Washington v. State
Annotate this CaseIn 1990, Appellant Michael Washington was convicted by a jury of first degree rape and related offenses and was sentenced to life in prison. Appellant later petitioned for a search for DNA material pursuant to Md. Code Ann. Crim. Proc. 8-201, after which the sheriff's office conceded it had destroyed biological evidence relating to Appellant's conviction. A hearing judge denied Appellant's subsequent petitions relating to this destruction of evidence. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding (1) the lower court did not err in finding that the State performed a reasonable search for the requested biological identification; (2) the State's duty to preserve scientific identification evidence, pursuant to section 8-201(j) begins as of the date the statute was enacted and is not to be applied retroactively; (3) because the hearing judge did not err in determining that the scientific identification evidence was destroyed prior to the enactment date of the statute, the statute was not applicable and Appellant was not entitled to the relief provided; and (4) the lower court did not err in finding that Appellant's conviction did not rest upon unreliable scientific identification evidence and denying Washington's motion for a new trial on that basis.
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