Reed, Rodney ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                 AP-77,054
    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    February 23, 2015                                          Transmitted 2/23/2015 3:22:39 PM
    Accepted 2/23/2015 3:58:29 PM
    ABEL ACOSTA
    No. AP-77,054                                           CLERK
    IN THE
    Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
    RODNEY REED,
    Appellant,
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    Appellee.
    On Appeal from the 21st Judicial District Court, Bastrop County, Texas
    STATE’S BRIEF
    ORAL ARGUMENT CONDITIONALLY REQUESTED
    BRYAN GOERTZ
    Criminal District Attorney
    Bastrop County, Texas
    MATTHEW OTTOWAY
    Assistant Attorney General/
    Assistant District Attorney
    Bastrop County, Texas
    Texas Bar No. 24047707
    Post Office Box 12548, Capitol Station
    Austin, Texas 78711
    Tel.: (512) 936-1400
    Fax: (512) 320-8132
    Email: matthew.ottoway@texasattorney
    general.gov
    Attorneys for the State
    IDENTITIES OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL
    Appellant
    Rodney Reed
    Appellant’s hearing and appeal counsel
    Bryce Benjet
    The Innocence Project
    40 Worth Street, Suite 701
    New York New York 10013
    Andrew MacRae
    Levatino|Pace, LLP
    1101 S. Capital of Texas Highway
    Building K, Suite 125
    Austin, Texas 78746
    Appellee
    The State of Texas
    Appellee’s hearing and appeal counsel
    Bryan Goertz
    Criminal District Attorney of Bastrop County
    804 Pecan Street
    Bastrop, Texas 78602
    Matthew Ottoway
    Travis Bragg
    Assistant Criminal District Attorneys/
    Assistant Attorneys General
    Post Office Box 12548, Capitol Station
    Austin, Texas 78711
    i
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    IDENTITIES OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL ........................................... i
    TABLE OF CONTENTS ............................................................................ii
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES ...................................................................... iv
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE ................................................................... 1
    STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT ................................... 1
    ISSUES PRESENTED ............................................................................... 2
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS ................................................................. 2
    I.     Appellant’s litigation history ............................................................. 2
    II.    Evidence at Appellant’s trial ............................................................. 7
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT ......................................................... 15
    ARGUMENT ............................................................................................. 17
    I.     The standards for DNA testing and appellate review.................... 17
    II.    Appellant’s motion lacked the required specificity necessary to
    prove compliance with Chapter 64’s requirements ....................... 19
    III. The trial court was correct in finding that Appellant did not
    meet his burden of proving that he would not have been
    convicted with exculpatory test results .......................................... 27
    A.      Appellant’s lack of specificity worked to his detriment ....... 28
    B.      The trial court properly eschewed Appellant’s request to
    consider post-trial evidence and such evidence is not
    properly before this Court...................................................... 29
    C.      The trial court applied the proper exculpatory-result
    presumption............................................................................ 32
    D.      Appellant failed to prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that he would not have been convicted armed
    with exculpatory test results ................................................. 36
    ii
    1.      Items found on Stites .................................................... 36
    2.      Items found near Stites ................................................ 39
    3.      Item discovered by a citizen ......................................... 39
    4.      Items found in or near the truck .................................. 40
    5.      Items presently in the possession of the Bastrop
    District Clerk ................................................................ 41
    IV. The trial court’s finding of unreasonable delay is amply
    supported by the record .................................................................. 42
    A.      The timing, breadth, and ambiguity of Appellant’s DNA
    testing request support the finding of unreasonable
    delay ........................................................................................ 45
    1.      Time between Appellant’s request and his
    execution date ............................................................... 46
    2.      Promptness of the request and previous
    opportunities to request testing ................................... 47
    B.      Appellant’s overall litigation history left little doubt that
    his Chapter 64 motion was filed for purposes of
    unreasonable delay ................................................................ 53
    V.    Appellant failed to prove chain of custody for items housed by
    the Bastrop District Clerk .............................................................. 55
    VI. Appellant did not prove biological material on the non-per se
    items he sought to test .................................................................... 58
    VII. The State re-urges its motion to accelerate this appeal ................. 61
    PRAYER FOR RELIEF ............................................................................ 62
    WORD-LIMIT CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ............................... 63
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE.................................................................. 63
    iii
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    Cases
    Bell v. State, 
    90 S.W.3d 301
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002)............................... 44
    Blacklock v. State, 
    235 S.W.3d 231
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) ........... passim
    Clarke v. State, 
    270 S.W.3d 573
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) ........................ 26
    Dinkins v. State, 
    84 S.W.3d 639
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) ............ 26, 27, 28
    Esparza v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 913
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).......... 35, 36, 37
    Ex parte Gutierrez, 
    337 S.W.3d 883
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) ...... 37, 42, 46
    Holberg v. State, 
    425 S.W.3d 282
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) .............. passim
    Lucio v. State, 
    351 S.W.3d 878
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) .......................... 39
    Mays v. State, 
    285 S.W.3d 884
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) .......................... 32
    Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 
    544 U.S. 408
    (2005) ............................................... 55
    Pate v. State, No. 10-09-00360-CR, 
    2011 WL 652920
         (Tex. App.—Waco Feb. 23, 2011, pet. ref’d) ................................... 63
    Prible v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 466
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) ......................... 61
    Riggins v. State, No. 11-03-00307-CR, 
    2004 WL 743742
         (Tex. App.—Eastland Apr. 8, 2004, no. pet.).................................. 63
    Rivera v. State, 
    89 S.W.3d 55
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) ...................... 19, 48
    Rosales v. State, 
    748 S.W.2d 451
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1987) ................. 55, 59
    Routier v. State, 
    273 S.W.3d 241
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) ........... 20, 33, 34
    Skinner v. State, 
    122 S.W.3d 808
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) ................ 48, 57
    Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) ...................... 57
    Skinner v. State, No. AP-76675, 
    2012 WL 2343616
         (Tex. Crim. App. June 20, 2012) ..................................................... 57
    State v. Patrick, 
    86 S.W.3d 592
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) ............. 47, 51, 52
    iv
    State v. Swearingen, 
    424 S.W.3d 32
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).......... passim
    Swearingen v. State, 
    189 S.W.3d 779
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)................ 57
    Swearingen v. State, 
    303 S.W.3d 728
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010)................ 57
    Thacker v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 926
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) .......... 49, 52, 53
    Whitaker v. State, 
    160 S.W.3d 5
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) ........................ 31
    Whitehead v. State, 
    130 S.W.3d 866
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) ......... passim
    Wilson v. State, 
    185 S.W.3d 481
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) ........................ 29
    Statutes
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01 (a)(2) .................................................... 20
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a) ......................................................... 19
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a)(1) ..................................................... 20
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a–1) ......................................... 17, 59, 64
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(b) ................................................... 18, 19
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(b)(1) ..................................................... 20
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(b)(2) ..................................................... 20
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1) ..................................................... 18
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(i)............................................. 64
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii) ............................... 60, 63, 64
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2) ..................................................... 18
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2)(A) ................................................ 29
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2)(B) .......................................... 47, 52
    v
    Other Authorities
    Act of April 5, 2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 2, § 2,
    2001 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 2 ..................................................... 49
    Act of June 17, 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 366, § 1–4,
    2011 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 366 ................................................. 49
    Rules
    Tex. R. Evid. 404(b) .................................................................................. 60
    Tex. R. Evid. 406 ....................................................................................... 60
    vi
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    This is an appeal from the denial of DNA testing in a death penalty
    case. Appellant moved for DNA testing pursuant to Chapter 64 of the
    Texas    Code    of   Criminal     Procedure     (“Chapter     64    motion”).
    2.CR(DNA).74–143.1 The State opposed. 2.CR(DNA).161–229, 307–29.
    The trial court held a live evidentiary hearing, which concluded with the
    denial of Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion. 4.RR(DNA).227.2 The trial
    court entered written findings thereafter. 3.CR(DNA).362–68. Appellant
    then filed his notice of appeal. 3.CR(DNA).359. The appeal is now before
    the Court.
    STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
    The State believes that oral argument should be denied. Many of
    the issues in this case have been authoritatively decided, the parties’
    briefs adequately lay out the facts and legal arguments, and the
    decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument,
    especially given Appellant’s rapidly approaching execution date.
    1     “CR(DNA)” refers to the clerk’s record for the Chapter 64 proceeding. The
    references are preceded by volume number and followed by page numbers.
    2     “RR(DNA)” refers to the reporter’s record for the Chapter 64 hearing. The
    references are preceded by volume number and followed by page numbers.
    1
    Nevertheless, should the Court determine that oral argument is
    appropriate, the State requests an opportunity to respond.
    ISSUES PRESENTED
    Whether the trial court erred by finding that Appellant
    did not prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he
    would not have been convicted of capital murder assuming
    exculpatory DNA test results?
    Whether the trial court erred by finding that Appellant
    did not prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that his
    request for DNA testing was not made to unreasonably delay
    the execution of his sentence or the administration of justice?
    Whether Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion was sufficiently
    specific to meet all of Chapter 64’s statutory requirements?
    Whether there was an adequate chain of custody
    established for items housed by the Bastrop District Clerk?
    Whether Appellant proved that the items he wanted
    tested were or contained biological material?
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    I.    Appellant’s litigation history
    A jury found Appellant guilty of capital murder for abducting,
    raping, and strangling to death Stacey Stites, and he was sentenced to
    death on May 30, 1998.        1.CR.489–493.3      Appellant’s conviction was
    3     “CR” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s capital murder trial. The
    references are preceded by volume number and followed by page numbers.
    2
    affirmed on direct appeal by this Court on December 6, 2000, Reed v.
    State, No. 73,135 (Tex. Crim. App. Dec. 6, 2000) (Reed I), and the
    Supreme Court of the United States denied Appellant a writ of certiorari
    later that next year, Reed v. Texas, 
    534 U.S. 955
    (2001).
    With direct appeal pending, Appellant filed an application for state
    habeas relief on November 15, 1999. 2.SHCR-01/02, at 2–251.4 A little
    more than a year later, Appellant filed a “supplemental claim.” 3.SHCR-
    01/02, at 391–402. On February 13, 2002, this Court denied Appellant’s
    initial application on findings by the trial court sitting in habeas and
    found the “supplemental claim” to be a subsequent application and
    dismissed it as abusive. Ex parte Reed, Nos. 50,961-01, 50,961-02 (Tex.
    Crim. App. Feb. 13, 2002) (Reed II).
    Appellant turned to federal court on February 13, 2003, filing a
    petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Western District of Texas, Austin
    Division. Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus, Reed v. Thaler, No. A-02-
    CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex. Sept. 26, 2012). The case was stayed and placed
    in abeyance on March 1, 2004, so that Appellant could exhaust certain
    4     “SHCR-01/02” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s first and second state
    habeas proceedings. The references are preceded by volume number and followed by
    page numbers.
    3
    claims through the state system. Order, Mar. 1, 2004, Reed v. Thaler,
    No. A-02-CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex. Sept. 26, 2012). Appellant thereafter
    proceeded to file four additional state habeas applications.
    On March 29, 2005, Reed filed his third state habeas application.
    1.SHCR-03, at 2–343.5 On October 19, 2005, this Court dismissed all of
    Appellant’s claims as abusive, with the exception of two claims that were
    remanded to the trial court for factual development. Ex parte Reed, No.
    WR-50961-03, 
    2005 WL 2659440
    , at *1 (Oct. 19, 2005) (Reed III). After a
    live evidentiary hearing and findings from the trial court, this Court
    issued an exhaustive opinion denying relief and finding that Appellant’s
    gateway-innocence claim was not persuasive enough to overcome the
    untimeliness of his procedurally defaulted claims. Ex parte Reed, 
    271 S.W.3d 698
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (Reed IV).
    With his third state habeas application pending, Appellant filed his
    fourth and fifth state habeas applications on March 5, 2007, and July 16,
    5     “SHCR-03” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s third state habeas
    proceeding. The references are preceded by volume number and followed by page
    numbers.
    4
    2008, respectively. SHCR-04, at 2–15;6 SHCR-05, at 2–89.7 Both of these
    applications were dismissed as abusive by this Court in a single opinion.
    Ex parte Reed, Nos. WR-50,961-04, WR-50,961-05, 
    2009 WL 97260
    , at *1–
    6 (Tex. Crim. App. Jan. 14, 2009) (Reed V).
    After those proceedings terminated, Appellant filed his sixth state
    habeas application on April 21, 2009. SHCR-06, at 2–59.8 This, too, was
    dismissed as abusive by this Court. Ex parte Reed, No. WR-50961-06,
    
    2009 WL 1900364
    , at *1–2 (Tex. Crim. App. July 1, 2009) (Reed VI).
    The stay in federal district court was lifted on August 20, 2009.
    Order, Aug. 20, 2009, Reed v. Thaler, No. A-02-CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex.
    Sept. 26, 2012).      On June 12, 2012, a federal magistrate judge
    recommended denial of relief, Report and Recommendation of the United
    States Magistrate Judge, Reed v. Thaler, No. A-02-CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex.
    Sept. 26, 2012), which the federal district judge largely adopted, and who
    6     “SHCR-04” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s fourth state habeas
    proceeding. The references are preceded by volume number and followed by page
    numbers.
    7     “SHCR-05” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s fifth state habeas
    proceeding. The references are preceded by volume number and followed by page
    numbers.
    8     “SHCR-06” refers to the clerk’s record for Appellant’s sixth state habeas
    proceeding. The references are preceded by volume number and followed by page
    numbers.
    5
    independently denied relief on September 26, 2012, Order on Report and
    Recommendation, Reed v. Thaler, No. A-02-CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex. Sept.
    26, 2012). The federal district judge also denied all of Appellant’s post-
    judgment filings on February 4, 2013. Order, Feb. 4, 2013, Reed v.
    Thaler, No. A-02-CV-142-LY (W.D. Tex. Sept. 26, 2012).
    Appellant then appealed the denial of federal habeas relief, but the
    Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed on January 10, 2014. Reed
    v. Stephens, 
    739 F.3d 753
    (5th Cir. 2014) (Reed VII). On March 19, 2014,
    the same court also rejected Appellant’s attempts at rehearing without a
    poll.    On Petition for Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc, Reed v.
    Stephens, 
    739 F.3d 753
    (5th Cir. 2014) (No. 13-70009). The Supreme
    Court of the United States denied Appellant’s petition for writ of
    certiorari from this proceeding on November 3, 2014. Reed v. Stephens,
    
    135 S. Ct. 435
    (2014).
    On April 8, 2014, the State requested the setting of Appellant’s
    execution for November 19, 2014. 1.CR(DNA).34–35. The trial court
    heard the State’s motion on July 14, 2014, and granted a modified
    execution date of January 14, 2015. 1.RR(DNA).17. The same day as the
    execution-setting hearing, July 14, 2014, Appellant filed his Chapter 64
    6
    motion.     2.CR(DNA).74–143.        Almost three months later, Appellant
    sought a hearing on the Chapter 64 motion. 3.CR(DNA).233–34. Two
    weeks after that, Appellant filed an affidavit from a DNA analyst and an
    affidavit   from   his    attorney    verifying      his   Chapter   64   motion.
    3.CR(DNA).240–56.         Then, the day before the Chapter 64 hearing,
    Appellant filed his personal affidavit. 3.CR(DNA).317–18.
    After considering the record and evidence presented at the Chapter
    64 hearing, the trial court denied Appellant’s motion because Appellant
    failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he would not
    have been convicted had exculpatory DNA test results been available at
    trial and that he did not file his Chapter 64 motion to unreasonably delay
    the   execution    of    sentence    or       the   administration   of   justice.
    4.RR(DNA).227.          These findings were later reduced to writing.
    3.CR(DNA).362–68. The trial court also modified Appellant’s execution
    date to March 5, 2015, for administrative reasons.              4.RR(DNA).227.
    Appellant then filed his notice of appeal. 3.CR(DNA).359.
    II.   Evidence at Appellant’s trial
    Stacey Stites was a happily-engaged nineteen-year-old just
    eighteen days shy of her wedding. 43.RR.81–82, 85.              She lived in an
    7
    apartment complex with her police-officer fiancé, Jimmy Fennell, and her
    mother, Carol, who lived in the apartment below Stites’s, and with whom
    Stites spent her last days alive planning her upcoming nuptials.
    43.RR.81; 44.RR.51.
    Stites worked at a Bastrop, Texas grocery store—the store was
    about thirty miles from her residence—and was scheduled for a 3:30 a.m.
    shift. 43.RR.95; 44.RR.48. When she did not show, a fellow employee
    became worried and eventually called Carol around 6:30 a.m. 43.RR.96,
    101–02. In turn, Carol called Fennell, and he went to look for Stites while
    Carol informed authorities about Stites’s absence. 44.RR.70–71.
    Before Carol knew about Stites’s disappearance, a Bastrop police
    officer had, at 5:23 a.m., discovered the pickup truck Stites took to work—
    Fennell’s red, compact truck—seemingly abandoned in a local high school
    parking lot. 43.RR.117. Because the truck was not reported stolen, the
    officer took no further action. 43.RR.118,122. Before he left, however, he
    noticed a piece of a belt lying outside the truck. 43.RR.120.
    Later that day, Stites’s body was found off a rural road. 44.RR.18,
    21. Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) crime laboratory personnel
    processed the scene.    44.RR.108.       They observed a partially clothed
    8
    Stites—her shirt removed, bra exposed, and missing a shoe and an
    earring. 44.RR.113. Her pants were undone, the zipper broken, and her
    panties were bunched at her hips.        44.RR.113–14, 122. She was
    discovered with work apparel—a nametag and a large knee brace.
    44.RR.128, 151.    On the side of the road was another piece of belt.
    44.RR.115.
    Because of obvious signs of rape, a DPS criminalist took vaginal
    and breast swabs from Stites’s body.     44.RR.123; 45.RR.51.    On-site
    chemical testing of a vaginal swab signaled the presence of semen.
    44.RR.124–27.     Around 11:00 p.m. that night, microscopic analysis
    showed the presence of intact sperm, which indicated recent seminal
    deposit—based on scientific articles, sperm remains whole within the
    vaginal cavity for usually no longer than twenty-six hours. 44.RR.131;
    45.RR.15–16.
    Later forensic testing matched the belt fragments to each other,
    and it appeared that the belt was torn apart, not cut, 47.RR.83–85, and
    Fennell identified the belt as Stites’s, 45.RR.102. A search of the truck
    by DPS criminalists yielded Stites’s missing shoe and earring, and the
    remnants of a smashed, plastic drinking glass. 47.RR.44–45; 49.RR.34,
    9
    38. Additionally, the driver’s-side seatbelt was still engaged and the seat
    was angled in such a way that a 6’2’’ person could properly utilize the
    rearview mirror. 46.RR.101; 49.RR.43.
    Stites’s body was autopsied the next day by Dr. Roberto Bayardo.
    48.RR.111. He observed a large mark across Stites’s neck that matched
    the pattern of her belt. 48.RR.119–20, 136–37. There were bruises on
    Stites’s arms consistent with forcible restraint, bruises on her head
    consistent with the knuckles of a fist, and bruises on her left shoulder
    and abdomen consistent with an over-the-shoulder seat belt. 48.RR.115–
    18.   Based on physical changes in the body, Dr. Bayardo estimated
    Stites’s time of death to be 3:00 a.m., give or take four hours. 48.RR.113–
    14.
    Dr. Bayardo also took vaginal swabs, in addition to oral and rectal
    swabs. 48.RR.121–23. He too observed intact sperm from a vaginal
    swab, which he stated indicated “quite recent[]” seminal deposit.
    48.RR.121–22.    There were also injuries to Stites’s anus, including
    dilation and lacerations. 48.RR.126. These were consistent with penile
    penetration inflicted at or near the time of Stites’s death—peri-mortem.
    48.RR.126–27. And, Dr. Bayardo, via microscopic analysis, thought he
    10
    saw sperm heads from a rectal swab, though he acknowledged that
    chemical testing was negative for semen from this swab. 48.RR.123–24.
    But, he noted however, that sperm break down quicker in the rectal
    cavity than in the vaginal cavity, so the fragmented sperm further
    indicated recent seminal deposit. 48.RR.125.
    Thereafter, DPS personnel conducted DNA testing on the vaginal,
    rectal, and breast swabs, and the results indicated that the foreign DNA
    came from a single source. 49.RR.95–113. They also “mapped” Stites’s
    panties, which showed little movement after semen was deposited in her
    vaginal cavity.   44.RR.190–91; 55.RR.40.      This, too, demonstrated
    seminal deposit just before her murder. 55.RR.41.
    For approximately a year, law enforcement—state, county, and
    municipal—searched for Stites’s killer to no avail. They interviewed
    hundreds and obtained biological samples from twenty-eight males; none
    matched the foreign DNA in and on Stites. 46.RR.111–12; 49.RR.114–
    19. And none mentioned Appellant associating with Stites. 46.RR.112.
    Appellant became a suspect in Stites’s murder after he was arrested
    for kidnapping, beating, and attempting to rape and murder another
    11
    nineteen-year-old woman, Linda Schlueter. 46.RR.122.9 Schlueter was
    abducted by Appellant approximately six months after Stites’s murder,
    near both the route Stites typically took to work and the time she
    disappeared—3:00 a.m.        61.RR.10, 37–47.      Moreover, Appellant was
    regularly seen in this area by Bastrop police officers in the early morning
    hours, and his home was close to where both Stites’s and Schlueter’s
    vehicles were abandoned. 50.RR.70–73, 80, 95–96. Further, Appellant’s
    height—6’2’’—aligned with the angle of the driver’s seat. 49.RR.43.
    Given these similarities, law enforcement inquired with DPS if they
    had Appellant’s DNA profile; they did because Appellant had raped his
    mildly intellectually disabled girlfriend, Caroline Rivas (this was pre-
    CODIS). 46.RR.122–23.10 Appellant’s DNA profile was compared to the
    foreign DNA inside and on Stites’s body and the two were consistent.
    50.RR.104.    Appellant was then questioned and he denied knowing
    Stites. 48.RR.82–83. Additional biological samples were taken from
    Appellant pursuant to a search warrant. 48.RR.18, 86–92.
    9    The specific facts of Schluter’s abduction, assault, and attempted rape and
    murder was not revealed to the jury until the punishment phase of trial.
    10    Again, the underlying facts of Rivas’s physical- and sexual-abuse was not
    provided to the jury until the punishment phase of trial.
    12
    More DNA testing was performed by DPS and a private laboratory
    on the new samples from Appellant and those taken from Stites’s body.
    49.RR.118–19; 50.RR.120–36, 140; 49.RR.127; 51.RR.33–34. The results
    were conclusive—Appellant could not be excluded as the foreign DNA
    contributor but 99% of the world’s population could be, and one would
    only expect to see the foreign DNA profile in one person in anywhere from
    24 to 130 billion people. 49.RR.118, 122; 50.RR.144–45; 51.RR.80. But,
    just to be sure, samples were taken from Appellant’s father and three of
    his brothers, and they were ruled out as contributors too. 49.RR.123–25
    Appellant’s trial counsel attempted to counter this damning
    evidence with a two-pronged attack—they tried to blame someone else
    for the murder, and they argued that Appellant and Stites were engaged
    in a clandestine, but consensual sexual relationship.
    To prove the former, Appellant’s DNA expert testified that a hair
    found on Stites’s back did not match any of the samples gathered by law
    enforcement, and a couple of witnesses testified they saw a white truck
    with three men in it near the area where Stites’s body was recovered.
    51.RR.107–08, 124–25; 54.RR.50–52. The latter witnesses’ testimony
    was significantly impeached. 51.RR.115, 119, 128–29.
    13
    Trial counsel also suggested that Fennell was the murderer. Law
    enforcement interviewed Fennell several times and collected biological
    samples from him, but they never searched his apartment. 45.RR.110–
    12; 46.RR.62. Fennell was eventually cleared after law enforcement
    investigated, and ruled impossible, Fennell’s ability to travel to Bastrop,
    murder Stites, and return home for Carol’s phone call within the known
    timeframes, and without any sort of transportation. 46.RR.127.
    Further still, trial counsel cast suspicion on David Lawhon, a
    Bastrop resident who murdered another woman, Mary Ann Arldt, two
    weeks after Stites’s death. 46.RR.158. They called several witnesses that
    testified about a connection between Stites and Lawhon, including one
    who said Lawhon had confessed to killing Stites. 52.RR.29–31, 89. They
    were all greatly impeached—the confession witness actually told police
    someone other than Lawhon had confessed to Stites’s murder, Stites’s
    good friends testified in rebuttal that Stites never dated Lawhon, and
    Lawhon’s ex-wife testified that nothing unusual occurred around the
    time of Stites’s murder, which was different than when Lawhon
    murdered Ardlt. 52.RR.93; 54.RR.130, 138, 141–43.
    14
    As to the secret-relationship defense, one witness testified that she
    saw Stites and Appellant talking at the grocery store, and another said
    Stites came by Appellant’s house looking for him. 51.RR.136; 53.RR.92.
    These were not credible accounts, however, as Appellant’s family were
    frequent guests at the first witness’s bar, and the second witness initially
    said “Stephanie,” not “Stacey,” was looking for Appellant, and she did not
    identify Stites when shown her driver’s license photo. 51.RR.138–39;
    53.RR.92–93. The jury found Appellant guilty of two counts of capital
    murder. See also Reed 
    IV, 271 S.W.3d at 702
    –12 (providing an extensive
    recitation of the facts from Appellant’s trial).
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Appellant’s
    Chapter 64 motion. Initially, Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion suffered
    from a lack of specificity and his litigation tactics added to the motion’s
    ambiguity creating confusion that continues on appeal. Because of this
    confusion, Appellant did not clearly explain to the trial court how he met
    all of Chapter 64’s prerequisites to obtain testing. A trial court, however,
    does not err in denying relief when a movant fails to clearly articulate
    compliance with all the requirements for the relief sought.
    15
    Next, the record amply supports the trial court’s finding that
    Appellant did not meet his burden of production and persuasion that his
    Chapter 64 motion was not made to unreasonably delay the execution of
    his sentence or the administration of justice. The record is replete with
    Appellant’s dilatory conduct.       Indeed, Appellant, even today, is
    attempting to add evidence not before the trial court to seemingly justify
    his laggard conduct in seeking DNA testing.             Not only is this
    impermissible, it does not show error in the trial court’s decision.
    Moreover, Appellant failed to prove that the evidence he seeks to
    test is or contains biological material.      Appellant’s own witnesses
    conceded that they could not categorically prove that the items Appellant
    sought to test contained biological material; they merely hypothesized
    DNA presence by speculating as to the facts of the crime. Guesses,
    however, are not evidence.
    Further, with respect to the items in the possession of the Bastrop
    District Clerk, Appellant failed to prove a sufficient chain of custody. In
    arguing otherwise, Appellant ignores that the statutory chain-of-custody
    definition includes the phrases “tampered with” or “altered in any
    material respect.” Appellant’s argument and evidence about the ubiquity
    16
    of “touch” DNA, combined with the undisputed testimony that these
    items have been handled by numerous individuals without gloves, prove
    that such items has been “tampered with” or “altered in any material
    respect.”
    Finally, the trial court did not err in finding that Appellant would
    have been convicted despite having exculpatory results on the items he
    wishes to test. Appellant attempts to define “exculpatory” in such a way
    that DNA testing would always have to be ordered, a proposition recently
    rejected by this Court.    And Appellant’s primary basis of argument
    focuses on post-trial developments, which is another issue that the Court
    has rejected not long ago. Because the trial court’s ruling was correct and
    because Appellant fails to demonstrate reversible error, the trial court’s
    decision should be affirmed.
    ARGUMENT
    I.   The standards for DNA testing and appellate review.
    Chapter 64 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure permits a
    “convicted person” to move for “forensic DNA testing of evidence
    containing biological material.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a–1).
    The evidence must have been “secured in relation to the offense that is
    the basis of the challenged conviction and was in possession of the state
    17
    during the trial,” and was either not previously tested or, was tested but
    newer techniques could provide “more accurate and probative” results.
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(b). The convicting court may order
    testing, but only if (1) the evidence “still exits and is in a condition making
    DNA testing possible;” (2) the evidence “has been subjected to a chain of
    custody sufficient to establish it has not been substituted, tampered with,
    replaced, or altered in any material respect;” and (3) “identity was or is
    an issue in the case.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1). Further,
    the convicted person must show by a preponderance of the evidence that
    he or she “would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been
    obtained through DNA testing,” and that “the request for proposed DNA
    testing is not made to unreasonably delay the execution of sentence or
    administration of justice.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2).
    On appeal, a trial court’s decision regarding DNA testing is
    reviewed using a bifurcated standard. Rivera v. State, 
    89 S.W.3d 55
    , 59
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). Almost total deference is afforded “a trial court’s
    determination of issues of historical fact and application-of-law-to-fact
    issues that turn on credibility and demeanor.” 
    Id. All “other
    application
    of law-to-fact issues” are considered de novo. 
    Id. 18 II.
      Appellant’s motion lacked the required specificity
    necessary to prove compliance with Chapter 64’s
    requirements.
    Article 64.01 provides preliminary requirements that must be
    satisfied for each item a convicted person seeks to test. Tex. Code Crim.
    Proc. art. 64.01(a)–(b). An “item” is not the entirety of a physical object,
    however, but specific, identifiable portions of the object which are or
    contain “biological material.” See Routier v. State, 
    273 S.W.3d 241
    , 248
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). “Biological material” is, in turn, defined by
    statute. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a)(1)–(2). Thus, a convicted
    person is required to specify the locations that he or she seeks to test of
    an item that is not per se biological material.
    Then, the convicted person must specify whether each item, down
    to the specific location, has been previously tested. Tex. Code Crim. Proc.
    art. 64.01(b)(1)–(2). For those items that have not, there is no further
    burden under Article 64.01, but for those items that have, the convicted
    person must prove that “newer testing techniques” would likely provide
    “more accurate and probative” results than those obtained from the prior
    tests. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(b)(1)–(2).
    19
    Appellant, in his Chapter 64 motion, sought to test a minimum of
    thirty-three items (some singularly listed items were actually multiple
    items; for example, “[c]arbon copies of checks”).      2.CR(DNA).115–17
    (emphasis added). But, Despite this large testing request, Appellant
    attempted to satisfy Article 64.01 by stating, simply, that there were
    some “items that have never been subjected to DNA testing” while other
    items were “tested in 1998 [but] can also be subjected to . . . considerably
    more advanced and sensitive DNA techniques.” 2.CR(DNA).91–92. In
    this, Appellant failed to demonstrate which items had been tested and
    which had not, he did not specify the regions to be tested on items that
    were not per se biological material, and he did not specify the DNA
    testing techniques that would provide more accurate and probative
    results on those items already tested.
    Moreover, it was unclear exactly what Appellant sought to test.
    Appellant referred to an attachment accompanying his Chapter 64
    motion as the “complete list of evidence” he wanted tested.
    2.CR(DNA).115–17.      However, he mentioned items not found in this
    “complete list” in the body of his Chapter 64 motion; for example, he
    asked to test items related to the extraneous offenses used at punishment
    20
    in his Chapter 64 motion but these items were not in the “complete list.”
    Compare 2.CR(DNA).77, with 2.CR(DNA).115–17.
    Only months later did Appellant discuss the various types of DNA
    testing currently available in his expert’s, Deanna Lankford’s, affidavit.
    3.CR(DNA).245–47. But, even then, Appellant only explained that such
    DNA testing might be helpful. For example, Appellant discussed the
    possibility of using mitochondrial testing, though he did not discuss its
    suitability with respect to any particular item. 3.CR(DNA).247. Rather,
    he established that mitochondrial testing is a “newer . . . technique,” but
    he did not discuss whether it was likely to result in more accurate and
    probative results, he still did not specify which items had been tested and
    which had not, nor did he specify the locales to be tested on each item.
    And, with this affidavit came more ambiguity about what, exactly,
    Appellant wanted to test. The expert mentioned several items to possibly
    be tested. 3.CR(DNA).250–53.11 But some of these items were then-being
    DNA tested pursuant to an agreement of the parties.                       Compare
    11     Belt, blue pants, white t-shirt, condom, hairs, nametag, fingerprints, napkin,
    pen, checks, and biological samples from Stites’s body
    21
    2.CR(DNA).144–48, with 3.CR(DNA).250–53.12                    And several items
    mentioned in the Chapter 64 motion and attachment were not discussed
    by the expert.
    Then, at the hearing, Appellant introduced more confusion about
    what he wanted to test (though, it clarified his true intent—unreasonable
    delay).   Appellant’s first witness, John Paolucci, discussed testing a
    plethora of items. 2.RR(DNA).30–53. For the first time ever, Appellant
    specified regions to be tested on several items included in his Chapter 64
    motion. 2.RR(DNA).30–39, 41.13 Appellant also requested testing on
    items he had never previously mentioned either in his Chapter 64 motion
    on in his expert’s affidavit with specificity. 2.RR(DNA).34–37, 39, 41–42,
    44, 46, 50, 53–55.14 Still yet, Appellant asked for preliminary testing on
    items he never before listed—with one exception—to determine if they
    12    Vaginal, rectal, and breast swabs; four specific hairs; and a cutting from the
    panties.
    13    Blue pants (cuffs, waistband, button opening, and button); panties
    (waistband); bra (clasp); and a white t-shirt (collar).
    14     Socks (heel and cuff); left shoe (heel and laces); right shoe (heel and laces);
    HEB-branded shirt (collar, cuffs, armpits); pieces of a green cup; brown planner; beer
    cans (lip); hair from brown planner; victim’s hand bags; extracts from condom; and
    extracts from beer cans.
    22
    contained biological material. 2.RR(DNA).45–47, 49–50, 52.15 And then
    Appellant, maybe, abandoned (or not) testing on several other items,
    some previously listed and some not. 2.RR(DNA).40, 42, 44–45.16
    Appellant’s second witness, Deanna Lankford, like Paolucci,
    discussed potentially testing a number of items. 3.RR(DNA).106–24.
    She, too, discussed testing certain regions of items that Appellant had
    discussed only at the item-level in his Chapter 64 motion, though she
    specified more areas than Paolucci did. 3.RR(DNA).106–10.17 And she,
    too, mentioned items not contained in Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion or
    specific in her prior affidavit, though she did not mention preliminary
    tests on some of these items like Paolucci did and she, again, mentioned
    additional areas to be tested on certain items. 3.RR(DNA).110–11, 115–
    17.18 Lankford also testified about items for which she only suggested
    15    White flakes; two tape lifts from Stites; paper napkin (requested in Chapter 64
    motion); green blanket; driver’s seat tape lifts; and white paper sheet.
    16     Back brace (not previously requested); bridal receipt (previously requested);
    knee brace (not previously requested); and maybe automatic teller and Walmart
    receipts (“skipping over paper items,” which were previously requested).
    17   Blue pants (crotch, zipper, button, waistband, and cuffs); and panties (crotch
    and waistband).
    18     Socks; left shoe; right shoe; HEB-branded shirt; pieces of a green cup; brown
    planner; white flakes; two tape lifts from Stites; beer cans (lip and crush ridges);
    victim’s hand bags; and unspecified extracts.
    23
    preliminary testing to determine if biological material existed.
    3.RR.(DNA).119.19         Finally, there were many items that Paolucci
    discussed that Lankford did not, or at least with specificity.20 The State
    objected to the items not specified in Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion. E.g.,
    2.RR(DNA).31.
    On appeal, it is still not entirely clear what Appellant wants to test.
    Does Appellant no longer want to test specific areas of items that only
    Lankford mentioned but Paolucci did not?21 Does Appellant wish to
    forego testing on items mentioned by Paolucci or Lankford but not
    discussed on appeal?22 Does Appellant abandon those items listed in his
    motion but not discussed at the hearing or on appeal?23
    On top of that ambiguity, Appellant still has not specified which
    items have been tested and which have not and what type of testing he
    19    White paper sheet; and driver’s side tape lifts.
    20    Back brace; bridal receipt; knee brace; green blanket; hair from brown planner;
    extracts from condom; and extracts from beer cans.
    21    Blue pants (crotch and zipper); and panties (crotch).
    22    Back brace; bridal receipt; knee brace; white flakes; tape lifts from Stites;
    paper napkin; green blanket; driver’s seat tape lifts; white paper sheet; and biological
    samples from Stites’s body.
    23    Carbon copies of checks; gas emergency book; automated teller receipt;
    Walmart receipt; business card; plastic bag; blue rope; brown rope; piece of a shirt;
    and piece of a knife.
    24
    would perform on each previously tested item. As Lankford admitted at
    the hearing, for example, mitochondrial testing cannot prove identity.
    3.RR(DNA).162. Are mitochondrial results, therefore, more probative
    than the results of testing previously run on the beer cans in 2001?
    Because Appellant has never provided the specificity needed to make
    such determinations, the answers to such questions are not found in this
    record.24
    Appellant’s hodgepodge testing request, ever changing and still not
    clear, is reason to affirm the trial court’s denial of his Chapter 64 motion.
    In Dinkins v. State, like here, the convicted person requested testing of
    certain items in his Chapter 64 motion and then requested more items at
    the hearing on the motion. 
    84 S.W.3d 639
    , 640–41 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2002). This Court affirmed the denial of Dinkins’s Chapter 64 motion, in
    part, because the Court was “not entirely clear as to what evidence
    [Dinkins] wants tested.” 
    Id. at 642.
    This was because Dinkins “never
    24     To prevent the problem that Appellant created here—a moving target of items
    that he wished to test—the Court should adopt the same rule utilized in motions for
    new trial. Namely, a new-trial movant cannot amend his motion for new trial at a
    hearing on the same if the State objects. See Clarke v. State, 
    270 S.W.3d 573
    , 580–
    81 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). The State, in Appellant’s case, repeatedly objected to
    testing of items raised for the first time at the hearing and, so, the trial court’s
    decision should be affirmed as to those dilatorily raised items.
    25
    explained the discrepancy between his original motion and [his expert’s]
    report.” 
    Id. The “discrepancy”
    in Dinkins pales in comparison with the
    one present here and, as such, the Court should affirm the decision
    denying Appellant DNA testing.
    Additionally, like in Dinkins, Appellant only made “general
    statements about the type of DNA testing that was available at the time
    of . . . trial [and] he failed to specifically address the issue of whether at
    the time of . . . trial the type of DNA testing necessary to test [those items
    already tested] was capable of providing probative results.” 
    Id. at 642.
    Swabs from Stites’s vaginal and rectal cavities and her breasts, a stain
    from the crotch of her panties, stains from her pants, a stain from her
    back brace, several hairs, and swabs from the beer cans were all tested
    at the time of trial, 49.RR.92–93; 54.RR.44; Reed 
    IV, 271 S.W.3d at 713
    –
    14, and the beer cans were re-tested as part of Appellant’s second state
    habeas proceeding, Reed 
    IV, 271 S.W.3d at 738
    –39, but Appellant has not
    provided specific analysis with any of these previously tested items, just
    the “general statements” that were found to be insufficient in Dinkins.
    Thus, the Court should affirm trial court’s ruling on these items (which
    Appellant may or may not still want to test).
    26
    III. The trial court was correct in finding that Appellant did not
    meet his burden of proving that he would not have been
    convicted with exculpatory test results.
    Appellant attacks the trial court’s decision that he did not prove, by
    a preponderance of the evidence, that he would not have been convicted
    presuming exculpatory results on the items he sought to test. Appellant’s
    Br. 41–60. Appellant’s arguments fall into two broad categories.
    Appellant’s first and primary contention is that the trial court
    should have considered post-trial evidence in making its Article
    64.03(a)(2)(A) finding. Appellant’s Br. 44–52. Appellant has provided
    the Court with the should-have-been-considered post-trial evidence in
    two appendix volumes. App’x 5, 21–22. In a footnote, Appellant argues
    that this Court may consider the appended evidence “under the doctrine
    of judicial notice.” Appellant’s Br. 48 n.22.
    Second,   Appellant    asserts    that    the   trial   court   used   an
    impermissibly narrow construction of the term “exculpatory” in making
    its probabilistic determination of whether Appellant would have been
    found guilty armed with the results of new testing. Appellant’s Br. 53–
    60.   Instead, Appellant argues that the appropriate exculpatory
    presumption under Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) is that the DNA of a third party,
    27
    known offender would be found on the items the convicted person seeks
    to test. Appellant’s Br. 52–60. Appellant’s complaints are without merit
    and the trial court’s decision should be upheld.
    A.    Appellant’s lack of specificity worked to his detriment.
    As noted above, a convicted person must prove by a preponderance
    of the evidence that he or she would not have been convicted assuming
    exculpatory results on the items sought to be tested. Tex. Code Crim.
    Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2)(A). It is clear that the convicted person bears the
    evidentiary burden on this point. See, e.g., Wilson v. State, 
    185 S.W.3d 481
    , 484 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). Moreover, courts cannot “consider post-
    trial evidence when deciding” this issue. Holberg v. State, 
    425 S.W.3d 282
    , 285 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).
    Initially, Appellant’s lack of clarity hampers his ability to show that
    the trial court erred. He faults the trial court’s oral ruling for containing
    “no findings of fact [and] no relevant evidence,” Appellant’s Br. 41, but
    Appellant’s lack of specificity as to which items to test and how each item
    fits into the larger evidentiary picture looms over his case even today. As
    demonstrated above, see supra Argument II, the State is still not sure
    what Appellant wants to test. It is hard to fault the trial court’s ruling
    28
    that Appellant failed in his burden of proof when Appellant did not even
    clearly articulate which items the trial court was supposed to apply the
    presumed-exculpatory-result standard. Because he did not make clear
    precisely what items were to factor into the Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) test,
    Appellant cannot demonstrate error in the trial court’s ruling.
    B.    The trial court properly eschewed Appellant’s request
    to consider post-trial evidence and such evidence is not
    properly before this Court.
    As to Appellant’s failure-to-consider-post-trial-evidence complaint,
    Holberg demonstrates that Appellant is clearly wrong and that the trial
    court was clearly right to not consider such evidence. In rejecting the
    same type of tactic Appellant uses, the Court held:
    Thus, despite the influx of newly asserted post-trial factual
    developments that the appellant calls upon us to consider, our
    review is limited to discerning whether, and to what extent,
    exculpatory results from . . . DNA testing would alter the
    landscape if added to the mix of evidence that was available
    at the time of trial.
    
    Holberg, 425 S.W.3d at 285
    .         Holberg is absolutely dispositive of
    Appellant’s point of error and the trial court did not err by failing to
    consider Appellant’s post-trial evidence.
    In addition, much of the evidence Appellant now relies upon he
    failed to provide to the trial court despite the fact Appellant’s request for
    29
    a live hearing was granted, something which the trial court was not
    required to do. See Whitaker v. State, 
    160 S.W.3d 5
    , 8–9 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2004) (“Nothing in Chapter 64 requires the trial court to conduct a
    hearing, regardless of whether the State attaches affidavits to its
    response”). Thus, Appellant has forfeited his right for this evidence to be
    considered, independent of Holberg, because he did not introduce it at the
    evidentiary hearing on his Chapter 64 motion. Cf. Mays v. State, 
    285 S.W.3d 884
    , 889 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“In order to preserve error
    regarding a trial court’s decision to exclude evidence, the complaining
    party must . . . make[] an ‘offer of proof’ which sets forth the substance of
    the proffered evidence.”). Thus, the trial court did not err in its Article
    64.03(a)(2)(A) ruling with evidence that Appellant did not even attempt
    to introduce at the Chapter 64 hearing.
    Additionally, this Court should not consider the appended, post-
    trial evidence, separate from Holberg and Appellant’s forfeiture of the
    issue, because “[g]eneral considerations governing appellate review apply
    here.” Whitehead v. State, 
    130 S.W.3d 866
    , 872 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
    First, “[a]n appellate court may not consider factual assertions that are
    outside the record, and a party cannot circumvent this prohibition by
    30
    submitting an affidavit for the first time on appeal.”      
    Id. (footnotes omitted).
    Second, “an appellate court’s review of the record itself is
    generally limited to the evidence before the trial court at the time of the
    trial court’s ruling.” 
    Id. (footnote omitted).
    Both considerations apply
    here and both counsel against Appellant’s attempt to unmoor the trial
    court’s ruling from the record before it.
    Appellant’s pursuit to thwart these well-worn rules finds no home
    in Routier, despite Appellant’s argument to the contrary. Rather, Routier
    stands for the unremarkable proposition that trial courts, in engaging in
    probabilistic determinations about how either new or additional evidence
    would have affected a trial if such evidence had been presented at trial,
    must, necessarily, consider the facts of the trial. See 
    Routier, 273 S.W.3d at 244
    n.2 (“However, in its order denying appellant’s motion for post-
    conviction DNA testing, the convicting court did indicate it had
    considered ‘the evidence adduced at trial[.]’” (alteration in original)).
    Nothing in Routier remotely stands for the proposition that, in making
    an Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) determination, that post-trial evidence can be
    considered. Even if it did, Holberg’s more recent vintage and its express,
    directly-on-point holding means Holberg controls.       Thus, Appellant’s
    31
    attack on the trial court’s ruling for not having considered post-trial
    evidence fails.
    C.    The trial court applied the proper exculpatory-result
    presumption.
    As to Appellant’s incorrect-exculpatory-presumption argument,
    that, too, fails. In one of the Court’s most recent Chapter 64 opinions, the
    Court defined “‘exculpatory results’ to mean only results ‘excluding [the
    convicted person] as the donor of this material.’” State v. Swearingen,
    
    424 S.W.3d 32
    , 38 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (alteration in original)
    (emphasis added) (quoting Blacklock v. State, 
    235 S.W.3d 231
    , 232 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2007)). While Appellant suggests that cases like Blacklock
    and Esparza v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 913
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009), support his
    third-party-presumption argument, they actually undermine it.
    In Blacklock, the Chapter 64 movant had been convicted of
    aggravated robbery and aggravated sexual 
    assault. 235 S.W.3d at 232
    .
    He sought to test vaginal smears from the victim and semen left on the
    victim’s pants and panties during the attack. 
    Id. This Court
    reversed a
    court of appeals, noting that the record established that the “victim’s lone
    attacker is the donor of the material for which [the] appellant seeks DNA
    testing.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Thus, if DNA testing “exclud[ed] [the]
    32
    appellant as the donor of th[e] [semen],” it would have establish his
    innocence. 
    Id. This firmly
    stands for the proposition that trial courts are
    only to presume that the results of testing would “exclud[e]” the convicted
    person, not include someone else.
    In Esparza, the underlying crime was an aggravated sexual
    
    assault. 282 S.W.3d at 914
    –17. The convicted person sought to test a
    rape kit, including vaginal and oral swabs and a fabric cutting. 
    Id. at 918.
      In reversing the court of appeals, this Court held that it was
    improper for the court of appeals to assume “the presence of a third
    party’s DNA” in deciding whether the convicted person would not have
    been convicted presuming exculpatory results.       
    Id. at 921.
      Instead,
    because it was undisputed that the victim’s “attacker deposited semen or
    seminal fluid inside [the victim] during the assault,” 
    id., a convicted
    person in a “sexual assault case[]” can prove innocence if the DNA from
    a rape kit is presumed to not to be his. 
    Id. at 922.
    Esparza, which relied
    heavily on Blacklock, supports the proposition that the proper
    exculpatory result is simply that the convicted person’s DNA would not
    be found on the items he or she desired to test.       See also Ex parte
    Gutierrez, 
    337 S.W.3d 883
    , 899 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (“The burden
    33
    under Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) is met if the record shows that exculpatory
    DNA test results, excluding the defendant as the donor of the material,
    would establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant
    would not have been convicted.” (emphasis added)).
    Moreover, it is clear that the trial court was prohibited from
    assuming that any item would bear the DNA of a known offender. This
    was recently rejected in Swearingen, where the Court stated:
    A requirement to assume that the results of testing were
    not only from someone other than the convicted person but
    that the other person was a repeat offender (or as the appellee
    argued before this court, a repeat offender with a similar
    modus operandi), makes it hard to imagine a case in which we
    would not grant DNA testing. Such compelling DNA results
    would certainly overcome any mountain of inculpatory
    evidence. We believe that had the legislature meant to so
    drastically lower the barrier for Chapter 64 testing, they
    would have said so explicitly. The statute requires only that
    the results be run through CODIS. It does not set a standard
    for exculpatory 
    results. 424 S.W.3d at 39
    . As such, the trial court was correct in not applying the
    presumption of a CODIS-matched DNA result in determining whether
    Appellant would have been convicted when factoring in exculpatory test
    results.
    Applying the proper exculpatory presumption—that Appellant’s
    DNA would not be found on a particular item—it is clear that the trial
    34
    court did not err. However, this Court should find that Appellant has
    forfeited the issue on appeal, at least as to how an exculpatory result on
    any particular item would factor into the trial evidentiary mix. While
    attempting to demonstrate error in how the trial court came to the
    conclusion that Appellant did not prove that he would have likely been
    convicted presuming exculpatory results, he does not actually discuss
    why the trial court’s decision is erroneous with respect to any particular
    item he (maybe) seeks to test. Put another way, Appellant does not
    describe how the absence of his DNA on each item he (maybe) seeks to
    test would prove that he would likely not have been convicted considering
    only the evidence at trial.
    Appellant’s primary substantive argument (instead of process-
    based argument) in challenging the adverse Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) finding
    is this—had the trial court presumed “an alternative known
    suspect . . . on the evidence [Appellant] seeks to test (i.e., the belt used to
    strangle Ms. Stites, the victim’s name tag, her clothing, fingernail
    scrapings, and other evidence very likely handled by her killer),” it could
    only have concluded that Appellant would not have been found guilty.
    Appellant’s Br. 57–58. But this cursory briefing is hardly an item-by-
    35
    item analysis of how each item fits into the evidence at trial. As such,
    the State respectfully requests that the Court find this issue forfeited on
    appeal for inadequate briefing. See Lucio v. State, 
    351 S.W.3d 878
    , 896–
    97 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (finding that the failure to provide record
    citations in relation to the applicable legal authority was inadequate
    briefing). Nevertheless, the State alternatively addresses the evidence
    Appellant at least mentions in his brief to demonstrate the correctness of
    the trial court’s Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) finding.
    D.    Appellant failed to prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that he would not have been convicted armed
    with exculpatory test results.
    1.    Items found on Stites
    Concerning the pants, the jury heard that there were two saliva
    stains on them, which had DQ Alpha alleles 1.2 and 4. 49.RR.112. The
    jury knew that Stites had DQ Alpha alleles of 1.2 and 4, 49.RR.101, and
    that Appellant’s DQ Alpha alleles were 1.2 and 3, 49.RR.118.
    Consequently, the jury knew Appellant’s DNA was not found on Stites’s
    pants and they nevertheless convicted him. Thus, he does not prove by a
    preponderance that the jury would not have convicted him given that
    they already knew his DNA was not found on Stites’s pants.
    36
    As to the panties, the jury learned that DQ Alpha alleles of 1.2 and
    3 and D1S80 alleles of 22 and 24 were discovered in them. 49.RR.110.
    The jury knew Appellant’s DQ Alpha alleles were 1.2 and 3 and his
    D1S80 alleles were 22 and 24. 49.RR.118–19. Thus, Appellant matched
    the male fraction found in the panties at these alleles. If Appellant was
    not found in the panties, however, the jury would still have known that
    his DNA was on Stites’s breasts, 49.RR.111, in her vaginal cavity,
    49.RR.104, and in her rectal cavity, 49.RR.107. Thus, Appellant does not
    demonstrate that he would not have been convicted had his DNA been
    “only” in and on Stites’s body, instead of in her panties.
    Similarly, had the jury known that Appellant’s DNA was not on the
    socks, shoes, and bra, they still would have convicted Appellant.
    Contrary to Appellant’s witnesses’ opinions at the Chapter 64 hearing,
    the jury heard testimony that there was no evidence to indicate Stites
    had been dragged to her resting place. 44.RR.153. Accordingly, the jury’s
    result would not have been any different had they known Appellant’s
    DNA was not on these items of clothing, but “only” inside and on Stites’s
    body.
    37
    The lack of Appellant’s DNA on Stites’s nametag also would not
    prove he would not have been convicted. The jury knew the nametag was
    tested for fingerprints, 47.RR.30, but that Appellant’s fingerprints were
    not on it, 47.RR.42. As such, the jury knew that Appellant was not linked
    with the item, yet still they convicted him. Again, Appellant does not
    show that if his DNA was not on this item that he would have avoided
    conviction.
    Finally, regarding the hand bags, there was testimony that no
    evidence was collected from Stites’s fingernails because “[t]hey were so
    short that it was impossible to even try to clip anything, much less try to
    scrape anything from underneath them.” 44.RR.163. And there was no
    testimony that Stites fought her attacker. As such, the jury would not
    blink if Appellant’s DNA was not found underneath Stites’s nails, which,
    according to Appellant, could possibly be found in the bags around her
    hands.   See Ex parte 
    Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at 900
    –01 (finding no
    reasonable probability of not being convicted because there was “no
    evidence to suggest that the [victim] was able to hit or scratch her
    murderers with her fingernails as they attacked her”).
    38
    2.   Items found near Stites
    Jurors heard that Stites borrowed the white t-shirt from Fennell.
    45.RR.108. And jurors heard that both the white t-shirt and the belt
    fragment were subjected to fingerprint analysis but that Appellant’s
    fingerprints were on neither item. 47.RR.43–44, 49. Again, the jury’s
    decision would not have been affected by not finding Appellant’s DNA on
    either item.
    Regarding the beer cans and their extracts, the jury heard the cans
    were collected off the side of the road, 45.RR.25, and that it was not
    uncommon to find such items on country roads, 45.RR.45. Assuming that
    Appellant’s DNA is not on these items does not prove by a preponderance
    that he would have not been convicted.
    3.   Item discovered by a citizen
    At trial, all that was revealed about the condom was that “someone”
    turned it into the sheriff’s office. 52.RR.134–35. The condom, however,
    “appeared to be old and cracked and worn out . . . hav[ing] been out in
    the woods for some time,” 52.RR.142, and there was no information
    regarding when the condom was given to authorities, 52.RR.143. Trial
    counsel mentioned the condom in closing, saying it was found “[n]ot right
    there, down the way, but in the general area.” 56.RR.110. That a condom,
    39
    with no seeming connection to the crime, would not have Appellant’s
    DNA on it does not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he
    would not have been convicted.
    4.   Items found in or near the truck
    Fennell testified that his truck was “just in disarray” because he
    had “thrown [his] baseball stuff” in the truck the night before Stites’s
    murder, a practice which he called “normal.” 45.RR.98. Fennell was a
    little league baseball coach and had coached his team and transported a
    little leaguer in his truck the evening before Stites’s murder. 45.RR.78–
    79, 97. Thus, the jury would not be surprised to not find Appellant’s DNA
    but someone else’s on any of the items found in or near Fennell’s truck.
    Moreover, the jury heard that several items found inside or near
    the truck—a gas emergency book, various receipts, lighter, Big Red gum
    pack, paper napkin, pen—and the truck itself were examined for
    fingerprints, 47.RR.32–35, 39–42, but that Appellant’s fingerprints were
    not discovered on the items, 47.RR.43, and that he did not match
    fingerprints that were developed on the truck, 47.RR.28. The jury’s
    decision would not be affected had they had also known that Appellant’s
    DNA was not in the truck. And, the jury’s verdict would not be any
    40
    different if Appellant’s DNA was not found on any of these items but still
    found on and inside Stites’s physically- and sexually-abused body. Cf.
    Bell v. State, 
    90 S.W.3d 301
    , 306 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (“The presence
    of another person’s DNA at the crime scene will not, without more,
    constitute affirmative evidence of [the convicted person’s] innocence.”).
    5.     Items presently in the possession of the Bastrop
    District Clerk
    As explained more fully below, see infra Argument V, many of the
    items Appellant (maybe) wants to test have been handled by numerous
    individuals—attorneys, court personnel, and jurors—without gloves at
    Appellant’s capital murder trial and they were stored commingled and
    without protective packaging in the Bastrop District Clerk’s Office.25
    4.RR(DNA).178–183, 194, 199–200. Assuming for the sake of argument
    that Appellant is right that touching these items ungloved would leave
    the handler’s DNA behind, finding another person’s DNA on these items
    would not demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Appellant would not have been convicted. See Swearingen, 
    424 S.W.3d 25
       Assuming that Appellant only wants to test what is listed in his brief, this
    would include: blue pants; panties; socks; shoes; bra; nametag; white t-shirt; belt;
    earring; HEB-branded shirt; knife with metal cover; pieces of a green cup; and brown
    planner.
    41
    at 38–39 (“Primarily, this is because the victim’s having encountered
    another person would not factually exclude the [convicted person] from
    having killer her. There are many ways someone else’s DNA could have
    ended up in the victim’s fingernails. Such results would not require an
    inference that the [convicted person would [have] been acquitted.”).
    “In sum, granting DNA testing in this case would ‘merely muddy
    the waters.’” Ex parte 
    Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at 901
    . Because Appellant
    does no more than that, the Court should affirm the trial court’s Article
    64.03(a)(2)(A) decision.
    IV.   The trial court’s finding of unreasonable delay is amply
    supported by the record.
    Appellant argues that the trial court’s overall finding that he filed
    his Chapter 64 motion to unreasonably delay the execution of his
    sentence or the administration of justice is in error. Appellant’s Br. 60–
    86. He asserts that Chapter 64 does not impose a filing deadline or
    “require a movant to explain why he did not raise a claim earlier.”
    Appellant’s Br. 63. Further, Appellant claims that Chapter 64 motions
    filed within a month of an execution setting are, presumptively, filed for
    the purpose of unreasonable delay but those filed before such a setting
    are not. Appellant’s Br. 63–64. Because he falls into the latter camp, his
    42
    motion was not an unreasonable delay.        He also alleges that each
    subsidiary fact finding is wrong. Appellant’s Br. 65–86. Contrary to
    Appellant’s arguments, the trial court’s umbrella ruling and its
    underlying factual findings are all abundantly supported by the record.
    A convicted person bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance
    of the evidence, that he or she does not seek DNA testing to unreasonably
    delay the execution of sentence or the administration of justice. Tex.
    Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2)(B). This Court has not elucidated the
    factors to be considered in determining unreasonable delay; however,
    Judge Hervey’s concurrence in State v. Patrick provides some factors to
    consider:
    Last minute requests for DNA testing without regard to the
    promptness of the request, the proximity in time between the
    request and execution of sentence, or a determination as to
    when the convicted person could have previously requested
    DNA testing would pose a hindrance to the Legislative
    mandate of Chapter 64 opposing unreasonable delay.
    
    86 S.W.3d 592
    , 598 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (Hervey, J., concurring). The
    State believes that additional factors here—the failure to provide time
    estimates, prior litigation history, and present litigation tactics—should
    also be considered holistically and a finding of unreasonable delay upheld
    unless entirely unsupported by the record.
    43
    This Court has previously indicated that such a determination “is
    an application-of-law-to-fact question and is therefore given de novo
    review.” Skinner v. State, 
    122 S.W.3d 808
    , 813 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
    Nevertheless, the State believes the appropriate standard of review in
    this case is “almost total deference” because Appellant placed his
    credibility at issue—he averred, in his (belatedly) sworn Chapter 64
    motion, that: (1) the motion was brought in good faith; (2) it was brought
    as soon as it appeared the federal habeas proceedings “were coming to a
    close;” (3) and he could not have brought it any sooner because of
    technological- and legislative-changes. 2.CR(DNA).100. At the hearing,
    the State introduced evidence, which was admitted without objection,
    contesting those (belatedly) sworn averments.          Thus, the State
    challenged Appellant’s credibility and the more favorable almost-total-
    deference standard should apply.        See 
    Rivera, 89 S.W.3d at 59
    .
    Regardless of the standard of review, “the trial court’s finding regarding
    unreasonable delay is supported by the record” and should be affirmed.
    Thacker v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 926
    , 927 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
    44
    A.    The timing, breadth, and ambiguity of Appellant’s DNA
    testing request support the finding of unreasonable
    delay.
    Appellant has continuously and aggressively challenged his
    judgment of conviction since the day he was sentenced to death in 1998.
    
    See supra
    Statement of Facts I. Against this backdrop, the Legislature
    enacted Chapter 64 in 2001, Act of April 5, 2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 2, §
    2, 2001 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 2 (codified at Tex. Code Crim. Proc. arts.
    64.01–64.05), and the last amendment was in 2011, Act of June 17, 2011,
    82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 366, § 1–4, 2011 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 366
    (codified at Tex. Code Crim. Proc. arts. 64.01, 64.035, 64.04). Appellant
    never sought DNA testing after it became statutorily available, that is,
    until he lost his federal habeas appeal in the Fifth Circuit.
    2.CR(DNA).106–13.      Even then, it was only an informal request.
    2.CR(DNA).106–13. The State agreed to test some of the items Appellant
    requested. 2.CR(DNA).144–48.
    In the interim, the State moved for an execution date.
    1.CR(DNA).34–35.     On the day the trial court first set Appellant’s
    execution date, Appellant filed his Chapter 64 motion and asked for a
    significant number of items to be tested, including items beyond what
    45
    was in his informal request. 2.CR(DNA).77, 115–17. Months later he
    supplemented (or amended) that large request with more items.
    3.CR(DNA).250–53. A month after that—at the Chapter 64 hearing—he
    added (or amended) his request with even more items. 2.RR(DNA).30–
    53, 106–24. See also supra Argument II. Given Appellant’s Chapter 64
    litigation, it was not improper for the trial court to find unreasonable
    delay.
    1.   Time between        Appellant’s    request    and   his
    execution date
    It is appropriate to consider the time between “proximity in time
    between the request and execution of sentence.” 
    Patrick, 86 S.W.3d at 598
    . Inherent in such a consideration is the nature of the request—a
    request to test a single item using one DNA testing technique a month
    away from an execution date will obviously be seen as more reasonable
    than requesting a large and nebulous amount of items using an
    unspecified variety of DNA testing techniques in that same time frame.
    Here, at the hearing setting an execution date, the State sought a
    date six months out to accommodate the agreed-to DNA testing of three
    types of swabs, four hairs, and a fabric cutting. Appellant’s Chapter 64
    request dwarfed the agreed-to DNA testing, which was thought to need
    46
    about six months for completion. Despite the fact that the State provided
    a timeline for that testing, 1.RR(DNA).14, and despite the fact that
    Appellant previously proposed to enter into a DNA-testing scheduling
    order, 1.CR(DNA).48, Appellant now chastises the trial court for having
    considered his failure to provide an estimated timeline for DNA testing.
    Appellant’s Br. 65–66. While Appellant is correct that Chapter 64 does
    not require that a convicted person propose an estimated completion date
    for DNA testing, Appellant’s Br. 65, it also does not define unreasonable
    delay, see Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(2)(B), meaning that it is not
    improper for a trial court to take into account the timing and breadth of
    the requested testing. Here, it was absolutely proper for the trial court
    to believe that Appellant’s massive and ever-changing request, seemingly
    prompted by the loss in the Fifth Circuit and filed on the same day as the
    hearing on the State’s motion to set an execution date, was intended to
    unreasonably delay the execution of sentence or administration of justice.
    2.    Promptness of the request                and     previous
    opportunities to request testing
    It is also proper to consider the “promptness of the request . . . [and]
    when the convicted person could have previously requested DNA
    testing.” 
    Patrick, 86 S.W.3d at 598
    . Chapter 64 had been in existence
    47
    for more than thirteen years and its last amendment was effective almost
    three years before Appellant filed his Chapter 64 motion. Such a delay
    should be considered presumptively unreasonable. See 
    Thacker, 177 S.W.3d at 927
    (“Appellant waited over four years to file his motion, and
    that motion was filed less than a month before his scheduled execution.”
    (emphasis added)).
    Moreover, the evidence before the trial court showed that one of
    Appellant’s attorneys, on behalf of another death row inmate, filed a
    Chapter 64 motion substantially similar and, in some places verbatim, to
    Appellant’s    a     year-and-a-half      before    Appellant’s     filing.
    7.RR(DNA).RX14. Notably, this filing contained an expert’s affidavit and
    an affidavit from the convicted person whereas, in Appellant’s case, these
    items did not come for months.          Compare 7.RR(DNA).RX14, with
    3.CR(DNA).233–34, 317–18. And the same attorney, on behalf of the
    same death row inmate, filed a second Chapter 64 motion two months
    before Appellant’s. 9.RR(DNA).RX15. Thus, it was entirely appropriate
    to find that Appellant had the legal expertise necessary to file his
    Chapter 64 motion much sooner than he did.
    48
    Further, this Court held long ago that the pendency of federal
    habeas proceedings did not prevent a convicted person from seeking
    Chapter 64 relief on account of the “two-forums” rule. See 
    Thacker, 177 S.W.3d at 927
    . As such, it was entirely appropriate for the trial court to
    find that Appellant’s federal habeas proceeding was not an impediment
    to his seeking testing under Chapter 64.
    To this, Appellant argues that the trial court did not take into
    account the State’s “foot-dragging” and his prior request for DNA testing.
    Appellant’s Br. 67–70. However, the evidence of the State’s supposed
    dilatoriness was not before the trial court—Appellant relies on his
    attorney’s affidavit filed in opposition to the State’s motion to accelerate
    this appeal.   Appellant’s Br. 21–23.     Thus, it cannot be a basis for
    undermining the trial court’s decision and it should not be considered on
    appeal. See 
    Whitehead, 130 S.W.3d at 872
    .
    Further, Appellant’s argument also ignores that requesting DNA
    testing in an almost twenty-year-old crime would naturally have
    attendant delay, especially when needing to locate and document
    evidence from four law enforcement agencies, a medical examiner’s office,
    a crime lab, and a clerk’s office in a case that had been closed for almost
    49
    sixteen years.   Even assuming that Appellant’s argument can be
    considered on appeal, the “foot-dragging” did not prevent Appellant from
    filing a protective Chapter 64 motion which he could have withdrawn had
    it been rendered moot by an agreement. Cf. Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 
    544 U.S. 408
    , 416 (2005) (noting that a state inmate may file a “‘protective’
    petition” in federal court to ensure compliance with timeliness
    standards).   Accordingly, Appellant’s latter-day blame shifting is no
    excuse for his more-than-a-decade-delayed filing. And Appellant’s last-
    minute attempt to shift blame for his dilatoriness to the State should be
    recognized by this Court and taken into account. See Rosales v. State,
    
    748 S.W.2d 451
    , 456 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987) (noting that, in the
    indigence-on-appeal context, the hiring of an appellate lawyer can be
    considered in deciding whether the appellant is indigent).
    Appellant also appears to suggest that the State’s requests for
    extensions of time in another proceeding somehow undermine the trial
    court’s decision. Appellant’s Br. 16–17. Neither the argument nor the
    evidence was provided to the trial court and should not be considered on
    appeal. See 
    Whitehead, 130 S.W.3d at 872
    . But, even considering this
    forfeited issue, there was only one 10-day extension in the Fifth Circuit
    50
    and two 30-day extensions in the Supreme Court after Appellant
    informally requested DNA testing, assuming that is the appropriate
    request measure. An additional 70 days in two different proceedings
    pales in comparison with Appellant’s thirteen- or almost-three-year delay
    following the enactment of Chapter 64 or its latest amendment.
    As to his prior, non-Chapter 64 DNA testing motion, the trial court
    faulted him for failing to file despite availability under Chapter 64,
    3.CR(DNA).344, and, as Appellant admits, his non-Chapter 64 DNA
    testing motion was filed before Chapter 64’s enactment, Appellant’s Br.
    7. This demonstrates no error in the trial court’s findings. Moreover,
    Appellant dubbed his Chapter 64 motion as his “first request for post-
    conviction DNA testing.” 2.CR(DNA).100. He can hardly fault the trial
    court for not mentioning a motion he seemingly forgot about.
    Appellant also argues that prior versions of Chapter 64 were “legal
    impediments” to his filing for DNA testing until the 2011 amendments
    defining “biological material.”   Appellant’s Br. 70–76.    If this were
    51
    actually true, it is news to Henry Skinner26 and Larry Swearingen,27 who
    filed Chapter 64 motions both before and after certain amendments to
    Chapter 64. Moreover, this Court confirmed that the amendments to
    term “biological material” did not result in the sea change Appellant
    suggests. See 
    Swearingen, 424 S.W.3d at 37
    (“The recent amendments
    have not fixed this problem in most cases. No part of the amendments
    addresses a method for determining the existence of biological
    material.”). Assuming arguendo the truth of Appellant’s impediment
    argument, however, it still does not explain why Appellant waited almost
    three years after the Legislature defined “biological material” to file his
    Chapter 64 motion. Appellant clearly was dilatory in his request for DNA
    testing and the trial court’s finding of unreasonable delay should be
    upheld.
    26     Skinner v. State, No. AP-76675, 
    2012 WL 2343616
    (Tex. Crim. App. June 20,
    2012); Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Skinner v. State, 
    122 S.W.3d 808
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
    27     State v. Swearingen, 
    424 S.W.3d 32
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014); Swearingen v.
    State, 
    303 S.W.3d 728
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Swearingen v. State, 
    189 S.W.3d 779
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)
    52
    B.    Appellant’s overall litigation history left little doubt
    that his Chapter 64 motion was filed for purposes of
    unreasonable delay
    It is also not error for a trial court to consider the entirety of a
    convicted person’s litigation history to determine his present intent.
    Multiple courts, including this one, have found that Appellant has
    engaged in fragmented and dilatory litigation. See 10.RR(DNA).RX16,
    at 11 (“Moreover, [Appellant’s] motion is untimely. . . . [Appellant] fails
    to provide this court with any explanation as to why he waited until
    [more than two years after filing his final federal habeas petition] . . . to
    request additional testing of evidence.”); 
    id. at 12
    (“The same concerns
    this court has about [Appellant’s] untimely motion for additional testing
    of evidence applies to his extraordinary delay in proffering Bayardo’s
    affidavit.”); 10.RR(DNA).RX17, at 17 n.17 (“[W]e find that even had the
    district court not considered Dr. Bayardo’s affidavit, it would have acted
    within its discretion because the affidavit was untimely. [Appellant] has
    provided no persuasive reason for waiting to well over a decade to revisit
    Dr. Bayardo’s testimony.”); Reed V, 
    2009 WL 97260
    , at *1 (describing
    Appellant’s as “[t]aking a piecemeal approach”).
    53
    Moreover, Appellant, multiple times and as early as almost eight
    months before the trial court entered its findings, stated he was going to
    file additional postconviction litigation, but never did—at least not before
    he filed his notice of appeal—despite providing the trial court with a
    proposed filing deadline.28 1.CR(DNA).47; 1.RR(DNA).10 (“We will be
    filing within 30 days.”).
    Further, Appellant waited months to provide the trial court with an
    expert’s affidavit or his own, despite a statutory requirement to submit
    the latter. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a–1). This delay occurred
    despite evidence that Appellant’s counsel knew of the personal-affidavit
    requirement a year-and-a-half earlier. Compare 7.RR(DNA).RX14, with
    3.CR(DNA).317–18. In addition, Appellant’s winding and nebulous DNA
    testing request, described in detail above, should be considered here, too.
    
    See supra
    Section II.         The record clearly supports that Appellant’s
    Chapter 64 motion is part and parcel with Appellant’s prior dilatory
    litigation.
    28      As Appellant notes, he filed his seventh state habeas application on February
    13, 2015. Appellant’s Br. 80 n.32. This is about six months after Appellant promised
    to file it. This would be another appropriate situation for the Court to take notice of
    in deciding the correctness of the trial court’s decision. See 
    Rosales, 748 S.W.2d at 456
    .
    54
    Appellant argues that the trial court should not have taken his
    litigation history into account in determining unreasonable delay
    because, essentially, he thinks it is irrelevant. Appellant’s Br. 76–86.
    But, an individual’s prior actions can be used for a variety of purposes,
    including proving intent, plan or habit. See, e.g., Tex. R. Evid. 404(b),
    406. Thus, because Appellant shouldered the burden of proof to establish
    no unreasonable delay of his execution or administration of justice, his
    litigation history became relevant as it would in any case of establishing
    diligence. The trial court’s decision finding unreasonable delay was well-
    supported by the record and should be upheld on appeal.
    V.   Appellant failed to prove chain of custody for items housed
    by the Bastrop District Clerk.
    A convicted person must prove that the items he or she seeks to test
    have “been subjected to a chain of custody sufficient to establish that [the
    items have] not been substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered in
    any material respect.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii). In
    short, a convicted person “is not entitled to DNA testing unless he first
    shows that unaltered evidence available for testing.” Prible v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 466
    , 467 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (emphasis added). Appellant
    55
    failed in his proof, at least with respect to items housed by the Bastrop
    District Clerk.
    A postconviction investigator testified at Appellant’s Chapter 64
    hearing that all of the items in possession of the Bastrop District Clerk
    are stored comingled and without protective covering.29 4.RR(DNA)178–
    83.   As a certified peace officer with a background in collection of
    evidence, 4.RR(DNA).183–84, the postconviction investigator testified
    that he believed that the storage of these items allowed for
    contamination, were materially altered, and were tampered with,
    4.RR(DNA).185–86.
    A deputy clerk testified that several other exhibits—seemingly the
    paper goods Appellant (maybe) no longer wants to test—were stored in
    the same manner as the other exhibits—together and without
    prophylactic measure. 4.RR(DNA).193–94.
    Finally, the lead trial prosecutor in Appellant’s case testified that,
    once the items introduced at trial were handled without gloves by
    29    The items in possession of the Bastrop District Clerk are found in Appellant’s
    Exhibit 2. 5.RR(DNA).DX2. Appellant (maybe) requests testing of the following
    items in that official’s possession: blue pants; panties; socks; shoes; bra; nametag;
    white t-shirt; belt; earring; HEB-branded shirt; knife with metal cover; pieces of a
    green cup; and brown planner.
    56
    attorneys, court personnel, and jurors, in accord with the standards of
    that time. 4.RR(DNA).198–201.
    Paolucci, on cross-examination, conceded that there is “a good
    chance [that the evidence in possession of the Bastrop District Clerk is]
    contaminated evidence.” 2.RR(DNA).72. And Lankford testified that the
    comingled storage was “not ideal,” with the possibility that each item has
    the DNA of more than a dozen people on it. 3.RR(DNA).149–52. She also
    conceded that, hypothetically, if someone opened the sealed packaging of
    evidence in a DNA laboratory and then touched the item ungloved, that
    would prove “you’ve tampered with our evidence.” 3.RR(DNA).155.
    The evidence before the trial court, and Appellant’s witnesses’
    concessions, readily establish that the items in the possession of the
    Bastrop District Clerk’s Office have been “tampered with” or “altered in
    any material respect.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii); see
    Pate v. State, No. 10-09-00360-CR, 
    2011 WL 652920
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—
    Waco Feb. 23, 2011, pet. ref’d) (“The items in question were trial exhibits,
    and therefore, handled by numerous persons during the trial.”); Riggins
    v. State, No. 11-03-00307-CR, 
    2004 WL 743742
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—
    Eastland Apr. 8, 2004, no. pet.) (agreeing that evidence stored without
    57
    temperature controls by a district clerk was insufficient to prove an
    adequate chain of custody).
    In arguing otherwise, Appellant ignores “tampered with” or
    “altered in any material respect.”      Appellant’s Br. 86–89.   But his
    witnesses conceded this point. While it can be said with certainty where
    these items are housed, that is not all that is required as the statutory
    definition reflects. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii). And,
    while these items might still be “in a condition making DNA testing
    possible,” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(i), which was the
    primary thrust of Appellant’s witnesses’ testimony, that is a different
    requirement than chain of custody, Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art.
    64.03(a)(1)(A)(ii). Appellant did not prove that requirement here and the
    trial court’s decision should be affirmed on such basis with respect to
    those items in the possession of the Bastrop District Clerk.
    VI.   Appellant did not prove biological material on the non-per
    se items he sought to test.
    Under Chapter 64, DNA testing is only permitted for evidence
    “containing biological material.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.01(a–1).
    The meaning of this statute is clear—this Court has “explicitly held that
    [a convicted person] must prove biological material exists and not that it
    58
    is merely probable.” 
    Swearingen, 424 S.W.3d at 38
    . Appellant failed in
    this endeavor.
    Appellant tried to prove biological material existed on a variety of
    items—because of Appellant’s lack of clarity, however, the State is still
    unsure exactly what he seeks to test—but ultimately failed to do so.30
    Paolucci conceded that he had not physically examined the evidence and
    had no personal knowledge as to how Stites was murdered.
    2.RR(DNA).64–65. And he conceded that there was no way to know if
    there was biological material on any of these items unless DNA testing
    was performed on them. 2.RR.(DNA).67. Further, Paolucci admitted
    that “you can’t say for sure where—where these items were touched.”
    2.RR(DNA).75.
    Lankford, too, conceded that “the only way to know for sure [if there
    is biological material] is to test the[ item] and obtain a DNA profile.”
    2.RR(DNA).143. Indeed, she stated that “I couldn’t testify to there being
    a biological stain, for instance, on an item of clothing without testing it.”
    30     Assuming that Appellant currently only seeks to test those items addressed on
    appeal, the non-per se biological material items are: blue pants (in the areas he seeks
    to test); panties (in the areas he seeks to test); socks; shoes; bra; nametag; hand bags;
    white t-shirt; belt; beer cans; condom; pen; earring; HEB-branded shirt; knife with
    metal cover; pieces of green cup; brown planner; lighter; box cutter; and Big Red gum
    pack.
    59
    2.RR(DNA).148. And, like Paolucci, Lankford could not say where any
    particular item had been handled such that skins cells might have been
    deposited. 2.RR(DNA)148–49, 169.
    With respect to the non-per se physical items in this case, Appellant
    did not prove there was biological material in any particular location.
    Even if the Court assumes that “touch” DNA will be deposited from every
    contact with human skin, all of Appellant’s witnesses conceded that they
    could not prove where any particular item had been so manipulated. As
    such, this case is no different than Swearingen, where a convicted
    person’s expert said it was likely that certain items had skin cells on
    them. See 
    Swearingen, 424 S.W.3d at 37
    –38. But that is not enough.
    Further, there was trial testimony that on many of the items
    Appellant requests to be tested there were “no stains of evidentiary value
    on them.” 49.RR.89–93.31 And nothing was collected from underneath
    Stites’s fingernails because they were too short, so Appellant cannot
    prove biological material on the hand bags either. 44.RR.163. The trial
    31     This includes the: white T-shirt; white flakes; bra; paper napkin; white paper
    sheet; knee brace; and HEB-branded shirt. 49.RR.89–90.
    60
    court’s decision should be affirmed, at least with respect to the non-per
    se biological material items, on this basis too.
    VII. The State re-urges its motion to accelerate this appeal.
    On January 27, 2015, the State moved this Court to accelerate
    Appellant’s appeal. State’s Motion for Accelerated Appeal, Reed v. State,
    No. AP-77,054 (Tex. Crim. App. Jan. 27, 2015). As apparent from the
    arguments above, Appellant has engaged in piecemeal and dilatory
    litigation tactics and it is clear that Appellant’s Chapter 64 motion and
    the attendant appeal have been filed to unreasonably delay the execution
    of his sentence and the administration of justice. As such, the State
    respectfully re-urges the motion to accelerate for purposes of this Court’s
    decisional process. Appellant should not be allowed to delay his presently
    scheduled execution date.
    61
    PRAYER FOR RELIEF
    The State respectfully requests that the Court affirm the trial
    court’s decision denying Appellant’s request for DNA testing pursuant to
    Chapter 64.
    Respectfully submitted,
    BRYAN GOERTZ
    Criminal District Attorney
    Bastrop County, Texas
    /s/ Matthew Ottoway
    MATTHEW OTTOWAY
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney/
    Assistant Attorney General
    Texas Bar No. 24047707
    Post Office Box 12548, Capitol Station
    Austin, Texas 78711
    Tel.: (512) 936-1400
    Fax: (512) 320-8132
    Email: matthew.ottoway@texasattorney
    general.gov
    Attorneys for the State
    62
    WORD-LIMIT CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    This brief complies with Rule 9.4(i)(2)(A) of the Texas Rules of
    Appellate Procedure. It contains 12,125 words, Microsoft Word 2013,
    Century Schoolbook, 14 points.
    /s/ Matthew Ottoway
    MATTHEW OTTOWAY
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney/
    Assistant Attorney General
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I do hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing
    pleading was served by placing same in the United States mail, postage
    prepaid, on this the 23rd day of February, 2015, addressed and
    electronically sent to:
    Bryce Benjet                      Mark S. Chehi
    40 Worth Street, Suite 701        Robert A. Weber
    New York, New York, 10013         Jason M. Liberi
    bbenjet@innocenceproject.org      Nicole A. DiSalvo
    Andrew G. Mirsis
    Andrew F. MacRae                  SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER &
    LEVATINO PACE LLP                       FLOM LLP
    1101 S. Capital of Texas Hwy.     One Rodney Square, P.O. Box 636
    Building K, Suite 125             Wilmington, Delaware 19899
    Austin, Texas 78746               mchehi@skadden.com
    amacrae@levatinopace.com          robert.weber@skadden.com
    /s/ Matthew Ottoway
    MATTHEW OTTOWAY
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney/
    Assistant Attorney General
    63