the legislature intended the word “exculpa-
    tory” in ORS 138.696 to mean that the DNA results must
    be “favorable.” Defendant contends that “ ‘exculpatory’ is a
    legal term of art regularly applied to evidence in the context
    of Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 US 83
    , 
    83 S Ct 1194
    , 
    10 L Ed 2d 215
     (1963).” And, under Brady, evidence is exculpatory if it
    is “favorable to an accused.” Brady, 
    373 US at 87
    . Defendant
    argues that the dictionary definition supports that interpre-
    tation because it establishes that the plain meaning of “excul-
    patory” is “ ‘tending to exculpate,’ which, in turn, means ‘to
    192                                          State v. Nefstad
    clear from alleged fault or guilt.’ ” (Quoting Webster’s Third
    New Int’l Dictionary 794 (unabridged ed 2002) (emphasis in
    defendant’s brief)). Lastly, defendant argues that, in assess-
    ing whether the results are favorable, the legislative history
    supports that the results must be viewed in light of the facts
    of the case.
    The state disputes defendant’s definition of “excul-
    patory.” The state argues that “exculpatory” for purposes
    of ORS 138.696 requires DNA test results to demonstrate
    defendant’s actual innocence. However, the state contends
    that, even applying the “favorable” standard, defendant’s
    arguments fail because defendant’s arguments are pre-
    mised on factual assertions that the trial court rejected.
    We agree with the state that we need not decide
    whether defendant’s definition of “exculpatory” for purposes
    of ORS 138.696 is correct because we conclude that, even
    applying defendant’s definition, the DNA results from the
    boots and the jacket are not favorable—that is, the results
    do not tend to exculpate defendant. We discuss the results
    from the jacket and the boots, in turn, below.
    We review for errors of law the court’s legal conclu-
    sion that the DNA results were not “exculpatory” based on
    its interpretation of ORS 138.696. See State v. Cadigan, 
    212 Or App 686
    , 690, 159 P3d 348, rev den, 
    343 Or 223
     (2007).
    On review for errors of law, a trial court’s findings of fact
    are binding on appeal if there is evidence in the record to
    support them. Ball v. Gladen, 
    250 Or 485
    , 487, 
    443 P2d 621
    (1968).
    A. DNA Results from the Jacket
    Because Jackson’s DNA was located on the jacket,
    we begin there. Defendant’s argument that the results
    from the jacket are exculpatory misstates the test results
    and incorrectly concludes that they were favorable to him.
    Chrystal Bell and Marla Kaplan, forensic scientists with
    the Oregon State Police Forensic Services Division, testi-
    fied at the hearing and explained the testing results. Bell
    conducted preliminary testing of the jacket and boots to
    determine the presumptive presence of blood. Kaplan subse-
    quently performed the DNA testing. Bell explained that she
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                 193
    and Kaplan devised an analytical approach to test the jacket
    to account for the risk of contamination. Their approach was
    to test the locations of the jacket where Carpenter had pre-
    viously located blood. Carpenter had cut squares from the
    jacket and tested those individual squares for blood. Because
    Carpenter’s original cuttings were either lost or destroyed,
    Bell tested the areas immediately adjacent to those squares.
    Carpenter had tested seven areas of the jacket, and
    four of those areas tested positive for the presence of blood
    using phenolphthalein, a chemical compound used to detect
    blood. Carpenter had created two separate drawings to doc-
    ument her testing from the cuttings, one reflecting the front
    of the jacket and the other reflecting the back. Carpenter
    indicated that the four areas that had tested positive for
    blood were all located on the front of the jacket. On the
    back of the jacket, Carpenter noted the two areas that she
    had tested were negative. Carpenter also tested the jacket
    for the presence of blood using luminol, and the results
    returned a void on the back of the jacket, indicating no blood
    was detected.
    As particularly relevant to this appeal, one of the
    areas that Bell tested was the outer edge of Carpenter’s cut-
    ting on the left sleeve or elbow. Carpenter noted this area
    as “A” on both her front and back sketches. On Carpenter’s
    front sketch, she noted that area A returned a positive blood
    result. On her back sketch, Carpenter omitted any positive
    or negative notation next to A. Bell explained that
    “[Area] A * * * on [Carpenter’s] sketches * * * is shown
    on both the front and on her sketch on the back. Now, we
    know that as a jacket or a shirt is worn, if you lay it down,
    there’s a front side and a back side. But as worn, you can
    have staining that’s extending onto both areas.”
    Bell thus concluded that Carpenter’s notation of area A on
    the front and back of her sketches appear to be “an exten-
    sion of the same stain.” Kaplan agreed with Bell’s conclusion
    that area A on the front and back of Carpenter’s sketches
    were a “single stain” due to the three-dimensional nature of
    the jacket.
    Bell took a cutting, labelling it “Ex 1.1,” from the
    threaded area where Carpenter’s cutting of area A had
    194                                                       State v. Nefstad
    been. Bell’s notes indicated that the location of area A and
    Ex 1.1 on the jacket was the “back left sleeve.” We provide an
    appendix that includes a photo of the front and back of the
    jacket taken by Bell.4 Bell testified that she took a cutting
    immediately below Carpenter’s cutting, “from an extension
    of the hole that * * * Carpenter had originally made.” Ex 1.1
    came back presumptively positive for the presence of blood.
    Bell also conducted a visual examination of the
    jacket to attempt to identify possible blood stains. Bell
    observed a “diffuse, light brown” stain in area A, but she
    was unable to determine whether the stain was a primary
    blood stain or blood deposited in another way, or some other
    soiling. Bell could not determine from Carpenter’s notes
    whether and the extent to which Carpenter had observed
    blood staining.
    Kaplan then conducted DNA testing by cutting
    pieces from the centers of the cuttings that she had obtained
    from Bell. Kaplan explained that she and Bell decided to
    actually test the cotton fibers of the jacket for DNA as
    opposed to just swabbing the surface because cotton fibers
    are absorbent, and the goal was to capture the genetic mate-
    rial from the blood that may have been trapped within the
    fibers in 1987.
    Kaplan’s testing results from Ex 1.1 revealed the
    partial DNA profile of a single person—Jackson. The esti-
    mated frequency of the DNA profile is less than 1 in 10 bil-
    lion in the Caucasian, African American, and Hispanic pop-
    ulations. Kaplan explained that a “partial profile” means
    that the DNA is not “fully resolved” at all 32 possible loca-
    tions in which DNA can be found. Kaplan testified that par-
    tial DNA profiles produce interpretable results and are com-
    monly relied on in the field of forensic science.5
    4
    The photo includes Bell’s notes indicating the areas on the jacket where
    Carpenter had tested, including some areas not addressed in this opinion. We
    focus only on the results from the jacket that are relevant to this appeal.
    5
    Jackson’s DNA was also located in two areas on the collar of the jacket.
    Carpenter’s drawing noted that blood was detected in two areas on the collar,
    areas B and G, in 1987. Bell labelled area B as “Ex 1.2,” and area G as “Ex 1.4.”
    For area B, Ex 1.2, Bell was unable to locate exactly where Carpenter sampled
    from, so her sample was taken from the “lower collar/placket.” For area G, Ex
    1.4, Bell cut from the margin of the hole that Carpenter had previously cut. Both
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                               195
    Kaplan acknowledged that she obtained one-fifth
    the optimum level of DNA from Ex 1.1, which is considered
    a low-level result, but noted that such levels are “a very rou-
    tine amount of DNA that is often tested * * * in criminal
    cases,” are “not in any way unusual,” and are scientifically
    reliable.
    Both Bell and Kaplan acknowledged that contam-
    ination—the transfer of DNA from Jackson’s or Miranda’s
    clothing to defendant’s jacket—was possible. To assess the
    presence and extent of contamination, Bell swabbed the sur-
    face of the jacket and then tested the swabs for the presence
    of blood. Bell labelled those swabs “Ex 1.5.” As a result of
    the swabbing, blood was detected in all of the areas tested,
    including those areas where Carpenter had not previously
    detected blood. Kaplan subsequently conducted DNA test-
    ing of those swabs, and they returned “mixtures of at least
    two individuals at a level that was so low that [Kaplan]
    was unable to make any conclusive determinations about
    the donors of * * * those DNA mixtures.” Kaplan testified
    that the mixture of DNA from Ex 1.5 may be the result of
    contamination from the commingling of defendant’s clothes
    with Jackson’s and Miranda’s clothing.
    Kaplan explained the relative significance of iden-
    tifying a single profile in Ex 1.1 and a low-level mixture of
    DNA in Ex 1.5. She noted that, if Ex 1.1 had returned a
    mixture of DNA profiles, she “would have no way to discuss
    [it], to contextualize that result because of the known com-
    mingling.” Kaplan continued,
    “However, in this instance, because I did obtain just
    that single source DNA profile, I’m * * * left to question * * *
    returned partial DNA profiles matching Jackson’s. The estimated frequency of
    the DNA profile from a randomly selected individual in these samples was higher
    than for the sample in Ex 1.1 (Ex 1.2: 1 in 60.0 million in the Caucasian popula-
    tion, 1 in 1.09 billion in the African American population, and 1 in 755 million
    in the Hispanic population; Ex 1.4: 1 in 8,330 in the Caucasian population, 1 in
    109,000 in the African American population, and 1 in 43,100 in the Hispanic
    population). Kaplan and Bell were not asked to and did not provide an opinion as
    to whether the blood located in those areas was more or less likely to have been
    deposited in 1987 or the result of contamination. Although the court’s written
    order did note the results in Ex 1.4, the court relied most heavily on the results
    from Ex 1.1 in its findings. Therefore, because of the court’s primary reliance on
    Ex 1.1, and because the results from Ex 1.4 and Ex 1.2 would not affect the out-
    come in this case, we focus our analysis on the results from Ex 1.1.
    196                                          State v. Nefstad
    from a DNA analysis and scientific standpoint, then what
    happened to the DNA—to the blood that [Carpenter] found
    in 1987, because I found no evidence of anyone else’s DNA
    in that same area.”
    Kaplan thus concluded that the test results of Ex 1.1 are
    “less likely the results of contamination than * * * of * * *
    Jackson’s blood” deposited in 1987. For the same reason, Bell
    likewise concluded that it is “more probable that the blood
    [she] detected and sampled [in Ex 1.1] was blood deposited
    in 1987.”
    On appeal, as he did before the trial court, defen-
    dant argues that the testing results from the jacket are
    exculpatory. He first contends that the testing “revealed the
    presence of multiple DNA profiles, which refutes the state’s
    trial theory” that the blood on the jacket must have been
    Jackson’s. Defendant contests the court’s findings that it was
    more probable that the blood on the elbow (Ex 1.1), which
    tested positive for Jackson’s DNA, was deposited at the
    time of the murder. He argues that “[t]hat conclusion wholly
    depends on a single premise: that Bell and Kaplan tested
    the same area in which Carpenter originally found blood,”
    which defendant contends “is unsupported by the record.”
    (Emphasis in original.) He argues that Kaplan and Bell
    could not have tested the same area as Carpenter because
    the squares Carpenter tested had been lost or destroyed.
    According to defendant, Ex 1.1 “likely revealed
    the victim’s DNA in an area where Carpenter originally
    obtained a negative result.” (Emphasis in original.) As sup-
    port for that position, defendant argues that Carpenter’s
    cuttings from the back of jacket and the luminol testing all
    reveal that there was no blood on the back of the jacket.
    Defendant acknowledges that “Area A, from which Ex 1.1
    was taken, included portions of both the front and the back
    of the jacket,” but concludes that Carpenter only identified
    blood on the front of the jacket. And, because Bell’s cutting
    came from the back of the jacket, Bell’s cutting did not come
    from the same area where Carpenter had detected blood
    on the left sleeve. Thus, defendant argues, Jackson’s blood
    on the left sleeve is the result of contamination and that,
    combined with the results identifying multiple contributors
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    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                              197
    elsewhere on the jacket, is favorable because it shows that
    the blood on defendant’s jacket may have come from a source
    other than Jackson, undermining the state’s trial theory.
    As it did before the trial court, the state disagrees.
    The state notes that it is undisputed that Jackson’s blood
    was located on the jacket. Further, the state argues, the
    trial court found as fact that Jackson’s blood on the back-
    left sleeve was located in the same area in which Carpenter
    had detected human blood in 1987, which linked defendant
    to the crime scene, and that defendant’s challenge to that
    factual finding ignores our standard of review.
    Refuting defendant’s specific challenges to the
    court’s factual findings, the state argues that defendant’s
    claim that Bell and Kaplan located Jackson’s blood in a
    location that Carpenter had previously determined lacked
    human blood is based on defendant’s own interpreta-
    tion of Carpenter’s handwritten notes to the exclusion of
    Carpenter’s testimony and other evidence. The state first
    points to Carpenter’s testimony at trial, stating that she
    found human blood on the “ ‘outside of the left elbow area.’ ”
    The state argues that “[n]othing about that testimony sug-
    gests that the human blood on the elbow was confined to
    the ‘front’ of the sleeve, as opposed to covering the elbow,
    three-dimensionally, front to back.” Further, the state points
    to a photo taken by Bell that shows a two-dimensional view
    of the back of the jacket and notes that the original hole that
    Carpenter cut, as reflected in the photo, is in fact located on
    the back of the jacket.
    The state also argues that defendant misunder-
    stands the scientists’ testimony and the trial court’s fac-
    tual findings regarding the background DNA testing of the
    jacket, which identified a mixture of at least two contribu-
    tors. The background DNA testing, the state contends, rep-
    resents the extent of potential contamination, explaining,
    “[P]laces on the jacket where there is no dispute that blood
    did not previously exist, Kaplan and Bell discovered blood
    from multiple contributors. Yet, in the exact location where
    Carpenter did detect the presence of blood—the left sleeve—
    there was only one contributor: the victim.” (Emphasis in
    original.) Thus, the state argues, the court’s finding that it
    198                                          State v. Nefstad
    was more probable that Jackson’s blood was deposited at the
    time of the murder is supported by the record and is binding
    on appeal. We agree with the state.
    Defendant’s argument that the jacket evidence is
    favorable hinges on his theory that Jackson’s DNA that was
    located on the left sleeve was a result of contamination and
    was not deposited at the time of the murder. As the state
    notes, the challenge for defendant is that defendant’s argu-
    ment is premised on a challenge to the trial court’s factual
    findings, which we are bound to follow if any evidence in
    the record supports them. Ball, 
    250 Or at 487
    . And, because
    there is evidence in the record to support the trial court’s
    factual findings, we conclude that the trial court did not err
    in finding the results were not exculpatory.
    First, the court found as fact that Bell’s Ex 1.1
    cutting came from the same location on the jacket as
    Carpenter’s area A—the factual premise underlying Bell
    and Kaplan’s conclusions that it was more probable that the
    blood on the left sleeve was deposited in 1987. In its written
    order, the trial court stated that Bell had taken cuttings
    from the “four areas where * * * Carpenter[’s] * * * testing
    revealed the presumptive presence of blood,” including the
    “back left sleeve.” That finding is supported by the record.
    Bell explained that she obtained the cuttings for Ex 1.1 by
    cutting immediately below the hole that Carpenter had cut,
    which included the threaded area of Carpenter’s hole. Bell’s
    cutting of Ex 1.1 was a cutting “from an extension of the hole
    that * * * Carpenter had originally made.” The trial court
    relied on that testimony in its written order. Additionally,
    the two-dimensional photo of the jacket that is provided in
    the appendix shows that Carpenter’s cutting was in fact
    located on the back of the jacket.
    Defendant contests that factual finding by argu-
    ing that Bell’s cutting actually came from an area that
    Carpenter either had not tested for blood or which tested
    negative based on Carpenter’s omission of a positive or neg-
    ative note on the two-dimensional sketch that she created of
    the back of defendant’s jacket. Although defendant presents
    alternative arguments as to how Carpenter’s notes should
    be interpreted, our standard of review does not allow us to
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                      199
    “reweigh the evidence or speculate whether the evidence
    might have supported other factual findings than those
    made.” Pratt v. Armenakis, 
    201 Or App 217
    , 220, 118 P3d 821
    (2005), rev den, 
    340 Or 483
     (2006). In light of our standard of
    review and the evidence in the record, that factual finding is
    supported and binding.
    Second, the trial court also found as fact that it was
    more probable that the blood located on the left sleeve of
    defendant’s jacket was deposited at the time of the murder
    rather than as a consequence of contamination. The trial
    court relied on Bell’s and Kaplan’s testimony, explaining
    that
    “[R]andom surface swabs were taken from the exterior
    of defendant’s jacket, described as Exhibit 1.5, in which the
    DNA profiles obtained revealed a mixture of at least two
    contributors—deemed not to be inconsistent with the stor-
    age of the jacket with decedent’s clothes or the handling of
    the items at trial. In contrast, the cuttings * * * of the cotton
    fibers within the jacket * * * where red stains appeared on
    the surface yielded genetic material * * * consistent with
    [Jackson’s] profile: [Ex] 1.1—the back left sleeve[.] Unlike
    the random swab of the surface of the jacket which revealed
    a mixture of at least two unidentified contributors, the test-
    ing of the sleeve * * * yielded only a single source of DNA—a
    partial DNA profile matching that of [Jackson].
    “* * * * *
    “* * * [T]he DNA profile [from the left elbow area] from
    a randomly selected individual matching the partial DNA
    profile is less than 1 in 10 billion in the Caucasian, Africa[n]
    America[n] and Hispanic populations.
    “It is the expert opinion of both * * * Bell and * * * Kaplan
    * * *, while not ruling out the possibility of contamination,
    that it is more probable that the blood revealed from cut-
    ting from the left sleeve, Exhibit 1.1. * * *, was deposited at
    the time of the murder.”
    The trial court’s order points to the evidence in the record
    that supports its finding that it was more probable that the
    blood located on the left elbow and that returned Jackson’s
    DNA was blood deposited at the time of the murder. Further,
    in relying on their testimony, the trial court found Bell and
    200                                                         State v. Nefstad
    Kaplan to be credible, and defendant does not argue that
    the trial court lacked a basis in the record to make that
    credibility determination and it is, therefore, also binding
    on appeal. Gable v. State of Oregon, 
    353 Or 750
    , 762-64,
    305 P3d 85, cert den, 
    571 US 1030
     (2013). Because the trial
    court’s factual findings are supported by the record, the trial
    court did not err in finding that the results from the jacket
    were not exculpatory, or favorable, to defendant.6
    B.    DNA Results from the Boots
    We next turn to the boots. In arguing that the
    results are exculpatory, defendant similarly misconstrues
    the testing results and their effect on his case. In describing
    the testing before the trial court, Bell explained that she
    tested the boots by visually separating them into sections,
    swabbing those sections, and testing the swabs for a chem-
    ical reaction with phenolphthalein to indicate the presence
    or absence of blood. Bell noted that Carpenter had detected
    human blood on the top of the right boot in 1987. Bell’s test-
    ing revealed presumptively positive results for blood on both
    boots. As relevant to this appeal, on the right boot, the pos-
    itive results were located in the following areas: toe, medial
    side, and lateral side. As also relevant to this appeal, on the
    left boot, positive results appeared in the following areas:
    lateral side and medial side.
    Kaplan explained the DNA testing of the boots by
    breaking the results into two categories. The first category
    included the testing results from four areas on the left and
    right boots (Ex 41.1, 41.2, 41.3, and 41.4). Kaplan explained
    that the DNA profiles from those four areas were “all low-
    level” and that “[t]wo of them appeared to be DNA mixtures
    of at least two contributors.” Kaplan concluded:
    6
    Even assuming that defendant’s theory is correct that Jackson’s DNA on
    Ex 1.1 of defendant’s jacket was the result of contamination, we reject defendant’s
    argument that the remaining results from the jacket that returned multiple, low-
    level DNA profiles are somehow favorable to defendant. Given Kaplan’s and Bell’s
    testimony, which the trial court credited, that contamination of the jacket after
    trial was possible, we do not see how the presence of multiple DNA profiles on
    the jacket would be favorable to, or tend to exculpate, defendant. At best, those
    results would be inconclusive. In any event, as explained below in the discussion
    of the boots, the presence of DNA from multiple contributors of an unknown iden-
    tity would not be favorable to defendant even considering the factual context of
    this case.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                                    201
    “So, based on how little DNA was recovered and then
    the potential for DNA from multiple individuals to compli-
    cate the interpretation, the results from those items are
    inconclusive. No comparisons can be made, conclusions can
    be drawn based on those four areas of the boot.”
    The second category included the results from a
    single area, the medial side, on the left boot (Ex 41.5). The
    results returned a mixture of “at least two contributors,”
    a minor and a major contributor. The major contributor
    matches the DNA of defendant. However, for the minor con-
    tributor, Kaplan was only able to obtain two pieces of genetic
    information out of a potential of 32, which Kaplan concluded
    was too low to make any scientifically reliable conclusions
    regarding identity. Kaplan explained:
    “When it gets to that level, it is in a DNA range where, yes,
    there’s absolutely genetic information there; yes, there are
    DNA types there. But because I can’t make any assump-
    tions about how many people are there, it’s also in that
    range of high risk of false exclusion, high risk of false inclu-
    sion. We call it inconclusive. We can’t draw any meaningful
    conclusions.”
    Kaplan also noted that those two DNA types are
    not types held by Jackson, but disputed defendant’s asser-
    tion that that result affirmatively excluded Jackson as the
    minor contributor. Kaplan explained:
    “It’s sort of a scien[tific] distinction, right. There is
    information there. There are two DNA types there. That’s
    the results. The results [are] also that those two DNA types
    are not held by * * * Jackson. That’s another result.
    “But the conclusions that can be drawn from that, could
    * * * Jackson have contributed DNA or not, we don’t draw
    conclusions at that level of DNA because of the risks asso-
    ciated with those types of conclusions at that level.”
    Defendant argues that the results from the boots
    are exculpatory in a number of ways. In defendant’s view,
    because the state asked the jury to draw the inference that
    the blood on the boots was Jackson’s, the DNA results would
    be exculpatory if the results show that the blood “either
    did not belong to Jackson or belonged to somebody else,”
    which rebuts the state’s theory at trial. Defendant argues
    202                                                          State v. Nefstad
    that the evidence establishes both. He first contends that
    the evidence affirmatively excludes Jackson as a contributor
    because the two DNA types that Kaplan detected from the
    minor contributor of the medial side of the left boot are not
    DNA types that were also held by Jackson. Alternatively,
    defendant argues that, even if the results do not affirma-
    tively exclude Jackson as a contributor, the results from the
    boots are exculpatory because there were multiple contribu-
    tors of DNA on the boots, including defendant’s, and none of
    them were identified to be Jackson. Thus, defendant contin-
    ues, the results are favorable because they “cast[ ] doubt on
    the state’s theory” that the blood on the boots was Jackson’s.7
    The state responds that the testing from the boots
    is not exculpatory, emphasizing that the first four samples
    tested yielded a mixture of DNA that was too low to make
    any comparisons or conclusions. Addressing Ex 41.5, the
    medial side of the left boot, the state argues that the genetic
    information of the minor contributor did not affirmatively
    exclude Jackson because, as Kaplan testified, the levels of
    DNA were too low and thus categorized as inconclusive.
    Finally, the state argues that, even if the results could be
    viewed as excluding Jackson, the results, in the context of
    the case, would still not be exculpatory.8 Again, we agree
    with the state.
    Kaplan testified that the results from the first cat-
    egory of swabs tested (Ex 41.1, 41.2, 41.3, and 41.4) were
    “inconclusive” because of the low-levels of DNA that were
    recovered and that she was unable to reach any conclusions
    regarding the identity of the DNA contributors. The DNA
    7
    At oral argument, defendant also asserted that, even if the DNA results
    are viewed as inconclusive because they returned no identifiable DNA profile,
    the results would still be helpful because they would allow him to argue to the
    jury that, even with DNA testing, the state cannot establish that the blood on
    the boots belonged to Jackson, which refuted the inference the state asked the
    jury to draw at trial. Even if there is some case in which inconclusive evidence
    could be considered favorable within the meaning of ORS 138.696—an issue we
    do not decide—we do not view the record as supporting a conclusion that the
    inconclusive evidence regarding the boots constitutes favorable evidence under
    the statute.
    8
    The state also contends that defendant should be judicially estopped from
    arguing that the results were exculpatory and that, if the trial court erred, defen-
    dant invited the error. We reject those arguments without discussion.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)                            203
    results do not, as defendant alleges, affirmatively exclude
    Jackson as the source of the blood on the boots. Because
    Kaplan was unable to make any conclusions regarding
    identity, the blood on the boots may or may not have been
    Jackson’s. In other words, the blood on the boots neither
    exculpates nor inculpates defendant—those results are, in
    Kaplan’s words, inconclusive.
    Moreover, for the second category, Ex 41.5, Kaplan
    testified that the DNA profile for the minor contributor was
    also “inconclusive” based on how little DNA was recovered.
    Kaplan specifically rejected defendant’s argument that the
    results from Ex 41.5 affirmatively exclude Jackson as the
    contributor because the two pieces of genetic information
    that were obtained were not held by Jackson. In its writ-
    ten order, the trial court found as fact that the DNA results
    from the boots did not generate useable DNA profiles and
    that factual finding is, for all the reasons just explained,
    supported by the record and binding on appeal. Therefore,
    for the same reasons as previously noted, the results from
    the boots are not exculpatory.
    For similar reasons, the presence of defendant’s DNA
    and multiple unknown contributors on the boots does not, as
    defendant argues, undermine the state’s theory at trial that
    the blood on the boots was Jackson’s, making the results
    favorable. Assuming without deciding that “exculpatory”
    for purposes of ORS 138.696 means evidence that would
    allow defendant to undermine the state’s theory at trial,
    the results in this case do not hold the impeachment value
    defendant assigns to them. At the time of trial, Carpenter
    could not identify whose blood was on the boots. And today,
    because the unknown DNA profiles on the boots may or may
    not be Jackson’s, those results—like the blood evidence pre-
    sented at the time of trial—still cannot be used to identify
    whether the blood on the boots is Jackson’s. Thus, even con-
    sidering the factual context of the case and the inference the
    state asked the jury to draw that the blood on the boots was
    Jackson’s, the results are not favorable to defendant.
    In sum, even applying defendant’s definition of
    exculpatory under ORS 138.696, the trial court did not err
    in concluding that the results from the boots and jacket were
    204                                         State v. Nefstad
    not exculpatory and, thus, did not err in denying defendant’s
    motion for a new trial.
    Affirmed.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 185
     (2019)      205
    APPENDIX—ER 32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A161053

Citation Numbers: 301 Or. App. 185

Judges: Ortega

Filed Date: 12/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024