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- June 1990
-
- DNA TESTING AND THE FRYE STANDARD
-
- By
-
- Robert A. Fiatal, J.D.
- Special Agent
- Legal Instructor, FBI Academy
-
-
- The ability to identify a certain individual as the
- perpetrator of a specific criminal act through DNA analysis and
- comparison is undoubtedly a revolutionary investigative procedure
- for law enforcement. This technique, which isolates and measures
- the variations in the DNA structure of unknown blood or semen and
- compares those variations with the variations in the criminal
- suspect's DNA, (1) possesses particular value in the investigation
- and prosecution of violent crimes, such as rape, homicide and
- aggravated assault. The results of DNA examinations can
- effectively rebut alibi defenses, corroborate the accuracy of
- what otherwise might be questionable eyewitness identification,
- and correspondingly produce more guilty pleas. (2) Conversely, it
- can exonerate the innocent. (3) For this procedure to be truly
- effective in the criminal justice system, however, expert
- opinions and conclusions based upon DNA identification must be
- admissible in criminal prosecutions.
-
- Comparisons and conclusions based upon this scientific
- technique are strong, if not overwhelming, proof of guilt, and
- prosecutors, investigators, and forensic scientists should
- anticipate strong defense objections to the admission of such
- testimony at trial. Therefore, all examined specimens must be
- obtained in compliance with constitutional standards and
- maintained in a manner that precludes contamination and assures
- a strict chain of custody for later authentication and
- identification. Moreover, since conclusions from this
- sophisticated testing process are based upon what some courts
- have viewed as the relatively novel application of scientific
- techniques and procedures to forensic science, the law
- enforcement community should be prepared to satisfy specific
- admissibility requirements not normally associated with the
- introduction of other types of expert testimony.
-
- The purpose of this article is to acquaint the police
- officer, prosecutor, and forensic scientist with these
- anticipated admissibility requirements in order to assist them in
- their law enforcement and prosecutorial functions. One should
- remember, however, that the ability to meet these requirements is
- almost entirely dependent upon the ability of expert witnesses to
- convince the courts, through their testimony, that these
- conditions have been fulfilled. It is also incumbent upon these
- experts to convince the courts that the procedures used in a
- particular case were conducted in a reliable manner.
-
- ADMISSIBILITY OF NOVEL SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE
-
- When assessing the admissibility of novel scientific
- evidence, some courts limit their review to the application of
- the traditional evidentiary test of relevancy. Under this test,
- scientific evidence is admissible if the testifying expert is
- duly qualified, the expert's opinion is relevant and will assist
- the fact finder, and the testimony is not so prejudicial as to
- outweigh its probative value. (4) For example, in United States v.
- Baller, (5) the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
- applied this test of admissibility to testimony relating to the
- then new technique of voiceprint or spectrographic
- identification. Because that expert testimony was found by the
- court to be relevant and not overly prejudicial, it was admitted.
-
- Most jurisdictions, however, apply the more stringent Frye
- standard when judging the admissibility of evidence derived from
- a relatively new scientific procedure. Based on the decision in
- Frye v. United States, (6) these courts also require that the
- theory underlying the technique, as well as the technique
- itself, be generally accepted or commonly recognized by
- scientists in the relevant scientific community. (7) Most courts
- that use the relevancy standard also deem the general acceptance
- or common recognition of a technique to be important factors in
- determining if evidence is relevant. (8) For example, the Supreme
- Court of Oregon determined that trial courts in that State should
- consider the following factors when assessing the relevancy of
- evidence based upon a new scientific approach: 1) The testifying
- expert's qualifications; 2) the existence of specialized
- literature about the procedure; 3) the use of the procedure; 4)
- its potential for error; and 5) its general acceptance in the
- relevant scientific community. (9)
-
- Accordingly, prosecutors, forensic scientists, and law
- enforcement officers in all jurisdictions should be prepared to
- satisfy the Frye prescription when introducing evidence
- concerning the results of DNA examinations, even though their
- particular jurisdictions may not specifically adopt the Frye
- standard.
-
- THE FRYE STANDARD
-
- In Frye, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
- Columbia Circuit reviewed the admissibility of evidence based
- upon a relatively primitive polygraph technique and ruled as
- follows:
-
- ``Just when a scientific principle or discovery crosses
- the line between experimental and demonstrable stages
- is difficult to define. Somewhere in this twilight zone
- the evidential force of the principle must be recognized,
- and while the court will go a long way in admitting
- expert testimony deduced from a well-recognized
- scientific principle or discovery, the thing from
- which the deduction is made must be sufficiently
- established to have gained general acceptance in the
- particular field in which it belongs.'' (10)
-
- Applying this standard, the court found that the questioned
- polygraph procedure had ``not yet gained such standing and
- scientific recognition among physiological and psychological
- authorities as would justify the courts in admitting testimony
- deduced from the discovery, development, and experiments thus far
- made.'' (11) Therefore, in order for the government to introduce
- conclusions and opinions based upon a novel scientific procedure
- or technique, it must meet the Frye standard by establishing
- that the technique and the principles behind it are generally
- accepted in the relevant scientific community.
-
- To meet the Frye standard, the scientific theories and
- techniques must be generally accepted in the specific scientific
- community or field to which they belong. In determining the
- appropriate or relevant scientific community, courts will
- generally not consider the entire spectrum of scientists. They
- will instead only consider those scientists ``whose scientific
- background and training are sufficient to allow them to
- comprehend and understand the [involved scientific] process and
- form a judgment about it.'' (12) The scientists will most often be
- limited to those who have had direct experience with the
- questioned scientific procedure, (13) or at least scientists who
- ``would be expected to be familiar with its use.'' (14)
-
- Once the appropriate scientific community is determined,
- the court must also decide if the questioned procedure,
- technique, and principles are generally accepted within that
- community. The Frye decision, as well as most of the decisions
- of other Federal and State courts that have adopted the Frye
- standard, give little if any guidance as to what is sufficient
- general acceptance. Those courts generally agree, however,
- that the Frye standard does not require unanimity of agreement
- in the applicable scientific field. (15) Instead, the Frye
- standard requires an agreement by a ``substantial section of
- the scientific community'' (16) rather than one that is
- universal. (17)
-
- In this regard, prosecutors planning to use DNA
- comparisons at trial should expect to encounter opposition to
- the common recognition of DNA testing procedure through the
- testimony of defense experts. However, this divergent testimony
- does not necessarily mean that the DNA technique is not
- generally accepted. Courts embracing the Frye standard
- generally recognize that ``a degree of scientific divergence of
- view is inevitable.'' (18) It is the overall degree of
- divergence in opinion in the relevant scientific community which
- is significant, if not crucial, in determining if the involved
- scientific process is generally acceptable. (19) Prosecutors
- attempting to meet both of these aspects of the Frye standard
- must rely almost exclusively upon expert testimony to persuade
- the court that the DNA testing procedure used is generally
- accepted in the appropriate scientific circle. They will also
- have to rely upon these same witnesses to convince the court and
- jury that the procedure was effectively and properly applied.
-
- CONTEMPORARY COURT ACCEPTANCE OF DNA TESTING
-
- Numerous courts, to include several at the appellate level,
- have assessed the admissibility of expert conclusions based upon
- the DNA identification process. Courts to date have carefully
- considered the expert testimony of scientists from the fields of
- molecular biology and genetics and consistently agreed that the
- principles underlying the DNA technique are universally
- accepted. (20) It is commonly recognized in all scientific
- disciplines that cells with nuclei contain DNA and that the
- structure of this DNA is different in all individuals except
- identical twins. Based on such expert testimony, these courts
- have also, without exception, recognized that certain DNA
- testing protocols are generally accepted as producing reliable
- and accurate results that satisfy both the Frye and relevancy
- standards of admissibility. Moreover, the overwhelming majority
- of these courts have determined that these procedures were
- properly employed by the testing laboratory.
-
- For example, in Cobey v. State, (21) a Maryland court of
- appeals upheld the admission of identification testimony based
- upon the DNA analysis performed by Cellmark Diagnostics, a
- private testing laboratory. Using the procedure known as
- restriction fragment length polymorphism, the laboratory
- perceived a match between the defendant's blood and semen stains
- found on the undergarments of the victim of a sexual assault.
- This complex testing procedure basically includes the following
- steps: 1) Extracting or recovering the DNA from the evidence;
- 2) fragmenting or splitting this DNA by restriction enzymes; 3)
- marshaling these fragments through the scientific process of gel
- electrophoresis; 4) transferring the fragments to a membrane by
- blotting; 5) detecting special segments by introducing
- radioactive probes; and 6) producing the autoradiograph, which
- is a photographic image of these special segments used for
- comparison with the DNA characteristics of the suspect's blood.
-
- The Cobey court relied upon the testimony of the
- government's five expert witnesses, including impartial
- scientists from the academic and research communities, to
- conclude that the procedures used were generally accepted,
- satisfied the Frye standard, and were reliably administered.
- (22) The court further found that the laboratory used acceptable
- criteria for formulating the minuscule chances of the match
- occurring randomly. (23)
-
- Although not an appellate opinion, a New York trial court
- similarly considered the propriety of the restriction fragment
- length polymorphism procedure used by another private
- laboratory, Lifecodes Corporation. In People v. Wesley, (24)
- the court, after an extensive hearing, was convinced by the
- testimony of independent experts that every step of that
- laboratory's protocol was generally recognized as accurate and
- reliable. The court was also satisfied that appropriate
- controls were instituted to assure that the examined samples
- were of sufficient quality for testing. The laboratory had
- conducted proficiency testing to ensure the skill of its
- examiners and studies to confirm the lack of degradation effects
- upon DNA characteristics due to age, heat, humidity and light.
-
- The Supreme Court of Virginia in Spencer v. Commonwealth
- (25) and a Florida court of appeals (26) applying the relevancy
- standard have also approved the admission of conclusions based
- upon this DNA testing procedure. These courts specifically
- relied upon the acceptance and application of the DNA testing
- procedure in diagnostic medicine for a lengthy period of time,
- the existence of specialized literature supporting the
- technique, and the unchallenged agreement among the testifying
- scientists that incorrect procedure would render an inconclusive
- result rather than a false match. (27) These courts also
- concurred that the private testing laboratory had used the
- proper standards when determining the statistical likelihood of
- a random match.
-
- Despite this overwhelming judicial acceptance of DNA
- identification, two courts, agreeing that DNA typing by
- restriction fragment length polymorphism is generally accepted
- in the applicable scientific disciplines, have criticized the
- manner in which the technique was employed. In both instances,
- the courts concluded that the testing procedure used was
- questionable, rendering results inadmissible.
-
- In one decision, the Supreme Court of Minnesota
- acknowledged the scientific acceptance of DNA testing, but
- cautioned that the ``admissibility of [DNA] test results in a
- particular case hinges on the laboratory's compliance with
- appropriate standards and controls.'' (28) The court concluded
- that deficiencies in the private laboratory's protocol
- disallowed admission of its test results. The court
- specifically criticized the private testing facility's failure
- to conduct or refer to experimental studies supporting the
- methodology used, and the lack of publication of those studies
- and their results for peer review and analysis. The court also
- questioned the laboratory's unwillingness to provide to the
- defendant specific information about its testing procedure and
- methodology. (29)
-
- In a highly publicized decision, a New York trial court
- also questioned the procedure used by another private laboratory
- and challenged earlier findings that faulty procedure could not
- render a test unreliable. In People v. Castro, (30) blood
- stains found on the defendant's watch were compared with the
- defendant's blood and the homicide victim's blood through
- restriction fragment length polymorphism. The examiner
- concluded that the blood on the watch was not the defendant's
- but was instead the victim's. After conducting an extensive
- Frye hearing, the court recognized the complete acceptance of
- DNA identification theory in the scientific world and the
- general acceptance of DNA identification techniques which are
- capable of producing reliable results. It further acknowledged
- that failure to perform this protocol in a scientifically
- acceptable manner would normally only effect the weight of any
- rendered conclusions and not their admissibility.
-
- However, the trial court determined that the laboratory was
- remiss in certain portions of its testing, casting doubt about
- the reliability of its conclusion that the blood on the watch
- was that of the victim. These errors included the laboratory's
- failure to: 1) Follow specialized procedures for resolving
- ambiguities that could be attributed to contaminated materials
- or degraded samples; 2) use a generally accepted control in one
- experiment; and 3) objectively quantify the readings of the
- produced autoradiographs. Accordingly, the court found it
- necessary to exclude this conclusion. However, because
- scientific methods to determine that two DNA samples do not
- match are less complex and were performed reliably, the court
- admitted the conclusion that the defendant's blood was not the
- blood on the watch. The court's decision was not appealed
- because the defendant subsequently pled guilty to the charged
- homicide.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- Properly employed DNA identification procedure has been
- judicially acknowledged as meeting admissibility standards. The
- law enforcement community can confidently employ it in criminal
- investigations and prosecutions. However, strong defense
- objections to its admission at trial should be anticipated.
- Accordingly, whether courts apply the Frye test or the seemingly
- less restrictive relevancy standard, complete cooperation
- between the prosecutor, law enforcement officer, and government
- expert is absolutely necessary to prepare for the admissibility
- of DNA testing results.
-
- Prosecutors should become familiar with the DNA
- identification process by reviewing available material
- explaining the technique. (31) Prosecutors should devote
- sufficient time prior to discovery and trial to discuss the DNA
- procedure used and proposed testimony with experts, including
- the laboratory examiner and independent impartial scientists who
- can corroborate the acceptance and reliability of the testing
- protocol. These experts should be prepared to apprise the
- prosecutor of their expert qualifications, including their
- academic and professional backgrounds. The experts should also
- be prepared to explain in comprehensible terms the DNA testing
- process, its underlying principles, and its application to the
- comparison made in that particular case. They should similarly
- refer to any tests they or others have conducted which validate
- the DNA testing technique and the dissemination of the results
- of those tests for peer review and comment. They should also
- inform the prosecutor of other scientists who have recognized
- the validity of this technique and be prepared to testify about
- those scientists' studies, writings and publications that
- support the employed methodology.
-
- The prosecutor and scientist should also discuss the
- anticipated testimony of any expected defense experts in order
- to prepare for appropriate cross-examination and rebuttal.
- Finally, they should acquaint themselves with those court
- decisions that have criticized the way in which the DNA testing
- procedure was performed and be prepared to explain to the trial
- court the reliability of the testing procedure used.
-
- In the final analysis, a court's decision to admit the
- results of DNA testing rests, in most jurisdictions, upon the
- application of the Frye standard to the testimony of the expert
- witnesses. It is expected that after a reasonable period of
- appropriate appellate review, all jurisdictions will recognize
- the scientific acceptance of the DNA technique. It will still
- be necessary, however, to convince courts that proper protocol
- was followed in a particular case. Success ultimately depends
- on the ability of the expert witnesses to explain to the court
- the scientific validity of the DNA process used and the
- particular conclusion or identification made.
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1) For a more thorough explanation of the DNA identification
- process, see John W. Hicks, ``DNA Profiling: A Tool for Law
- Enforcement,'' FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, vol. 57, No. 8,
- August 1988, pp. 1-5.
-
- (2) See People v. Castro, 545 N.Y.S.2d 985 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.,
- Bronx County, 1989).
-
- (3) Of the DNA examinations performed by the FBI's DNA Analysis
- Unit which have resulted in a conclusion, approximately 30
- percent have excluded the suspect. Telephone interview with SA
- Lawrence A. Presley, DNA Analysis Unit, Laboratory Division,
- FBI, March 2, 1990.
-
- (4) See United States v. Downing, 753 F.2d 1224 (3d Cir. 1985);
- United States v. Brown, 557 F.2d 541 (6th Cir. 1977); United
- States v. Baller, 519 F.2d 463 (4th Cir. 1975); State v. Brown,
- 687 P.2d 751 (Or. Sup. Ct. 1984); State v. Hall, 297 N.W.2d 80
- (Iowa Sup. Ct. 1980); State v. Williams, 388 A.2d 500 (Me. Sup.
- Ct. 1978).
-
- (5) Id.
-
- (6) 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923).
-
- (7) United States v. Tranowski, 659 F.2d 750 (7th Cir. 1981);
- United States v. Kilgus, 571 F.2d 508 (9th Cir. 1978); United
- States v. McDaniel, 538 F.2d 408 (D.C. Cir. 1976); United States
- v. Alexander, 526 F.2d 161 (8th Cir. 1975); State v. Temple, 273
- S.E. 2d 273 (N.C. Sup. Ct. 1981); Reed v. State, 391 A.2d 364
- (Md. Ct. App. 1978); People v. Tobey, 257 N.W.2d 537 (Mich. Sup.
- Ct. 1977); Commonwealth v. Topa, 369 A.2d 1277 (Pa. Sup. Ct.
- 1977); People v. Kelly, 549 P.2d 1240 (Cal. Sup. Ct. 1976);
- Commonwealth v. Lykus, 327 N.E.2d 671 (Mass. Sup. Ct. 1975).
- For a detailed discussion of the current status of the Frye
- standard, see Gianelli, ``The Admissibility of Novel Scientific
- Evidence: Frye v. United States, A Half-Century Later,'' 86
- Colum. L. Rev. 1198 (1980).
-
- (8) United States v. Downing, supra note 4; United
- States v. Brown, supra note 4; State v. Brown, supra note 4.
-
- (9) State v. Brown, supra note 4.
-
- (10) Supra note 6, at 1014.
-
- (11) Id. at 1014.
-
- (12) Reed v. State, supra note 7, at 368.
-
- (13) See People v. Young, 391 N.W.2d 270 (Mich. Sup Ct. 1986).
-
- (14) People v. Williams, 331 P.2d 251, 254 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).
-
- (15) See People v. Middleton, 429 N.E.2d 100 (N.Y. Ct. App.
- 1981).
-
- (16) United States v. Williams, 443 F.Supp. 269, 273 (S.D.N.Y.
- 1977).
-
- (17) See United States v. Zeigler, 350 F.Supp. 685 (D.D.C.
- 1972).
-
- (18) Commonwealth v. Lykus, supra note 7, at 678 n. 6.
-
- (19) See Reed v. State, supra note 7; People v. Barbara, 255 N.W.2d
- 171 (Mich. Sup. Ct. 1977).
-
- (20) Trial courts have admitted conclusions based upon DNA
- analysis by examiners from the FBI on over 50 occasions.
- Telephone interview with SA Lawrence A. Presley, DNA Analysis
- Unit, Laboratory Division, FBI, March 2, 1990.
-
- (21) 559 A.2d 391 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1989). See also Yorke v.
- State, 556 A.2d 230 (Md. Ct. App. 1989) and State v. Woodall,
- 385 S.E.2d 253 (W. Va. Sup. Ct. 1989). (Inconclusive DNA tests,
- although generally accepted in the scientific community,
- conducted after trial not grounds for new trial.)
-
- (22) Maryland now statutorily allows the admission of
- conclusions based upon DNA testing. 1989 Md. Laws Ch. 430.
-
- (23) The court specifically found that the number of samples
- used to devise the database for calculating these figures was
- within generally accepted scientific criteria.
-
- (24) 533 N.Y.S.2d 643 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Albany County, 1988). See
- also People v. Shi Fu Hung, 546 N.Y.S.2d 920 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.,
- Nassau County, 1989).
-
- (25) 384 S.E.2d 775 (Va. Sup. Ct. 1989); 384 S.E.2d 785
- (Va. Sup. Ct. 1989) (the defendant was convicted of two
- incidents of murder in separate trials).
-
- (26) Andrews v. State, 533 S.2d 841 (Fla. Ct. App. 1988); see
- also Martinez v. State, 549 So.2d 94 (Fla. Ct. App. 1989).
-
- (27) See also Cobey v. State, supra note 21 and People v.
- Wesley, supra note 24. But see People v. Castro, supra note 2.
-
- (28) State v. Schwartz, 447 N.W.2d 422, 428 (Minn. Sup. Ct. 1989).
-
- (29) Minnesota statute now requires the application of the
- relevancy standard in determining the admissibility of DNA
- testing. Minn. Stat. Sec. 634.25 (1989).
-
- (30) Supra note 2.
-
- (31) For detailed discussions of the DNA identification process,
- see John W. Hicks, ``DNA Profiling: A Tool for Law
- Enforcement,'' supra note 1; and Thompson and Ford, ``DNA
- Typing: Acceptance and Weight of the New Genetic Identification
- Tests,'' 75 Va. L. Rev. 45 (1989).