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Terry Anthony Clayton v State of Alaska (8/18/2023) ap-2755

Terry Anthony Clayton v State of Alaska (8/18/2023) ap-2755

                                                         NOTICE  

            The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the  

            Pacific  Reporter.  Readers  are  encouraged  to  bring  typographical  or  other  

            formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts:  

            

                                      303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501  

                                                  Fax: (907) 264-0878  

                                         E-mail: corrections@akcourts.gov  

                                                                 

                                                                 

                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  

  

TERRY ANTHONY CLAYTON,                                                

                                                                            Court of Appeals No. A-13013  

                                       Appellant,                        Trial Court No. 3AN-15-10248 CI  

                                                                      

                             v.                                       

                                                                                        O P I N I O N  

STATE OF ALASKA,                                                      

                                                                      

                                       Appellee.                             No. 2755 - August 18, 2023  

                                                                      

  

                    Appeal  from  the   Superior  Court,   Third  Judicial  District,  

                    Anchorage, Jennifer Henderson, Judge.  

                      

                    Appearances:   Jane   B.   Martinez,   Law   Office   of   Jane   B.  

                    Martinez, LLC, Anchorage, under contract with the Office of  

                    Public  Advocacy,  for  the  Appellant.  Timothy  W.  Terrell,  

                    Assistant   Attorney   General,   Office   of   Criminal   Appeals,  

                    Anchorage, and Kevin G. Clarkson, Attorney General, Juneau,  

                    for the Appellee.  

                      

                    Before:  Allard,  Chief  Judge,  and  Wollenberg  and  Harbison,  

                    Judges.  

                      

                    Judge ALLARD.  

  



                    In 1987, Terry Anthony Clayton was convicted of first-degree murder for  



the  shooting  death  of  Lisa  Haverling.  This  Court  affirmed  Clayton's  conviction  on  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

                                                                                                                      



                                                                          1 

direct appeal in an unpublished memorandum decision.  In that decision, we referred to  



                                                                  2 

the evidence against Clayton as "overwhelming."    



                  In 2015, Clayton filed an application for post-conviction relief, claiming  



that  the  FBI  hair  and  fiber  analyst  who  testified  at  his  trial  had  given  erroneous  



testimony. The superior court dismissed the application as untimely on two independent  



grounds: (1) that it was not supported by "admissible" evidence, and (2) that it did not  



establish Clayton's "innocence" by clear and convincing evidence.   



                  Clayton now appeals, arguing that the superior court erred in dismissing  



his application. We agree with Clayton that his application was supported by evidence  



in  a  form  sufficient  to  survive  a  motion  for  summary  dismissal.  We  also  question  



whether the superior court may have applied an unduly stringent standard of "innocent"  



for purposes of AS 12.72.020(b)(2), the statutory exception to the statute of limitations  



for claims of newly discovered evidence. But for the reasons explained in this opinion,  



we conclude that - even applying the lower standard advocated by Clayton - Clayton  



has failed to establish a prima facie case of timeliness under the statutory exception.   



                  We therefore affirm the superior court's order of dismissal.  



                    



         Underlying facts and proceedings related to Clayton's trial  



                  In 1987, following a jury trial, Clayton was convicted of the murder of  



Lisa Haverling and sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 99 years. We summarized  



the case against Clayton in his direct appeal, and we briefly restate the facts here.    



                  Haverling's  body  was  found  in  her  apartment,  face  down  with  a  rope  



around her legs and hands. She had been shot twice in the back of the head. She had a  



stab wound in her lower back, and her left wrist had been cut. Police found no signs of  



                                      

     1   Clayton  v.  State,  1989  WL  1594949,  at  *3-4   (Alaska  App.  May  3,  1989)  



(unpublished).   



    2    Id. at *3.   



                                                       - 2 -                                                    2755  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

                                                                                                              



a forced entry or sexual assault, but Haverling was missing two rings, one of which was  



described  by  her  friend  as  distinctive.  The  police  found  a  .25  caliber  shell  casing  



underneath the bed.   



                 The police subsequently received an anonymous tip that Terry Clayton  



had murdered Haverling. Eventually, the police contacted Henry Mason, a close friend  



of Clayton's. Mason told the police that his wife had provided the anonymous tip, and  



that he had been the source of her information.  Mason agreed to cooperate with the  



police.  



                 Mason reported that Clayton, who lived in an apartment building located  



adjacent to Haverling's, had previously spent an afternoon with Haverling and learned  



that she had money. According to Mason, Clayton said, "She's gone and she's mine."  



Clayton and Mason had previously committed burglaries together, and Mason told the  



police that he assumed Clayton intended to burglarize Haverling's apartment.  



                 Mason later confronted Clayton about the murder. According to Mason,  



Clayton initially denied committing the murder but ultimately confessed to the killing.  



Mason  said  that  Clayton  told  him  that  he had  gone  into Haverling's  apartment  and  



waited until she returned for lunch. He then surprised her and demanded that she write  



him two checks, one for $1,700 and one for $800. Mason testified that Clayton said he  



took Haverling upstairs, sexually assaulted her, and  then tied her up. Clayton said he  



intended  to  leave  at  that  point,  but  that  he  then  decided  to  look  more  closely  at  



Haverling's  checkbook.  He  noticed  that  Haverling  had  written  the  checks  out  of  



sequence, in the middle of the  checkbook. Clayton said that he became enraged and  



returned upstairs and shot Haverling.   



                 After examining Haverling's checkbook, the police found that a check had  



been torn from the center of the book. At trial, the State introduced evidence that the  



check was written in Haverling's handwriting to Clayton for $800.    



                 The police obtained a warrant to search Clayton's rented storage locker.  



In  the  locker,  the  police  found  both  a  .25  caliber  pistol  and  a  knife  in  a  box  with  



                                                   - 3 -                                                2755  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

                                                                                                               



Clayton's fingerprints on it. FBI laboratory technicians testified that the bullets used to  



kill Haverling were discharged from this pistol, and that there were spots of human  



blood on both the knife and the pistol. (When interviewed, Clayton admitted that he  



owned a gun and knife similar to the ones found in his storage locker, but he stated that  



he had used the knife to cut steak.)  



                 The  police  also  discovered  that  Clayton  had  pawned  a  distinctive  ring  



three  days  after  the  murder;  one  of  Haverling's  co-workers  identified  the  ring  as  



Haverling's.  (When  questioned  about  the  ring,  Clayton  told  the  police  that  he  had  



pawned the ring, but claimed he had obtained it in a drug deal a month prior.)    



                 A witness who lived  across the street from Clayton later testified at trial  



that Clayton's car was in the parking lot of the apartment complex all morning on the  



day of the murder, and that he saw Clayton come out of his apartment around 1:15 p.m.  



- just past the lunch hour during which Haverling was murdered.   



                 The  State  also  introduced  the  testimony  of  FBI  Special  Agent  Chester  



Blythe, who conducted hair and fiber analysis on hairs recovered from Haverling's body  



and Clayton's clothing.   



                 For the most part, Agent Blythe was very moderate in his claims. Blythe  



testified that microscopic hair comparisons could not be used to identify a person to the  



exclusion of others because "[t]his is not a positive association like a fingerprint." He  



also acknowledged that there was  "no reliable study or statistic available" that could  



provide a percentage likelihood that two hairs were from the same person.    



                 In  accordance  with  these  recognized  limits,  Blythe  testified  that  a  hair  



recovered from the sweatpants Clayton was wearing during his arrest resembled a pubic  



hair and that the hair was "consistent" with Haverling's and "could  have come from  



her."  Blythe also testified that wool fibers found on Clayton's jacket and pants  were  



"consistent with" wool fibers that were taken from Haverling's skirt - noting that they  



"exhibited the same characteristics"  and were both from a black sheep whose wool  



remained  black  even  after  the  dyes  were  eliminated  from  the  fiber.  Lastly,  Blythe  



                                                    - 4 -                                                2755  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                                                                                                                   



testified that there were hairs on Clayton's jacket that were "consistent with" hairs taken  



from Haverling's cats.   



                 But  despite  acknowledging  the  limits  of  microscopic  hair  comparison  



analysis,  Agent  Blythe  also  made  statements  that  seemed  to  suggest  that  a  positive  



identification could be made to the exclusion of others and that a percentage could be  



assigned to the likelihood of a match. Blythe testified, for example, that it was "likely"  



that the pubic hair found on Clayton's clothes belonged to Haverling, and he put the  



percentage of that likelihood as "a lot higher" than fifty percent.  The State relied on  



Blythe's testimony at closing, offering the hair and fiber evidence as proof that Clayton  



had been in Haverling's apartment.    



                  Clayton's  defense  at  trial  was  that  Mason  had  framed  Clayton  for  the  



murder and  that  Mason was Haverling's real killer. Clayton presented evidence that  



Mason had a key to his storage locker (although there was also testimony suggesting  



that it would have been very difficult for Mason to have gained access to the storage  



locker area without Clayton being present). Clayton  attacked Mason's credibility and  



the fact that he had been granted immunity for multiple unrelated property and drug  



crimes in exchange for his testimony.   



                  Clayton also relied on a part of Agent Blythe's hair and fiber testimony  



that was favorable to Clayton. At trial, Blythe testified that he recovered a foreign hair  



from Haverling's dead body that was "consistent with" hair taken from Henry Mason,  



although it was longer than Mason's current hair  style. Clayton introduced evidence  



that Mason shaved his head after the murder occurred, and Clayton used Agent Blythe's  



testimony to support his defense that Mason had killed  Haverling  and then "set up"  



Clayton by planting other evidence that incriminated Clayton.   



                 The jury rejected this defense and  found  Clayton  guilty  of first-degree  



murder.    



                   



                   



                                                      - 5 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                                                                                                                   



         Post-conviction relief proceedings   



                 Around   2013,   the   FBI,   the   Innocence   Project,   and   the   National  



Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers began reviewing testimony and lab reports  



by FBI examiners involving microscopic hair analysis. In particular, the FBI identified  



some FBI examiners who had given testimony that "exceeded the limits of science by  



overstating the conclusions that may appropriately be drawn from a positive association  



between evidentiary hair and a known hair sample." Clayton was notified of this review  



in 2015 because Agent Blythe, the FBI hair analyst who testified in his case, was one  



of the criticized examiners.   



                 In response, Clayton filed a pro se   application for post-conviction relief  



and  was  appointed  an  attorney  to  help  him  with  the  post-conviction  relief  process.  



Clayton's  application  was  filed  nineteen  years  after  the  statute  of  limitations  had  



           3 

expired.   



                 In 2016, the FBI sent a letter to the State of Alaska stating that it had  



reviewed the testimony of Agent Blythe in Clayton's case, and that it had  concluded  



that certain statements in Blythe's microscopic hair testimony "exceeded the limits of  



the  science."   The  letter  indicated  that  the  Innocence  Project  and  the  National  



Association of Criminal Defense  Lawyers had also independently reviewed Blythe's  



testimony and they agreed with the FBI's conclusions. The letter was signed by Special  



Counsel Norman Wong and it included unsigned reports documenting the results of the  



FBI  review  and  the  independent  review  by  the  Innocence  Project  and  the  National  



Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.  



                 The FBI letter made clear that "[t]he science underlying microscopic hair  



comparison  [was] not the subject of this review." Instead, the review was targeted at  



                                     

    3    In 1995, the legislature instituted a two-year statute of limitations on most post- 



conviction relief claims (which was later lowered to eighteen months). The bill included a  

provision allowing anyone with a conviction date prior to July 1994 to file a claim before  

July 1996. C.S.H.B. 201, § 40, 19th Leg. 1st Sess. (1995).   



                                                      - 6 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

                                                                                                                 



FBI examiners who exceeded the limits of science "by overstating the conclusions that  



may appropriately be drawn from a positive association between evidentiary hair and a  



known hair sample." The letter compared these types of errors to "cases in which the  



FBI  Laboratory  report  and  examiner  testimony  presented  conclusions  that  may  



appropriately be drawn from a positive association."   



                 The letter indicated that Agent Blythe's testimony contained two types of  



errors:  (1)  it  stated  or  implied  that  the  evidentiary  hair  could  be  associated  with  a  



specific  individual  to the  exclusion  of  all  others;  and  (2)  it  assigned  to  the positive  



association  a  statistical  weight  or  probability  or  provided  a  likelihood  that  the  



questioned hair originated from a particular source, or an opinion as to the likelihood  



or  rareness  of  the  positive  association  that  could  lead  the  jury  to  believe  that  valid  



statistical weight could be assigned to a microscopic hair association.   



                 The FBI letter noted that, in federal cases, the United States Department  



of Justice was waiving reliance on the statute of limitations and other procedural-default  



defenses  in  order  to  permit  the  resolution  of  post-conviction  relief  claims  based  on  



similar erroneous testimony.    



                 Clayton's attorney subsequently  filed an  amended  application for post- 



conviction relief, arguing that the FBI letter constituted newly discovered evidence that  



required Clayton's conviction to be vacated in the interests of justice. The attorney also  



argued  that  the  tainted  FBI  testimony  had  undermined  the  fundamental  fairness  of  



Clayton's trial and violated Clayton's state and federal due process rights. The amended  



application did not acknowledge that the statute of limitations had expired nineteen  



years earlier.  



                 The State filed a motion to dismiss Clayton's application as untimely. In  



its motion to dismiss, the State made clear that, unlike the federal government, it was  



not waiving any statute of limitations or procedural defenses to these post-conviction  



relief  claims  based  on  allegedly  tainted  FBI  expert  testimony.  The  State  therefore  



pointed  out  that,  in  order  for  Clayton's  application  to  be  accepted  as  timely  under  



                                                     - 7 -                                                 2755  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

                                                                                                                     



Alaska  law,  Clayton  needed  to  meet  the  requirements  of  AS  12.72.020(b)(2),  the  



statutory exception to the statute of limitations for post-conviction relief claims based  



on newly discovered evidence. Under this provision, a court may hear an application  



for post-conviction relief that falls outside the statute of limitations if the application is:   



                  (2)  based  on  newly  discovered  evidence  if  the  applicant  

                  establishes due diligence in presenting the claim and sets out  

                  facts supported by evidence that is admissible and  



                           (A) was not known within  



                                    (i)  18  months  after  entry  of  the  judgment  of  

                  conviction[;]  



                           (B)  is  not  cumulative  to  the  evidence  presented  at  

                  trial;  



                           (C) is not impeachment evidence; and  



                           (D) establishes by clear and convincing evidence that  

                  the applicant is innocent.[4]  



                  The  State  argued  that  Clayton  had  failed  to  meet  this  standard  in  two  



different ways. As an initial matter, the State argued  that the FBI letter and  attached  



reports  were  unsworn  hearsay,  and  that  Clayton's  application  was  therefore  not  



supported by "admissible" evidence. The State also separately argued that the FBI letter  



was "mere impeachment" and it did not undermine the  State's case in any significant  



      5 

way,   and  it  did  not  establish  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  Clayton  was  



actually innocent.   



                  In response, Clayton argued that the reports he submitted were admissible  



as business records, and he asserted that he would be unable to procure affidavits or  



                                     

    4    AS 12.72.020(b)(2).   



     5   Mooney v. State, 167 P.3d 81, 91 (Alaska App. 2007) (explaining that, in the post- 



conviction   relief   context,   impeachment   evidence   "simply   reinforces   the   types   of  

impeachment  that  were  previously  available,"  whereas  newly  discovered  evidence  that  

"undermines  the  government's  case  in  a  new  and  significant  way  .  .  .  is  not  'merely  

impeaching'").  



                                                       - 8 -                                                   2755  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

                                                                                                                     



other  information from the FBI until the discovery phase of litigation. Clayton also  



argued      that    he    was      not    required      to    meet     the    statutory      standard      under  



AS  12.72.020(b)(2); instead, he claimed that he was only required to meet the standard  



used  for  timely  motions  for  new  trial  based  on  new  evidence.  This  standard  -  



commonly referred to as the Salinas standard based on the Alaska Supreme Court case  



Salinas v. State - is very similar to the standard under AS 12.72.020(b)(2), with one  



                            6 

important difference.  The Salinas standard does not require a defendant to establish by  



clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  they  are  "innocent."  Instead,  it  requires  the  



defendant  to  show that the newly discovered evidence would "probably produce an  



acquittal" (when considered with the totality of evidence that would be available at a  



              7 

new trial).     



                  The superior court rejected both of Clayton's arguments and granted the  



State's motion to dismiss. The court ruled first that the FBI documents did not qualify  



as "business records" under the hearsay exception, and that Clayton had therefore failed  



to support his application with "admissible" evidence. The court also ruled that, even if  



admissible, the FBI letter and reports did not establish by clear and convincing evidence  



that Clayton was  "innocent."  The superior court did not explain what Clayton would  



have to show to establish his innocence under this standard, although the court made  



clear  that  the  standard was higher  than  the  Salinas  "probably produce  an  acquittal"  



                                     

     6   The Salinas  standard asks  whether  the evidence (1) is, in fact, newly discovered;  



(2) was discovered with reasonable diligence on the part of the movant; (3) is not merely  

cumulative or impeaching; (4) is material to the issues involved; and (5) would probably  

produce an acquittal. Salinas v. State, 373 P.2d 512, 514 (Alaska 1962).   



     7   See  id.  at 514-15 (asking whether the newly discovered evidence was so material  

that it would probably produce an acquittal in a new trial); see also James v. State, 84 P.3d  

404,  407  (Alaska  2004)  (remanding  post-conviction  relief  case  for  express  findings  on  

whether  newly  discovered  evidence  would  probably  produce  an  acquittal  because  "the  

superior court neither explicitly nor implicitly stated the likely effect of the recantation  

evidence on a jury at a new trial").  



                                                      - 9 -                                                    2755  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

                                                                                                                      



standard  that  applied  to  motions  for  new  trial  and  timely  post-conviction  relief  



applications.   



                  Following  the court's order,  Clayton filed a  motion for reconsideration,  



arguing that the court had failed to address his due process claims. The superior court  



issued a handwritten order, ruling that the motion for reconsideration was untimely and  



that any constitutional claims had been waived for inadequate briefing. The court also  



noted that by applying the  statute of limitations under AS 12.72.020, it had implicitly  



rejected any argument that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to Clayton's case.  



                  This appeal followed.   



                    



         Why we  conclude that the FBI letter and accompanying reports  would  

         have been  sufficient to sustain Clayton's  initial burden  at the pleading  

         stage  



                  Clayton  first  claims  that  the  superior  court  erred  by  dismissing  his  



application for lack of evidentiary support. Clayton argues that, at this preliminary stage  



of  the  post-conviction  relief  proceeding,  the  FBI  letter  and  attached  reports  were  



sufficiently      trustworthy       to   qualify     as   "admissible"        evidence      for   purposes   of  



AS  12.72.020(b)(2). We agree.   



                  On appeal, the State argues that Clayton should have used the Freedom of  



Information Act to obtain information from the FBI regarding the authors of the report.  



                                                                                8 

But it is not clear how realistic this option would have been.  The State also argues that  



Clayton should have secured his own microscopic hair analysis expert who could then  



have  submitted  an  affidavit  attesting  to  the  same  conclusions  that  the  FBI  analysts  



reached. But arguably such an affidavit would be no more "admissible" than the FBI  



documents in the sense that affidavits, although sworn,  are not directly admissible at  



                                      

     8   See, e.g., Kuplen v.  U.S. Dep't of Justice , 2013 WL 5476566 (W.D.N.C. Oct. 2,  



2013)   (unpublished)   (discussing   Freedom   of   Information   and   Privacy   Act   request  

involving Agent Blythe where the FBI refused to provide records).    



                                                      -  10 -                                                   2755  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

                                                                                                                                                     



        9 

trial.   Courts nevertheless accept affidavits as sufficient to meet a pleading standard  



because they are generally accepted as reliable evidence that the true evidence - i.e.,  

the live testimony - will be available at trial.10   



                       Here,   Clayton   was   relying   on   documents   created   by   the   federal  



government that had been originally sent to the State and whose authenticity was not in  



doubt. Clayton's burden at this preliminary stage of the proceeding was to present well- 



pleaded assertions of fact which, if ultimately proven, would establish that he is entitled  

to relief.11 The FBI letter and accompanying reports, although unsworn, were sufficient  



to demonstrate that Clayton could produce admissible evidence to support his claim that  



Agent Blythe's testimony was tainted by error, even if he was unable to provide the  



identity of the person who might provide that evidence at a future evidentiary hearing  



or  retrial.  Indeed,  the  FBI  letter  was  an  admission  of  flawed  testimony  by  a  



governmental  agency  that  testified  on  behalf  of  the  State  at  Clayton's  trial;  this  



admission  was  presumably  against  the  agency's  self-interest  and  thus  sufficiently  



trustworthy to qualify as admissible under the residual hearsay exception, at least for  

purposes of fulfilling Clayton's initial pleading requirement.12   



                                               

      9    See Greenway v. Heathcott, 294 P.3d 1056, 1065 (Alaska 2013) (describing witness  



affidavits as "quintessentially hearsay and suspect evidence" and upholding trial court's  

decision to decline to accept affidavits in lieu of testimony subject to cross-examination).  



      10   Cf. Argo v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Kansas, Inc., 452 F.3d 1193, 1199 (10th  



Cir. 2006)  ("At the summary judgment stage, evidence need not be submitted 'in a form  

that would be admissible at trial.' Parties may, for example, submit affidavits in support of  

summary judgment, despite the fact that affidavits are often inadmissible at trial as hearsay,  

on the theory that the evidence may ultimately be presented at trial in an admissible form."  

(citations omitted)).   



      11   Alaska  R.  Crim.  P.  35.1(d);  LaBrake  v.  State ,  152  P.3d  474,  480  (Alaska  App.  



2007).   



      12   See Alaska R. Evid. 803(23),  804(b)(5) (residual hearsay exception for statements  



with "circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness" on par with listed hearsay exceptions);  



  



                                                                     -  11 -                                                                   2755  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

                                                                                                                     



                  Under  the  residual  hearsay  exception,  a  statement  that  has  "equivalent  



circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness" as other exceptions to the hearsay rule is  



considered admissible if the court determines that:   



                  (a) the statement is offered as evidence of a material fact;  

                  (b) the statement is more probative on the point for which it  

                  is offered than any other evidence which the proponent can  

                  procure  through  reasonable  efforts;  and  (c)  the  general  

                  purposes of these rules and the interest of justice will best be  

                  served by admission of the statement into evidence.[13]  



Here,  Clayton's  attorney  asserted  that  it  was  difficult  to  obtain  the  names  of  the  



reviewers at this early stage of the post-conviction relief proceedings, but that these  



names would be easier to obtain in the second stage of the proceedings, when Clayton  



would have access to discovery tools and the power of the court. Given this, and given  



the circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness that the FBI letter otherwise provided,  



we conclude that Clayton's application should not have been dismissed on the ground  



that he had failed to present an adequate evidentiary basis for his claims.    



  



         Why we conclude that Clayton 's application was properly dismissed and  

         that he failed to meet his burden under AS 12.72.0 20(b)(2), regardless of  

         how that burden is construed  



                  Under Alaska law, a defendant may move for a new trial based on newly  

discovered  evidence  within  180  days  of  their  final  judgment.14  These  claims  are  



evaluated under the standard first announced in 1962 by the Alaska Supreme Court in  



Salinas  v.  State :  whether  the  evidence  (1)  is,  in  fact,  newly  discovered;  (2)  was  



discovered  with  reasonable  diligence  on  the  part  of  the  movant;  (3)  is  not  merely  



                                     

see also Alaska R. Evid. 804(b)(3) (hearsay exception for statements against interest); cf.  

Alaska R. Evid. 80 1(d)(2) (admission of party opponent is not hearsay).  



     13   Alaska R. Evid. 803(23).   



     14   Alaska R. Crim. P. 33(c).  



                                                      -  12 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

                                                                                                                      



cumulative or impeaching; (4) is material to the issues involved; and (5) would probably  

produce an acquittal.15 As we observed in Mooney v. State , almost every jurisdiction in  



the country uses a test essentially identical to the Salinas test in the new trial context.16   



                  Both the Alaska Supreme Court and this Court have applied this same  



Salinas  test  in  the  context  of  timely  post-conviction  relief  claims  based  on  newly  



discovered evidence - i.e., applications that are filed within the statute of limitations  

and brought under AS 12.72.010(4).17 This statute provides that a person is entitled to  



post-conviction  relief  if  "there  exists  evidence  of  material  facts,  not  previously  



presented and heard by the court, that requires vacation of the conviction or sentence in  

the  interest  of  justice."18  Thus,  a  defendant  who  files  a  timely  application  for  post- 



conviction relief based on newly discovered evidence is entitled to vacation of their  



conviction  in  the  interests  of  justice  if  they  can  prove,  inter  alia,  that  the  newly  



discovered evidence would "probably produce an acquittal" when evaluated as part of  

the totality of the evidence that would be available at a new trial. 19 The State does not  



contest that the Salinas standard applies to these timely post-conviction relief claims.   



                                      

     15   Salinas v. State, 373 P.2d 512, 514 (Alaska 1962).  



     16   Mooney v. State , 167 P.3d 81, 91 (Alaska App. 2007) (citing 5 Wayne R. LaFave  



et al., Criminal Procedure § 24.11(d), at 623-28 (2d ed. 1999)).  



     17   See Lewis v. State, 901 P.2d 448, 450 (Alaska App. 1995) (holding that the Salinas  



test  applies  to  newly-discovered  evidence  claims  raised  in  an  application  for  post- 

conviction relief under Criminal Rule 35.1(a)(4)); see also James v. State , 84 P.3d 404,  

406 (Alaska 2004) (discussing how to evaluate the impact of a recantation in  assessing  

whether, in a post-conviction relief application, the recantation would "probably produce  

an acquittal," as required by the Salinas standard); Mooney , 167 P.3d at 83, 90-91 (applying  

the Salinas test in the context of a timely post-conviction relief application).  



     18   AS 12.72.010(4); see also Alaska R. Crim. P. 35.1(a)(4).  



     19   James ,  84  P.3d  at  407-08  (holding  that  newly  discovered  evidence  "must  be  



realistically evaluated in light of the totality of the evidence to be presented in the event of  

a retrial").   



                                                      -  13 -                                                   2755  


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                  In the current case, Clayton argues that the same Salinas standard applies  



to otherwise untimely post-conviction relief claims based on newly discovered evidence  



that are brought outside the applicable statute of limitations . In other words, Clayton  



argues (essentially) that the statutory language contained in AS 12.72.020(b)(2)(D) -  



"establishes by clear and convincing evidence that the applicant is innocent" - should  



be construed as requiring  no more than the "probably produce an acquittal" standard  



under Salinas. He further  asserts that it would be unconstitutional to require  anything  



more than the Salinas standard.   



                  Clayton's arguments raise a question of first impression for this Court.  



Although  this  Court  has  discussed  the  possible  meaning  of  AS  12.72.020(b)(2)  in  



various  unpublished  cases,  there  are  no  published  cases  construing  this  statutory  

provision.20 In particular, there are no published cases addressing what the legislature  



meant by the term "innocent" and whether that term was intended to convey something  



different than "not guilty." We note that in Schlup v. Delo, the United States Supreme  



Court  observed  that  "proof  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  marks  the  legal  boundary  



between guilt and innocence," and the Court defined a claim of "actual innocence" for  



purposes of the federal "actual innocence" gateway as requiring proof that "it is more  



likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted [the defendant] in light of  

the new evidence."21 In reaching this conclusion, the Court stated that the adoption of  



                                     

    20    See,  e.g.,  Fox  v.  State ,  2016  WL  6310766,  at  *1  (Alaska  App.  Oct.  26,  2016)  



(unpublished)  (suggesting  that  defendant  could  establish  his  innocence  by  clear  and  

convincing  evidence  if  he  proved  that  "his  illegal  act  was  actually  the  product  of  

entrapment");  Simpson v. State, 2008 WL 4757150, at *2 (Alaska App. Oct. 29, 2008)  

(unpublished)       (addressing       but   not    resolving     the    meaning      of   "innocent"       under  

AS  12.72.020(b)(2)); State v. Finney, 2001  WL 1448756, at *4 (Alaska  App.  Nov.  14,  

200 1)  (unpublished)  (suggesting  that  the  standard  under  AS  12.72.020(b)(2)  is  "more  

stringent" than the "probably produce an acquittal" standard).  



    21   Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298, 327-28 (1995).  



                                                     -  14 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

                                                                                                                         



this standard "reflect[ed] the proposition, firmly established in our legal system, that  

the line between innocence and guilt is drawn with reference to a reasonable doubt."22  



                  Other   jurisdictions   have   likewise   defined   the   term   "innocent"   or  



"innocence" in their post-conviction relief statutes to mean that the defendant would be  

found not guilty on a retrial. 23  Sometimes the term is used to mean not only that the  



defendant  would  be  found  not  guilty  of  the  underlying  offense,  but  also  that  the  



defendant would be found not guilty of any accomplice liability or any lesser included  



                                       

     22   Id. at 328.   



     23   See, e.g., Schmidt v. State, 909 N.W.2d 778, 795-98 (Iowa 2018) ("For an applicant  



to succeed on a freestanding actual-innocence claim, the applicant must show by clear and  

convincing  evidence  that,  despite  the  evidence  of  guilt  supporting  the  conviction,  no  

reasonable fact finder could convict the applicant of the crimes for which the sentencing  

court found the applicant guilty in light of all the evidence, including the newly discovered  

evidence.");  Riley  v.  State,  819  N.W.2d  162,  170  (Minn.  2012)  ("[E]stablishing  actual  

innocence requires evidence that renders it more likely than not that no reasonable juror  

would  convict.");  People  v.  Morgan,  817  N.E.2d  524,  527  (Ill.  2004)  ("Our  court  has  

therefore  recognized  the  right  of  postconviction  petitioners  to  assert  a  claim  of  actual  

innocence  based  on  newly  discovered  evidence.  To  win  relief  under  that  theory,  the  

evidence adduced by the defendant must . . . be of such conclusive character that it would  

probably change the result on retrial." (citations omitted)); Haas v. Commonwealth , 871  

S.E.2d  257, 276-77 (Va.  2022)  ("A person seeking a writ of actual innocence . . . must  

prove [by a preponderance of the evidence] that the evidence on which his petition is based  

. . . is material and, when considered with all of the other evidence in the current record,  

will  prove  that  no  rational  trier  of  fact  would  have  found  proof  of  guilt  .  .  .  beyond  a  

reasonable doubt." (citations omitted)).   



                                                        -  15 -                                                    2755  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

                                                                                                                     



offense.24  This  is  similar  to  the  definition  of  "innocence"  contained  in  AS  12.73,  



Alaska's post-conviction DNA testing statute. 25    



                  However, in Clayton's case,  the superior court appeared to assume that  



"innocent" meant something other than "not guilty." According to the superior court, it  



was  not  enough  for  Clayton  to  show  that  the  new  evidence  would  probably  have  



produced an acquittal at trial in the sense that the jury would have reached a different  



verdict; instead, the court stated that Clayton needed to meet "the higher burden of  



establishing innocence."   



                  It is not clear what the superior court meant when it referred to a "higher  



burden of establishing innocence." It is possible the court meant only to highlight the  



difference between the Salinas preponderance of the evidence standard and the "clear  

and convincing" burden of proof required by AS 12.72.020(b)(2).26 It is also possible  



that the court was applying the "higher burden" of proving that the defendant would not  



only be found not guilty of the underlying crime, but also would be found not guilty as  

an accomplice or of any lesser included offense.27 Alternatively, it is possible that the  



superior  court  was  interpreting  "innocence"  as  requiring  some  sort  of  affirmative  



                                     

    24   See, e.g., La. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 926.2 (2021) (defining finding of "factual  



innocence" to require that new evidence establish that "no rational juror would have found  

the petitioner guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of either the offense of conviction or of any  

felony offense that was a responsive verdict").   



    25   See AS 12.73.090(2) (defining "innocence" for purposes of post-conviction DNA  



statute as meaning that "the applicant was not a perpetrator of or an accomplice to the  

offense or lesser included offense for which the applicant was convicted").   



    26   Geisler  v.  State,  2021  WL  3179639,  at  *1  n.6  (Alaska  App.  July  28,  2021)  



(unpublished) (citing  State v. Finney, 2001  WL 1448756, at *4 (Alaska App.  Nov. 14,  

2001)  (unpublished))   (referring  to  the  standard  for  untimely  post-conviction  relief  

applications  as  "more  stringent"  than  the  standard  for  timely  post-conviction  relief  

applications).   



    27   See AS 12.73.090.   



                                                      -  16 -                                                  2755  


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showing beyond simply proving that the defendant would be found "not guilty" at any  



new trial.   



                  We conclude that we need not resolve this question here because we are  



convinced that Clayton is not entitled to relief regardless of what the word "innocent"  



means.      In    other    words,      even     if   Clayton      is   correct     and     the    language      in  



AS  12.72.020(b)(2)(D)  -  "establishes  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  the  



applicant  is  innocent"  -  requires  only  that  the  defendant  show  that  the  newly  



discovered evidence would "probably produce an acquittal" under the Salinas standard,  



we would still conclude that Clayton has failed to meet this burden.   



                  As  we  stated  in  our  decision  in  Clayton's  direct  appeal,  "the  evidence  



against  Clayton  was  overwhelming"  and  there  was  "substantial  physical  evidence  

connecting Clayton to the crime scene."28 This physical evidence not only included the  



hair  and  fiber  analysis  contained  in  Agent  Blythe's  testimony,  but  also  included  



evidence of the gun and knife found in Clayton's storage locker, evidence that a check  



written  from  Haverling's  checkbook  had  Clayton's  name  on  it,  and  evidence  that  



Clayton pawned Haverling's distinctive ring three days after her murder.    



                  Moreover, although Clayton asserts that none of Agent Blythe's testimony  



would be admissible at a new trial, there is little reason to believe that would be true.  



As already explained, the FBI letter made clear that it was not invalidating all expert  



testimony related to microscopic hair comparisons; instead,  it was only invalidating  



expert  testimony  that  "exceeded  the  limits  of  science"  -   e.g.,  testimony  that  



erroneously claimed that a positive identification to the exclusion of others could be  



                                     

    28   Clayton   v.   State,   1989   WL   1594949,   at   *3   (Alaska   App.   May   3,   1989)  



(unpublished).   



                                                      -  17 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

                                                                                                                     



made  or  that  erroneously  ascribed  a  particular  percentage  to  the  likelihood  that  a  

positive identification could be made.29   



                  A review of Agent Blythe's testimony at Clayton's trial reveals that, for  

the most part, Agent Blythe did not make such erroneous claims.30 Indeed, as already  



explained, Agent Blythe largely acknowledged that microscopic hair comparison could  



not yield a positive association to the exclusion of any other source. And although he  



claimed at a couple points in his testimony that it was "likely" that the pubic hair found  



on Clayton's clothing belonged to Haverling, he also acknowledged that there were no  



statistics or percentages that actually applied to microscopic hair comparisons.   



                  In addition, the  erroneous statements identified by the FBI reports were  



only made in relation to the pubic hair. Agent Blythe did not make any such erroneous  



claims with regard to the cat hairs or the wool fibers. Instead, his testimony was simply  



that the cat hairs found on Clayton's clothing were "consistent with" hairs taken from  



Haverling's cats.  And he similarly testified that the wool fibers found on Clayton's  



clothing were "consistent with" the wool fibers taken from Haverling's skirt, explaining  



that he reached this conclusion because the fibers "exhibited the same characteristics"  



and because they retained their blackness even after the dye was eliminated from the  



fibers  (which  suggested  that  they  both  came  from  a black  sheep).  Notably,  there  is  



nothing in the FBI letter or the associated reports (both of which addressed only errors  



                                     

    29   We note that, by limiting his evidentiary support for his claims to the FBI letter and  



the accompanying reports, Clayton limited his criticisms of Agent Blythe's microscopic  

hair and fiber analysis to the criticisms contained in those documents.   



     30   See,  e.g.,  Crump  v.  May,  2023  WL  2240289,  at  *5-6  (D.  Del.  Feb.  27,  2023)  



(unpublished)  (noting,  in  case  with  similarly  tainted  hair  testimony,  that  the  FBI  letter  

would  not  probably  produce  an  acquittal  where  the  expert  also  made  equivocating  

statements along the same lines as Agent Blythe did here).   



                                                      -  18 -                                                  2755  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

                                                                                                                         



in  microscopic  hair  comparison analysis) that discredits this part of Agent Blythe's  

testimony.31   



                  In  any  case,  even  if  we  assume  that  the  majority  of  Agent  Blythe's  



testimony would not be introduced at a new trial, the jury would still likely hear at least  



some  expert  testimony  regarding  the  hairs  and  fibers  found  on  Clayton's  clothing.  



Moreover, this evidence would be presented along with all the other evidence used to  



convict  Clayton,  which  included:  Henry  Mason's  testimony  regarding  Clayton's  



alleged confession; the $800 check made out to Clayton that seemingly corroborates  



the confession; the discovery of the gun that was used to shoot Haverling in Clayton's  



storage locker; Clayton's admissions that the gun belonged to him; Clayton's admission  



that the knife that was found in the storage locker with the gun also belonged to him  



and his claim that the blood on the knife was from cutting steak; evidence that Clayton  



was seen at the apartment complex around the time of the murder; and evidence that  



Clayton pawned one of Haverling's distinctive rings a few days after the murder.    



                  Given all this, we conclude that Clayton's pleadings failed to show that  



the newly discovered evidence contained in the FBI letter and the accompanying reports  



would  probably  produce  an  acquittal  at  a  new  trial.  In  sum,  although  it  is  an  open  



question  what  "establishes  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  the  applicant  is  



innocent" actually means under Alaska law, we need not decide that issue in this case  



because Clayton has failed to show that he is entitled to relief even under the  lower  



Salinas standard that he advocates.      



                    



                                       



                                       

     31   Cf.  McCartney  v.  Warden ,  2016  WL  11811648,  at  *2  (W.D.  La.  Jan.  5,  2016)  



(unpublished) (distinguishing between tainted FBI hair analysis and untainted FBI fiber  

analysis).  



                                                        -  19 -                                                    2755  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                                                                                                                                                     



            Clayton's due process arguments   



                       In the proceedings before the superior court, Clayton's post-conviction  



relief attorney made a number of vague constitutional claims under the due process  



clause.  The  superior  court  later  dismissed  these  claims  as  inadequately  briefed.  We  



likewise  conclude  that  Clayton  has  failed  to  sufficiently  articulate  his  due  process  



claims on appeal. We nevertheless address them here to the extent we can based on the  



briefing we have received.   



                       First,  to  the  extent  that  Clayton  is  arguing  that  AS  12.72.020(b)(2)  is  



unconstitutional  because  it  requires  a  higher  standard  than  the  Salinas  "probably  



produce an acquittal" standard, this argument is moot because  Clayton has failed to  



show that he can meet the Salinas standard.   



                       Second, to the extent that Clayton is arguing that due process is violated  



when tainted expert testimony renders a trial "fundamentally unfair," we conclude that  



Clayton   has   failed   to   show   that   the   tainted   FBI   testimony   rendered   his   trial  

fundamentally unfair.32 As already explained, the erroneous statements comprised only  



a small part of Agent Blythe's testimony, and the majority of his testimony would likely  



be  allowed  in  any  new  trial.  Moreover,  Clayton's  conviction  was  supported  by  



significant evidence separate from Agent Blythe's testimony, and Clayton has failed to  



show  that  the  outcome  of  his  case  would  have  been  different  even  without  Agent  



Blythe's testimony.   



                       Lastly, to the extent that Clayton is arguing that due process was violated  



because  the  State  "knew  or  should  have  known"  that  it  was  introducing  "false  or  

perjured"  testimony, we find this claim unpreserved.  33  On appeal, Clayton cites to a  



                                               

      32   See United States v. Berry, 624 F.3d 1031, 1041-42 (9th Cir. 2010) (refusing to find  



a trial fundamentally unfair where expert used significantly criticized, though not wholly  

unreliable, analytical methods but expert's "conclusions were not overstated").   



      33   Cf. Napue v. Illinois , 360 U.S. 264 (1959) (holding that a defendant is deprived of  



a fair trial when (1) the government introduces false or misleading testimony or allows it  



  



                                                                     - 20 -                                                                    2755  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

                                                                                                                            



federal decision,  United States v. Ausby, in which a federal court granted habeas relief  



to a defendant because the federal government conceded that it knew or should have  

known that the microscopic hair analysis it introduced at trial was false. 34 But the State  



has made no such concession here, and Clayton's post-conviction relief attorney failed  



to even allege that the State knew or should have known of the problems with Agent  



Blythe's testimony when he filed Clayton's amended application for post-conviction  



relief. Clayton's reliance on Ausby and the related authority in his briefing is therefore  



misplaced.   



  



          Conclusion   



                   The  superior  court's  order  dismissing  Clayton's  application  for  post- 



conviction relief is AFFIRMED.   



                     



                                        

to go uncorrected, (2) the government knew or should have known that the testimony was  

false, and (3) the false evidence was material to the conviction).  



     34   United States v. Ausby, 916 F.3d 1089, 1095 (D.C. Cir. 2019).  



                                                         - 21 -                                                       2755  

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