People v. Ortega , 405 P.3d 346 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                        2016COA148
    Court of Appeals No. 13CA0547
    Jefferson County District Court No. 11CR3036
    Honorable Christopher J. Munch, Judge
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    Raymond Lee Ortega,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
    Division V
    Opinion by JUDGE ROMÁN
    Lichtenstein and Sternberg*, JJ., concur
    Announced October 20, 2016
    Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Brian M. Lanni, Assistant Attorney
    General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
    Douglas K. Wilson, Colorado State Public Defender, Stephen C. Arvin, Deputy
    State Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
    *Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art.
    VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2016.
    ¶1    Defendant, Raymond Lee Ortega, appeals his conviction for
    aggravated robbery, as well as his adjudication as a habitual
    offender. We affirm.
    I. Background
    ¶2    Two men, one wearing a stocking over his head and one
    unmasked, held up a fast-food restaurant. The unmasked man
    pointed a handgun at the employee behind the register and
    demanded money. He then shot the employee in the arm as the
    employee fled. When the two men were unable to open the register,
    they carried it off.
    ¶3    From the restaurant’s surveillance video, the police identified
    the unmasked man as David Maestas. The police also found a car
    belonging to Maestas’s wife, which they believed had been used
    during the robbery.
    ¶4    A search of the car turned up, among other things, a cell
    phone and a pair of jeans consistent with those worn by the
    masked man in the surveillance video. Analysis showed that
    defendant’s DNA was on the waistband and in the pockets of the
    jeans. The cell phone belonged to Maestas’s wife, but she testified
    that Maestas also used the phone and had taken it from her a
    1
    couple of weeks before the robbery. Phone records showed several
    calls in the days around the robbery from this cell phone to a
    number identified in the phone’s contact list as “Ray’s mom.”
    ¶5      A jury convicted defendant of aggravated robbery. After a
    separate trial, the court adjudicated defendant a habitual criminal.
    ¶6      Defendant appeals both his conviction for aggravated robbery
    and his adjudication as a habitual offender. He contends that
    (1) his right to confrontation under both the United States and
    Colorado Constitutions was violated by admission of the cell phone
    records and the custodian’s certification; (2) he was denied a fair
    trial because the prosecutor misstated the DNA evidence; and
    (3) during his habitual trial, his right to confrontation under the
    state constitution was violated by admission of sentencing and
    prison records.
    II. Defendant’s Confrontation Right Pertaining to Phone Records
    ¶7      Defendant contends that the admission of phone records
    violated his right to confrontation under both the United States and
    Colorado Constitutions. We disagree.
    A. Admission of Phone Records
    2
    ¶8    The investigating detective testified that he requested from the
    phone company, Cricket, records pertaining to the phone number
    attached to the cell phone found in the car. The detective testified
    that he received a CD from Neustar, Inc. (Neustar), the company
    that kept Cricket’s records, with a declaration from the custodian of
    records attached. The detective testified, based on the records, that
    there had been a number of calls from the cell phone to a certain
    number three days before the robbery, as well as on the days before
    and after the robbery. The detective testified that the receiving
    number was labeled in the cell phone’s address book as “Ray’s
    mom,” and that when he called the number, the recorded message
    reported, in a female voice, that he had reached the Ortegas.
    B. Federal Confrontation Clause
    ¶9    Under the United States Constitution, a criminal defendant
    “shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses
    against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. In 2004, the Supreme Court
    explained that when a declarant does not testify at trial, testimonial
    statements are admissible “only where the declarant is unavailable,
    and only where the defendant has had a prior opportunity to cross-
    examine.” Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 59 (2004). The
    3
    Supreme Court later held that, under the Crawford formulation,
    nontestimonial hearsay does not implicate the Federal
    Confrontation Clause. See Michigan v. Bryant, 
    562 U.S. 344
    , 354-
    59, 378 (2011); People v. Phillips, 
    2012 COA 176
    , ¶ 75.
    ¶ 10   “Testimony” is “[a] solemn declaration or affirmation made for
    the purpose of establishing or proving some fact.” 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 51
    (alteration in original) (quoting 2 N. Webster, An
    American Dictionary of the English Language (1828)). “Testimonial
    statements” include
    ex parte in-court testimony or its functional
    equivalent — that is, material such as
    affidavits, custodial examinations, prior
    testimony that the defendant was unable to
    cross-examine, or similar pretrial statements
    that declarants would reasonably expect to be
    used prosecutorially; extrajudicial statements
    . . . contained in formalized testimonial
    materials, such as affidavits, depositions, prior
    testimony, or confessions; statements that
    were made under circumstances which would
    lead an objective witness reasonably to believe
    that the statement would be available for use
    at a later trial.
    Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 310 (2009)
    (alteration in original) (quoting 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 51
    -52). More
    concisely, where “a statement is not procured with a primary
    4
    purpose of creating an out-of-court substitute for trial testimony,”
    the Confrontation Clause is not implicated. 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 358-59
    .
    ¶ 11   According to defendant, the trial court erred by admitting the
    phone records in violation of his federal right to confrontation. He
    argues that (1) the phone records were testimonial and (2) the
    declaration of the custodian for the phone records was testimonial.
    We disagree with both arguments, concluding instead that the trial
    court correctly determined that the phone records and attestation
    were not testimonial and thus not subject to the Confrontation
    Clause.
    ¶ 12   In United States v. Yeley-Davis, 
    632 F.3d 673
    (10th Cir. 2011),
    the Tenth Circuit considered and rejected similar arguments that
    both cell phone records (admitted pursuant to the business records
    hearsay exception) and a certification by the custodian of records
    were testimonial. The Tenth Circuit concluded that the phone
    records were not testimonial because they were kept in the course
    of the phone company’s regularly conducted business, rather than
    created simply for litigation. 
    Id. at 679.
    As to the custodian’s
    certification of the phone records, the Tenth Circuit acknowledged
    5
    that the custodian “objectively could have foreseen that the
    certification and affidavit might be used in the investigation or
    prosecution of a crime.” 
    Id. at 680.
    Nonetheless, that court held
    that certificates of authenticity, the purpose of which is merely to
    authenticate the phone records and not to establish or prove some
    fact at trial, are not testimonial. 
    Id. ¶ 13
      We are persuaded by the reasoning in Yeley-Davis and apply it
    in this case. Here, according to the declaration from the custodian
    of records, the records of defendant’s phone activity introduced in
    this case
    a) Were made at or near the time of the
    occurrence of the matters set forth in the
    records by, or from information transmitted by
    a person with knowledge of those matters;
    b) Were kept in the course of a regularly
    conducted business activity; and
    c) Were made by the regularly conducted
    activity as a regular practice.
    Because the records, made at or near the time of the phone activity,
    were made and kept as a regular practice in the course of Neustar’s
    regularly conducted business activity, and not for the purpose of
    establishing or proving some fact at trial, the phone records are not
    6
    testimonial. See id.; United States v. Green, 396 F. App’x 573, 574-
    75 (11th Cir. 2010) (“[B]ecause the [cell phone] records were
    generated for the administration of Metro PCS’s business, and not
    for the purpose of proving a fact at a criminal trial, they were non-
    testimonial, and the district court did not violate [the defendant’s]
    constitutional right [to confrontation] by admitting them into
    evidence.”); People v. Marciano, 
    2014 COA 92M
    -2, ¶ 40 (bank
    statements were not testimonial because “[w]hile duplicates of the
    statements may have been obtained in the course of investigating
    this case, the original statements were generated to facilitate the
    administration of the defendant’s bank account”); see also
    
    Melendez-Diaz, 557 U.S. at 324
    (“Business and public records are
    generally admissible absent confrontation not because they qualify
    under an exception to the hearsay rules, but because — having
    been created for the administration of an entity’s affairs and not for
    the purpose of establishing or proving some fact at trial — they are
    not testimonial.”); 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 56
    (“Most of the hearsay
    exceptions covered statements that by their nature were not
    testimonial — for example, business records . . . .”).1
    1   Defendant also argues that the trial court erred by shifting the
    7
    ¶ 14   Melendez-Diaz, relied on by defendant, is distinguishable. The
    records there — certificates of analysis showing that substances
    seized by the police had been forensically determined to contain
    cocaine — were testimonial because they had been created for the
    sole purpose of providing evidence against the 
    defendant. 557 U.S. at 323-24
    . Defendant argues that the records in this case were
    likewise created “under circumstances which would lead an
    objective witness reasonably to believe that the statement would be
    available for use at a later trial.” 
    Id. at 310
    (quoting 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 52
    ). He points to portions of the exhibit introduced at trial
    that indicated the documents from Neustar were prepared in
    response to the People’s subpoena. But, although the exhibit
    introduced at trial was prepared in response to the subpoena, the
    records themselves were created at or about the time of defendant’s
    phone activity, for Neustar’s business purposes. Compare Yeley-
    
    Davis, 632 F.3d at 679
    , and People v. Warrick, 
    284 P.3d 139
    , 144
    (Colo. App. 2011) (booking reports and mittimus admitted in trial
    burden to the defense to establish that the phone records were
    testimonial. The trial court did not rule, however, that defendant
    failed to establish that the records were testimonial; the trial court
    ruled that the phone records were not testimonial.
    8
    for possession of weapon by a previous offender were not
    testimonial because they were created for routine administrative
    purposes and not to establish a material fact at any future criminal
    proceeding), with 
    Melendez-Diaz, 557 U.S. at 322-24
    , and Hinojos-
    Mendoza v. People, 
    169 P.3d 662
    , 667 (Colo. 2007) (lab report that
    identified the substance found in Hinojos-Mendoza’s vehicle to be
    cocaine was testimonial — it was prepared at the direction of the
    police, the sole purpose of the report was to analyze the substance
    in anticipation of criminal prosecution, and the report was
    introduced at trial to establish the elements of the charged offense).
    ¶ 15   Nor are we persuaded that the mere fact that the records were
    produced in a different format than they are kept in by the phone
    company transforms the records into testimonial statements. As
    the Tenth Circuit explained in United States v. Keck, “[i]n the
    context of electronically-stored data, the business record is the
    datum itself, not the format in which it is printed out for trial or
    other purposes.” 
    643 F.3d 789
    , 797 (10th Cir. 2011). The fact that
    the record custodian distilled the pertinent business records into
    the exhibit ultimately offered at trial does not alter the
    characterization of the underlying nontestimonial phone data. See
    9
    
    id. at 796
    (concluding that the admission into evidence of a
    spreadsheet logging wire transactions was constitutionally
    permissible even if the custodian of records cut and pasted
    information to create the exhibits; “since the underlying wire-
    transfer data are not testimonial, the records custodian’s actions in
    preparing the exhibits do not constitute a Confrontation Clause
    violation”). This is not a case in which the business records were
    cherry-picked to support the prosecution’s case. Cf. People v.
    Flores-Lozano, 
    2016 COA 149
    , ¶¶ 11-12 (spreadsheet there “was not
    a simple regurgitation of electronically stored information” because
    “the loss prevention director applied his professional judgment to
    sort, include, and exclude electronically stored information for the
    precise purpose of creating a customized spreadsheet to determine
    if the defendant had stolen from the victim and, if so, in what
    amount”). The exhibit here contained all of the phone records for
    the particular phone number, from three days before the robbery to
    five weeks after the robbery.
    ¶ 16   Defendant further contends, however, that even if the phone
    records themselves are not testimonial, the declaration by the
    custodian of records is testimonial. Defendant reasons that the
    10
    declaration was certainly made under “circumstances which would
    lead an objective witness reasonably to believe that the statement
    would be available for use at a later trial.” 
    Melendez-Diaz, 557 U.S. at 310
    (quoting 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 52
    ), as the declaration states
    that it is in response to a subpoena.
    ¶ 17   We are again persuaded by the reasoning in Yeley-Davis,
    which followed several other circuits and concluded that a
    certification authenticating a business record is not testimonial
    simply by virtue of the certification itself being made in anticipation
    of 
    litigation. 632 F.3d at 680
    . The court relied on United States v.
    Ellis, 
    460 F.3d 920
    , 927 (7th Cir. 2006), in which the Seventh
    Circuit explained that a written certification authenticating hospital
    records as kept in the ordinary course of the hospital’s business
    was nontestimonial because it was “too far removed from the
    ‘principal evil at which the Confrontation Clause was directed’ to be
    considered testimonial.” 
    Id. (quoting Crawford,
    541 U.S. at 50).
    ¶ 18   Here, as in Yeley-Davis, where the “purpose of the
    certifications . . . was merely to authenticate the cell phone
    records — and not to establish or prove some fact at 
    trial,” 632 F.3d at 680
    , we agree with the Tenth Circuit that the certification is not
    11
    testimonial. See also United States v. Brinson, 
    772 F.3d 1314
    , 1323
    (10th Cir. 2014) (certificate authenticating debit card records which
    did not “contain any ‘analysis’ that would constitute out-of-court
    testimony” was simply a nontestimonial statement of authenticity);
    United States v. Adefehinti, 
    510 F.3d 319
    , 327-28 (D.C. Cir. 2007)
    (in trial related to scheme to secure mortgages at vastly inflated
    values, admission of loan applications and other documents relied
    on by banks in lending money pursuant to written certification of
    custodian of records did not violate the defendants’ confrontation
    rights); State v. Brooks, 
    56 A.3d 1245
    , 1252-55 (N.H. 2012)
    (admission of various business records, including telephone
    records, authenticated by written certifications from the records’
    custodians did not violate the defendant’s confrontation rights
    because the certificates themselves had minimal evidentiary value,
    serving only as the foundation for the admission of substantive
    evidence); State v. Doss, 
    754 N.W.2d 150
    , 161-65 (Wis. 2008)
    (affidavits authenticating bank records were not testimonial; noting
    that a number of federal appellate decisions addressed the issue
    and concluded that similar affidavits and certifications are
    12
    nontestimonial). Because the certification is not testimonial, the
    Federal Confrontation Clause is not implicated.
    C. Colorado Confrontation Clause
    ¶ 19   Defendant also argued in the trial court, and reasserts on
    appeal, that even if we conclude the phone records are
    nontestimonial, his right to confrontation under the Colorado
    Constitution was violated because the phone records were admitted
    without a showing that the custodian of records was unavailable.
    We disagree with defendant that his right to confrontation under
    the Colorado Constitution was violated.
    ¶ 20   The Colorado Confrontation Clause provides that a criminal
    defendant “shall have the right . . . to meet the witnesses against
    him face to face.” Colo. Const. art. II, § 16. “The purpose of this
    provision is ‘to prevent conviction by [e]x parte affidavits, to sift the
    conscience of the witness, and to test his recollection to see if his
    story is worthy of belief.’” Phillips, ¶ 79 (alteration in original)
    (quoting People v. Bastardo, 
    191 Colo. 521
    , 524, 
    554 P.2d 297
    , 300
    (1976)).
    ¶ 21   The People urge us to dispose of the analysis in People v.
    Dement, 
    661 P.2d 675
    (Colo. 1983), abrogated in part on other
    13
    grounds by People v. Fry, 
    92 P.3d 970
    , 976 (Colo. 2004), and
    conform our analysis of state Confrontation Clause challenges to
    the approach that the United States Supreme Court has laid out for
    challenges under the Federal Confrontation Clause. In Phillips, a
    division of this court explored the proper analysis of Confrontation
    Clause challenges based on the state constitution. ¶ 81. The
    division noted that although our supreme court adopted the United
    States Supreme Court’s inquiry under the Federal Confrontation
    Clause as to testimonial hearsay, it retained the test in Dement as
    to nontestimonial hearsay. 
    Id. (citing Compan
    v. People, 
    121 P.3d 876
    , 885 (Colo. 2005)). The Phillips division then noted that our
    supreme court has not “directly considered whether, in light of our
    supreme court’s congruent precedent, the recent clarification of
    Crawford should affect our state Confrontation Clause analysis.”
    
    Id. at ¶
    82 (citation omitted). The division then followed Compan
    and considered a state Confrontation Clause issue involving
    nontestimonial hearsay under the Dement test. See 
    id. We, too,
    apply Dement to evaluate whether admission of nontestimonial
    hearsay violates the Colorado Confrontation Clause.
    14
    ¶ 22   In doing so, we disagree with defendant’s assertion that
    Dement necessarily requires a showing of unavailability to admit
    evidence in the absence of the declarant. Rather, in Dement, our
    supreme court explained that the unavailability requirement is
    subject to an exception when “the utility of trial confrontation [is
    very] remote.” 
    Dement, 661 P.2d at 681
    (alteration in original)
    (quoting Ohio v. Roberts, 
    448 U.S. 56
    , 65 n.7 (1980), abrogated by
    Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    (2004)).
    ¶ 23   Another division of this court applied the Dement
    Confrontation Clause analysis and concluded that a price tag could
    be used as prima facie evidence of an item’s value in a theft trial
    without implicating the defendant’s confrontation right because the
    utility of cross-examination would be very remote. People v.
    Schmidt, 
    928 P.2d 805
    , 807-08 (Colo. App. 1996). The Schmidt
    division explained that, because customers do not ordinarily
    bargain over the price of retail goods, “if [the] defendant had asked
    any employee in the store, including the manager, what the price of
    a particular item was, he or she would have answered by checking
    the price tag on the item.” 
    Id. at 807.
    The division acknowledged
    that there might be instances in which a price tag would not reflect
    15
    the true value of an item, but the division nonetheless concluded
    that the defendant’s right to confrontation was not violated. 
    Id. at 808.
    ¶ 24     We conclude that cross-examining the custodian of the phone
    records would be of limited utility in this case and that a showing of
    unavailability was not required. Like a store employee reporting the
    value on a price tag, the custodian of records here reported
    information already recorded and stored in Neustar’s records. See
    also People v. Gilmore, 
    97 P.3d 123
    , 131 (Colo. App. 2003)
    (Admission of a work order from a cable company, as well as a lay-
    away agreement for furniture and two related cash receipts, each
    containing the defendant’s name and the address at which cocaine
    and the defendant were found, did not violate the defendant’s
    confrontation right in a possession of controlled substance trial
    because “the documents do not assert that defendant had engaged
    in any conduct, criminal or otherwise, and there is no indication
    that self-interest or animus against defendant motivated the
    authors to make false statements about his address or that the
    documents may have been otherwise fraudulent,” and thus “[t]he
    test of cross-examination regarding these documents would be of
    16
    marginal utility.”). Thus, there is minimal practical benefit in
    applying “the crucible of cross-examination” against the custodian
    of records regarding the nontestimonial phone records. 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 61
    . The mere possibility that a mistake may have been
    made in the records, just as a mistake may be made on a price tag,
    does not implicate defendant’s confrontation right. 
    Schmidt, 928 P.2d at 808
    .
    III. Closing Argument
    ¶ 25   Defendant next contends that during closing argument the
    prosecutor misstated the evidence regarding how DNA was or could
    have been deposited on the jeans.
    A. Legal Standards
    ¶ 26   “[A] prosecutor’s closing argument should be based on the
    evidence in the record and all reasonable inferences to be drawn
    therefrom,” and “‘[t]he prosecutor should not intentionally misstate
    the evidence or mislead the jury as to the inferences it may draw.’”
    Martinez v. People, 
    244 P.3d 135
    , 140-41 (Colo. 2010) (quoting ABA
    Standards for Criminal Justice, Prosecution Function, and Defense
    Function § 3-5.8(a) (3d ed. 1993)).
    17
    ¶ 27   “[C]losing argument allows advocates to point to different
    pieces of evidence and explain their significance within the case.”
    Domingo-Gomez v. People, 
    125 P.3d 1043
    , 1048 (Colo. 2005). In so
    doing, “a prosecutor has wide latitude in the language and
    presentation style used.” 
    Id. We evaluate
    claims of improper
    argument “in the context of the argument as a whole and in light of
    the evidence before the jury.” People v. Samson, 
    2012 COA 167
    ,
    ¶ 30. Further, “because arguments delivered in the heat of trial are
    not always perfectly scripted, reviewing courts accord prosecutors
    the benefit of the doubt when their remarks are ambiguous or
    simply inartful.” 
    Id. ¶ 28
      “Whether a prosecutor’s statements constitute misconduct is
    generally a matter left to the trial court’s discretion.” Domingo-
    
    Gomez, 125 P.3d at 1049
    . Thus, absent a showing of an abuse of
    discretion, we will not disturb the trial court’s ruling allowing such
    statements. People v. Strock, 
    252 P.3d 1148
    , 1152 (Colo. App.
    2010).
    ¶ 29   We turn to the context of the argument in light of the expert’s
    testimony.
    B. Expert’s Testimony
    18
    ¶ 30   A laboratory agent with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation
    forensic crime laboratory testified for the prosecution as an expert
    in criminalistics and the subfields of serology and DNA analysis and
    identification. As pertinent here, the expert testified about the
    results of her analysis of the jeans for “contact or touch DNA.”
    Explaining “contact or touch DNA,” the expert testified that “[w]hat
    that is is an indication maybe of who has been wearing a garment
    or who has been touching a garment.”
    ¶ 31   The expert testified that (1) a swab from the waist area of the
    jeans and (2) a swab from the inside of the front pocket of the jeans
    both resulted in a DNA profile that was mixture, with defendant
    being the source of the major component of the DNA profile. When
    a DNA profile developed from a sample is a mixture, more than one
    individual’s DNA profile is present. In the mixture situation, there
    is sometimes a “main contributor” — an individual whose DNA is
    present in the sample at a much higher concentration than that of
    other potential contributors — and one or more minor contributors.
    ¶ 32   The prosecutor explored the mixture concept as it related to
    touch DNA by posing a hypothetical. He asked the expert whether
    it would be possible for him to pick up DNA from touching various
    19
    items around the room and then touching his collar, resulting in a
    DNA profile developed from the collar of his shirt then including
    both a major and minor component. The expert agreed this was
    possible because “DNA is pretty much everywhere,” and she
    explained that when someone touches an item, he or she may
    deposit a small amount of DNA and remove some DNA of people
    who previously touched that same item. But, she said, “If you’re
    talking about your mixture on your shirt, I would expect there -- I
    would expect there to be a major contributor, I would expect that
    major contributor to be you.”
    ¶ 33   The expert made clear during her testimony that, although it
    might provide certain clues, DNA analysis could not conclusively
    establish how DNA arrived on a piece of clothing.
    C. Closing Argument in This Case
    ¶ 34   Defendant asserts that the prosecutor, contrary to the expert’s
    testimony, told the jury it was impossible that someone other than
    defendant had contact with the jeans. We disagree with this
    characterization of the prosecutor’s argument.
    ¶ 35   The court instructed the jury on defendant’s theory of defense
    in which he contended that “the presence of a mixture of DNA on
    20
    the . . . jeans indicates that someone other than [defendant] also
    came in contact with those areas of the jeans tested by the Colorado
    Bureau of Investigations.” The prosecutor responded specifically to
    that theory of defense instruction in closing, arguing:
    [That i]nstruction goes on to say that they
    further contend the presence of a mixture of
    DNA on the . . . jeans indicates that someone
    other than Raymond Ortega also came in
    contact with those areas of the jeans tested by
    CBI.
    Simply not the case. It’s essentially not the
    case at all. That says that what the mixture of
    DNA in the pockets and mixture of DNA on the
    waistband that what those jeans [shows] is
    that someone else came in contact with those
    jeans. They’d like you to believe that, but
    that’s not what the evidence means, and that’s
    not what the evidence shows.
    What the evidence shows is that the
    Defendant’s DNA is on the waist of those
    jeans, and his DNA is in the pocket of those
    jeans. . . . Both the waist of the jeans and the
    pockets of the jeans have a mixture, what they
    call a mixture of DNA, that is to such a slight
    degree at that time cannot be interpreted to
    say [whose] DNA is this, [whose] is that.
    . . . The mixture that’s in the pocket, and the
    mixture that’s on the waist band means that
    somebody else’s DNA came in contact with
    those jeans.
    But it absolutely does not mean that somebody
    else came in contact with the jeans. Sounds
    21
    like a small description, right? But think
    about it like this: [the expert] talked about the
    fact if you’re touching an item, you’re picking
    up DNA from that item. . . .
    The jeans that are there have touch DNA that
    was found as far as a mixture of DNA, that is
    absolutely consistent with picking up DNA
    from other items and putting it in your
    pockets.
    . . . I can’t stand here and tell you with
    certainty, I can’t tell you where the DNA came
    from, the mixture.
    What I can tell you is it’s of a such a slight
    degree it’s absolutely consistent with picking
    up DNA from any other items and putting
    them into the jeans for a long period of time.
    What cannot be said is that the presence of the
    mixture indicates that someone other than
    Raymond Ortega also came into contact with
    those jeans.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶ 36   Defense counsel objected on the basis that the prosecutor
    misstated the evidence, and the court overruled the objection,
    noting that this was argument.
    ¶ 37   The prosecutor then added, “They can’t say it. They can’t say
    that the DNA came from somebody else, the postman came into
    contact with the jeans.”
    22
    ¶ 38   Thus, as we read the closing argument, the prosecutor
    responded to the theory of defense — that the DNA evidence
    indicated that someone else also came into contact with the jeans
    possibly worn in the robbery — by arguing, consistent with the
    expert’s testimony, that the evidence simply indicated that someone
    else’s DNA came into contact with the jeans. The People’s further
    argument that the result was “absolutely consistent with picking up
    DNA from any other items and putting them into the jeans” was
    reasonably based on the expert’s testimony about touch DNA
    hypotheticals.
    ¶ 39   Although the prosecutor might have more artfully worded his
    argument, we read his statements as permissibly arguing that
    (1) the DNA evidence did not establish that someone other than
    defendant had contact with the jeans and (2) the more likely
    scenario was that defendant had picked up a small amount of
    someone else’s DNA and deposited it on the jeans. See Sampson,
    ¶ 30. And importantly, the prosecutor reiterated in closing that he
    could not tell the jury with certainty, based on the DNA evidence,
    where the DNA on the jeans came from.
    23
    ¶ 40   Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the trial
    court’s determination that the argument was permissible.
    IV. Cumulative Error
    ¶ 41   Because we discern no error in the trial court’s rulings
    admitting the cell phone records into evidence and determining the
    prosecutor’s argument was permissible, there was no cumulative
    error. See People v. Marin, 
    686 P.2d 1351
    , 1357 (Colo. App. 1983).
    V. Admission of Documentary Evidence in Habitual Trial
    ¶ 42   Finally, defendant contends that he was denied his right to
    confrontation under the Colorado Confrontation Clause because the
    trial court erroneously concluded that sentencing and prison
    records could be admitted into evidence without a showing of
    unavailability of “the judges or their clerks who may have created,
    signed, or processed the various mitts and the other various court
    documents.”
    ¶ 43   In short, defendant again asserts that the Colorado
    Confrontation Clause demands a showing that a declarant is
    unavailable before nontestimonial hearsay can be admitted without
    the declarant’s testimony. As we explained in Part II.C, under
    Dement, the prosecution need not produce a declarant nor prove
    24
    him or her unavailable where the utility of trial confrontation is
    remote. As with the phone records, we conclude that the
    sentencing and prison records fall into this category. Indeed,
    defendant argues that unavailability must be shown but offers no
    argument as to what helpful information might be revealed by
    cross-examination of the judges or clerks who recorded and
    reported defendant’s previous convictions.
    VI. Conclusion
    ¶ 44   The judgment is affirmed.
    JUDGE LICHTENSTEIN and JUDGE STERNBERG concur.
    25