Paredes, Jovany Jampher , 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 626 ( 2015 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. PD-1043-14
    JOVANY PAREDES, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    FROM THE FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS
    HARRIS COUNTY
    N EWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
    OPINION
    Does the admission of a supervising DNA analyst’s opinion regarding a DNA match
    violate the Confrontation Clause when that opinion is based upon computer-generated data
    obtained through batch DNA testing? Neither this Court nor the United States Supreme
    Court has squarely answered this question.        In this case, we hold that it does not.
    Consequently, we affirm the court of appeals’s holding that the admission of the supervising
    analyst’s testimony did not violate the Confrontation Clause.
    Paredes - 2
    Facts
    Appellant, a member of the Houston-area SPPL street gang, gathered a group of gang
    members and entered the apartment of Rafael Sanchez Cantu and Abelardo Sanchez to
    attempt to steal money and drugs from the two men. In the course of the robbery, both Cantu
    and Sanchez were shot and killed. Appellant gave a fellow gang member, Jessica Perez, the
    T-shirt he had worn during the crime and asked her to wash it. She did not. Instead, she
    informed the police who then recovered the shirt from Perez and sent it to Identigene, a
    private forensic laboratory, for DNA testing. DNA testing of a bloodstain on appellant’s
    shirt matched one of the victims.1
    At trial, the State called Robin Freeman, the forensic-laboratory director for
    Identigene, to testify about the DNA analyses in appellant’s case. Freeman testified that
    DNA testing is conducted in an assembly-line batch process. A different laboratory analyst
    conducts each step of the DNA testing in order to generate raw DNA data. One analyst
    applies chemicals to the biological sample to isolate the DNA in the cells. A second analyst
    then determines the amount of DNA present. A third analyst copies the DNA sequence and
    loads the data onto the capillary electrophoresis instrument that yields a DNA graph–the raw
    data–that can be used to compare the produced DNA profile to other evidence. Finally, an
    analyst takes that graph and uses it to determine whether the DNA profile obtained from the
    testing matches the DNA profile of a known individual, in this case the victim.
    1
    Appellant did not object that the chain of custody was broken or argue that the
    Confrontation Clause required testimony from every person who formed a link in that chain.
    Paredes - 3
    Freeman testified that the batch process in this case was conducted by three different
    analysts and that she supervised the proceedings and conducted the final analysis–comparing
    the produced DNA profiles to the evidence and determining a match:
    [Defense counsel:] With regard to what you’re about to testify to, did you conduct
    these tests yourself?
    [Freeman:] The testing is done in a batch process. So, we have technicians that
    would extract the samples and do the amplification portion of that. But I am
    qualified in those different areas, and I do the interpretation from the data they
    obtain.
    [Defense counsel:] So that I’m clear, what you’re saying, basically, is that what
    you’re testifying to is what you are overseeing or, technically, supervising, but you
    didn’t conduct the test that you’re about to testify to yourself?
    [Freeman:] I do the interpretation and the comparison of the D.N.A. profiles. I did
    not do the physical extraction process.
    ...
    [Prosecutor:] And in this particular case, did you take their results from what they
    put the things through the instruments–the evidence through the instruments,
    applied the chemical reagents, extracted that D.N.A., that entire process; did you
    oversee that entire process in this case?
    [Freeman:] Yes, in this case.
    [Prosecutor:] And did you take their raw data and then compile it yourself and you
    personally do the analysis leading to your ultimate opinion?
    [Freeman:] Yes, I do the comparison and interpretation.
    Freeman acknowledged that she did not physically watch each of the three analysts
    conduct the DNA testing process, but she explained that Identigene has safety protocols to
    identify errors in the process. Freeman testified that if there were “a problem in the analysis,
    Paredes - 4
    then what happens is you get no result as opposed to a wrong analysis.” The three analysts
    in this case provided Freeman with the raw data she used to determine that (1) the
    complainant’s DNA matched the DNA found in a stain on the T-shirt, and (2) scrapings from
    the collar of the T-shirt contained DNA from at least three contributors, and one was the
    major contributor.2
    The State did not introduce into evidence any documents concerning the raw data that
    Freeman relied upon to perform her analysis, and none of the three analysts who conducted
    the batch process testified at trial. However, Freeman made clear that she was not testifying
    about someone else’s opinions because she was responsible for compiling the data generated
    by the various instruments and reaching the ultimate conclusion:
    [Prosecutor:] But, then, am I to understand correctly that you took the results
    of those instruments or the readings that you got from various equipment in the
    lab, you compiled it, you looked at it, you compared it, you analyzed it and
    interpreted it?
    [Freeman:] Right.
    [Prosecutor:] Right. So, the ultimate opinion is yours?
    [Freeman:] Correct. It’s my opinion.
    [Prosecutor:] You’re not testifying for someone else.          This is what you
    discovered, correct?
    [Freeman:] Correct.
    2
    An analyst from a different lab testified that appellant’s DNA matched the DNA of this
    major contributor on the T-shirt, but appellant does not raise an issue about that testimony on
    appeal. It was, after all, appellant’s T-shirt.
    Paredes - 5
    The record is unclear about whether Freeman herself created a report based on her opinions,
    but even if she did, the State did not admit any such report into evidence. The State offered
    only Freeman’s opinion testimony.
    Appellant objected, arguing that he was entitled to cross-examine the people who
    actually conducted the testing on which the expert opinion was based. The State responded
    that Freeman’s analysis was the relevant testimony:
    What these other people did was they took the evidence and they just put it
    through the instruments and they applied chemical reagents for it. She’s looking
    at all the data. She’s comparing the data. So, the only steps that she didn’t do is
    actually take the physical stuff, the evidence, and place it into the instruments and
    apply the chemical reagents that gave these scientific readings . . . . She’s
    comparing them. She’s analyzing them. She’s doing the interpretation. The final
    result is what’s coming before the jury.
    The trial judge overruled appellant’s objection, and appellant was ultimately convicted of
    capital murder and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
    Appeal
    The Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed, holding, among other things, that
    Freeman’s testimony did not violate the Confrontation Clause. Subsequently, this Court held
    in Burch v. State that the introduction of a lab report containing drug-test results violated the
    Confrontation Clause when the testifying witness explaining the report was merely a
    surrogate for the lab technician who had performed the test. 
    401 S.W.3d 634
    , 637 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2013). Consequently, this Court granted appellant’s petition for discretionary
    review, vacated the court of appeals’ judgment, and remanded the case to allow the court of
    Paredes - 6
    appeals the opportunity to consider Burch and its applicability to this case. Paredes v. State,
    No. PD-1420-11, 
    2013 WL 4507075
    (Tex. Crim. App. Aug. 21, 2013) (per curiam) (not
    designated for publication).
    On remand, the court of appeals again affirmed, distinguishing appellant’s case from
    both Burch v. State, 
    401 S.W.3d 634
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) and Bullcoming v. New Mexico,
    
    131 S. Ct. 2705
    (2011). As we observed, the testifying lab supervisor in Burch had no
    personal knowledge of the specific tests used to determine that the seized substance was
    cocaine as detailed in the lab report because she did not observe or perform any 
    analysis. 401 S.W.3d at 635
    . Similarly, in Bullcoming, the United States Supreme Court considered both
    a certified lab report and testimony from an analyst who had not actually participated in or
    observed the testing of the defendant’s blood, though the analyst was familiar with a forensic
    lab’s blood-alcohol-content testing 
    procedures. 131 S. Ct. at 2709
    .
    But as the court of appeals observed in this case, Freeman had personal knowledge
    of the tests used, and she conducted the crucial analysis by comparing the DNA profiles and
    determining that the complainant’s DNA profile matched the DNA from the bloodstain on
    appellant’s T-shirt. Paredes v. State, 
    439 S.W.3d 522
    , 526 (Tex. App.–Houston [14th Dist.]
    2014). The court of appeals further distinguished appellant’s case by noting that the raw
    DNA data was not found in a formal report and was not admitted into evidence. 
    Id. at 527.
    Furthermore, the court of appeals held that the raw DNA data was not used as a substitute
    for out-of-court testimony, but rather it merely provided the basis for the opinion developed
    Paredes - 7
    by Freeman. 
    Id. Because appellant
    had the opportunity to cross-examine Freeman, the person
    who conducted the analysis linking him to the crime, the court of appeals held that
    appellant’s Confrontation Clause rights were satisfied. 
    Id. We granted
    appellant’s second petition for discretionary review to determine whether
    the Confrontation Clause should have precluded the admission of Freeman’s testimony when
    she relied on raw DNA data generated by non-testifying analysts to form her opinion.
    Forensic Testing and the Confrontation Clause
    The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment guarantees the accused the right
    to confront the witnesses against him. Pointer v. Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 403 (1965). The
    United States Supreme Court has applied this rule to “testimonial” statements and held that
    such statements are inadmissible at trial unless the witness who made them either takes the
    stand to be cross-examined or is unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to
    cross-examine the witness. Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 54 (2004). In Crawford,
    the Supreme Court included in the class of testimonial statements those “that were made
    under circumstances which would lead an objective witness reasonably to believe that the
    statement would be available for use at a later trial.” 
    Id. at 52;
    see also 
    Burch, 401 S.W.3d at 636
    (“While the exact contours of what is testimonial continue to be defined by the courts,
    such statements are formal and similar to trial testimony.”).
    Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts and Bullcoming v. New Mexico
    Since Crawford, the Supreme Court has considered the Confrontation Clause in three
    Paredes - 8
    cases involving forensic reports. First, in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, the Court held
    that the admission into evidence of notarized “certificates of analysis” prepared by a state
    laboratory and listing the composition, quality, and weight of the narcotics at issue violated
    the Confrontation Clause. 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 309-11 (2009). The testing analysts did not testify
    at trial, and the defendant was not given any opportunity to cross-examine them. 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court held that the certificates of analysis were testimonial because they were
    “functionally identical to live, in-court testimony, doing precisely what a witness does on
    direct examination.” 
    Id. at 310-11
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Therefore, the reports
    were inadmissible without the testimony of the analysts who performed the testing and
    prepared the reports. 
    Id. at 311.
    Notably, however, the Court explicitly refused to hold in
    Melendez-Diaz that “anyone whose testimony may be relevant in establishing the chain of
    custody, authenticity of the sample, or accuracy of the testing device, must appear in person
    as part of the prosecution's case.” 
    Id. at 311
    n.1.
    The Supreme Court next addressed the applicability of the Confrontation Clause to
    the admission of forensic lab reports in Bullcoming v. New Mexico, 
    131 S. Ct. 2705
    (2011).
    In Bullcoming, the defendant was charged with driving while intoxicated, and the prosecutor
    introduced a lab report certifying that the defendant’s blood-alcohol content was above the
    limit for the New Mexico offense of aggravated DWI. 
    Id. at 2709.
    The analyst who had
    tested the defendant’s blood and signed the report did not testify because he was on unpaid
    leave from the laboratory. 
    Id. at 2711-712.
    Rather than call the analyst who had performed
    Paredes - 9
    the testing, the prosecution called a different analyst, one who was familiar with general
    BAC testing procedures conducted at the lab, but who did not review the prior analyst’s work
    or sign the forensic report. 
    Id. at 2712.
    The Supreme Court held that the lab report was
    testimonial and that the “surrogate testimony” given by the non-testing analyst explaining the
    report did not satisfy the defendant’s Confrontation Clause rights. 
    Id. at 2715.
    The Court
    rejected the argument that the testing analyst was a “mere scrivener” who transcribed the
    results calculated by a machine because the testing analyst’s role involved checking for
    human error, not just reading machine-generated raw data. 
    Id. at 2714.
    Williams v. Illinois
    The Supreme Court’s most recent attempt to come to terms with the application of the
    Confrontation Clause to forensic-opinion testimony resulted in an irreconcilably divided
    opinion. In Williams v. Illinois, the Illinois State Police lab sent vaginal swabs to Cellmark,
    a private lab, and Cellmark developed a DNA profile from the semen contained in those
    swabs. 
    132 S. Ct. 2221
    , 2229 (2012). The prosecution did not call any of the analysts from
    Cellmark. 
    Id. at 2229.
    Instead, a forensic specialist testified that she compared the
    Cellmark-created DNA profile from the vaginal swabs to the defendant’s DNA profile in the
    state DNA database and determined that they were a match. 
    Id. at 2229-230.
    The forensic
    specialist also noted that Cellmark’s DNA profile would “exhibit certain telltale signs if it
    had been deduced from a degraded sample,” but she didn’t see any evidence of that. 
    Id. at 2231.
    The Cellmark report itself, however, was not admitted into evidence. 
    Id. at 2230.
                                                                                      Paredes - 10
    While a majority of the Supreme Court held that the evidence did not violate the
    Confrontation Clause, a majority of the Court could not agree on a rationale to support this
    holding. A plurality opinion authored by Justice Alito held that there was no Confrontation
    Clause violation because the testifying expert’s implicit, in-court adoption of an underlying
    report was not offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted (that the DNA profile came
    from semen found in the victim). Alternatively, the plurality held that the reference to the
    underlying report was not testimonial because the report was generated before there was a
    suspect in the case. 
    Id. at 2228.
    Justice Thomas concurred that the admission of the
    evidence did not violate the Confrontation Clause, but he, along with the four dissenting
    Justices, rejected the rationales offered in Justice Alito’s plurality opinion. Justice Thomas
    agreed that the report was offered for the truth of the matter asserted, but he believed the
    admission did not violate the Confrontation Clause because the testimony’s implicit reference
    to an un-introduced report was not formal enough to be considered testimonial. 
    Id. at 2255-
    256 (Thomas, J., concurring).
    While Williams dealt with the same type of testing at issue in this case, unique
    characteristics of the opinion limit its value as precedent. The general rule for interpreting
    opinions in which no single rationale is adopted by a majority of the Court is “the holding
    of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members who concurred in the
    judgments on the narrowest grounds.” Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193 (1977)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). But because each of the Williams opinions applies a
    Paredes - 11
    different rationale to determining whether the use of forensic evidence violates the
    Confrontation Clause, and because five members of the Supreme Court disagreed with the
    plurality’s rationale, there is no narrow rule that this Court can apply from Williams. See
    Young v. United States, 
    63 A.3d 1033
    , 1043 (D.C. 2013) (noting that the narrow-grounds
    approach “works only when the narrowest opinion actually does represent a common
    denominator. If one opinion does not fit entirely within a broader circle drawn by the others,
    the Marks approach . . . would turn a single opinion to which eight of nine justices do not
    subscribe into law.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). Ultimately, Justice Breyer’s
    concurring opinion may have summarized the problem with Williams most succinctly: “This
    case raises a question that I believe neither the plurality nor the dissent answers adequately:
    How does the Confrontation Clause apply to the panoply of crime laboratory reports and
    underlying technical statements written by (or otherwise made by) laboratory 
    technicians?” 132 S. Ct. at 2244
    (Breyer, J., concurring). A majority of the Justices of the United States
    Supreme Court agree that the implicit admission of underlying technical statements in
    Williams did not violate the Confrontation Clause; they just can’t settle on why.3
    3
    Other courts have likewise found Williams unhelpful when deciding Confrontation
    Clause issues. See, e.g., State v. Michaels, 
    95 A.3d 648
    , 666 (N.J. 2014) (“We find Williams’s
    force, as precedent, at best unclear.”); Jenkins v. United States, 75 A.3d. 174, 176 (D.C. 2013)
    (“We now hold that the splintered decision in Williams, which failed to produce a common view
    shared by at least five Justices, creates no new rule of law that we can apply in this case.”);
    People v. Merritt, ___ P.3d. ___, 
    2014 WL 4748090
    (Colo. Ct. App. 2014) (“Given the absence
    of majority support for any of the reasoning behind the outcome of Williams, it provides no clear
    guidance as to the current state of the law regarding the testimony of experts whose opinions are
    based on forensic reports which they themselves did not prepare. . . . Thus, the holding in
    Paredes - 12
    However, some consistency with Bullcoming may be teased out when considering a
    portion of the testimony at issue in Williams. The Court divided over an answer to a
    hypothetical question that included certain, critical facts:
    [Q:] Was there a computer match generated of the male DNA profile found in semen
    from the vaginal swabs of [L.J.] to a male DNA profile that had been identified as
    having originated from Sandy Williams?
    [A:] Yes, there was.
    
    Williams, 132 S. Ct. at 2236
    . According to Justice Kagan’s dissent, this testimony was the
    equivalent of “surrogate” expert testimony because the testifying expert could not convey
    what the testing analyst knew or observed about the testing or the testing process. 
    Williams, 132 S. Ct. at 2267
    (Kagan, J., dissenting). Neither could the testifying expert expose any
    lapses or possible protocol errors, not only because she was not there to observe the testing,
    but also because the testifying expert had no knowledge of Cellmark’s operations. 
    Id. Thus, four
    Justices found the expert’s opinion testimony to be surrogate testimony similar to the
    formal lab report introduced in Bullcoming because the expert’s answer to the hypothetical
    question necessarily included an opinion that the DNA testing at issue had been done
    properly and that the material tested was the same material that had been collected from the
    victim. 
    Id. Burch v.
    State
    With this legal backdrop in mind, this Court examined how the Confrontation Clause
    Williams is not entirely helpful.”).
    Paredes - 13
    applies to forensic testing in Burch v. State, 
    401 S.W.3d 634
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). In
    Burch, the State offered into evidence a lab report certifying that the substance tested was
    cocaine. 
    Id. at 635.
    Both the testing analyst and the reviewing analyst signed the lab report,
    but the State called only the reviewer at trial. She testified that she “basically double-
    checked everything” that the testing analyst did, but there was no indication that she had
    personally conducted any tests or observed any tests being performed. 
    Id. at 635-36.
    We
    held that this violated the Confrontation Clause because the reviewer had no personal
    knowledge that the tests were done correctly. 
    Id. at 637-38.
    (“Without having the testimony
    of the analyst who actually performed the tests, or at least one who observed their execution,
    the defendant has no way to explore the types of corruption and missteps the Confrontation
    Clause was designed to protect against.”).
    Analysis
    From these cases, several general principles are clear, assuming a defendant was
    afforded no prior opportunity to cross-examine. The admission of a lab report created solely
    by a non-testifying analyst, without calling that analyst to sponsor it, violates the
    Confrontation Clause. Doing so deprives a defendant of his opportunity to cross-examine
    the non-testifying expert about the conclusions contained in the report and how the non-
    testifying expert arrived at those conclusions. Additionally, testimony from an expert
    explaining that non-testifying analyst’s report does not provide an adequate substitute for
    cross-examination even if the testifying expert is generally familiar with how the relevant
    Paredes - 14
    analysis is customarily performed.    When the testifying expert has no personal knowledge
    of how the testing was conducted, a defendant still cannot adequately challenge through
    cross-examination the conclusion of that non-testifying analyst offered in that non-testifying
    analyst’s report. For an expert’s testimony based upon forensic analysis performed solely by
    a non-testifying analyst to be admissible, the testifying expert must testify about his or her
    own opinions and conclusions. While the testifying expert can rely upon information from
    a non-testifying analyst, the testifying expert cannot act as a surrogate to introduce that
    information.
    Turning to the facts of this case, we agree with the court of appeals that this case is
    distinguishable from Bullcoming and Burch because here the testifying expert was more than
    a surrogate for a non-testifying analyst’s report. In Bullcoming, the testifying analyst merely
    knew about the laboratory’s procedures but did not participate in testing the defendant’s
    
    blood. 131 S. Ct. at 2709
    . Likewise, in Burch, the State called the testing analyst’s
    supervisor who signed the lab report but had not performed or observed any 
    testing. 401 S.W.3d at 634-35
    . In both cases, the prosecution offered a lab report containing testimonial
    statements through the expert testimony of a person who did not make those statements and
    could not verify the authenticity of those statements.
    Yet in this case, as the court of appeals noted, Freeman performed the crucial analysis
    determining the DNA match and testified to her own conclusions. See 
    Paredes, 439 S.W.3d at 526
    . She was not merely a supervisor who “checked the boxes” on the lab report.
    Paredes - 15
    Furthermore, the lab reports Freeman relied on to come to these conclusions were not offered
    into evidence. Cf. 
    Bullcoming, 131 S. Ct. at 2722
    (“[T]his is not a case in which an expert
    witness was asked for his independent opinion about underlying testimonial reports that were
    not themselves admitted into evidence.”) (Sotomayor, J., concurring); 
    Burch, 401 S.W.3d at 639
    (“[M]ore in line with Bullcoming, the report at issue here was offered and admitted into
    evidence. Consequently, it was not merely mentioned as an underlying basis of the expert’s
    opinion: the report itself was primary evidence.”). This is not a case in which the State
    attempted to bring in a testimonial lab report through a surrogate.
    Additionally, this case does not present the human-error problem this Court observed
    in Burch. In Burch, the defendant had no opportunity to challenge the opinion of the
    testifying reviewer because that witness “could not verify that the results were properly
    generated.” 
    Burch, 401 S.W.3d at 637
    . Appellant contends that the analysts could misreport
    information or mishandle the samples, but the Supreme Court has held that the Confrontation
    Clause does not mandate “that anyone whose testimony may be relevant in establishing the
    chain of custody, authenticity of the sample, or accuracy of the testing device” must testify.
    
    Melendez-Diaz, 557 U.S. at 311
    n.1. More importantly, Freeman testified about the safety
    measures in place at Identigene to detect such errors and stated that, if part of the analysis
    were done improperly, the laboratory procedure would not generate an incorrect DNA
    profile. The testing would yield no result at all rather than an improper result.
    Indeed, this case is distinguishable from prior cases because the testifying expert in
    Paredes - 16
    this case relied upon raw, computer-generated data in reaching her conclusion rather than
    another laboratory analyst’s report. As the United States Supreme Court has observed,
    testimonial statements include:
    ex parte in-court testimony or its functional equivalent–that is, material such
    as affidavits, custodial examinations, prior testimony that the defendant was
    unable to cross-examine, or similar pretrial statements that declarants would
    reasonably expect to be used prosecutorially. . . .
    Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 51-52 (2004). The Supreme Court has held that
    forensic documents were testimonial in two instances: (1) when three “certificates of
    analysis” stated that the tested substance was cocaine and reported the weight, and (2) when
    a report certified that the defendant’s blood-alcohol content was above the legal limit.
    
    Melendez-Diaz, 557 U.S. at 309-11
    ; 
    Bullcoming, 131 S. Ct. at 2715
    . In both of those cases,
    the forensic reports alone were surrogates for in-court testimony. The certificates in
    Melendez-Diaz showed that the substance in question was an illegal drug. No further analysis
    was required to render a testimonial statement. Similarly, in Bullcoming, the report on its
    own certified that the defendant’s blood was above the legal limit. See Bullcoming, 131 S.
    Ct. at 2722. That is not so with the raw data produced by the Identigene analysts in this case.
    Without Freeman’s independent analysis, the DNA profiles–the raw, computer-generated
    data–that the capillary electrophoresis instrument produced stand for nothing on their own.
    See 
    Burch, 401 S.W.3d at 641-42
    (Hervey, J., concurring) (“If the State can produce
    ‘another’ [analyst] who may have developed his or her own separate conclusion based on
    data supplied through testing (i.e., particular ‘testing’ is really performed through machinery
    Paredes - 17
    and analysts develop opinions from that data), I see no reason why that witness should be
    denied the opportunity to testify.”). They are not the functional equivalent of live, in-court
    testimony because they did not come from a witness capable of being cross-examined. They
    came from a computer.4
    Conclusion
    The lower court was correct that the evidence in this case did not violate the
    Confrontation Clause. Freeman did not introduce or testify regarding a formal report or
    assertion   from    a   non-testifying    analyst.   Instead,    she   used    non-testimonial
    information–computer-generated DNA data–to form an independent, testimonial opinion and
    appellant was given the opportunity to cross-examine her about her analysis. We affirm the
    decision of the court of appeals.
    Delivered: June 3, 2015
    Publish
    4
    While the Fourteenth Court of Appeals has been the leading proponent of this position
    among Texas courts of appeals, her sister courts have also upheld the admissibility of expert
    testimony based upon computer-generated data. See, e.g., Hamilton v. State, 
    300 S.W.3d 14
    , 21-
    22 (Tex. App.–San Antonio 2009, pet. ref’d.) (holding that testifying expert’s recitation of non-
    testifying DNA analyst’s opinions violated the Confrontation Clause, but the testifying expert’s
    independent opinion based upon computer-generated data did not); Blaylock v. State, 
    259 S.W.3d 202
    , 207 (Tex. App.–Texarkana 2008, pet. ref’d.) (upholding the admission of expert witness’s
    independent opinion based, in part, upon “printed results from instruments”). Likewise, other
    states have followed this approach with regard to forensic analysts who use raw data generated
    by others to form an independent opinion. See, e.g., State v. Roach, 
    95 A.3d 683
    , 695 (N.J.
    2014) (holding similar testimony admissible if “provided by a truly independent and qualified
    reviewer of the underlying data and report, and the witness may not merely parrot the findings of
    another”); State v. Medicine Eagle, 
    835 N.W.2d 886
    , 895 (S.D. 2013) (permitting DNA expert
    who did not conduct every step of the analysis to testify because “she independently reviewed,
    analyzed, and compared the data . . . [and] came to her own independent conclusions . . . [and]
    only testified about her own conclusions”).