UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
WILFREDO MARTINEZ ACOSTA, and
VICTOR RODRIGUEZ
Pollak, J. January 7, 2002.
Currently before the court is defendants' Motion to Preclude the United States from Introducing Latent Fingerprint Identification Evidence,(1) in which defendants contend that evidence relating to fingerprints fails to conform to the standard for admitting expert testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993) and Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137 (1999). The United States has responded to defendants' motion by submitting a Combined Motion in Limine to Admit Latent Print Evidence and Response to Defendant Acosta's Motion to Preclude the Introduction of Latent Fingerprint Identification Evidence. In this combined motion and response, the government has moved the court to (1) admit fingerprint evidence at trial and (2) take judicial notice of the uniqueness and permanence of fingerprints. Defendants have submitted a Reply Memorandum of Law in Support of Mr. Acosta's Motion to Exclude the Government's Latent Fingerprint Identification Evidence. In support of their respective positions, the defendants and the government have agreed by stipulation to rely on the testimony regarding fingerprint evidence that was presented to my colleague Judge Joyner in 1999 in United States v. Mitchell, Cr. No. 96-407 (E.D. Pa.). The testimony that is referred to in the remainder of this opinion is drawn from the Mitchell hearing.(2)
I. Background: Fingerprints and Their Identification
The defendants' and government's motions bring into question (1) whether each individual has a unique set of fingerprints and, if so, whether these unique fingerprints are permanent, and (2) whether latent prints--fragments of fingerprints "lifted" from a surface touched by an unidentified person--can accurately be matched to "rolled" prints--complete fingerprints that are obtained from an identified person through established fingerprinting procedures. These questions warrant a preliminary examination of what fingerprints are, what the basic premises of fingerprint identifications are, and how fingerprints are identified.
A. What Fingerprints Are
At the Mitchell hearing, government witness Dr. William
Babler, a former President of the American Dermatoglyphics Association,(3)
professor of gross anatomy, and embryologist, gave testimony on
his research on the prenatal development of fingerprints. According to Dr.
Babler, friction ridges--in simple terms, the lines on the ends of fingers that
are arranged in patterns--start forming when the fetus is in the ninth or tenth
week of development. Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 35-36.(4)
He described these early formations as primary friction ridges, which develop
"deep to the surface of the skin." Id. at 40. At about fourteen weeks,
sweat glands or sweat ducts begin to form, "start[ing] out as proliferations
from the primary ridge. They grow down into the dermis and they ultimately
mature into a duct and into a gland." Id. at 44. The deep, primary ridges
proliferate until sometime between the fetus's fifteenth and seventeenth weeks
of development, when primary ridges stop proliferating and secondary ridges
begin to form. These secondary ridges, which begin to appear on the skin surface
at about week seventeen, mature from weeks seventeen through twenty-four.
According to Dr. Babler: [T]his interface between the epidermis and the dermis really
provides a template of the configuration of the friction ridges on the surface.
And this template tends to be permanent. It does not change. Unless it gets
injured, and it would take a deep injury. It would take an injury that would
pierce through that interface such as a deep knife wound, or a deep burn to
actually distort this template at the epidermal, dermal interface. Id. at 47. In sum, "at the stage of 17 weeks then, we
see that the friction ridge basically has become permanent and fixed on the
surface of the skin. And it does not change thereafter." Id. at
50. Dr. Babler also discussed factors that may affect the
arrangement of friction ridges, including genetics, environmental factors,
chemicals, disease, and perhaps the shape of the volar pad (end of the
finger): [T]here are many different factors, many, many different
factors that influenced the development of the friction ridge and ultimately the
development of its secondary characteristics, the minutiae, the actual shape of
the ridge itself. All these are so numerous and so individual that they--that I
cannot conclude anything but that each and every friction ridge and their
arrangements are individual and specific. Id. at 63.(5) Fingerprint examiners refer to three levels of detail that can
be observed on mature fingerprints. At the first level of detail, an examiner
looks at the overall pattern of a fingerprint. These overall patterns are
described as whorl patterns, loop patterns, and arch patterns. See, e.g.,
id. at 53. According to the testimony of Sergeant David Ashbaugh, a
fingerprint specialist of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, level two detail
consists of "a path of ridges," which are islands (a group "of individual ridge
units fused together"), or bifurcations ("friction ridges splitting into two").
Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 99-101. Stephen Meagher, an FBI unit chief
and supervisory fingerprint specialist whom the government has listed as a
witness in the case at bar,(6)
testified in Mitchell that when fingerprint examiners look at level two
detail, they often look for points (referred to as "Galton points") on the
ridges that the latent and rolled prints have in common. Test. Meagher, Tr. July
8, 1999, at 79, 83.(7)
The most intricate level of detail--level three detail--consists of "minutiae,"
including sweat pores and their structures. Id. at 74.(8) B. The Two Premises of Fingerprint Examination: Uniqueness and
Permanence The process of examining fingerprints is based on two premises--that each
person's fingerprints are unique and that they are permanent. The government's
contention that fingerprints are unique is supported in part by Dr. Babler's
testimony that the prenatal development of fingerprints is affected by "many
different factors." Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 63. The government also
relies on a survey directed by Mr. Meagher, in which he sent the latent
fingerprints and ten-print card (rolled fingerprints) of Byron Mitchell, the
defendant in Mitchell, to law enforcement agencies in all fifty states.
The state fingerprint examiners were asked, inter alia, whether the
rolled prints matched any prints in their repositories.(9)
Except for West Virginia, which did not have sufficient technological
capabilities, the state agencies used automated or computer-run programs to
compare Mr. Mitchell's ten-print card with the records in their repositories.
The only state that had a "hit" was Pennsylvania, the state in which Mr.
Mitchell was incarcerated. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 126. The government also bases its claim of uniqueness on an algorithmic study,
dubbed the 50k x 50k study, in which 50,000 fingerprints, all in loop
arrangements and taken from white males, were compared with each other. The goal
of this study, which was comprised of two separate tests, was to determine the
probability that fingerprints of two people could be identical. Id. at
157-58. Donald Ziesig, an algorithmist at Lockheed Martin Information Systems
who played an important role in developing the FBI's computer-based fingerprint
system (the Automatic Fingerprint Identification System, or AFIS), Test. Ziesig,
Tr. July 9, 1999, at 32-39, was a developer of the 50k x 50k study and explained
in detail how it operated. Id. at 50-80. The result of the
first test, in which full-sized, one inch fingerprints were compared with each
other, was that the probability of finding two people with identical
fingerprints was one in ten to the ninety-seventh power. Id. at 68, 73.
In the second test, the rolled prints were artificially cropped to the average
size of latent prints so that only the center 21.7% of the rolled prints was
analyzed, with the resultant conclusion that the probability of finding two
different, partial fingerprints to be identical was one in ten to the
twenty-seventh power. Id. at 73-74. The government also contends, based on Dr. Babler's testimony,
that fingerprints do not change over time, but are permanent. In particular, Dr.
Babler testified that "at the stage of 17 weeks then, we see that the friction
ridge basically has become permanent and fixed on the surface of the skin. And
it does not change thereafter." Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 50. These two
premises--uniqueness and permanency--provide the basis for associating a
particular fingerprint with a particular individual, and for matching latent
fingerprints with rolled fingerprints. C. Examination of Fingerprints A fingerprint examiner's job consists of comparing latent and
rolled fingerprints to determine if the person who left the latent prints can be
identified. The FBI describes latent prints in a training manual: [T]he ridges of the fingers and palms are in intermittent
contact with other parts of the body, such as the hair and face, and with
various objects, which may leave a film of grease or moisture on the ridges. In
touching an object, the film of moisture and/or grease may be transferred to the
object, thus leaving an outline of the ridges of the fingers or palm thereon.
This print is called a latent impression, the word "latent" meaning hidden, that
is, the print many times is not readily visible. U.S. Dep't Justice, Fed'l Bur. Investigation, The Science of
Fingerprints: Classification and Uses 170, reproduced at Def. Mot. Ex.
9. According to the testimony of Mr. Meagher, latent prints are
usually incomplete--the average size of a latent print is 21.7% the average size
of a rolled print, Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 162-63--and are often
distorted. Distortion is due to the manner in which the finger comes into
contact with the surface, the nature of the surface on which the print is left,
and the property of the material and/or medium that is used to "lift" the latent
print. Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 160. Rolled fingerprints, by
contrast, are obtained from known persons and are taken under controlled
circumstances. The average size of a rolled fingerprint is one square inch.
Id. at 98. In comparing latent and rolled prints, fingerprint examiners
employ a process known as "ridgeology"(10)
or ACE-V, an acronym for "analysis," "comparison," "evaluation," and
"verification." Sergeant Ashbaugh testified that, during the analysis stage,
examiners look at the unknown, or latent, print and note both the "anatomical
aspects" of the fingerprint and the clarity of the print. He described the
analysis stage in some detail: Does it have first, second and third level detail or a
combination? What is the clarity of the print? We would then look at all the
ridge paths, all the ridge arrangements. We'd explore ridge shapes and we would
note any red flags. Red flags--I'll be very brief with this because it is a very
large area--we would look for any lines running in the print that could have
been caused by pressure, substraight [sic] or matrix smears. We would look for
areas of fat ridges, possibly that could be caused by overlapping ridges. We'd
look for differing amounts of pressure. We'd look for similar ridge
characteristics close to each other. This could mean a double tap, two pressures
and a [sic] again, an overlapping print. We'd look for shadows, shadow ridges in
the furrows, which also could mean two prints deposited. We'd look for misaligned ridges protruding into the furrow.
We'd look for cross-over ridges running through the furrow and, of course, we'd
look for inappropriate print outline. Id. at 113-14. After analysis: [W]e move on to comparison, and comparison is carried out in
sequence or systematically and we start--first of all, we would look at first
level detail, is the overall pattern configuration in agreement. And then we
would look at--start at an area that is common to both the unknown and the known
print. And we would start at a common area and we start systematically comparing
all the various friction ridge arrangements and friction ridge shapes, including
relative pore position, if it's at all possible. The comparison is something that is very objective. We're
dealing with physical evidence and if I discuss something in the ridge
arrangement, I should be able to point to it, so it's a very objective
process. Once the comparison is complete, and we recommend that the
whole print be compared, the next thing that we would do is then evaluate what
we saw during comparison as far as agreement of the various ridge formations.
And I break it down into actually two separate areas. The first area is, do I
have agreement? If you say yes to that, if you form the opinion you have
agreement, then you have to ask yourself, is there sufficient unique detail
present to individualize? That final decision is a subjective decision. It's based on
your knowledge and experience and your ability. And that, if you say yes, I feel
there's enough to individualize, then you formed an opinion of
identification. The conclusions that we recommend that are available to you at
the end of identification, would be elimination, which usually would start very
early in the identification process, identification, a situation where you have
sufficient volume of unique details to individualize. And a situation where you
have agreement, but you're unable to individualize or eliminate. And, in other
words, you can't differentiate from others. And those are the three conclusions
that we recommend that you can form. From there we move into the very last box, which deals with the
verification, which is a form of peer review, and it is part of the scientific
process. From this point the person actually starts right at the beginning and
goes through the whole identification process again individually. Id. at 114-16. In some state jurisdictions in the United States, and in some
foreign jurisdictions, fingerprint examiners must find a minimum number of
Galton points (characteristics on the fingerprint ridges) in common before they
can declare a match with absolute certainty. Id. at 143-45. The FBI
switched from relying on a mandatory minimum number of points to no minimum
number in the late 1940s. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 105.(11)
Testifying in United States v. Havvard, 117 F. Supp. 2d 848 (S.D. Ind.
2000), aff'd 260 F.3d 597 (7th Cir. 2001), Mr. Meagher
discussed the absence of a uniform standard prescribing a minimum number of
points in common as a precondition of finding a match. Judge Hamilton, in his
opinion holding fingerprint identification testimony admissible, referred to Mr.
Meagher's testimony, which he found persuasive: Meagher testified that there is no single quantifiable standard
for reaching an identification opinion because of differences in both the
quantity of characteristics shown in the latent print and the quality of the
image. For example, if a latent print shows a relatively small portion of a
fingerprint but has a very clear image--one that allows clear identification of
level three detail such as the shapes of ridges, locations of pores, and the
like, a reliable identification may still be possible even with relatively few
level two "points." Meagher's explanation makes sense, and the court credits it.
See also Moenssens, et al., Scientific Evidence in Civil and Criminal
Cases at 514-16 (by tradition, latent print examiners in the United States have
required a match of at least six to eight characteristics to show identity, but
most experts prefer at least ten to twelve; in English courts 14 to 16 matches
are required for identity). Professor Moenssens also reports the results of
study conducted for the International Association for Identification, which
concluded that there was no valid basis for requiring a predetermined minimum
number of ridge characteristics, and that an identification opinion must take
into account other factors, including the quality and clarity of the
impressions. Id. 117 F. Supp. 2d at 853. To aid them in deciding whether a latent fingerprint and a
rolled fingerprint were deposited by the same individual, FBI fingerprint
examiners are trained in the "quantitative/qualitative process." Test. Meagher,
Tr. July 8, 1999, at 78. This process denotes an inverse relationship whereby
the more quantity of detail that can be matched, the less clear the print has to
be, and vice versa: For example, if a print has a large number of level two
information of Galton details, the quality does not have to be there present to
provide level three information. He can make an identification and individualize strictly based
on level two information. However, the contrary is that if he has small numbers of the
level two information, he must then rely on the quality of the image to present
additional information which might be present in the level three. Id. at 79. After utilizing the ACE-V and quantitative/qualitative
processes, an examiner is ready to make a determination with respect to the
latent print in question. The three options that the examiner has are described
in one of two ways: (1) identification, elimination, or "agreement but not
enough to individualize--not enough to eliminate," Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7,
1999, at 154, or (2) "absolutely him, absolutely not him, and absolutely I don't
know," id. at 154-55. Whichever terminology is used, the result is the
same--an examiner who makes a positive identification is determining that the
latent fingerprint necessarily came from the individual in question, "to the
exclusion of all other fingers in the world." Id. at 191. II. Court Decisions Regarding the Admissibility of
Fingerprint Testimony Several courts have addressed the issue of whether fingerprint
identifications are admissible as expert testimony under Federal Rule of
Evidence 702, and, since the Supreme Court's Daubert ruling, all have
come to the conclusion that fingerprint testimony should be admitted.(12)
In the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, fingerprint testimony has been
considered and admitted in two cases, United States v. Mitchell, Cr. No.
96-407 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 13, 1999), and United States v. Ramsey, Cr. No.
01-5-4 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 21, 2001). In Mitchell, my colleague Judge Joyner
took judicial notice of the uniqueness and permanence of friction ridges,
permitted fingerprint examiners to testify as experts, and reserved for the jury
the issue of "whether or not there's been a positive identification pursuant to
whatever standards are applicable." Mitchell, Cr. No. 96-407, at 4-5. In
Ramsey, my colleague Judge Yohn held that fingerprint identification
techniques are scientifically reliable and that fingerprints are unique and
permanent. Ramsey, Cr. No. 01-5-4, at 5-6, 12. Courts in other circuits have also concluded that fingerprint
testimony is sufficiently scientific and reliable to be admitted under Rule 702.
Published opinions applying Rule 702 prior to its December 2000 amendment are:
United States v. Sherwood, 98 F.3d 402, 408 (9th Cir. 1996) (finding that
the district court did not err in admitting fingerprint testimony); United
States v. Havvard, 117 F. Supp. 2d at 855 (stating that "latent print
identification is the very archetype of reliable expert testimony"),
aff'd 260 F.3d 597 (7th Cir. 2001) (reviewing the district court's
determination de novo and finding that the district court did not err in its
consideration of the Daubert factors as they apply to fingerprint
techniques); United States v. Cooper, 91 F. Supp. 2d 79, 82 (D.D.C. 2000)
(declining to hold a pre-trial Daubert hearing and finding that
fingerprint identification techniques are "well-established principles").
Published opinions applying Rule 702 as amended are: United States v.
Reaux, 2001 WL 883221, *2 (E.D. La. July 31, 2001) (relying on the Seventh
Circuit's opinion in Havvard and admitting fingerprint testimony);
United States v. Martínez-Cintrón, 136 F. Supp. 2d 17 (D.P.R. 2001)
(admitting fingerprint examination testimony); United States v. Joseph,
2001 WL 515213, *1 (E.D. La. May 14, 2001) (finding that fingerprint analysis is
"scientific knowledge"). III. Judicial Notice of the Uniqueness and Permanence
of Fingerprints The government requests that this court take judicial notice of
the uniqueness and permanence of fingerprints (friction ridges and friction
ridge skin arrangements). Gov't Mot. & Resp. at 113. Federal Rule of
Evidence 201(b) lays down the types of facts for which judicial notice is
appropriate. A judicially noticed fact must be one not subject to reasonable
dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial
jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready
determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
questioned. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). Under some circumstances, the trial judge
must take judicial notice of adjudicative facts: "A court shall take judicial
notice if requested by a party and supplied with the necessary information."
Fed. R. Evid. 201(d). Even when not required to do so, trial judges may take
judicial notice of an adjudicative fact as a matter of discretion: "A court may
take judicial notice, whether requested or not." Fed. R. Evid. 201(c). Judicial
notice under either the mandatory or discretionary subsection is only
appropriate when "particular facts are outside the area of reasonable
controversy . . . . A high degree of indisputability is the essential
prerequisite." Fed. R. Evid. 201(a), advisory committee note. The government
contends that this court should take judicial notice of both the uniqueness and
the permanence of fingerprints under the mandatory subsection of Rule 201. Gov't
Mot. & Resp. at 113. With respect to the uniqueness of fingerprints, both Dr. Babler
and Mr. Ziesig testified, essentially, that their work provides a basis for
concluding that fingerprints are unique. Dr. Babler testified that because
multiple factors affect the prenatal development of fingerprint ridges, they
must be unique. Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 63. While this assertion
makes intuitive sense, Dr. Babler did not actually compare fingerprint ridges to
determine whether the assertion was factually correct. Mr. Ziesig, however, did
undertake such a comparison. As described above, Mr. Ziesig's 50k x 50k study
found the probability to be one in ten to the ninety-seventh power that two
rolled fingerprints (whether taken from fingers of two different people or from
two fingers of the same person) would be identical. Test. Ziesig, Tr. July 9,
1999, at 68, 73. Mr. Ziesig's testimony provides the "necessary information" for
this court to take judicial notice of the uniqueness of fingerprints, in
accordance with Federal Rule of Evidence 201(d). Based on his research involving the prenatal development of
fingerprints, Dr. Babler testified that fingerprints are permanent. Because the
deeply-rooted primary ridges form a template for secondary ridges--the ridges
that are visible on the surface of the skin--he conjectured that only a very
deep wound could alter a fingerprint. Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 47. Dr.
Babler's research provides an adequate basis for this court to take judicial
notice of the permanency of fingerprints. IV. Admission of Expert Testimony For several decades, the standard for admission of expert
testimony was the "general acceptance" standard that was established in Frye
v. United States, 293 F. 1013, 1014 (D.C. Cir. 1923): "[W]hile courts 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." In articulating the "general acceptance"
standard, the Frye court addressed only the admissibility of novel
scientific evidence. Other courts subsequently extended "general acceptance" as
a test of admissibility for all scientific evidence. Some fifty years after Frye's articulation of the
"general acceptance" standard, Congress adopted Federal Rule of Evidence 702,
entitled "Testimony by Experts": If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will
assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in
issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or
otherwise. Federal Rules of Evidence, Pub. L. No. 93-595, 88 Stat. 1926,
1937 (1975). Rule 702 did not mention "general acceptance," much less adopt this
as the test for admission of expert testimony. Daubert, 509 U.S. at 588.
Nevertheless, many courts continued to use the "general acceptance" standard
until the Supreme Court clarified, in 1993, that Frye's "general
acceptance" standard had been superseded by Federal Rule of Evidence 702.
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 587. Daubert emphasized that the basic standard of relevance
under the Rules is "a liberal one," id. at 587, but that a "trial judge
must ensure that any and all scientific testimony or evidence admitted is not
only relevant, but reliable," id. at 589.(13)
That is, trial judges are called on to play a "gatekeeping role" with respect to
scientific testimony. Id. at 597. In applying Rule 702 to the admission
of scientific testimony, the Court emphasized that, for evidence to be
considered "reliable," the proposed expert's opinion must actually be based on
what Rule 702 terms "scientific knowledge." The Court, speaking through Justice
Blackmun, clarified what "scientific knowledge" signifies: The adjective "scientific" implies a grounding in the methods
and procedures of science. Similarly, the word "knowledge" connotes more than
subjective belief or unsupported speculation. The term applies to any body of
known facts or to any body of ideas inferred from such facts or accepted as
truths on good grounds. Of course, it would be unreasonable to conclude that the
subject of scientific testimony must be "known" to a certainty; arguably, there
are no certainties in science. But, in order to qualify as "scientific
knowledge," an inference or assertion must be derived by the scientific method.
. . . In short, the requirement that an expert's testimony pertain to
"scientific knowledge" establishes a standard of evidentiary
reliability. Id. at 590 (quotations and citations omitted). In
further delineating what trial judges should be looking for in scientific
testimony, Justice Blackmun presented four "general observations," which are
commonly referred to as the "Daubert factors": (1) whether the technique
"can be (and has been) tested," (2) whether the technique has been "subjected to
peer review and publication," (3) "the known or potential rate of error . . .
and the existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique's
operation," and (4) "general acceptance." Id. at 593-94.(14)
In Kumho Tire, the Court held that Daubert's
interpretation of Rule 702 applies with equal force to proposed expert testimony
based on technical or other specialized knowledge. 526 U.S. at 141. The Court
also emphasized that the four Daubert factors are flexible and that the
"list of specific factors neither necessarily nor exclusively applies to all
experts or in every case." Id. In an effort to bring Rule 702 into closer verbal harmony with
Daubert and Kumho Tire, Congress amended Federal Rule of Evidence
702: If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will
assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in
issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or
otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the
testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness
has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the
case. Fed. R. Evid. 702. This newly-amended Rule 702 took effect on
December 1, 2000 and is thus applicable to the case at hand. V. Fingerprint
Identifications The primary question that the parties dispute is whether
fingerprint identifications are scientifically reliable and thus admissible
under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, as construed by the Supreme Court in
Daubert and Kumho Tire. While the four factors discussed in
Daubert are flexible general guidelines, not a rigid test for
admissibility, Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594-95; Kumho Tire, 526 U.S.
at 152, the factors do provide a useful framework for determining whether
fingerprint identifications are scientifically valid and thus reliable,
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594-95. In their submissions in the case at bar,
both the government and the defendants have undertaken to apply the
Daubert factors, albeit with discrepant results. Agreeing with the
parties that, with respect to fingerprint identification evidence, the
Daubert factors constitute a proper touchstone of admissibility, this
court will also proceed along the analytic path marked out by the Daubert
factors. A. Testing 1. Definition of "Testing" The first Daubert factor is "whether a theory or
technique . . . can be (and has been) tested." 509 U.S. at 593. According to the
government, "[t]he ACE-V process and the experts' conclusions have been tested
empirically over a period of 100 years and in any particular case they can be
tested by examination of the evidence by another expert." Gov't Mot. & Resp.
at 112. The second clause of this sentence seems to be arguing that,
following testimony by one fingerprint examiner that a particular latent print
corresponds with a particular known print, testimony by a second examiner
constitutes a form of "testing." However, this is not "testing" of the "theory"
or the "technique" of fingerprint identification in the Daubert sense.
With respect to "theory," the fact that a second examiner, following the same
"technique" as a prior examiner, reaches the same (or, indeed, a different)
result, would not seem to shed any light on the validity of the "theory"
underlying that "technique." With respect to "technique"--assuming, for purposes
of discussion, that the validity of the "theory" were acknowledged--it is
difficult to see that a single confirmatory examination would be adequate to
validate the "technique." Conversely, it is not apparent that a result arrived
at by a second examiner discrepant from a result arrived at by a prior examiner
would (1) establish that the first result was erroneous, or (2) offer a secure
basis for concluding that the "technique" was faulty. A scientist might be
disposed to require scores, or perhaps hundreds, of observations before
regarding the "technique" as having been "tested."(15) The first clause in the sentence from the government's motion
papers quoted above--"[t]he ACE-V process and the experts' conclusions have been
tested empirically over a period of 100 years"--apparently refers to the fact
that fingerprint identification has been a customary ingredient of trials for a
century. Some courts that have addressed the admissibility of fingerprint
testimony have also equated the use of fingerprint identifications in court with
"testing." In Havvard, for example, the court stated, "the methods of
latent print identification . . . have been tested for roughly 100 years. They
have been tested in adversarial proceedings with the highest possible
stakes--liberty and sometimes life." 117 F. Supp. 2d at 854, aff'd 260
F.3d 597; accord Ramsey, Cr. No. 01-5-4, at 6-7. "[A]dversarial" testing in court is not, however, what the
Supreme Court meant when it discussed testing as an admissibility factor. In his
brief elaboration on testing, Justice Blackmun quoted an evidence treatise with
approval: "'Scientific methodology today is based on generating hypotheses and
testing them to see if they can be falsified; indeed, this methodology is what
distinguishes science from other fields of human inquiry.'" Daubert, 509
U.S. at 593 (quoting Green, Expert Witnesses and Sufficiency of Evidence in
Toxic Substances Litigation: The Legacy of Agent Orange and Bendectin
Litigation, 86 Nw. U. L. Rev. 643 (1992)). In an
article on Daubert, Professor Imwinkelried explained the importance of
falsifiability to scientific testing: Attempts to disprove the hypothesis are more significant [than
verification] in two respects. First, although a single outcome consistent with
an hypothesis furnishes little proof of the truth of the hypothesis, a
hypothesis phrased as a universal statement is disproved by even one singular
inconsistent outcome. Second, even when there are an impressive number of
consistent outcomes and no inconsistent outcomes, the hypothesis is not
definitively confirmed because it is always possible that an empirical test will
some day demonstrate the theory to be incorrect. The theoretical possibility of
disproof remains. Edward J. Imwinkelried, Evidence Law Visits Jurassic Park:
The Far-Reaching Implication of the Daubert Court's Recognition of the
Uncertainty of the Scientific Enterprise, 81 Iowa L.
Rev. 55, 62 (1995) (quotations and citations omitted). Thus, by striving to
falsify a certain premise or outcome, scientists can more closely approximate
what is "true." Id. at 61-62.(16) It makes sense to rely on scientific testing, rather than
"adversarial" courtroom testing, because to rely on the latter would be to
vitiate the gatekeeping role of federal trial judges, thereby undermining the
essence of Rule 702 as interpreted by the Court in Daubert. If
"adversarial" testing were the benchmark--that is if the validity of a technique
were submitted to the jury in each instance--then the preliminary role of the
judge in determining the scientific validity of a technique would never come
into play. Thus, even 100 years of "adversarial" testing in court cannot
substitute for scientific testing when the proposed expert testimony is
presented as scientific in nature. 2. Absence of Testing of Fingerprint
Techniques On the record made in Mitchell, the government had
little success in identifying scientific testing that tended to establish the
reliability of fingerprint identifications.(17)
By contrast, defense testimony strongly suggested that fingerprint
identification techniques have not been tested in a manner that could be
properly characterized as scientific. Particularly pointed was the testimony of
forensic scientist David Stoney, the Director of the McCrone Research Institute
in Chicago. According to Dr. Stoney: The determination that a fingerprint examiner makes . . . when
comparing a latent fingerprint with a known fingerprint, specifically the
determination that there is sufficient basis for an absolute identification is
not a scientific determination. It is a subjective determination standard. It is
a subjective determination without objective standards to it. Test. Stoney, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 87. Dr. Stoney's point that "[t]he determination that a fingerprint
examiner makes . . . when comparing a latent fingerprint with a known
fingerprint . . . is a subjective determination," was fully confirmed by the
testimony presented by government witnesses Ashbaugh and Meagher. After
describing the "analysis" ingredient of ACE-V, Sergeant Ashbaugh proceeded to
discuss "comparison" and "evaluation" in the following terms: Once the comparison is complete, and we recommend that the
whole print be compared, the next thing that we would do is then evaluate what
we saw during comparison as far as agreement of the various ridge formations.
And I break it down into actually two separate areas. The first area is, do I
have agreement? If you say yes to that, if you form the opinion you have
agreement, then you have to ask yourself, is there sufficient unique detail
present to individualize? That final decision is a subjective decision. It's based on
your knowledge and experience and your ability. And that, if you say yes, I feel
there's enough to individualize, then you formed an opinion of
identification. Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 115-16. FBI supervisory
fingerprint specialist Meagher gave very similar testimony: A: The analysis and comparison process is a very objective
process. The evaluation process is the subjective opinion of that examiner that
he has reached the conclusion that it's ident, non-ident. Q: The evaluation, the ultimate determination is a subjective
one, is it not, sir? A: Yes. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 228-29. The significance of the fact that the determinations are
"subjective" was explained by the further testimony of Dr. Stoney: Now, by subjective I mean that it [a fingerprint identification
determination] is one that is dependent on the individual's expertise, training,
and the consensus of their agreement of other individuals in the field. By not
scientific, I mean that there is not an objective standard that has been tested;
nor is there a subjective process that has been objectively tested. It is the
essential feature of a scientific process that there be something to test, that
when that something is tested the test is capable of showing it to be
false. Test. Stoney, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 87.(18) B. Peer Review and Publication The second Daubert factor is "whether the theory or
technique has been subjected to peer review and publication." 509 U.S. at 593.(19)
As with the testing factor, the purpose of the inquiry into peer review and
publication is to gauge the scientific reliability of the proposed testimony.
Thus, in explaining this factor, the Supreme Court wrote that "submission to the
scrutiny of the scientific community is a component of 'good science.'"
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 593. This sentiment was echoed in a law review
article that attempted to explain the scientific method to lawyers and judges:
"The peer-review system represents both an effort to police scientific claims
and to assure their widest possible dissemination." Bert Black et al.,
Science and the Law in the Wake of Daubert: A New Search for
Scientific Knowledge, 72 Tex. L. Rev. 715, 777 (1994). Thus, formal peer
review is an "integral part of the scientific publication process." Id.
At the Mitchell hearing, Dr. Stoney defined a peer-reviewed publication:
The term is used in the context of scientific publications to refer to where
you have made a formal submission to a peer review journal where an editorial
board of that journal has then usually anonymously, but in any case, has
reviewed the work in a formal way, given an opinion to the editor of the
journal, and then subsequently your paper has either been accepted or rejected
from that process. Test. Stoney, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 41. The government maintains that "[t]he fingerprint field and its theories and
techniques have been published and peer reviewed during a period of over 100
years." Gov't Mot. & Resp. at 112. It is the case that there are numerous
writings that discuss the fingerprint identification techniques employed by
fingerprint examiners.(20)
But it is not apparent that their publication constitutes "submission to the
scrutiny of the scientific community" in the Daubert sense. Even those
who stand at the top of the fingerprint identification field--people like David
Ashbaugh and Stephen Meagher--tend to be skilled professionals who have learned
their craft on the job and without any concomitant advanced academic training.
It would thus be a misnomer to call fingerprint examiners a "scientific
community" in the Daubert sense. The Havvard court suggested that the "verification" phase of the ACE-V
process constitutes peer review: [A]ny other qualified examiner can compare the objective information upon
which the opinion is based and may render a different opinion if warranted. In
fact, peer review is the standard operating procedure among latent print
examiners. 117 F. Supp. 2d at 854. In his Mitchell testimony, Sergeant Ashbaugh
voiced the same view. ACE-V "verification," he said, "is a form of peer review,
and it is part of the scientific process." Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at
116. The difficulty is that if the opinion announced by a fingerprint
examiner--"ident, non-ident," as Mr. Meagher expressed it--is, as both Mr.
Meagher and Sergeant Ashbaugh acknowledged, "subjective," another opinion
rendered by another examiner, whether in corroboration or in refutation, does
little to put a "scientific" gloss on the first opinion, much less constitute
"peer review" as described by Dr. Stoney.(21) C. Rate of Error and Controlling Standards The third Daubert factor is that trial judges "consider the known or
potential rate of error . . . and the existence and maintenance of standards
controlling the technique's operation." Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594. 1. Rate of Error The government divides the "rate of error" question into two
parts--"methodology error" and "practitioner error." The government's argument
with respect to these two different rates of error is as follows: Dr. Budowle's testimony established that methodology error rate in the
science of fingerprints is not a relevant inquiry. Moreover, practitioner error
can be detected and corrected by another qualified examiner, either in the
verification process or through consultation with other experts during
litigation. Gov't Mot. & Resp. at 113. a. "Methodology Error" Dr. Bruce Budowle, whose testimony the government invokes ("Dr. Budowle's
testimony established that methodology error rate in the science of fingerprints
is not a relevant inquiry") is a geneticist in the FBI's Laboratory Division.
Dr. Budowle's testimony with respect to methodology error was as follows: Q: Tell us how it [error rate] applies to scientific methods,
methodology. A: Well, this transcends all kinds of forensic, it transcends all disciplines
in that, but in the forensic area particularly, this has been an issue discussed
repeatedly in lots of disciplines, whether it is DNA chemistry and latent
fingerprints. We have to understand that error rate is a difficult thing to calculate. I
mean, people are trying to do this, it shouldn't be done, it can't be done. I'll
give you an example as an analogy. When people spell words, they make mistakes.
Some make consistent mistakes like separate, some people I'll say that I do
this, I spell it S-E-P-E-R-A-T-E. That's a mistake. It is not a mistake of
consequence, but it is a mistake. It should be A-R-A-T-E at the end. That would be an error. But now with the computer and Spell Check, if I set
up a protocol, there is always Spell Check, I can't make that error anymore. You
can see, although I made an error one time in my life, if I have something in
place that demonstrates the error has been corrected, it is no longer a valid
thing to add as a cumulative event to calculate what a error rate is. An error
rate is a wispy thing like smoke, it changes over time because the real issue
is, did you make a mistake, did you make a mistake in this case? If you made a
mistake in the past, certainly that's valid information that someone can
cross-examine or define or describe whatever that was, but to say there's an
error rate that's definable would be a misrepresentation. So we have to be careful not to go down the wrong path without understanding
what it is we are trying to quantify. Now, error rate deals with people, you should have a method that is defined
and stays within its limits, so it doesn't have error at all. So the method is
one thing, people making mistakes is another issue. Test. Budowle, Tr. July 9, 1999, at 122-23, quoted in Gov't Mot. &
Resp. at 42-43. The full import of the quoted Budowle testimony is not easy to grasp. Its
basic thrust, however, would seem to be contained in the concluding sentences:
"Now, error rate deals with people, you should have a method that is defined and
stays within its limits, so it doesn't have error at all. So the method is one
thing, people making mistakes is another issue." Mr. Meagher's testimony with respect to error rate tracked Dr. Budowle's
testimony and is easier to understand. The testimony is as follows: Q: Now--Your Honor, if I could just have a moment here. Let's move on into error rate, if we can, please, sir? I want to address error rate as we have--you've heard testimony about ACE-V,
about the comparative process, all right? Have you had an opportunity to discuss and read about error rate? A: Yes. Q: Are you familiar with that concept when you talk about methodologies? A: Sure. Q: And where does that familiarity come from, what kind of experience? A: Well, when you're dealing with a scientific methodology such as we have
for ever since I've been trained, there are distinctions--there's two parts of
errors that can occur. One is the methodological error, and the other one is a
practitioner error. If the scientific method is followed, adhered to in your process, that the
error in the analysis and comparative process will be zero. It only becomes the subjective opinion of the examiner involved at the
evaluation phase. And that would become the error rate of the practitioner. Q: And when you're talking about this, you're referring to friction ridge
analysis, correct? A: That is correct. It's my understanding of that regardless of friction
ridge analysis. The analysis comparative evaluation and verification process is pretty much
the standard scientific methodology and a lot of other disciplines besides-- Q: And that may be so. Are you an expert or familiar with other scientific areas of
methodologies? A: No, I'm not an expert, but I do know that some of those do adhere to the
same methodology as we do. Q: Are you an expert on their error rate? A: No. Q: Based on the uniqueness of fingerprints, friction ridge, etcetera, do you
have an opinion as to what the error rate is for the work that you do, latent
print examinations? A: As applied to the scientific methodology, it's zero. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 154-56. This court accepts Dr. Budowle's testimony "that error rate is a difficult
thing to calculate" and his further testimony that "error rate deals with
people, you should have a method that is defined and stays within its limits, so
it doesn't have error at all." Test. Budowle, Tr. July 9, 1999, at 122-23.
Further, this court accepts, arguendo, Mr. Meagher's response to the
question whether "you have an opinion as to what the error rate is for the work
that you do, latent print examinations": "As applied to the scientific
methodology, it's zero." Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 156. Assuming, for
the purposes of the motions now at issue before this court, that fingerprint
"methodology error" is "zero," it is this court's view that the error rate of
principal legal consequence is that which relates to "practitioner error." As
Dr. Stoney explained at the Mitchell hearing: You can't have a fingerprint examination without a fingerprint examiner. If
you attempt to say errors that individuals make don't count, then you wouldn't
have a scientific process that is being tested anymore. The individual is an inherent part of getting to the opinion in this process.
And, errors that individuals make are a very important part of evaluating
whether or not it works. Test. Stoney, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 104. It is the practitioner error rate
that affects, for better or worse, the reliability of the fingerprint
identification testimony on which the government seeks to have the jury base
some aspects of its verdicts.(22)
Accordingly, the next Daubert ingredient to be considered is practitioner
error. b. "Practitioner Error" After having opined, in his Mitchell testimony, that the error for
"scientific methodology" is "zero," Mr. Meagher was questioned by government
counsel about "practitioner error": Q: How would one correct the practitioner error that you talked about? Sir,
you do not deny that there's practitioner error, correct? A: Yes, there is. Q: Practitioners make mistakes? A: Sure, we're human. Q: And how would one, like myself, if I was charged with a crime and part of
that evidence had to do with fingerprint analysis and fingerprint opinion, how
would I be able to see if there was practitioner error? A: Well, the images exist. You haven't done anything. They can simply be--the
corrected action can simply be given to another qualified examiner for
review. Q: So what you used to--as an examiner used to come to an opinion, any other
practitioner could pick up, do ACE-V and come to whatever opinion they are going
to come to? A: That is correct. Test. Meagher, July 8, 1999, at 156-57. As previously noted supra, Part I.B, Mr. Meagher had conducted a
survey in which he sent Byron Mitchell's ten-print card and alleged latent
fingerprints to state agencies. The ten-print card was to be compared with the
state fingerprint records: the result--that only Pennsylvania, the state in
which Mitchell had been incarcerated, reported a "hit"--was significant
confirmation of the uniqueness of fingerprints. The other aspect of the Meagher
survey--a request that state agencies determine whether the latent prints
matched the known Mitchell prints--offered scant support for the accuracy of
fingerprint identification. Nine of the thirty-four responding agencies did not
make an identification in the first instance.(23)
In his testimony, Mr. Meagher offered a variety of explanations: the examiner
did not know that the survey was related to a Daubert hearing, id.
at 136; the photos of the ten-print card or latent prints were insufficiently
clear, id. at 136, 141-42, 148-49; three of the examiners "just screwed
up," id. at 138, 139, 150; inexperience, id. at 143-45;
insufficient time, id. at 147; the examiner "attitude toward the survey
was not as serious as it should have been," id. at 148; and "[i]t was
late in the day and [the examiner] was probably tired," id. at 150. While
the survey results fall far short of establishing a "scientific" rate of error,
they are (modestly) suggestive of a discernible level of practitioner
error.(24) 2. Controlling Standards The parties raise three types of "standards controlling the technique's
operation," Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594, which play a role in fingerprint
identifications. a. Galton Point Minima Various witnesses at the Mitchell hearing testified that the ACE-V
process is the method in general use among fingerprint examiners in the United
States. However, the application of this method, in particular whether a minimum
number of Galton points must be identified before a match can be declared,
varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Sergeant Ashbaugh testified that the
United Kingdom employs a sixteen-point minimum, Australia mandates that twelve
points be found in common, and Canada uses no minimum point standard. Test.
Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 144-45. In the United States, state jurisdictions
set their own minimum point standards, while the FBI has no minimum number that
must be identified to declare an "absolutely him" match, Test. Meagher, Tr. July
8, 1999, at 105, but does rely on a twelve-point "quality assurance" standard,
id. at 104. As described by the Havvard court, "there is no single
quantifiable standard for rendering an identification opinion because of
differences in both the quantity of characteristics shown in the latent print
and the quality of the image." Havvard, 117 F. Supp. 2d at 853. While
there may be good reason for not relying on a minimum point standard--or for
requiring a minimum number, as some state and foreign jurisdictions do--it is
evident that there is no one standard "controlling the technique's operation,"
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594. b. Identifying Fingerprints Government and defense witnesses agreed that the actual
identification of a latent fingerprint--that is, the decision that the ridges of
the two prints that are being compared are sufficiently "identical" to be
considered an "absolutely him" match--is a subjective determination. Sergeant
Ashbaugh testified for the government: The opinion of individualization or identification is
subjective. It is an opinion formed by the friction ridge identification
specialist based on the friction ridge formations found in agreement during
comparison. The validity of the opinion is coupled with an ability to defend
that position and both are found in one's personal knowledge, ability and
experience. Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 142. Likewise, Mr. Meagher
testified for the government that the evaluation phase is characterized by "the
subjective opinion of the examiner." Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 155.
Dr. Stoney, testifying for the defense, agreed: The determination that a fingerprint examiner makes or that an
examiner makes when comparing a latent fingerprint with a known fingerprint,
specifically the determination that there is sufficient basis for an absolute
identification is not a scientific determination. It is a subjective
determination standard. It is a subjective determination without objective
standards to it. Test. Stoney, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 87. With such a high degree
of subjectivity, it is difficult to see how fingerprint identification--the
matching of a latent print to a known fingerprint--is controlled by any clearly
describable set of standards to which most examiners subscribe. c. Examiner Qualifications The Scientific Working Group on Friction Ridge Analysis, Study,
and Technology (SWGFAST) adopted "quality assurance guidelines for latent print
examination" in 1997. Test. German, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 35.(25)
Nevertheless, it appears that these guidelines remain just that, optional
recommendations. There are no mandatory qualification standards for individuals
to become fingerprint examiners,(26)
nor is there a uniform certification process. Mr. Meagher, for example,
testified that while some FBI fingerprint examiners are certified by the
International Association for Identification (IAI),(27)
he is not certified by the IAI, but by the FBI. Test. Meagher, Tr.
July 8, 1999, at 66. D. General Acceptance In Daubert, the Supreme Court noted that "general
acceptance"--the major ingredient of the Frye legacy--can still lend
support to a trial judge's finding that a technique is scientifically reliable.
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 594.(28)
The government points out that fingerprint identifications have been used for
over 100 years. Gov't Mot. & Resp. at 3. See also Ramsey, Cr.
No. 01-5-4, at 9 (acknowledging that fingerprint identifications
are "generally accepted in the relevant scientific community" because they are
"accepted by the vast, vast majority of persons who are engaged in fingerprint
analysis"). In addition, Mr. Meagher testified that he sent a survey to state
law enforcement agencies, with a striking result: "Unanimously, all states
responded, the fact that they do use fingerprints as a means to individualize
and they all believe in the two basic principles to our discipline, that is,
fingerprints are unique and permanent." Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 112.
It is apparent that law enforcement officials uniformly place strong reliance on
the fingerprint examiner community's acceptance, and utilization, of ACE-V and
its kindred identification processes. General acceptance by the fingerprint examiner community does
not, however, meet the standard set by Rule 702. First, there is the difficulty
that fingerprint examiners, while respected professionals, do not constitute a
"scientific community" in the Daubert sense. See supra,
text following note 20; see also note 28. Second, the Court cautioned in
Kumho Tire that general acceptance does not "help show that an expert's
testimony is reliable where the discipline itself lacks reliability." 526 U.S.
at 151. The failure of fingerprint identifications fully to satisfy the first
three Daubert factors militates against heavy reliance on the general
acceptance factor.(29)
Thus, while fingerprint examinations conducted under the general ACE-V rubric
are generally accepted as reliable by fingerprint examiners, this by itself
cannot sustain the government's burden in making the case for the admissibility
of fingerprint testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 702. VI. Admission of Fingerprint Testimony Pursuant to the foregoing discussion, it is the court's view that the ACE-V
fingerprint identification regime is hard to square with Daubert. The one Daubert factor that ACE-V satisfies in significant
fashion is the fourth factor: ACE-V has attained general acceptance within the
American fingerprint examiner community.(30)
But the caveat must be added that, in the court's view, the domain of knowledge
occupied by fingerprint examiners should be described, in Rule 702 terms, by the
word "technical," rather than by the word "scientific," the word the government
deploys. Given that Kumho Tire establishes that the Daubert analysis is
applicable to "technical" as well as "scientific" knowledge, it may be thought
that this court's characterization of the knowledge base of fingerprint
examiners as "technical" rather than "scientific" is a semantic distinction
which is of no practical consequence. However, as discussed above, the court
finds that ACE-V does not adequately satisfy the "scientific" criterion of
testing (the first Daubert factor) or the "scientific" criterion of peer
review (the second Daubert factor). Further, the court finds that the
information of record is unpersuasive, one way or another, as to ACE-V's
"scientific" rate of error (the first aspect of Daubert's third factor),
and that, at the critical evaluation stage, ACE-V does not operate under
uniformly accepted "scientific" standards (the second aspect of Daubert's
third factor). Since the court finds that ACE-V does not meet Daubert's testing, peer
review, and standards criteria, and that information as to ACE-V's rate of error
is in limbo, the expected conclusion would be that the government should be
precluded from presenting any fingerprint testimony. But that
conclusion--apparently putting at naught a century of judicial acquiescence in
fingerprint identification processes--would be unwarrantably heavy-handed. The
Daubert difficulty with the ACE-V process is by no means total. The
difficulty comes into play at the stage at which, as experienced fingerprint
specialists Ashbaugh and Meagher themselves acknowledge, the ACE-V process
becomes "subjective"--namely, the evaluation stage. By contrast, the antecedent
analysis and comparison stages are, according to the testimony, "objective":
analysis of the rolled and latent prints and comparison of what the examiner has
observed in the two prints. Up to the evaluation stage, the ACE-V fingerprint
examiner's testimony is descriptive, not judgmental. Accordingly, this court
will permit the government to present testimony by fingerprint examiners who,
suitably qualified as "expert" examiners by virtue of training and experience,
may (1) describe how the rolled and latent fingerprints at issue in this case
were obtained, (2) identify and place before the jury the fingerprints and such
magnifications thereof as may be required to show minute details, and (3) point
out observed similarities (and differences) between any latent print and any
rolled print the government contends are attributable to the same person. What
such expert witnesses will not be permitted to do is to present "evaluation"
testimony as to their "opinion" (Rule 702) that a particular latent print is in
fact the print of a particular person. The defendants will be permitted to
present their own fingerprint experts to counter the government's fingerprint
testimony, but defense experts will also be precluded from presenting
"evaluation" testimony. Government counsel and defense counsel will, in closing
arguments, be free to argue to the jury that, on the basis of the jury's
observation of a particular latent print and a particular rolled print, the jury
may find the existence, or the non-existence, of a match between the prints. In arriving at this disposition of the competing government and defense
motions and supporting memoranda, this court has derived substantial assistance
from the thoughtful approach taken by Judge Gertner, of the District of
Massachusetts, in dealing with the comparable problem of handwriting evidence.
In United States v. Hines, 55 F. Supp. 2d 62 (D. Mass. 1999), Judge
Gertner wrote as follows: The Harrison [Diana Harrison, an FBI document examiner] testimony may be
divided into two parts: Part 1 is Harrison's testimony with respect to
similarities between the known handwriting of Hines, and the robbery note. Part
2 is Harrison's testimony with respect to the author of the note, that the
author of the robbery note was indeed Hines. 55 F. Supp. 2d at 67. When a lay witness, the girlfriend of the defendant for example, says "this
is my boyfriend's writing," her conclusion is based on having been exposed to
her paramour's handwriting countless times. Without a lay witness with that kind
of expertise, the government is obliged to offer the testimony of "experts" who
have looked at, and studied handwriting for years. These are, essentially,
"observational" experts, taxonomists--arguably qualified because they have seen
so many examples over so long. It is not traditional, experimental science, to
be sure, but Kumho's gloss on Daubert suggests this is not
necessary. I conclude that Harrison can testify to the ways in which she has
found Hines' known handwriting similar to or dissimilar from the handwriting of
the robbery note; part 1 of her testimony. Part 2 of the Harrison testimony is, however, problematic. There is no data
that suggests that handwriting analysts can say, like DNA experts, that this
person is "the" author of the document. There are no meaningful, and accepted
validity studies in the field. No one has shown me Harrison's error rate, the
times she has been right, and the times she has been wrong. There is no academic
field known as handwriting analysis. This is a "field" that has little efficacy
outside of a courtroom. There are no peer reviews of it. Nor can one compare the
opinion reached by an examiner with a standard protocol subject to validity
testing, since there are no recognized standards. There is no agreement as to
how many similarities it takes to declare a match, or how many differences it
takes to rule it out. Id. at 69 (footnotes omitted). I find Harrison's testimony meets Fed. R. Evid. 702's requirements to the
extent that she restricts her testimony to similarities or dissimilarities
between the known exemplars and the robbery note. However, she may not render an
ultimate conclusion on who penned the unknown writing. Id. at 70-71.(31) VII. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons: A. This court will take judicial notice of the uniqueness
and permanence of fingerprints. B. The parties will be able to present expert fingerprint
testimony (1) describing how any latent and rolled prints at issue in this case
were obtained, (2) identifying, and placing before the jury, such fingerprints
and any necessary magnifications, and (3) pointing out any observed similarities
and differences between a particular latent print and a particular rolled print
alleged by the government to be attributable to the same persons. But the
parties will not be permitted to present testimony expressing an opinion of an
expert witness that a particular latent print matches, or does not match, the
rolled print of a particular person and hence is, or is not, the fingerprint of
that person.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
CARLOS IVAN LLERA PLAZA,
WILFREDO MARTINEZ ACOSTA, and
VICTOR RODRIGUEZ
Cr. No. 98-362-10, 11, 12
For the reasons expressed in the accompanying opinion,
1. The government's Combined Motion in Limine to Admit Latent Print Evidence and Response to Defendant Acosta's Motion to Preclude the Introduction of Latent Fingerprint Identification Evidence is GRANTED insofar as it asks this court to take judicial notice of the uniqueness and permanence of fingerprints;
2. The balance of the government's motion, together with the defendants' Motion to Preclude the United States from Introducing Latent Fingerprint Identification Evidence, are GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The government may present expert fingerprint testimony (1) describing how the rolled and latent fingerprints at issue in this case were obtained, (2) identifying, and placing before the jury, the fingerprints and such magnifications as may be required to show minute details, and (3) pointing out observed similarities (and differences) between any latent print and any rolled print the government contends are attributable to the same person. The defendants may present expert fingerprint testimony countering the government's fingerprint testimony. But no expert witness for any party will be permitted to testify that, in the opinion of the witness, a particular latent print is--or is not--the print of a particular person.
DATE:_______________________ ____________________________
Pollak, J.
1. This motion was initially submitted only by defendant Martinez Acosta, but was subsequently adopted by defendants Llera Plaza and Rodriguez.
2. Listed among the government's potential witnesses in the case at bar are four FBI fingerprint examiners: Linda A. Hileman, James N. Hudson, Lashawn Sims, and Kim Decarla Smith. Also listed is FBI unit chief Stephen Meagher, a supervisory fingerprint specialist. Mr. Meagher was a government witness at the Mitchell hearing.
3. Dr. Babler described dermatoglyphics:
[B]asically the configurations and the patterns that are found on the surfaces of the hands and feet, not only humans, but also primates. . . . The people who study it basically are physical anthropologists, medical geneticists, biologists, populational geneticists, a variety of people whose study--who study these configurations of what we call friction ridges, from the aspect of looking at specific populational genetic components, looking at the relationships of these configurations for determining predictability for, say, a medical condition or for a variety of related situations.
Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 12-13. The American Dermatoglyphics Association has approximately 200 members. Id. at 13.
4. Dr. Babler provided a more detailed description of what friction ridges are:
[T]he basal layer of the epidermis will produce new cells . . . . These cells then move toward the surface. As they do so, they change their shape. And there are different zones and I won't go into that. As they get to the surface, they start to basically be cornified, that means that they release keratin. That's the horny outer covering of the skin, the covering of the skin.
Ultimately, they die and they are shed off. But since the cells that produce the skin are deep to the surface at the interface of the dermis and epidermis, the fact is that they will continue to grow because that layer keeps producing what the template holds and moves it up to the surface.
So you can keep on brushing away your skin. And indeed, it's why it's called friction ridge because there's a lot of friction. You're going to rub away cells.
Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 70.
5. On cross examination, Dr. Babler acknowledged that his
research "did not examine statistically the frequency within which any given
human being in a particular population group would have, say, for level two
minutia in common," and that he "didn't examine whether they would have four,
six, or any particular number in common." Test. Babler, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 75.
6. See supra note 2.
7. According to Sergeant Ashbaugh,
8. It appears that, at one time, there was disagreement among fingerprint specialists about the utility of examining sweat pores. According to a 1972 FBI publication that was quoted at the Mitchell hearing:
Writers on fingerprints quite frequently mention the value of poroscopy in affecting [sic] identifications where only a few characteristics are present. FBI technicians know of no case in the United States in which pores had been used in the identification of fragmentary impression. To the contrary, our observations on pores have shown that they are not reliably present and that they can be obliterated or altered by pressure, fingerprint ink, or developing media.
Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 213-14 (quoting FBI, An Analysis of Standards and Fingerprint Identification (1972)). Sergeant Ashbaugh stated that he disagreed with this analysis. Id. at 214. This dispute may now be a thing of the past: Mr. Meagher, the FBI fingerprint specialist, described the examination of level three detail, including pores. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 74-75, 84.
9. Examiners were also asked if Mr. Mitchell's rolled prints matched the latent prints. See infra, Part V.C.1.b.
10. "Ridgeology" is a term that was frequently mentioned during the Mitchell hearing. Sergeant Ashbaugh testified that he invented this term; he defined "ridgeology" as "the study of the uniqueness of the friction ridges and the use of that information for personal identification." Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 136.
11. The FBI does use a "12-point quality assurance" process, as explained by Mr. Meagher:
There have certainly been a number of points requirement in terms of a quality assurance effort. We have today what's referred to as a 12-point quality assurance issue. And that is, generally speaking, at the level two information. That is saying when you start to go below that, that requires a close scrutiny by a supervisory examiner or more senior examiner, simply as a quality assurance mechanism. It has nothing to do--
A: Would that be in addition to the normal verification that you talked about or that has been talked about?
A: Yes. It is, as I implied, a quantity--a quality assurance measure that we have implemented. It does not--it did by no means imply that you cannot individualize on less.
Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 104-05. In a previous part
of his testimony, Mr. Meagher referred to the point system as "a simplistic way
of explaining the identification process to the jury." Id. at 99.
12. Courts that have addressed the admissibility of
fingerprint evidence have generally analyzed the proposed testimony in terms of
whether it constitutes "scientific" knowledge within the meaning of Rule 702. In
the present case, too, submissions before this court address the "scientific"
validity of fingerprint evidence. But it is to be borne in mind that
Daubert's analysis of Rule 702's treatment of "scientific" knowledge was
extended by Kumho Tire to Rule 702's treatment of "technical or other
specialized knowledge" as well. 526 U.S. at 141. The Court observed in Kumho
Tire that "[w]e do not believe that Rule 702 creates a schematism that
segregates expertise by type while mapping certain kinds of questions to certain
kinds of experts. Life and the legal cases that it generates are too complex to
warrant so definitive a match." Id. at 151.
13. In the present case, the defendants only challenge the
reliability of fingerprint identifications, not their relevance.
14. In a pre-Daubert Third Circuit case that was
cited with approval by the Supreme Court in Daubert, 509 U.S. at 591,
594, 594 n.12, Judge (now Chief Judge) Becker articulated three factors for
determining when scientific testimony should be permitted.
In our view, Rule 702 requires that a district court ruling upon the admission of (novel) scientific evidence, i.e., evidence whose scientific fundaments are not suitable candidates for judicial notice, conduct a preliminary inquiry focusing on (1) the soundness and reliability of the process or technique used in generating the evidence, (2) the possibility that admitting the evidence would overwhelm, confuse, or mislead the jury, and (3) the proffered connection between the scientific research or test result to be presented, and particular disputed factual issues in the case.
United States v. Downing, 753 F.2d 1224, 1237 (3d Cir. 1985). With respect to the soundness or reliability of the technique, Judge Becker offered a non-exhaustive list of factors that trial judges may examine: scientific acceptance, novelty, "existence of a specialized literature dealing with the technique,"qualifications of the witness, non-judicial uses of the technique, and the frequency of erroneous results. Id. at 1238-39.
15. With respect to the ACE-V process at issue here, reliance on a second examiner's same result as a confirmatory "test" of the first examiner's result is subject to the further dilution that, not infrequently, the second examiner has been advised of the prior result. See, e.g., Test. Ashbaugh, Tr. July 7, 1999, at 116 ("There are situations where, when we ask for verification, the expert will know that an identification has been made.").
16. The centrality of falsifiability to the scientific pursuit is further examined in another article:
A universal statement can be shown to be false if it is found inconsistent with even one singular statement about a particular event of occurrence. But the reverse is not true; a universal statement can never be proven true by virtue of the truth of particular statements, no matter how numerous.
. . . . Thus no hypothesis can ever be proven absolutely true, but a hypothesis may become well corroborated if it survives a variety of tests that fail to falsify it.
Bert Black et al., Science and the Law in the Wake of
Daubert: A New Search for Scientific Knowledge, 72 Tex. L. Rev. 715, 755-56 (1994).
17. In a recent "solicitation," the National Institute of
Justice requested research that would test the "validity of individuality in
friction ridge examination based on measurement of features, qualification
and statistical analysis." U.S. Dep't Justice, Nat'l Inst. Justice,
Solicitation: Forensic Friction Ridge (Fingerprint) Examination Validation
Studies 4 (2000) (emphasis in original). Under the heading "Areas of Research
Required," the solicitation explained what it sought: "statistical validation of
individuality in friction ridge analysis," "qualitative/quantitative aspects of
friction ridge comparison," and "statistical validation of standard operating
procedures for friction ridge (fingerprint) comparison." Id. at 4-5. The
solicitation stated that the need for this research/testing stemmed from
Daubert:
[A]ll expert testimony must follow the admissibility rules for scientific evidence set forth in recent court cases e.g. Daubert v. Merrill [sic] Dow Pharmaceuticals (113 S.Ct. 2786). These rules require scientists to address the reliability and validity of the methods used in their analysis. Therefore, the purpose of this solicitation is to address the needs identified in the above NIJ publication and to provide greater scientific foundation for forensic friction ridge (fingerprint) identification.
Id. at 3.
It appears that the timing of the NIJ solicitation release was tied, at least in part, to the Mitchell case. Dr. Richard M. Rau, a forensic program manager at the Department of Justice who played a leading role in the development of the solicitation, testified about the relationship between the solicitation, Daubert and Kumho Tire, and the Mitchell case:
Q: The question was, with that in paragraph two of that letter, you provided some reasons as to why you believe that it was urgent, and you used the word urgent at the very end of that paragraph as to why the solicitation should be issued. Correct?
A: Yes.
Q: And you identified the opinion changed to Rule 702, Federal Rule of Evidence 702. Why did you believe that made the issuance of the solicitation to be urgent?
A: I think it's because they raised the issue of reliability.
Q: And because they raised the issue of reliability, you thought it was important that these validation studies be conducted?
A: Yes.
Q: You also identified the Kumho Tire decision. Why did you believe that made the issuance of the solicitation urgent?
A: It had come out just before I wrote this, and it supported the Daubert case and the findings. It applied not only to scientific evidence, but to technical evidence.
Q: So you understood Kumho Tire to mean that the government or prosecution would have to make the same kind of showing of reliability for all kinds of experts, not just scientific experts, correct?
A: yes.
. . . .
Q: And, finally, you refer there in paragraph two to the challenge to the admissibility of fingerprint evidence in a case in Philadelphia. Now, of course, you were referring to this case, correct?
A: yes.
Q: And why did you believe that the challenge that was brought in this case made the issuance of the solicitation urgent?
A: As you know, I'm not an expert in fingerprint analysis and matching. So what I'm going to say is based on my opinion only.
The feeling was that when the people that wrote status and needs met to discuss about the needs for research in the forensic field, that they pulled out the documents, the weapons and fingerprints, among others, and the issue of the need to do more research in those fields to show the reliability of the procedures. I felt that if what happened in the document case, where a federal judge ruled that it wasn't admissible on that basis--
Q: Ruled that what wasn't admissible, sir?
A: The document examination, the matching of documents.
Q: Handwriting analysis?
A: Handwriting analysis. That if that were to happen for fingerprints, there was no fallback position since there wasn't any other research around. . . . .
Test. Rau, Tr. Jan. 3, 2001, at 41-44.
18. Likewise, Professor James E. Starrs, a professor at
George Washington University's Department of Forensic Sciences and at the Law
School, who teaches courses on fingerprints and their examination, testified
that fingerprint identification techniques have not been scientifically
tested:
It is my opinion that the present process as I know it of fingerprint comparison and analysis, is not predicated on a sound and adequate scientific basis for purposes of making an individualization to one person from a fragmentary print to the exclusion of all other persons in the world.
. . . .
Shorthand for my reasons are, many of which you have already heard even today, and that is that the claim of absolute certainty either way on the part of fingerprint examiners, the failure to carry out controlled empirical data searching experimentation, a failure to recognize the value of considerations of the error rate. The lack of objectivity and uniformity and systemization with respect to the standards, if any, of the fingerprint analysis.
Finally, . . . , a failure to show a due regard to a vigorous and uncompromising skeptism [sic] as Carl Sagan described it, to a mind open vision of what might or might not be accepted skeptism [sic], what they are doing as to the inconsistencies they are making on an individual and general basis.
Test. Starrs, Tr. July 12, 1999, at 150.
19. In Havvard, the court stated that the
publication factor "does not fit well with fingerprint identification because it
is a field that has developed primarily for forensic purposes." 117 F. Supp. 2d
at 854. While it is correct that the end purpose of fingerprint identifications
is a forensic one, the reliability of identification techniques must be assessed
just as any other scientific, technical, or specialized technique under Rule
702.
20. For example, Sergeant Ashbaugh has authored several
books and articles on the uniqueness of fingerprints, and on "ridgeology." The
Ashbaugh articles brought to this court's attention include David Ashbaugh,
The Premises of Friction Ridge Identification, Clarity and the Identification
Process, 44 J. of Forensic Identification 499 (1994); David Ashbaugh, The
Key to Fingerprint Identification, 10 Fingerprint Whorld 93 (April 1985);
and David Ashbaugh, Defined Pattern, Overall Pattern, and Unique Pattern,
42 J. of Forensic Identification 505 (1992). These articles do not, however,
establish the scientific reliability of fingerprint identifications, nor does it
appear that the articles were published in peer-reviewed journals, as defined by
Dr. Stoney supra.
21. It is to be recalled that the government also contends
that a regime of re-examination by a second examiner constitutes a
Daubert "test"--a contention that this court, for the reasons explained
supra, Part V.A.1 of this opinion, finds unpersuasive.
22. In Daubert, after instructing that "in the case
of a particular scientific technique, the court ordinarily should consider the
known or potential rate of error," Justice Blackmun noted "see, e.g.,
United States v. Smith, 869 F.2d 348, 353-54 (CA7 1989) (surveying
studies of the error rate of spectographic voice identification technique)." 509
U.S. at 594. The studies described in Smith dealt with the error rates of
spectographic voice identification specialists, or, to use the terminology of
the parties in the case at bar, "practitioner error."
23. Mr. Meagher followed up by sending photographic
enlargements of the prints in a plastic sleeve, on which the level two Galton
detail information was marked. Mr. Meagher asked the nine agencies to reconsider
their initial responses, emphasizing that the survey was being prepared for a
Daubert hearing. All nine agencies changed their responses and made a
positive identification. Test. Meagher, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 119-21. Mr. Meagher
explained his resubmission of the fingerprints to the nine agencies: Well, just as if I would have done in-house with any examiner, especially in
a training status, if an individual fails to make an identification that we
believe they should have been able to, we would take that information back to
that individual, show them the characteristics of which they should take into
consideration, ask them to reassess their position and, you know, use the
information that's now presented to them and try to come up with the same
conclusion. That is, that the two prints were identical. Id. at 124-25.
24. The defendants also point out that in proficiency
examinations that were given to fingerprint examiners beginning in 1995, the
error rates have been alarmingly high. In 1995, fewer than half of the 156
participating examiners--44%--correctly identified all five latent prints that
were being tested, while 31% of the examiners made erroneous identifications.
Possession of Truth, 46 J. Forensic Identification 521, 524 (1996) (Def.
Ex. 2).While the results had improved somewhat by 1998, only 58% of the
examiners correctly identified all the matching prints and did not make
incorrect identifications. Latent Prints Examination Report No. 9808, Forensic
Testing Program 2 (Def. Ex. 3). As with the Mitchell survey, these
proficiency examination results may be taken as somewhat suggestive of
practitioner error. However, it should be stressed that these results, standing
alone, can hardly be regarded as significant evidence of what the "rate of
error," in the Daubert sense, may be. 509 U.S. at 594.
25. Edward German, a Special Agent with the U.S. Army
Criminal Investigation Laboratory, chair of the Quality Assurance Committee of
SWGFAST, and chair of the Friction Ridge Automation Committee of SWGFAST,
explained the SWGFAST Guidelines. Special Agent German testified that the
Guidelines "concern minimum qualification guidelines for considering a person to
be trained as a latent print examiner. They also concern the training to
competency guidelines, which means the topics or subjects that need to be
covered, the recommended and suggested topics to be covered at training." Test.
German, Tr. July 8, 1999, at 35.
26. According to one critic:
Traditionally, fingerprint training has centered around a type of apprenticeship, tutelage, or on-the-job training, in its best form, and essentially a type of self study, in its worst. Many training programs are the "look and learn" variety, and aside from some basic classroom instruction in pattern interpretation and classification methods, are often impromptu sessions dictated more by the schedule and duties of the trainer than the needs of the student. Such apprenticeship is most often expressed in terms of duration, not in specific goals and objectives, and often end with a subjective assessment that the trainer is ready.
David L. Grieve, The Identification Process: The Quest for
Quality, 40 J. of Forensic Identification 109, 110-11 (1990), quoted
in Def. Mot. at xxix.
27. The IAI is " 28. In listing "general acceptance" as a reliability
factor, the Court quoted with approval Judge Becker's opinion in Downing,
in which he wrote that a "reliability assessment does not require, although it
does permit, explicit identification of a relevant scientific community and an
express determination of a particular degree of acceptance within that
community." 753 F.2d at 1238.
29. As noted above, until Daubert displaced
Frye, "general acceptance" was widely considered the standard of
admissibility for scientific evidence. The Court ruled that "the Frye
test was superseded by the adoption of the Federal Rules of Evidence."
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 587. Thus, in stating that general acceptance was
still a factor to be considered in determining the admissibility of scientific
evidence, the Court did not intend that scientific evidence could be deemed
reliable and thus admissible based on its general acceptance alone. To do so
would be to maintain Frye as the controlling standard for the admission
of scientific evidence, a prospect which the Court clearly did not intend.
30. General acceptance need not connote universal and
unqualified acceptance. As pointed out above, some state fingerprint examiners
(like some in other countries) require a minimum number of points in common
between the latent print and the rolled print before an identification can be
arrived at, whereas ACE-V, at the "evaluation" phase, sets no minimum standard
and relies, instead, on the "subjective" judgment of the examiner. See
supra Parts I.C, V.C.2.b.
31. Accord United States v. Van Wyk, 83 F.
Supp. 2d 515, 523-24 (D.N.J. 2000) (relying on Hines in permitting a
forensic stylist to compare writings of known authorship with writings of
unknown authorship, but not permitting the forensic stylist to give an opinion
as to the author of the questioned writings). But see United States v.
Paul, 175 F.3d 906 (11th Cir. 1999) (upholding trial court's decision to
permit a handwriting examiner to give an opinion as to the author of documents
in question).