Case Title: Varriale v. State

Citation: 

Docket Number: 85/14

State: maryland

Court: Maryland Supreme Court

Date: 2015-08-11T00:00:00Z

Document:
George Varriale v. State, No. 85, September Term 2014, Opinion by Greene, J.
CRIMINAL LAW – SEARCH AND SEIZURE – CONSENT TO SEARCH –
SUBSEQUENT USE OF DNA
The use of a buccal swab inside a person’s cheek to obtain DNA samples for testing is a
search.  Generally, a DNA sample may be obtained from an individual for testing by consent,
pursuant to a warrant, or other court order.  If a person’s DNA profile created from a DNA
sample is in the lawful possession of the police for examination by consent and does not
exceed the scope of the consent given to conduct the search, there is no Fourth Amendment
violation.  Moreover, the subsequent examination and use of the DNA in an unrelated
investigation is not a search.  Here, the defendant did not expressly limit the testing and/or
use of his DNA.  Any legitimate expectation of privacy that Varriale had in the identifying
information contained in his DNA obtained from his cheek cells and penile area evaporated
when his DNA was lawfully seized; it did not reappear when law enforcement officers
compared his DNA sample to other samples and obtained a match.
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County 
Case No. 02-K-13-000548
Argued: May 7, 2015
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 85
September Term, 2014
GEORGE VARRIALE
v.
STATE OF MARYLAND
 
Barbera, C.J.,
*Harrell,
Battaglia,
Greene,
Adkins,
McDonald,
Watts,
JJ.
Opinion by Greene, J.
Watts, J., joins in judgment only.
Harrell and Adkins, JJ., dissent.
Filed: August 11, 2015
*Harrell, J., now retired, participated in the hearing
and conference of this case while an active member
of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to the
Constitution, Article IV, Section 3A, he also
participated in the decision and adoption of this
opinion.
In this case, we address whether the subsequent use of a suspect’s DNA profile,1
created from a voluntarily provided DNA sample as part of a criminal investigation,
implicates Fourth Amendment principles, where a comparison search of the DNA database
reveals a match to forensic evidence obtained from the scene of an earlier, unrelated crime. 
In 2012, Petitioner George Varriale (“Petitioner” or “Varriale”) voluntarily consented to a
search of his person, in the form of buccal and penile swabs, for the purpose of furnishing
a DNA sample to the Anne Arundel County Police Department during the latter’s
investigation of a rape allegation.  Although the DNA profile created from the extraction of
Varriale’s DNA supported the conclusion that he did not commit the alleged rape, it
subsequently connected him to an earlier, unrelated burglary when Varriale’s DNA profile
was uploaded to the local DNA database and an automatic search revealed a match to a DNA
profile created from the burglary crime scene evidence collected in 2008.  Following his
indictment on the burglary and related charges, Varriale sought to suppress the DNA
evidence as an unlawful search under the Fourth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.  After the suppression hearing judge denied the motion, Varriale entered into
a conditional guilty plea to second degree burglary.  He noted a timely appeal of his
conviction for burglary.  In this case, we shall hold that, where Varriale’s consent to search
 This Court explained recently that a “DNA profile” is defined as “[t]he genetic
1
constitution of an individual at defined locations (also known as loci) in the DNA . . . [and]
[o]nce a DNA profile is prepared, it can be compared with profiles produced by other
samples, a process we have previously referred to as ‘DNA profiling.’” Allen & Diggs v.
State, 440 Md. 643, 660, 103 A.3d 700, 710 (2014) (citing Young v. State, 388 Md. 99, 110,
879 A.2d 44, 50 (2005)).
was not expressly limited by him, by the State, or by law, the Fourth Amendment does not
preclude the State from storing and using his voluntarily provided DNA sample and resultant
DNA profile for additional, unrelated criminal investigations.2
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the morning of July 10, 2012, Detective David Wood of the Anne Arundel County
Police Department responded to a call about an alleged rape in the wooded area behind a
liquor store in Glen Burnie, Maryland.  Upon his arrival at the scene, he was informed that
the patrol officers who originally responded to the call had located a possible suspect named
 The dissenting opinion assails the analysis and conclusions of the majority opinion
2
on several fronts.  In doing so, the dissenting opinion refuses to accept three basic
propositions of law: (1) that Varriale’s consent to the search of his body and the analysis of
his DNA stems from his voluntary consent, which provided the same authority to law
enforcement as if his DNA had been collected pursuant to a search warrant; (2) that by
consenting to a search of his person and DNA, as he did, Varriale waived any reasonable
expectation of privacy in his DNA for future comparison in other cases; and (3) that only one
search occurred in this case, a conclusion which is based squarely within the law as explained
recently by both this Court and the United States Supreme Court.  As we explain in this
opinion, the United States Supreme Court explained the law concerning DNA identification
in Maryland v. King, __ U.S. __, __, 133 S. Ct. 1958, 1972, 186 L. Ed. 2d 1, __ (2013)
(noting that “the use of DNA for identification is no different than matching an arrestee’s
face to a warrant poster of a previously unidentified suspect; . . . or matching the arrestee’s
fingerprints to those recovered from a crime scene”), and this Court subsequently interpreted
that law in Raynor v. State, 440 Md. 71, 82, 99 A.3d 753, 759 (2014), cert. denied, 135 S.
Ct. 1509, 191 L. Ed. 2d 433 (2015) (holding that the DNA testing of the defendant’s genetic
material collected from the armrest of a chair at a police station and comparison of the 13
identifying loci in order to determine a match with DNA the police collected from the scene
of the rape was not a “search” for Fourth Amendment purposes).  Applying the principles
announced in those cases, we conclude here that Varriale’s consent opened the door to all
that took place, and we do not subscribe to the dissenting opinion’s view that there should
exist a separate set of rules governing the use of DNA in “cold cases.”
2
“George,” a homeless man living in a tent in the wooded area behind the liquor store. 
Detective Wood approached “George,” who then identified himself as George Varriale. 
Detective Wood identified himself, explained that he was conducting an investigation, and
asked Varriale if he would consent to a search of his person.  Detective Wood read the Anne
Arundel County Police Department’s standard Consent to Search Person Form (“consent
form”) to Varriale and placed a completed consent form in front of him for his signature. 
Varriale agreed to submit to a search of his person in the form of saliva and penile swabs and
signed the form.  The consent form stated:
Case #: 12-725920
Date:     7-10-12
I, George Varriale, do hereby consent to a search of my person for the purpose
of furnishing evidence relating to one or more of the following:
Hair Blood 
Saliva 
Fibers 
Penile Swabs
Pubic Hair Combings  Marks or Injuries  Fingerprints  Photographs
I know that I do not have to consent to a search of my person.
I realize that if I do consent to a body search, that any evidence found to be
involved in this investigation, being conducted by the Anne Arundel County
Police Department can be used in any future criminal prosecution.
This written consent to search my body is being given by me, George Varriale,
to Det. Wood # 1371 and any member of the Anne Arundel County Police
Dept. and/or medical personnel, voluntarily, without threat or promise of any
kind. I am not under the influence of any intoxicating beverage or drug, which
would affect my judgment in consenting.
The words “saliva” and “penile swabs” were circled to denote the areas to be searched for
3
the collection of evidence.   Shortly thereafter, an evidence technician collected a sample of
3
Varriale’s saliva and a swab of his penis for DNA testing.  Detective Wood did not arrest
Varriale, question him further, or contact him again after July 10, 2012.
Detective Wood submitted the swabs collected from Varriale as well as evidence
samples obtained from the female complainant to the County crime laboratory for serological
and DNA analysis.  The crime laboratory issued a report dated December 12, 2012, stating
that a partial DNA profile was obtained from fingernail swabs collected from the alleged
victim and that Varriale was excluded as a source of that DNA.
Following the analysis and comparison of the known DNA samples, Varriale’s DNA
profile was uploaded into the suspect index of the County and State DNA databanks.  An
automatic search of the County databank compared the DNA profiles of known persons, such
as Varriale, to unidentified DNA profiles developed from crime scene evidence.  On
December 14, 2012, the crime laboratory issued a report to Detective Wood stating that the
automatic search resulted in a match between Varriale’s DNA profile and a DNA profile
associated with an unsolved commercial burglary that occurred in 2008.
 Based on that DNA evidence, on March 29, 2013, Varriale was charged in the Circuit
Court for Anne Arundel County with two counts of second degree burglary, theft over
$1,000, and malicious destruction of property.  Varriale filed a motion to suppress the State’s
 It is undisputed that Varriale consented to a search of his person for the purpose of
3
obtaining DNA samples.
4
DNA match evidence, on the grounds that the subsequent use of his DNA to conduct a
comparison search of the DNA databank exceeded the scope of his consent and, therefore,
constituted an unreasonable search in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.  The Circuit
Court held a hearing on Varriale’s motion on August 2, 2013. 
At the hearing, Ashley Hayes, a forensic DNA analyst and CODIS Administrator at
the County crime laboratory, described the operation of the DNA database system and her
analysis of Varriale’s DNA sample.  She explained that the County crime laboratory
participates in CODIS, the FBI’s Combined DNA Index System, which consists of three
tiers: the National DNA Index System (NDIS), the State DNA Index System (SDIS), and the
Local DNA Index System (LDIS).   Each tier represents a separate database within the
4
combined system, CODIS.   Ms. Hayes testified that the Anne Arundel County crime
5
  Pursuant to the Maryland DNA Collection Act, Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.,
4
2014 Supp.), § 2-501 et seq. of the Public Safety Article (“PS”), Maryland cooperates with
the FBI’s CODIS program.  “CODIS” is defined by PS § 2-501(c) as “the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s ‘Combined DNA Index System’ that allows the storage and exchange of
DNA records submitted by federal, state, and local forensic DNA laboratories[,]” and
“includes the national DNA index administered and operated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.”  See also Federal Bureau of Investigation, Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQs) 
on 
the 
CODIS 
Program 
and 
the 
National 
DNA 
Index 
System,
http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/lab/biometric-analysis/codis/codis-and-ndis-fact-sheet 
(last
visited July 30, 2015) (“CODIS . . . is the generic term used to describe the FBI’s program
of support for criminal justice DNA databases as well as the software used to run these
databases.  The National DNA Index System or NDIS is considered one part of CODIS, the
national level, containing the DNA profiles contributed by federal, state, and local
participating forensic laboratories.”).
 In Maryland v. King, the United States Supreme Court described the nature and
5
function of CODIS:
(continued...)
5
laboratory maintains a local DNA database, or LDIS, containing DNA samples from cases
within the County, over which the County maintains ownership, to include any forensic case
work samples and any suspect known samples tested within the County laboratory.  She
further explained that a “forensic sample” is a DNA sample associated with a crime scene,
and a “suspect sample” is a DNA sample taken directly from a known individual who is a
suspect in the case.  Once samples are uploaded, Ms. Hayes explained, the database program
automatically runs a weekly search and generates a report for any matches found within the
LDIS, which the laboratory will review prior to determining eligibility for and uploading any
DNA profiles to the SDIS or NDIS.  Although the NDIS created a “suspect index,” Ms.
(...continued)
Authorized by Congress and supervised by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) connects DNA
laboratories at the local, state, and national level. Since its authorization in
1994, the CODIS system has grown to include all 50 States and a number of
federal agencies. CODIS collects DNA profiles provided by local laboratories
taken from arrestees, convicted offenders, and forensic evidence found at
crime scenes. To participate in CODIS, a local laboratory must sign a
memorandum of understanding agreeing to adhere to quality standards and
submit to audits to evaluate compliance with the federal standards for
scientifically rigorous DNA testing. . . .  In short, CODIS sets uniform national
standards for DNA matching and then facilitates connections between local
law enforcement agencies who can share more specific information about
matched . . . profiles.
__ U.S. __, 133 S. Ct. 1958, 1968, 186 L. Ed. 2d 1, 18-19 (2013) (citations omitted).  Federal
and Maryland state law, respectively, specify and limit what types of DNA evidence can be
uploaded to the NDIS and SDIS.  See 42 U.S.C. § 14132 (governing entry of DNA evidence
into the national databank, or NDIS); PS §§ 2-504 and 2-506 (governing collection and
maintenance of DNA samples in the Maryland State databank, or SDIS).  These statutes,
however, do not encompass or regulate local databases, or LDIS.
6
Hayes testified that the County lab does not upload suspect samples, such as Varriale’s
sample, to either the SDIS or NDIS.
Next, Ms. Hayes testified regarding the analysis and treatment of Varriale’s DNA
sample.  She explained that Varriale’s DNA samples were analyzed to develop a DNA
profile and then compared to the DNA profile developed from DNA evidence taken from the
alleged rape victim.  Ms. Hayes testified, and the lab report states, that there was no match
between Varriale’s DNA profile and the DNA profile obtained from the sexual assault
evidence kit.  Following the direct comparison analysis, and without informing Detective
Wood or giving notice to Varriale, Ms. Hayes designated Varriale’s DNA profile as a suspect
sample and uploaded it to the LDIS and SDIS.
Following the suppression hearing, the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County denied
Varriale’s motion to suppress the DNA evidence.  Thereafter, on August 13, 2013, Varriale
entered a conditional guilty plea to the second degree burglary charge, reserving his right to
appeal the hearing judge’s ruling on his motion to suppress.  The State entered a nolle
prosequi of the remaining charges.  The Circuit Court sentenced Varriale to four years,
suspending all but time served, and placed him on two years’ probation.  The same day,
Varriale filed an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.
In a reported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed, holding that the
subsequent examination and use of Varriale’s DNA in an unrelated investigation was not a
search for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment.  Varriale v. State, 218 Md. App. 47, 54,
7
96 A.3d 793, 797 (2014).  Looking to Varriale’s consent form to determine the scope of his
consent, the intermediate appellate court noted that the form was “not a model of clarity” but
in “constru[ing] this ambiguity against the State[,] . . . the consent form does not contain
Varriale’s consent to the use of his DNA in criminal prosecutions that are unrelated to the
alleged rape.”  Id.  Nevertheless, because the subsequent retention and examination of the
evidence was not a Fourth Amendment search, the Court of Special Appeals concluded:
Even if Varriale did not unambiguously consent to the use of his DNA in
criminal prosecutions that are unrelated to the alleged rape, he unquestionably
consented to the taking of a DNA sample . . . . [and] once the State had validly
obtained the sample, . . . it had no obligation to obtain a warrant before using
the sample in a subsequent investigation.  
218 Md. App. at 55, 96 A.3d at 797-98.6
We granted both Varriale’s petition for certiorari and the State’s cross-petition,
Varriale v. State, 441 Md. 61, 105 A.3d 489 (2014), to answer the following questions:
 1. Whether the Fourth Amendment applies to law enforcement’s retention and
use, for general investigatory purposes, of Petitioner’s DNA profile collected
for a limited purpose? 
2. If applicable, whether the Fourth Amendment permits the police to use
Petitioner’s DNA profile for a purpose that exceeded the limited terms of
consent police relied on to collect Petitioner’s DNA samples? 
3. Did Petitioner consent to the collection and subsequent use of his DNA
profile?
 The Court of Special Appeals also addressed the applicability of the Maryland DNA
6
Collection Act under these circumstances, and held that the Act’s “statutory protections do
not extend to persons in Varriale’s position.”  Varriale, 218 Md. App. at 59, 96 A.3d at 800. 
This issue has not been challenged before this Court and therefore we do not address it. 
8
For the reasons explained below, we hold that the Fourth Amendment did not prohibit the
police from using Varriale’s lawfully obtained DNA sample, where he consented to the
search without placing an express limitation on his consent, for comparison to other DNA
profiles that were unrelated to the rape investigation.  Accordingly, we shall affirm the
judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
DISCUSSION
Our standard of review of a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress is well
established.  As we recently explained:
In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, an appellate court
reviews for clear error the trial court’s findings of fact, and reviews without
deference the trial court’s application of the law to its findings of fact.  The
appellate court views the trial court’s findings of fact, the evidence, and the
inferences that may be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the party
who prevails on the issue that the defendant raises in the motion to suppress. 
Hailes v. State, 442 Md. 488, 499, 113 A.3d 608, 614 (2015) (citations and quotations
omitted).  The suppression motion in this case addressed the scope of Varriale’s consent to
a search of his person for DNA.  It is undisputed that Varriale voluntarily consented to the
collection of buccal and penile swabs from his body.  At issue is to what extent Varriale’s
DNA profile, created from analysis of the swabs, may be compared subsequently to other
DNA profiles for criminal investigative purposes.  In other words, what is disputed is
whether the scope of Varriale’s consent was limited to the investigation of one specific
incident.
9
Varriale contends that his consent was limited to the collection and use of his DNA
for purposes of the rape investigation alone and that the consent form objectively limits the
purpose of the search to the rape investigation.  He argues that any use of his DNA for
purposes other than the rape investigation would exceed the scope of his consent and
constitute a warrantless search in violation of the Fourth Amendment.  Thus, in Varriale’s
view, the State exceeded the scope of his consent and violated his Fourth Amendment rights
when the crime lab entered his DNA profile into the LDIS and compared it to DNA profiles
for general criminal investigatory purposes after he had been eliminated as a suspect in the
rape investigation. 
The State counters that Varriale did not expressly limit his consent, that the consent
form indicates that his DNA could be used in “any future prosecution,” to include the
burglary prosecution.  In addition, the State contests Varriale’s characterization of the crime
laboratory’s DNA comparison analysis as a “search” for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. 
Rather, the State maintains that the subsequent DNA comparison by automatic search was
a “future use” of evidence that the police had lawfully obtained by consent, and that “use”
does not implicate the Fourth Amendment. 
Scope of Consent to Search
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, made applicable to the
states through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides, in pertinent part, “[t]he right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
10
searches and seizures, shall not be violated . . . .”  U.S. Const. amend. IV.  With regard to a
search of a person, the United States Supreme Court has explained that “[v]irtually any
intrusion into the human body will work an invasion of cherished personal security that is
subject to constitutional scrutiny.”  Maryland v. King, __ U.S. __, __, 133 S. Ct. 1958, 1969,
186 L. Ed. 2d 1, 19 (2013) (citations and quotations omitted).  It is undisputed that the State
engaged in a “search” when the County evidence technician took buccal and penile swabs
to obtain Varriale’s DNA.  See King, __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 1968-69, 186 L. Ed. 2d at
19 (“It can be agreed that using a buccal swab on the inner tissues of a person’s cheek in
order to obtain DNA samples is a search.”); Raynor v. State, 440 Md. 71, 82, 99 A.3d 753,
759 (2014), cert. denied, 135 S. Ct. 1509, 191 L. Ed. 2d 433 (2015) (same). 
Ordinarily, a search of a person conducted without a warrant, such as here, is
presumptively unreasonable, unless one of the recognized exceptions to the warrant
requirement applies.  Relevant to this case is the consent exception.  For a consensual search
to satisfy the Fourth Amendment, the consent must be voluntary, i.e., free from coercion.  See
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 93 S. Ct. 2041, 36 L. Ed. 2d 854 (1973)
(explaining that to be valid, consent to search must be voluntary, and a reviewing court’s
evaluation of “voluntariness” is based on the totality of the circumstances);  Jones v. State,
407 Md. 33, 51, 962 A.2d 393, 403 (2008) (“A search conducted pursuant to valid consent,
i.e., voluntary and with actual or apparent authority to do so, is a recognized exception to the
warrant requirement.”).  In addition, “‘[a] consensual search may go no further than the
11
limits’ defined by the consent.”  Gamble v. State, 318 Md. 120, 129, 567 A.2d 95, 100 (1989)
(quoting State v. Jensen, 723 P.2d 443, 446 (Wash. App. 1986)).  See also 4 LaFave, Search
and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 8.1(c) (5th ed. 2012) (“When the police
are relying upon consent as the basis for their warrantless search, they have no more authority
than they have apparently been given by the consent.”).  In other words, a consensual search
may be limited in scope.  See Florida v. Jimeno, 500 U.S. 248, 252, 111 S. Ct. 1801, 1804,
114 L. Ed. 2d 297, 303 (1991) (“A suspect may of course delimit as he chooses the scope of
the search to which he consents.”).  In this case, Varriale does not dispute that his consent
was voluntary.  Thus, we shall confine our discussion to the disputed scope of his consent. 
In Jimeno,  the High Court explained that “[t]he scope of a search is generally defined
7
 Florida v. Jimeno is the seminal Supreme Court case governing scope of consent for
7
a Fourth Amendment search.  In that case, a law enforcement officer suspected Jimeno of
illegal drug trafficking and followed Jimeno in his vehicle.  Jimeno, 500 U.S. at 249, 111 S.
Ct. at 1803, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 301.   Upon witnessing Jimeno fail to stop before turning right
at a red light, the officer pulled him over.  Id.  On the side of the road, the officer explained
that he had reason to believe Jimeno was in possession of illegal narcotics and requested
permission to search his vehicle, which Jimeno granted.  Jimeno, 500 U.S. at 249-50, 111 S.
Ct. at 1803, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 301-02.  While conducting the search, the officer found and
opened a brown paper bag, which contained a kilo of cocaine.  Jimeno, 500 U.S. at 250, 111
S. Ct. at 1803, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 302.  Thereafter, Jimeno was charged with possession with
intent to distribute.  Id.  Before trial, Jimeno filed a motion “to suppress the cocaine found
in the bag on the ground that [his] consent to search the car did not extend to the closed paper
bag inside of the car.”  Id.  The motion was granted, and the case made its way to the United
States Supreme Court “to determine whether consent to search a vehicle may extend to
closed containers found inside the vehicle.”  Id.  Under the facts of that case, the Court
concluded:
[T]he terms of the search’s authorization were simple. [Jimeno] granted
Officer Trujillo permission to search his car, and did not place any explicit
(continued...)
12
by its expressed object.” 500 U.S. at 251, 111 S. Ct. at 1804, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 303.  In this
case, the consent form clearly states that Varriale gave his “consent to a search of [his]
person for the purpose of furnishing evidence relating to . . . saliva [and] penile swabs.” 
Although the form does not specify precisely what the police would do with the swabs once
the evidence was furnished, “[i]t is undisputed that law enforcement officers analyze DNA
for the sole purpose of generating a unique identifying number against which future samples
may be matched.”  King, __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 1979, 186 L. Ed. 2d at 31.   Thus, the
8
(...continued)
limitation on the scope of the search. Trujillo had informed Jimeno that he
believed Jimeno was carrying narcotics, and that he would be looking for
narcotics in the car. We think that it was objectively reasonable for the police
to conclude that the general consent to search respondent’s car included
consent to search containers within that car which might bear drugs. A
reasonable person may be expected to know that narcotics are generally carried
in some form of a container. Contraband goods rarely are strewn across the
trunk or floor of a car.  The authorization to search in this case, therefore,
extended beyond the surfaces of the car’s interior to the paper bag lying on the
car’s floor.
500 U.S. at 251, 111 S. Ct. at 1804, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 303(citation omitted).
 We note briefly that identification is a key component to our analysis of DNA cases. 
8
As noted by the State in its brief, the State analyzes DNA evidence to obtain DNA profiles
derived from the non-coding regions of DNA, commonly referred to as “junk DNA.” 
“Although highly useful for identification purposes, junk DNA ‘does not show more far-
reaching and complex characteristics like genetic traits.’” Raynor, 440 Md. at 86, 99 A.3d
at 761 (quoting King, __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 1967, 186 L. Ed. 2d at 17).  For that reason,
discussed further infra, this Court held in Raynor that an individual does not retain a privacy
interest in his DNA profile, once it is lawfully possessed by the State, which would entitle
him or her to the protections of the Fourth Amendment.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 96, 99 A.3d at
767 (“In the end, we hold that DNA testing of the 13 identifying junk loci within genetic
material, not obtained by means of a physical intrusion into the person’s body, is no more a
(continued...)
13
“object” of the search was the collection of the DNA swabs for the purpose of identification. 
See Commonwealth v. Gaynor, 820 N.E.2d 233, 244 (Mass. 2005) (“The object of the
intended search was a sample of the defendant’s blood and the identifying information that
could be obtained by DNA testing of the sample.”).
The consent form further provides that Varriale understood “that any evidence found
to be involved in this investigation, being conducted by the Anne Arundel County Police
Department can be used in any future criminal prosecution.”  Varriale asserts that this form
limits the scope of the search to use only in the rape investigation and any potential criminal
prosecution related to that specific investigation.  More specifically, he asserts that by signing
the form, he conditioned his consent on the restrictions contained therein; in his view,
“evidence found in this investigation” meant the investigation of the rape.  (Emphasis added.) 
Varriale contends that the form does not purport to provide general consent, which would
impose no restriction on the future use of the DNA evidence.
The State counters that the consent form is not so limiting, and, in fact, the use of the
phrase “can be used for any future criminal prosecution” demonstrates consent to any and all
subsequent uses of the DNA evidence garnished from the search.  In its opinion in this case,
(...continued)
search for purposes of the Fourth Amendment, than is the testing of fingerprints, or the
observation of any other identifying feature revealed to the public—visage, apparent age,
body type, skin color.”).  It is noteworthy, however, that the Supreme Court has cautioned
that “[i]f in the future police analyze samples to determine, for instance, an arrestee’s
predisposition for a particular disease or other hereditary factors not relevant to identity, that
case would present additional privacy concerns not present here.”    King, __ U.S. at __, 133
S. Ct. at 1979, 186 L. Ed. 2d at 31. 
14
the Court of Special Appeals aptly pointed out that the consent form “is not a model of
clarity.”  218 Md. App. at 54, 96 A.3d at 797.  The consent form demonstrates neither an
express limitation on the permitted use of the DNA evidence nor an express consent to any
future use.  Indeed, the form does not specify what the State would do with the DNA
evidence once it was collected (namely, that it would retain the DNA profile and upload it
to the LDIS).  Unlike the Court of Special Appeals, however, we do not conclude that the
form should be construed against the State to mean that there was no consent to the
subsequent use and analysis of Varriale’s DNA. 
As instructed by the Supreme Court in Jimeno, we apply an objective reasonableness
test.  See Jimeno, 500 U.S. at 251, 111 S. Ct. at 1803-04, 114 L. Ed. 2d at 302 (“The standard
for measuring the scope of a suspect’s consent under the Fourth Amendment is that of
‘objective’ reasonableness-what would the typical reasonable person have understood by the
exchange between the officer and the suspect?”).  “[D]etermining what is reasonable requires
a factual analysis, ‘examining the totality of the circumstances.’”  State v. Green, 375 Md.
595, 621, 826 A.2d 486, 501 (2003) (quoting Ohio v. Robinette, 519 U.S. 33, 39, 117 S. Ct.
417, 421, 136 L. Ed. 2d 347, 354 (1996)). 
Varriale argues that no reasonable person would understand that his DNA evidence
and/or DNA profile would be indefinitely retained by the State and used in subsequent
criminal investigations.  We disagree.  Both this Court and the United States Supreme Court
have explained that DNA profiles are like fingerprints, which police routinely catalog and
15
compare in the course of criminal investigations.  See King, __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 1972,
186 L. Ed. 2d at 23; Raynor, 440 Md. at 88, 99 A.2d at 762.  In that regard, the Court of
Special Appeals has explained: 
Once the police are in reasonable possession of the fingerprints, however,
those fingerprints are kept on file, . . . so that they are available for future
criminal investigations.  No further Fourth Amendment authorization is
required for the police freely to comb such fingerprint banks to seek out and
to identify criminals.  Indeed, it is difficult to conceive of a modern law
enforcement system without such fingerprint banks.
  
Wilson v. State, 132 Md. App. 510, 549, 752 A.2d 1250, 1271 (2000).  The same rationale
holds true for the collection and use of DNA.  As explained by the Georgia Supreme Court,
“like a fingerprint, DNA remains the same no matter how many times blood is drawn and
tested and a DNA profile can be used to inculpate or exculpate suspects in other
investigations without additional invasive procedures.  It would not be reasonable to require
law enforcement personnel to obtain additional consent or another search warrant every time
a validly-obtained DNA profile is used for comparison in another investigation.” Pace v.
State, 524 S.E.2d 490, 498 (Ga. 1999).
Our conclusion is consistent with our analysis, supra, regarding what we have defined
to be the “object” of the search–namely, the collection of the DNA swabs for the purpose of
identification.  The rationale of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts examining this
topic is instructive.  In Commonwealth v. Gaynor, 820 N.E.2d 233 (Mass. 2005), the
defendant consented to provide palmprints, fingerprints, and a blood sample while speaking
voluntarily with officers at the police station.  At the time the defendant came to the station,
16
the police officers were in possession of, and the defendant viewed, a car belonging to a
murder victim that had a blood stain on the front passenger seat.  Id. at 241.  The police
submitted the defendant’s blood sample for DNA testing, which revealed his involvement
in a total of four rape and murder incidents, including the one victim whose car the defendant
viewed at the police station, who turned out to be the fourth victim in the string of incidents. 
Id. at 239-42.  The defendant argued that his consent “was limited by what police told him,
namely, that they wanted to test his blood and compare the results with testing done on blood
found in the fourth victim’s car.”  Id. at 244.  Citing Jimeno, the Massachussets court
explained:
Here, a reasonable person likely would have concluded that police were
seeking the defendant’s blood tests results, including his DNA profile.  The
object of the intended search was a sample of the defendant’s blood and the
identifying information that could be obtained by DNA testing of the sample. 
The testing actually done on the defendant’s blood sample was no more intense
or intrusive of his privacy interests than what was expressly sought.  The scope
of the search, blood tests, was confined to what a reasonable person would
have understood from the request by police.
Id.  Finally, the Gaynor court noted that, “[a]lthough it is a suspect’s right to limit the scope
of a search to which he consents, [Gaynor] did not avail himself of that right.”  820 N.E.2d
at 244 (citation omitted).  Therefore, the court held that the scope of the search was not
limited to one particular investigation.  Id.  See also People v. Collins, 250 P.3d 668, 676
(Colo. App. 2010) (comparing that case to Gaynor and concluding that where a suspect orally
consented to provide police with a DNA sample during an ongoing robbery investigation in
Missouri without “limit[ing] the scope of his consent in any way,”  “the scope of the actual
17
search . . . was limited to its intended object, namely, a sample of defendant’s saliva for DNA
testing[,] . . . the typical reasonable person in defendant’s place would have understood that
the DNA sample taken from him and the data obtained from analysis of the sample would
remain in possession of law enforcement and be available for future law enforcement uses”
and therefore the police did not violate the suspect’s rights by subsequently sharing the
voluntarily proffered DNA sample with police in Colorado, who thereafter connected the
suspect to a “cold” rape case in Colorado).  
Looking at the totality of the circumstances of this case, we cannot conclude that the
lawful use of Varriale’s DNA was limited only to the rape investigation.  It is undisputed that
Varriale made no express limitation indicating that his consent was limited to or conditioned
upon the DNA evidence being used exclusively in the rape investigation.   In addition,
9
nothing in the record indicates that Detective Wood gave any representation whatsoever to
Varriale regarding what would happen to his DNA following the analysis required for the
 Varriale urges us to rely on State v. Binner, 886 P.2d 1056 (Or. Ct. App. 1994), an
9
Oregon intermediate appellate court case, for the proposition that a DNA sample taken for
one purpose cannot be used subsequently for a different purpose without offending the
Fourth Amendment.  In Binner, police suspected the defendant to be intoxicated after he was
involved in a fatal car accident.  Id. at 1057.  Upon request by the police, the defendant
consented to provide a blood sample for alcohol testing but specifically refused to provide
a urine sample for drug testing.  Id.  The Oregon court held that the police violated the
defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights when the blood sample was subsequently submitted
to a drug test.  Id. at 1059.  That holding, however, was based on the defendant’s express
refusal to submit to drug testing.  Id.  Thus, Binner is inapposite to this case, because Varriale
placed no express limitation on his consent to the search.
18
rape investigation.   Therefore, absent an express limitation placed on the use or storage of
10
the DNA evidence by Varriale, the State, or by law, we cannot conclude that it was
unreasonable for the State to maintain and utilize Varriale’s DNA for subsequent unrelated
investigations.  
Although we could end our analysis here, we shall discuss Varriale’s questions
concerning the applicability of the Fourth Amendment to the subsequent use of his evidence. 
As we shall explain, Varriale’s failure to place an express limitation on the use or storage of
his DNA sample at the time he provided consent constituted a waiver of any privacy interest
in that DNA sample and the State was not prohibited from utilizing his DNA profile in
subsequent criminal investigations.  
Subsequent Use of Varriale’s DNA
We begin with the proposition that, for the reasons explained above, the DNA
evidence was lawfully within the State’s possession after the samples were collected from
 If, as a basis to obtain Varriale’s consent to search, Detective Wood had made any
10
statements or promises to Varriale regarding the retention or use of his DNA, our analysis
might be different.  For example, deceit or misrepresentation by a police officer to obtain
consent to search may negate the voluntariness of the consent.  See Redmond v. State, 213
Md. App. 163, 186, 73 A.3d 385, 399 (2013) (holding that, where police intentionally
misrepresented their purpose to gain entry to a house by consent, the search was invalid for
two reasons: (1) the consent was involuntary; and (2) the scope of consent was limited by the
officers’ misrepresented purpose to gain entry).  In addition, at least one court has held that
a police officer is not required to inform or explain to a suspect that his DNA evidence may
be retained indefinitely by police.  See Pace v. State, 524 S.E.2d 490, 498 (Ga. 1999) (“The
police were not required to explain to Pace that his blood or hair could be used in
prosecutions involving other victims, or that he had a right to refuse consent.”).  We agree
that under the circumstances, no such explanation was necessary. 
19
Varriale’s person.  In Raynor v. State, supra, this Court held recently that once the State
lawfully possessed a suspect’s DNA, subsequent testing of that DNA does not amount to a
Fourth Amendment search.  440 Md. at 96, 99 A.3d at 767.  In that case, police suspected
Raynor in connection with a rape investigation and invited him to the police station for
questioning, which Raynor did of his own volition.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 76, 99 A.3d at 755. 
During questioning, a detective requested that Raynor submit to DNA testing.  Id.  Raynor
refused to consent unless the police agreed to destroy his DNA sample upon completion of
the rape investigation, which the police declined to do.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 76, 99 A.3d at
756.  After Raynor left the station, the officers present observed sweat on the chair in which
Raynor had been seated, from which they were able to successfully collect a sample of
Raynor’s DNA.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 77, 99 A.3d at 756.  Forensic DNA analysis confirmed
Raynor’s involvement in the rape, for which he was subsequently tried and convicted.  Id. 
Noting that the petitioner had conceded that the State’s collection of the DNA was
lawful, the Court addressed only whether, once the DNA had been lawfully obtained,
subsequent police “testing of the identifying loci within that DNA material for the purpose
of determining whether those loci match that of DNA left at a crime scene constitute[d] a
search under the Fourth Amendment.”  Raynor, 440 Md. at 82, 99 A.3d at 759.  Relying on
the Supreme Court’s explanation in King that the “junk” DNA used in this type of DNA
analysis is used only for identification purposes, much like fingerprints, the Majority
determined that Raynor “[did] not possess a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
20
identifying characteristics of his DNA.”  440 Md. at 86-88, 92, 99 A.3d at 761-62, 765
(citing King, __ U.S. at __, 133 S. Ct. at 1967, 186 L. Ed. 2d at 17).  
In making this conclusion, the Court in Raynor specifically distinguished United
States v. Davis, 690 F.3d 226 (4th Cir. 2012), a federal case on which Varriale relies for the
proposition that the retention and inclusion of his DNA in the LDIS violated his
constitutional rights.  In that case, police collected bloody pieces of clothing from Davis
when he was in the hospital being treated for a gunshot wound.  Davis, 690 F.3d at 230. 
Four years later, when the police suspected Davis in relation to a murder investigation, police
used the bloodstained clothing, still in their possession, to create a DNA profile which was
uploaded to the department’s local DNA database.  Id.  Thereafter, a piece of DNA evidence
from another, unrelated murder investigation resulted in a “cold hit” with regard to Davis’s
DNA, which was used to prosecute him for the murder.  Id. at 232.  At trial, Davis moved
to suppress the DNA evidence on Fourth Amendment grounds.  Id.  On appeal of his
conviction, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit concluded that Davis
retained a privacy interest in his genetic material even though the genetic material was on an
item of clothing that was in the possession of and had previously been lawfully obtained by
law enforcement.  Id. at 246.  Therefore, the Fourth Circuit held that the subsequent testing
of that DNA was a search for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment.  Id.  This Court in
Raynor explained that “[t]he Davis Court’s conclusion that the DNA testing at issue in that
case constituted a Fourth Amendment search rested on what may now be a faulty premise,
21
given the discussion in King that DNA analysis limited to the 13 junk loci within a person’s
DNA discloses only such information as identifies with near certainty that person as unique.” 
Raynor, 440 Md. at 90, 99 A.3d at 764.  See also Commonwealth v. Arzola, 26 N.E.3d 185,
194 (Mass. 2015) (distinguishing Davis and noting that “[t]he Davis court never fully
addressed the limited scope of the DNA analysis: to develop a DNA profile that would serve
as a genetic fingerprint to be compared with unknown DNA profiles”).  Further, we noted
that, “because no individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy in his or her identifying
physical characteristics[,] [i]t therefore matters not that, at the time of the analysis, [Raynor]
was, in the words of Davis, a ‘free person.’” Raynor, 440 Md. at 90 n.9, 99 A.3d at 764 n.9.11
 In addition, the Court explained, “[Raynor] was not subjected to the forcible collection of
his genetic material, or any other bodily intrusion.”  440 Md. at 94, 99 A.3d at 766. 
Therefore, we held that “law enforcement’s analysis of the 13 identifying loci within
Petitioner’s DNA left behind on the chair at the police station, in order to determine a match
with the DNA the police collected from the scene of the rape, was not a search, as that term
is employed in Fourth Amendment parlance.”  440 Md. at 82, 99 A.3d at 759.
Varriale would distinguish Raynor from this case based on the “degree and scope of
intrusion” at issue here, and liken the instant case to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. 67, 121 S. Ct. 1281, 149 L. Ed. 2d 205 (2001).  In
 Similarly, Varriale’s reliance on the fact that he is not an individual with
11
“diminished rights,” such as an arrestee or convicted person, to support his argument that the
State violated his Fourth Amendment rights is not relevant to our analysis.
22
that case, the Supreme Court noted the difference between collecting urine samples for
medical purposes as compared to law enforcement purposes, and held that a state hospital’s
practice of collecting urine samples for drug testing and reporting positive test results to law
enforcement constituted an unreasonable search.  Ferguson, 532 U.S. at 83-84, 121 S. Ct. at
1291-92, 149 L. Ed. at 219-20.  We disagree with Varriale that the analysis in Ferguson
controls here, because Varriale indisputably consented to provide his DNA to law
enforcement for criminal investigative purposes.  See Pharr v. Commonwealth, 646 S.E.2d
453, 458 (Va. App. 2007) (concluding that where the suspect “specifically consented to
having his DNA taken, tested, and identified for purposes of criminal investigation, . . . the
principles enunciated in Ferguson are inapposite”). 
In addition, as noted in its opinion in this case, the Court of Special Appeals
previously discussed the re-examination of DNA evidence in Wilson v. State, 132 Md. App.
510, 752 A.2d 1250 (2000).  In that case, law enforcement had lawfully obtained the
appellant’s blood sample pursuant to a valid warrant in 1991.  Wilson, 132 Md. App. at 531,
752 A.2d at 1262.  In 1997, Wilson was a suspect in a rape and abduction investigation.  132
Md. App. at 516-17, 752 A.2d at 1254.  In conducting their investigation, law enforcement
learned that Wilson’s 1991 blood sample was within their possession and available for re-
testing, such that no new or additional blood sample would be necessary.  132 Md. App. at
531, 752 A.2d at 1262.  Using the 1991 sample, DNA analysis confirmed Wilson’s
involvement in the rape, and he was subsequently convicted.  
23
Before the Court of Special Appeals, Wilson argued that his Fourth Amendment rights
were violated when the police tested his 1991 blood sample in 1997 without obtaining a
second warrant.  Wilson, 132 Md. App. at 543, 752 A.2d at 1268.  The court disagreed,
stating that “no such fresh authorization is required.”  Wilson, 132 Md. App. at 544, 752 A.2d
at 1269.  Using the DNA/fingerprint analogy (later adopted by the Supreme Court in King,
supra), Judge Moylan, writing for the court, explained:
Once an individual’s fingerprints and/or his blood sample for DNA testing are
in lawful police possession, that individual is no more immune from being
caught by the DNA sample he leaves on the body of his rape victim than he is
from being caught by the fingerprint he leaves on the window of the
burglarized house or the steering wheel of the stolen car. . . . By the same
token, photographs, handwriting exemplars, ballistics tests, etc., lawfully
obtained in the course of an earlier investigation are freely available to the
police in the course of a new and unrelated investigation. No new Fourth
Amendment intrusion is involved.
132 Md. App. at 550, 752 A.2d at 1272.  Moreover, the court held, once the State had
lawfully obtained Wilson’s blood sample pursuant to the 1991 warrant, “[a]ny legitimate
expectation of privacy that the appellant had in his blood disappeared.”  Id.
Although Wilson involved DNA obtained by a warrant rather than consent, we
conclude that, absent an express limitation by the suspect, the same analysis applies to a
consent search.  See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 243, 93 S. Ct. 2041, 2056, 36
L. Ed. 2d 854, 872 (1973) (“The actual conduct of the [consensual] search may be precisely
the same as if the police had obtained a warrant.”); Gamble v. State, 318 Md. 120, 129, 567
A.2d 95, 100 (1989) (explaining that the scope of a consent search is “just as broad” as a
24
warrantless search based on probable cause).  In its brief in this case, the State correctly
points out that, under these circumstances, “[t]he Fourth Amendment is concerned with the
way in which the State comes into possession of material, not with its subsequent use of it[.]” 
Where the Fourth Amendment is not triggered, there is no need for the State to obtain a
warrant, nor must the State prove validity under one of the warrant exceptions.  See Raynor, 
440 Md. at 82-83, 99 A.3d at 759 (“It is bedrock constitutional law that the rights accorded
by the Fourth Amendment are implicated only if the conduct of the government officials at
issue infringed an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable.”)
(citations and quotations omitted).  Under the facts of this case, the State lawfully obtained
Varriale’s DNA by consent.  In providing his consent, Varriale placed no express limitation
on the subsequent use or storage of his genetic material and, therefore, as explained above,
he waived any potential privacy interest he may have had in that genetic material.  
12
Moreover, as explained in Raynor, Varriale has no privacy interest in his identifying
information contained in the DNA profile created from lawfully obtained DNA samples
 We make note of two other points.  First, the dissenting opinion’s suggestion that
12
Varriale’s privacy rights were somehow restored to full vigor once the department’s DNA
analysis revealed that Varriale was excluded as a possible suspect in the rape investigation
is pure fiction.  Once Varriale consented to the search in this case, any reasonable expectation
of privacy in his identity essentially evaporated.  It did not reappear once he became a suspect
in another crime.
Second, because our analysis rests on the conclusion that Varriale did not place any
limitations on the use of his DNA, we need not decide what protections a suspect may have
in a case involving a consensual search where the suspect does in fact place an express
limitation on the use of DNA evidence and the State has conceivably exceeded the scope of
consent given.  We leave that question for another day. 
25
which would entitle him to the protections of the Fourth Amendment.  Thus, in this case,
after the initial search of Varriale’s person to obtain the DNA swabs, the Fourth Amendment
was not triggered.  Therefore, the State did not need a warrant or Varriale’s additional or
express consent in order to conduct further testing of his DNA or upload it to the LDIS for
comparison with other DNA profiles.  
13
Therefore, we reject Varriale’s contention that his Fourth Amendment rights were
violated when his DNA was uploaded to the LDIS and subsequently used in the burglary
investigation and prosecution.  We agree with the Court of Special Appeals in this case that
“once the State had validly obtained the sample, . . . it had no obligation to obtain a warrant
before using the sample in [another unrelated] investigation.”  Varriale, 218 Md. App. at 55,
 Other courts have reached the same conclusion.  See, e.g., Washington v. State, 653
13
So.2d 362, 364 (Fla. 1994) (holding that, where defendant “freely and voluntarily provided
[detectives] with hair and blood samples. . . . the samples were validly obtained, albeit in an
unrelated case, [and] the police were not restrained from using the samples as evidence in the
murder case”); State v. Hauge, 79 P.3d 131, 145 (Haw. 2003) (“[R]egardless of the number
of times that the [police] tested Hauge’s blood sample for its DNA, no violation of his
constitutional right to privacy occurred because the analyses did not exceed the objective for
which the original warrant was sought–DNA testing for the purpose of identification.”);
Smith v. State, 744 N.E.2d 437, 439 (Ind. 2001) (“[O]nce DNA is used to create a profile, the
profile becomes the property of the Crime Lab[,] [t]hus, Smith had no possessory or
ownership interest in it.”); State v. Bowman, 337 S.W.3d 679, 685 (Mo. 2011) (“Fourth
Amendment analysis focuses on the intrusiveness of the initial search, not on the subsequent
use of information obtained from that search. . . . [T]he subsequent use of the DNA sample
obtained from the valid [consensual] search and seizure does not constitute a Fourth
Amendment violation.”); State v. Notti, 71 P.3d 1233, 1238 (Mont. 2003) (“We conclude that
Notti waived any reasonable expectation of privacy in the DNA profile created by the Crime
Lab. After the initial withdrawal of blood, obtained pursuant to the initial sexual assault
investigation, there was simply no subsequent search or seizure of Notti’s person such that
Notti could invoke a privacy interest or right.”).
26
96 A.3d at 797-98.  Accordingly, we hold that, under these circumstances, the Fourth
Amendment does not preclude the police from retaining and using a suspect’s DNA profile
created from a DNA sample lawfully obtained by consent.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
SPECIAL 
APPEALS 
AFFIRMED.
PETITIONER TO PAY THE COSTS.
27
 
 
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County  
Case No. 02-K-13-000548 
Argued: 7 May 2015 
  
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 85 
 
SEPTEMBER TERM, 2014 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
GEORGE VARRIALE 
 
 
v. 
 
STATE OF MARYLAND 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Barbera, C.J., 
*Harrell, J. 
Battaglia, 
 
Greene, 
 
Adkins, 
 
McDonald, 
 
Watts, 
 
 
 
 
 
 
JJ. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dissenting Opinion by Harrell, J., which 
Adkins, J. joins. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Filed:   August 11, 2015 
 
*Harrell, J., now retired, participated in the 
hearing and conference of this case while an 
active member of this Court; after being 
recalled pursuant to the Constitution, Article IV, 
Section 3A, he also participated in the decision 
and 
adoption 
of 
this 
opinion.  
This case illustrates a corollary of the aphorism that “no good deed goes 
unpunished,” “be not so quick to volunteer.”  After the report of an alleged rape, George 
Varriale (at worst, a person of interest at the time) consented to a police request that he 
supply biological samples from his person in order for police to determine whether he 
could be inculpated or exculpated as a suspect in the rape through comparison of his 
DNA profile with that of DNA left behind under the fingernails of the alleged victim 
apparently by the alleged unknown rapist.1  Based on the results of an Anne Arundel 
County crime laboratory comparison test performed on the samples provided by Varriale 
and those recovered from the alleged victim, Varriale was excluded quickly as a source 
of the DNA recovered from the victim.  Despite this result, the Anne Arundel County 
Police Department Crime Laboratory forensic DNA analyst who performed the test 
uploaded (on her initiative) Varriale’s profile into the general suspect index of the County 
DNA databank in a fishing expedition to see if Varriale’s DNA profile matched any cold 
case DNA profile on record.  That search yielded a match of Varriale’s DNA to a DNA 
profile obtained from an unsolved commercial burglary scene.  The burglary occurred 
four years earlier.   
 
The Majority determines today, among other things, that Varriale is to be faulted 
for not placing any “express limitation(s)” on his consent when he acquiesced to the 
                                              
1 The Forensic Biology Report from the Anne Arundel County Police Crime Laboratory 
indicated that no blood or semen was found on the person of the alleged victim.  
Furthermore, the partial DNA profile obtained from the alleged victim’s fingernail swabs 
was consistent with her own DNA profile.  The State’s Attorney’s Office declined 
charges in the case ultimately, and the case was closed “by exception,” whatever that 
means. 
2 
 
collection of buccal and penile swabs from his body for use in the rape investigation.  
The Majority holds that, absent “an express limitation on his consent,” “the Fourth 
Amendment did not prohibit the police from using Varriale’s lawfully obtained DNA 
sample . . . for comparison to other DNA profiles that were unrelated to the rape 
investigation.”  Maj. Slip Op. at 9.  The Majority’s interpretation of Varriale’s consent is 
incorrect as a matter of law.  It follows that the Majority’s Fourth Amendment analysis is 
flawed as well.  Accordingly, I dissent. 
I. 
CONSENT, OR THE LACK THEREOF 
As the Majority opinion sets out in full, George Varriale’s consent to have 
biological samples taken from his person occurred during the late morning of 10 July 
2012 in a wooded area in Glen Burnie, Maryland.  Maj. Slip Op. at 2–4.  Detective David 
Wood (“Detective Wood”), who was investigating a report of a rape occurring nearby, 
approached Varriale, a homeless person who was living in a makeshift campground in a 
wooded area near the scene of the alleged crime, and introduced himself.  Detective 
Wood explained that “he was conducting an investigation,”2 Maj. Slip Op. at 3, and asked 
                                              
2 The record is unclear regarding whether, before Varriale gave his biological samples, 
Detective Wood specified verbally that he was conducting an investigation of a rape. 
Detective Wood’s Investigative Report, detailing his actions of 10 July 2012, was 
included in the materials provided to the Circuit Court of Anne Arundel County in 
advance of the Motion to Suppress hearing.  In pertinent part, Detective Wood’s 
Investigative Report states as follows: 
 
I met with Officer Pederson in the wooded area . . . .  
[The subject] identified himself as George Varriale. . . . I 
informed Mr. Varriale I was conducting an investigation and I 
wanted an opportunity to talk to him.  I told him he was not 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
3 
 
                                              
(…continued) 
under arrest and was not under any obligation to talk to me.  
He agreed to talk to me and he gave me consent to use a 
digital voice recorder for the interview. . . . 
 
I advised Mr. Varriale we would like to collect saliva 
swabs and penile swabs from him.  I placed a completed 
Consent to Search Person form in front of him and read the 
form to him.  He agreed to give the Anne Arundel County 
Police Department consent to a search of his person for the 
purpose of furnishing evidence relating to saliva and penile 
swabs.   
 
The Investigative Report then recounts in detail the conversation Detective Wood had 
with Varriale, wherein they discussed Varriale’s activities the night before, his 
knowledge of the alleged victim, and Detective Wood’s further investigation of the 
matter. 
 
As noted above in the Investigative Report, Detective Wood used a digital voice 
recorder to make an audio recording of his interview with Varriale.  The recording 
begins, however, after the point in time when Varriale consented to have the conversation 
recorded, and begins with Detective Wood reiterating their earlier conversation and 
confirming that Varriale understood that he was not under arrest and was not obligated to 
talk to him.  The audio recording sheds no light on how Detective Wood characterized 
the nature of the investigation to Varriale originally.   
 
Regrettably, the Circuit Court judge presiding over Varriale’s suppression hearing 
prevented Detective Wood from developing the circumstances more fully through his 
testimony.  During Detective Wood’s direct examination, the following transpired: 
 
[Detective Wood]: They had a subject found in a tent in that 
wooded area who identified himself as George, so I wanted to 
talk to the subject and, you know, still it’s very earlier [sic] in 
the investigation.  I’m trying to figure out what’s going on, 
you know, he’s located as a possible subject. 
 
So when I arrived, I had all officers but one be there.  I 
did have one officer with me just for officer’s safety, I guess 
routine, and I identified myself to the George subject and 
basically formed on what little I had, and (indiscernible) for 
him to talk to me. 
 
THE COURT: Let me ask you a question. 
 
[Detective Wood]: Yes. 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
4 
 
Varriale if he would consent to a search of his person.  Detective Wood read then to 
Varriale a document entitled “Anne Arundel County Police Consent to Search Person 
Form” (“Consent Form”) and placed a completed Consent Form in front of him for his 
signature.  In pertinent part,3 the Consent Form stated: 
Case #: 12-725920[4] 
 
 
 
 
 
Date:    7-10-12 
 
                                              
(…continued) 
 
THE COURT: His case, the relevance, Counsel, of the [2012] 
incident is just how they came in possession of the DNA 
sample, correct? 
 
[Prosecution]: Yes. 
 
THE COURT: Okay.  We’re in no need of going to any great 
detail on this event, are we? 
 
[Prosecution]: No.  Well, I intended to—the issue is, I 
believe, is consent. 
 
. . .  
 
THE COURT: Can we stipulate to anything here so that we 
can get the detective back to bigger and better things? 
 
Discussion between the attorneys and the hearing judge ensued.  Much later in the 
hearing, when the hearing judge turned his attention back to Detective Wood, he asked 
the witness two direct questions regarding a different factual issue and then dismissed the 
witness. 
 
3 See Maj. Slip Op. at 3 (reproducing the Consent Form in full). 
 
4 The underlined text reflects blanks on the document that were completed by hand.  The 
remainder of the document appears to be a pre-printed form.  Clearly, the investigation 
was of a specific alleged crime (indicated by a case number) that is highly unlikely to 
have been the cold case burglary occurring four years earlier. 
5 
 
I, George Varriale, do hereby consent to a search of my 
person for the purpose of furnishing evidence relating to one 
or more of the following: 
 
[. . . Saliva . . . Penile Swabs . . .] 
 
. . .  
 
I realize that if I do consent to a body search, that any 
evidence found to be involved in this investigation, being 
conducted by the Anne Arundel County Police Department 
can be used in any future criminal prosecution. 
 
(emphasis added).  Varriale signed the form, cooperated in the obtention of the samples 
by an evidence technician, and had an extended conversation with Detective Wood about 
the events of the proceeding evening.  In short order, Varriale was excluded as a source 
of DNA from the alleged rape, see Maj. Slip Op. at 4–7, and Detective Wood did not 
contact Varriale again after 10 July 2012.5   
 
At the suppression hearing, Varriale argued that the State’s DNA match evidence 
as to the much older burglary case should have been excluded on the grounds that 
subsequent use of his DNA profile to conduct a cold case comparison search of the DNA 
databank exceeded the scope of his consent and constituted therefore an unreasonable 
search in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 4–7.  The 
Circuit Court judge denied Varriale’s motion to suppress, sans explanation, findings of 
fact, or conclusions of law (not that such are required, but it is helpful often to understand 
what a trial judge is thinking, particularly in the context of a suppression ruling). 
                                              
5 As of the date when Varriale was excluded as a possible suspect in the rape 
investigation, his expectation of privacy as a citizen was restored to its full vigor.  I will 
speak more to this status later.  See infra Part II of this dissent. 
6 
 
 
On appeal of Varriale’s conviction after entering a conditional guilty plea, the 
Court of Special Appeals conceded that Varriale “may not have unambiguously 
consented to the use of his DNA outside of the rape investigation,” Varriale v. State, 218 
Md. App. 47, 52–53, 96 A.3d 793, 796 (2014), and that “the consent form is not a model 
of clarity.”  Varriale, 218 Md. App. at 54, 96 A.3d at 797.  The intermediate appellate 
court opined as follows: 
While the form states that Varriale’s DNA “can be used in 
any future prosecution,” the form does not clearly specify 
whether the State may use the DNA only in a “criminal 
prosecution” for the alleged rape that the police were actually 
investigating, 
as 
opposed 
to 
some 
other 
“criminal 
prosecution” that is entirely unrelated to the alleged rape.  
Because we must construe this ambiguity against the State as 
the drafter, we conclude that the consent form does not 
contain Varriale’s consent to the use of his DNA in criminal 
prosecutions that are unrelated to the alleged rape. 
 
Id.  The intermediate appellate court concluded nonetheless that the ambiguity was 
“ultimately immaterial” because the State did not run afoul of the Fourth Amendment as 
it “had no obligation to obtain a warrant before reexamining the DNA sample that it had 
lawfully obtained.”  Varriale, 218 Md. App. at 53, 96 A.3d at 796; see id. at 55, 96 A.3d 
at 797. 
 
The thrust of the Majority’s reasoning here hangs on its threshold determination 
that Varriale did not place an “express limitation” on his consent.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 2 
(“[W]e shall hold that, where Varriale’s consent to search was not expressly limited by 
him, by the State, or by law, the Fourth Amendment does not preclude the State from 
storing and using his voluntarily provided DNA sample and resultant DNA profile for 
7 
 
additional, unrelated criminal investigations.”), 9, 15, 18, 18 n.9, 19 (“Therefore, absent 
an express limitation placed on the use or storage of the DNA evidence by Varriale, the 
State, or by law, we cannot conclude that it was unreasonable for the State to maintain 
and utilize Varriale’s DNA for subsequent unrelated investigations.”), 19, 24, 25.  In 
interpreting the Consent Form signed by Varriale, the Court majority reasons that it  
demonstrates neither an express limitation on the permitted 
use of the DNA evidence nor an express consent to any future 
use.  Indeed, the form does not specify what the State would 
do with the DNA evidence once it was collected (namely, that 
it would retain the DNA profile and upload it to the LDIS).  
Unlike the Court of Special Appeals, however, we do not 
conclude that the form should be construed against the State 
to mean that there was no consent to the subsequent use and 
analysis of Varriale’s DNA. 
 
Maj. Slip Op. at 15.  The Majority proceeds then to apply the United States Supreme 
Court’s “‘objective’ reasonableness” test, as set out in Florida v. Jimeno, 500 U.S. 248, 
251 (1991), to measure the scope of Varriale’s consent: “[W]hat would the typical 
reasonable person have understood by the exchange between the officer and the suspect?”  
See Maj. Slip Op. at 15.  The Majority concludes, applying the Jimeno test, that  
[l]ooking at the totality of the circumstances of this case, we 
cannot conclude that the lawful use of Varriale’s DNA was 
limited only to the rape investigation.  It is undisputed that 
Varriale made no express limitation indicating that his 
consent was limited to or conditioned upon the DNA 
evidence being used exclusively in the rape investigation. 
 
Maj. Slip Op. at 18. 
 
The Majority’s assessment of the scope of Varriale’s consent, in my view, is so far 
removed from the reality of what a typical reasonable person would have believed, based 
8 
 
on the totality of the circumstances in this case, as to boggle the mind of virtually any 
person-on-the-street in our State.  A typical reasonable person, presented with the 
Consent Form at issue in this case, with a specific case number written on the top of the 
form identifying the aim and scope of the investigation as being a part of an ongoing, 
open rape investigation,6 would assume that, indeed, the biological samples provided 
(and the DNA profile developed from the samples) would be used only in connection 
with the ongoing, open rape investigation.  Furthermore, a reasonable person would 
understand the Consent Form to mean: “any evidence found to be involved in this 
investigation, being conducted by the Anne Arundel County Police Department can be 
used in any future criminal prosecution [of the alleged crime under investigation].”  
(emphasis added).   
By its own terms and the circumstances of the encounter between Detective Wood 
and Varriale, Varriale’s Consent Form limits the scope of the search (and its fruit) to use 
only in the rape investigation case (“this investigation”) and any future criminal 
prosecution related thereto.  When Varriale’s DNA profile was compared to the DNA 
profile of the biological samples taken from under the alleged victim’s fingernails, his 
sample was found to exclude him as a suspect in the rape investigation and the scope of 
consent reached its limit.  After that failed comparison, however, Varriale’s sample 
(during the automatic database search, see Maj. Slip Op. at 5–7) was compared to 
                                              
6 Most burglary investigations probably do not call for the collection of a penile swab, 
unless it is suspected that a penis was used as a burglary tool.  In any event, this fact 
reinforces the notion that Varriale had every reason to believe it was only a rape 
allegation that was under active investigation. 
9 
 
evidence samples not “found to be involved in this [rape] investigation,” to wit, every 
other sample from every unsolved crime for which there was a DNA sample entered into 
the LDIS suspect index; i.e., evidence from untold other investigations.  A typical 
reasonable person would not understand Varriale’s Consent Form to encompass such a 
continuation of the use of the fruit of his sample. 
 
The Majority is wrong to conclude, therefore, that Varriale did not limit expressly 
the scope of his consent.  Varriale limited the scope of his consent—the standard Consent 
Form provided to him by the Anne Arundel County Police Department limited expressly 
the scope of his consent by its own terms.  Because the Majority misunderstands the 
appropriate scope of Varriale’s consent, its Fourth Amendment analysis is flawed as well. 
 
Even if the consent may be deemed not to be limited expressly to use of Varriale’s 
biological samples (and resultant DNA profile) only in the rape investigation, I cannot 
endorse that the Court of Special Appeals and the Majority here appear to expect a 
homeless person living in the woods to be able to appreciate that he needs to re-negotiate 
the terms of the pre-printed Consent Form to specify that his biological samples may not 
be used to investigate any imaginable crime other than the one being investigated.  This is 
beyond the ken of a typical lay person, even one who is not a homeless person living in 
the woods.  Unless and until the Public Defender or private criminal defense attorneys 
open offices in the woods,7 the Majority’s standard, as applied in this case, represents an 
                                              
7 Or raccoons are accepted for matriculation in law schools.   
10 
 
unreasonable expectation of what a typical reasonable person in Varriale’s shoes would 
know to do. 
II. 
UNREASONABLE SEARCHES 
Given the scope of Varriale’s consent, the subsequent analysis and database 
comparison of Varriale’s DNA profile with the DNA profiles associated with cold cases 
in Anne Arundel County is a separate search.  On the facts of this case, this second search 
was an unreasonable one that violated Varriale’s Fourth Amendment rights.  The “match” 
resulting from further testing of his biological materials should have been suppressed. 
The Fourth Amendment guarantees that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in 
their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures shall 
not be violated[.]”  U.S. Const. amend. IV.  Where an individual consents voluntarily to a 
search, that search does not violate his or her Fourth Amendment rights.  See Maj. Slip 
Op. at 11–12 (discussing the standards for consent and “voluntariness”); State v. Green, 
375 Md. 595, 609, 826 A.2d 486, 494 (2003) (“Where an individual’s encounter with the 
police is purely consensual, ‘no privacy interests [are] invaded and thus the Fourth 
Amendment is not implicated.’’) (quoting Ferris v. State, 355 Md. 356, 375, 735 A.2d 
491, 501 (1999)).  Once a search goes outside the scope of consent, however, it becomes 
unreasonable.  See Jimeno, 500 U.S. at 252 (“A suspect may of course delimit as he 
chooses the scope of the search to which he consents.”); Gamble v. State, 318 Md. 120, 
129, 567 A.2d 95, 100 (1989) (“‘[A] consensual search may go no further than the limits’ 
defined by the consent.” (quoting State v. Jensen, 723 P.2d 443, 446 (Wash. App. 
1986))); Buckley v. State, 797 N.E.2d 845, 849 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (“Because [consent 
11 
 
to search] comes within an established exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant 
requirement, the scope of the authority to search is strictly limited to the consent given, 
and a consensual search is reasonable only if it is kept within the bound of that 
consent.”); State v. Binner, 886 P.2d 1056 (Or. App. 1994) (holding that a DNA sample 
taken for one purpose cannot be used subsequently for a different purpose without 
offending the Fourth Amendment); see also 4 LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on 
the Fourth Amendment § 8.1(c) (8th ed. 2014) (“When the police are relying upon 
consent as the basis for their warrantless search, they have no more authority than they 
have apparently been given by the consent.”). 
Varriale consented for his DNA profile to be compared only to the DNA profile 
gleaned from the fingernail scrapings of the alleged rape victim.  Had the police 
recovered other biological materials from the victim of the alleged crime scene of the 
rape, comparison of that with Varriale’s DNA profile would have been fair game under 
the consent given here.  The further DNA comparison, achieved by searching LDIS, was 
outside, however, the scope of Varriale’s consent.  Once outside the scope of consent, the 
far-ranging comparison search became a warrantless second search.  “[W]e look at any 
DNA collection effort as two discrete and separate searches.  The first search is the actual 
swab of the inside of [the suspect’s] mouth and the second is the analysis of the DNA 
sample thus obtained, a step required to produce the DNA profile.”  King v. State, 425 
Md. 550, 594, 42 A.3d 549, 575 (2012), rev’d, Maryland v. King, 569 U.S. ___, ___, 133 
S. Ct. 1958, 1980 (2013) (determining that, under the specific circumstances of the case, 
the second search was reasonable); see Raynor v. State, 440 Md. 71, 98, 99 A.3d 753, 
12 
 
769 (2014) (Adkins, J., dissenting) (“As I see it, two distinct events happened in this case 
that raise Fourth Amendment concerns.  The first is the State’s collection of Raynor’s 
DNA from the police station chair after inviting him to the station for questioning, as 
which time he refused to submit to DNA testing.  The second is the analysis and 
submission to the CODIS database of the DNA.”); see also United States v. Mitchell, 652 
F.3d 387, 407 (2011) (“The second ‘search’ at issue is, of course, the processing of the 
DNA sample and creation of the DNA profile for CODIS.  This search also has the 
potential to infringe upon privacy rights.”).  
As the Majority points out, in Raynor, 440 Md. 71, 99 A.3d 753, this Court held 
that “once the state lawfully possessed a suspect’s DNA, subsequent testing of that DNA 
does not amount to a Fourth Amendment search,” to wit, the State collected lawfully 
biological materials discarded by a suspect in his perspiration on a chair in the police 
station.  Maj. Slip Op. at 20.  I conclude, however, under the Katz test, that subsequent 
testing does amount to a Fourth Amendment search in the consent context of the present 
case.  
The Katz test, from Justice Harlan’s concurrence to Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 
347 (1967) (Harlan, J., concurring), remains the “lodestar for determining whether police 
conduct is a search for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.”  Raynor, 440 Md. at 83, 99 
A.3d at 759.  The Katz test invokes a twofold analysis to decide what is protected under 
the Fourth Amendment.  The first is that the person needs to have exhibited an actual 
(subjective) expectation of privacy, and the second, that the expectation be one that 
13 
 
society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.  Katz, 389 U.S. at 361 (Harlan, J., 
concurring).  
Every person should be presumed to start with an actual expectation of privacy in 
his or her DNA, although the vigor of that expectation may be diminished in those with a 
prior criminal record.  DNA is not collected for employment purposes (like fingerprints 
are for some forms of employment).  It is not recorded by the government at birth, at the 
issuance of a driver’s license, or at any point during a citizen’s life except in the 
investigation of a crime.8  DNA differs from fingerprints in the sheer wealth of 
information it contains.9  See King, 425 Md. at 595, 42 A.3d at 576 (“We do not embrace 
wholly the analogy between fingerprints and DNA samples advanced in Judge Raker’s 
concurring opinion in [State v. Raines, 383 Md. 1, 857 A.2d 19 (2004)] and by the State 
                                              
8 DNA may be recorded collected and recorded also during diagnostic medical 
procedures, like genetic testing, but the courts have made it abundantly clear that DNA 
medical testing is different than DNA testing done by the police.  See Maryland v. King, 
569 U.S. ___, ___, 133 S. Ct. 1958, 1966–67 (2013) (determining that the DNA used for 
forensic DNA testing “does not show far reaching and complex characteristics like 
genetic traits”); id. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1968 (noting that the CODIS loci are not “known 
to have any association with a genetic disease or any other genetic predisposition.  Thus, 
the information in the database is only useful for human identity testing”).  The DNA 
discussed here is simply that thought-to-be unimportant DNA that marks you as 
completely unique from virtually any other human on the planet.  
 
9 The Majority, like many other courts, insists that DNA and fingerprints are identical 
essentially.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 15–16.  The Supreme Court, in King, found that to be 
true in the case of arrestees, felons, and parolees, who already have a diminished 
expectation of privacy, and when there is a compelling government interest at play.  I am 
disinclined to extend the Supreme Court’s reasoning to those who are not suspected of a 
crime (as was the situation of Varriale after he was excluded as a person of interest in the 
rape investigation) when the government has no legitimate interest that warrants 
intrusion.  
14 
 
in the present case.  As aptly noted, fingerprints are a physical set of ridges on the skin of 
a person’s fingers that, when exposed to ink (or other medium) and the resultant imprint 
placed on paper or electronic records, can determine usually and accurately a person’s 
identity by matching the physical characteristics to a known set of fingerprints.  DNA, on 
the other hand, is contained within our cells and is collected by swabbing the interior of a 
cheek (or blood draw or otherwise obtained biological material).”), rev’d, 569 U.S. ___, 
133 S. Ct. 1958; see id. at 595–96, 42 A.3d at 576–77 (“The information derived from a 
fingerprint is related only to physical characteristics and can be used to identify a person, 
but no more.  A DNA sample, obtained through a buccal swab, contains within it 
unarguably much more than a person’s identity.”); Raynor, 440 Md. at 103, 99 A.3d at 
771–72 (Adkins, J., dissenting) (“DNA has the potential to reveal enormous amounts of 
private information about a person.  With today’s technology, scientists have the power 
to discern genetic traits, behavioral tendencies, propensity to suffer disease or defects, 
other private medical information and possibly more.”).  DNA differs also from 
fingerprints because the acquisition of a biological sample sufficient to garner a DNA 
profile requires a comparatively greater intrusion into one’s body.  Because DNA is 
harder to collect and analyze and is not “collected” routinely by the government in the 
same manner as fingerprints, people still maintain an expectation of privacy interest in 
their DNA.10, 11  
                                              
10 Although the State, as of now, does not have the ability (without a warrant) to test for 
personal medical information, it still has access to material that contains that information.  
As courts become increasingly relaxed about DNA testing, citizens may fear that one day 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
15 
 
                                              
(…continued) 
their medical information will be accessible.  After all, as the United States Supreme 
Court points out in King, technology is improving quickly.  The Supreme Court noted 
that “the FBI has already begun testing devices that will enable the police to process the 
DNA of arrestees within 90 minutes.”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1977.  This 
technological increase in speed leads one to believe reasonably that the same technology 
will make processing of medical records to become more readily available and faster as 
well.  “[W]e cannot turn a blind eye to the vast genetic treasure map that remains in the 
DNA sample retained by the State.”  King, 425 Md. at 596, 42 A.3d at 577, rev’d, King, 
569 U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. 1958. 
Another potential fear is that a State or local law enforcement database containing 
DNA profiles could be hacked and persons unfettered by statutory limitations on the use 
of the data by law enforcement will have access to one’s unique identity or one’s medical 
information.  The fear that the database will be hacked is not so futuristic, given current 
events.  See, e.g., Ken Dilanian & Ted Birdis, Officials: Second Hack Exposed Military 
and 
Intel 
Data, 
Associated 
Press, 
June 
12, 
2015, 
available 
at 
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/d842d757851b4a59aca2aecf2f31995a/union-says-all-
federal-workers-fell-victim-hackers; AP Source: Cardinals Allegedly Hack Astros Player 
Database, 
June 
16, 
2015, 
USA 
Today, 
available 
at 
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/2015/06/16/ap-source-cardinals-allegedly-
hacked-astros-player-database/28816387/; Patricia Zengerle & Megan Cassella, Millions 
More Americans Hit by Government Personnel Data Hack, June 16, 2015, Reuters, 
available 
at 
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/09/us-cybersecurity-usa-
idUSKCN0PJ2M420150709.  Although the Supreme Court says it need not speculate 
about the risks posed by a system that “did not contain comparable security provisions,” 
King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1980 (internal quotation omitted), given the 
attributions to and projections about technological advances, due speculation is warranted 
also to technological weaknesses and the consequences resulting therefrom.  It is cause 
enough for fear for someone to have your social security number, which is issued by the 
federal government.  The fear would be untold if the information contained in your DNA 
was in someone else’s hands, especially if you are unaware the State has uploaded the 
DNA profile to databases that are more attractive to hackers, foreign or domestic.  
 
11 The Majority relies on the analogy between DNA and fingerprints to support its 
opinion.  The Majority, as do a number of other courts, concludes that DNA is another 
booking procedure like fingerprinting, see Maj. Slip Op. at 15–16, even though 
fingerprint collection has not “undergone definitive Fourth Amendment scrutiny.”  King, 
425 Md. at 596, 42 A.3d at 577, rev’d, 569 U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. 1958; see King, 569 U.S. 
at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1988 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“The ‘great expansion in fingerprinting 
came before the modern era of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence,’ and so we were never 
asked to decide the legitimacy of the practice.” (quoting United States v. Kincade, 379 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
16 
 
In United States v. Davis, 690 F.3d 226 (4th Cir. 2012), the United States Court of 
Appeals for the Fourth Circuit found that the defendant maintained a privacy interest in 
his DNA when it was collected from his clothes.  Davis went to the hospital for a gunshot 
wound, which he claimed resulted from being shot by a robber.  Davis, 690 F.3d at 230.  
The officers that investigated Davis’s claim took his blood-soaked clothes and stored 
them in evidence in case they needed them during the investigation of the alleged 
robbery.  Id.  Investigating police decided to investigate Davis further, based on their 
conversations with him at the hospital.  Id.  The officers found marijuana in Davis’s car 
and arrested him on drug charges, which were dropped later.  Id.  The initial robbery 
investigation was not pursued and charges were not brought.  Id.  Davis’s bloody clothes 
were logged into evidence on the same sheet that connected Davis to the marijuana.  
Davis, 690 F.3d at 231.  At that point, Davis was both a victim and an arrestee.  Id.  His 
DNA, however, was on items that pertained to his status as a victim.  Id.  Later, Michael 
Neal was murdered and Davis became a suspect.  Id.  His clothes from the earlier events 
were still in the evidence room of the Howard County Police Department.  Id.  The police 
took the clothes from when Davis was shot and, without a warrant, created a DNA profile 
from the blood, compared it to DNA found at the Neal murder crime scene, and 
discovered that Davis did not match the DNA from the Neal murder crime scene.  Id.  
Nonetheless, the police entered then Davis’s DNA profile into their local DNA database.  
                                              
(…continued) 
F.3d 813, 874 (9th Cir. 2004) (Kozinski, J. dissenting)).  But cf. King, 133 S. Ct. at 1976–
77 (majority opinion) (discussing fingerprinting as a form of identification).   
17 
 
Id.  The general comparison search of Davis’s DNA profile with DNA profiles connected 
to “cold cases” in the local DNA database resulted in a “hit” to a different robbery and 
murder crime scene.  Davis, 690 F.3d at 232.  As a result of the hit, Davis was arrested.  
Id.   
The Davis Court found that “a person who is solely a crime victim does not lose 
all reasonable expectation of privacy in his or her DNA material simply because it has 
come into the lawful possession of the police.”  Davis, 690 F.3d at 244.  In particular, the 
Davis court notes that, although sister courts recognize that “the Constitution allows the 
collection of DNA samples,” they “uniformly recognize” also that “persons who have not 
been arrested have a greater privacy interest in their DNA that persons who have been 
arrested.”  Id.  The Fourth Circuit’s reasoning in Davis between the different accorded 
privacy interests in DNA between an innocent person and an arrestee is compelling.  
Varriale was not an arrestee and had the fullest scope of the Fourth Amendment’s 
protections available to him, as did Davis as a victim. 
Varriale exhibited an actual (subjective) expectation of privacy.  His consent 
reduced temporarily, and in limited fashion, his reasonable expectation of privacy to the 
testing of his DNA in an effort to eliminate police suspicion regarding the rape 
allegation12; his consent did not forego suddenly, and forevermore, any privacy interest in 
                                              
12 In Fernandez v. California, 571 U.S. ___, 134 S. Ct. 1126 (2014), the Supreme Court 
found that a homeowner’s consent to search her house is valid, even if the other occupant 
objects, if the objecting owner is absent.  One reason that a homeowner may consent to 
have their house searched even if the police could not obtain a warrant, the Court 
supposed, was that the owner believed he or she was under suspicion: “Where the owner 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
18 
 
his DNA.13  “Even an arrestee, who has a diminished expectation of privacy, does not 
forfeit forever all privacy interest in his effects.”  Davis, 690 F.3d at 243.  Furthermore, 
once he was excluded as the source of DNA found under the victim’s fingernails, his full 
expectation of privacy was re-established.14  
Not only does the Majority refuse to recognize the actual expectation of privacy 
that Varriale had in his DNA profile upon exclusion as a possible suspect in the rape 
investigation, the Majority shies away further from recognizing outright that the second 
comparison search of LDIS was, indeed, a search, and discusses at length why it is not a 
                                              
(…continued) 
believes that he or she is under suspicion, the owner may want the police to search the 
premises so that suspicions are dispelled.”  Fernandez, 571 U.S. at ___, 134 S. Ct. at 
1132.  Surely, we cannot imagine that this means the State may enter the home at any 
time after that initial search consent; rather, we would demand that the police obtain 
consent for each and every subsequent search.  We would not find it reasonable that one 
instance of consent, designed to remove suspicion and help the police narrow their search 
to appropriate suspects, means the owner has given up forever his or her privacy interest 
in the home.  To say otherwise would bestow on the police the same power Bram Stoker 
gave to Dracula and his brethren—once invited over the threshold, they may enter at any 
time thereafter. 
 
13 From the Majority’s reading of what it takes for a person to exhibit an actual 
(subjective) privacy expectation in his or her DNA profile, Varriale might have been 
expected to wear a HazMat suit to ensure that his DNA could not land anywhere 
unintended.  
 
14 We offer this status to those who are: arrested, but have the charges dropped; tried 
actually, but not convicted; those whose conviction is reversed or vacated, and no new 
trial permitted; or the individual granted an unconditional pardon.  See King, 569 U.S. at 
___, 133 S. Ct. at 1967.  It would be unreasonable to think we do not offer that same 
protection to someone who is never even arrested.    
19 
 
search, but a use.15  See Maj. Slip Op. at 19–22.  The reason, I suspect, the Majority rests 
its legal opinion on the scope of consent issue,16 as opposed to the DNA as a search issue, 
                                              
15 The Majority looks to the reasoning of several other courts to support its conclusion 
that a reasonable person would understand that, upon giving voluntarily a DNA sample 
without an express limitation on the use of that sample, his or her DNA profile would be 
retained forever by the State and, in weekly automatic searches, compared to DNA 
samples collected from crime scenes.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 5–6, 15–18.  The Majority’s 
reliance on some of these cases is flawed.  To the extent that the Majority relies on the 
similarity of fingerprints and DNA to justify the search, Maj. Slip Op. at 15–16, that is 
addressed above, supra at p.14. 
The Majority relies heavily on Commonwealth v. Gaynor, 820 N.E.2d 233 (Mass. 
2005).  See Maj. Slip Op. at 16–17. The discussion in Gaynor is based on the 
interpretation of a consent form.  Because the Gaynor Court interprets the consent form 
in the same way that the Majority interprets Varriale’s consent form, they agree on the 
expectation a reasonable person would have.  Since I find that interpretation incorrect, 
see supra Part I of this dissent, I find that a reasonable person would not have concluded 
what the Gaynor Court and the Majority believes they would have. 
 
The Majority relies next on People v. Collins, 250 P.3d 668 (Colo. App. 2010).  
See Maj. Slip Op. at 17–18.  The facts of this case are starkly similar to King.  Colorado 
police matched ultimately Collins’s DNA to the DNA left on a rape victim.  Collins, 250 
P.3d at 672.  Collins had been under investigation initially for a robbery in Missouri.  
Collins, 250 P.3d at 671.  Police in Missouri believed they could connect Collins to the 
robbery through DNA.  Id.  He consented to have his DNA tested.  Id.  Collins’s DNA 
matched the DNA the police obtained from the crime scene, as well as DNA from 
another Missouri crime scene that involved a home invasion and sexual assault.  Id.  The 
Missouri police noted that Collins had a Colorado arrest record and forwarded his DNA 
profile to the Colorado police.  Collins, 250 P.3d at 672.  It was found that Collins’s 
DNA matched the DNA found on a rape victim in 1999.  Id.  Although this case was 
decided four years before King, now that King has been decided, the jurisprudential value 
of Collins should be analyzed in light of King.  Collins involved an arrestee: his DNA 
could be collected and his criminal history determined and ascertained as a part of getting 
the full picture of the arrestee’s identity.  Pursuant to King, running the arrestee’s DNA 
through a cold-case database is not a Fourth Amendment violation because of the 
legitimate government interest and the arrestee’s diminished privacy rights.  
Collins does not inform us, however, about the proper outcome of the present case.  
The Majority’s use of Collins as support that once the defendant gave his consent, he 
should have expected it would be used in any other case, presents two problems.  First, 
there was no written agreement, but an oral one, between the police and Collins.  The 
exact conversation is not discussed in the Collins opinion.  So, we cannot analyze any 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
20 
 
is because the United States Supreme Court’s holding in King, 569 U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. 
1958, supports the notion that subsequent DNA testing is a search.  The holding in King 
is a narrow one and is based on the idea that DNA collection and analysis is a search.  
The United States Supreme Court held:  
When officers make an arrest supported by probable cause to 
hold for a serious offense and they bring the suspect to the 
station to be detained in custody, taking and analyzing a 
cheek swab of the arrestee’s DNA is, like fingerprinting and 
photographing, a legitimate police booking procedure that is 
reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. 
 
569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1980 (emphasis added).  This does not mean that DNA 
analysis and comparison is not a search, only that, in the narrow factual context of an 
arrestee involved in a police booking procedure, it is a reasonable search.17   
                                              
(…continued) 
potential differences between concepts of consent in Missouri and Maryland.  Second, 
Collins’s DNA was matched to the crime for which he was suspected—the robbery.  In 
light of King, we should not look here to Collins for guidance because the King decision 
renders moot the exact legal discussion of the scope of the arrestee’s consent.  The only 
value for which the Majority may depend on Collins is its analysis that the Court took the 
defendant’s lack of express limitation on the scope as evidence of no limitation, and that 
the police do not have to inform the suspect that the DNA will be used in subsequent 
investigation.  These issues go directly to scope of consent, and were addressed in the 
first Part of this dissent.   
 
16 If the subsequent comparison with all the “cold-case” samples in LDIS is not a search, 
it does not matter where Varriale’s consent ended. 
 
17 The Fourth Amendment is only applicable when dealing with the right of the people 
against unreasonable search and seizure.  The Supreme Court concluded that a buccal 
swab is a search.  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1969.  The State also has the right 
to search (in the form of a buccal swab) the person of the accused when legally arrested.  
See King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1970.  A buccal swab, however, does not give the 
State the identity of the person, unless it is analyzed, a profile created, and samples 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
21 
 
King offers little further assistance in the present case.  The biological samples 
obtained from Varriale were not taken during an arrest.  They were not taken pursuant to 
a police booking procedure.  They were not taken in order to identify the giver of the 
samples as the correct pretrial defendant or for a pretrial custody decision.  See King, 569 
U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1980.  Varriale’s identity was known fully as one who 
consented voluntarily in an effort presumably to exclude himself from suspicion of an 
alleged rape.18  The compelling government interest of identification that made the 
further DNA search through CODIS reasonable in King does not exist here.  
 
In Raynor, the Majority found that analysis by the police of the 13 identifying so-
called “junk” loci is not a search under the Fourth Amendment when the biological 
sample was abandoned in perspiration on a chair in a police station.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 
75, 99 A.3d at 755.  The DNA analysis in that holding was a single comparison of 
Raynor’s DNA profile with that of the DNA profile extracted from biological materials 
left on the rape victim.  Raynor, 440 Md. at 76–77, 99 A.3d at 756.  Raynor’s holding is 
of limited applicability to the case at bar, which deals not with the single comparison, but 
                                              
(…continued) 
compared.  It is that comparison of the subject profile with other DNA profiles derived 
from other biological samples that gives the State an individual’s identity (identity being 
the legitimate government interest in play in King).  If identity is the product of the 
search, then the search is not just obtaining the buccal swab, but the analysis and 
comparison of its contents. 
 
18 Varriale was not arrested and was not going to be processed, charged, or tried.  The 
reasons that justify a subsequent search for identification purposes (one who has been 
arrested, who is being tried, and the criminal history to discover other offenses, or a 
record of violence or mental disorder, King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1971–72), do 
not exist in this case.   
22 
 
with a generalized, far-sweeping search of all DNA profiles in a cold case database.  If, 
as in Raynor, the person is matched to the DNA profile of the initial qualifying case, and 
then arraigned, any subsequent DNA cold-case comparison will be determined by 
application of the Supreme Court’s decision in King.  But that is not the case here.  
Varriale (the person of interest) was excluded as the source of the DNA found on the 
victim as a result of the initial comparison.  The subsequent comparison search of 
Varriale’s DNA profile in LDIS does not fall under King.  As the Raynor court did not 
discuss the topic of general cold-case “fishing” investigative searches, Raynor does not 
provide the legal support for its conclusion that the Majority believes it does.    
The Majority finds that the comparison search of the LDIS database of DNA 
profiles associated with cold cases cannot be a search because a person does not retain 
privacy rights once the police have obtained “lawfully” a DNA profile.  See Maj. Slip Op. 
at 20.  The Majority finds support for its decision in several cases, but those cases all 
have factual backgrounds that differ significantly, and do not lend strength to the 
Majority’s conclusion.  In all of those cases, the defendants had their DNA collected 
because they were being booked for other crimes, which they had committed.19  When an 
                                              
19 The Majority focuses primarily on Wilson v. State, 132 Md. App. 510, 752 A.2d 1250 
(2000).  Maj. Slip Op. at 23–24.  In that case, a blood sample from Wilson was collected 
pursuant to a warrant in connection with a 1991 rape investigation.  Wilson, 132 Md. 
App. at 531–32, 752 A.2d at 1262.  A DNA profile was not developed, however, because 
the victim made a positive identification of someone else during a police lineup in which 
Wilson participated.  Id.  When Wilson was suspected of committing a rape in 2000, the 
police obtained a warrant for his DNA.  Id.  When they re-discovered they had his DNA 
on file, however, they tested the DNA sample that they had stored from the previous rape 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
23 
 
                                              
(…continued) 
investigation, rather than execute the warrant.  Id.  They did not run it against every cold 
case in the jurisdiction, as here, however; they performed basic analysis of two samples.  
Notwithstanding the Wilson court’s belief that, once DNA is in lawful police 
possession, no further Fourth Amendment intrusion occurs, I note that the Maryland 
DNA Collection Act makes clear that a DNA sample and profile must be destroyed if the 
individual is not convicted of a qualifying crime or if the original charges are dropped.  
Md. Code (2003, 2008 Repl. Vol, 2014 Cum. Supp.), Public Safety Article [“PS”] § 2-
504(d)(2).  The very inclusion of this provision implies to me that the Legislature found 
something uneasy (and perhaps unconstitutional) about keeping the DNA sample of that 
class of persons enumerated in the Md. DNA Collection Act: those for whom 
(a) qualifying criminal charges are determined to be unsupported by probable cause; 
(b) criminal action was begun against the individual relating to the crime but did not 
result in a conviction of the individual; (c) the conviction was finally reversed or vacated 
and no new trial was permitted; or, (d) the individual was granted an unconditional 
pardon  See PS § 2-504(d)(2), § 2-511(a)(1)(i), (ii), and (iii).  Although I admit Varriale 
does not fall under the Maryland DNA Collection Act, if a person arrested on probable 
cause has the right to have his or her DNA profile destroyed, why not the person who is 
not arrested and who is never charged with a qualifying crime?  As Justice Scalia 
foretold, “the [Maryland DNA Collection] Act manages to burden uniquely the sole 
group for whom the Fourth Amendment protections ought to be most jealously guarded: 
people who are innocent of the state’s accusations.”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 
1989 (Scalia, J., dissenting). 
 
The Majority relies also on Washington v. State, 653 So.2d 362 (Fla. 1994).  Maj. 
Slip Op. at 26 n.13.  In that case, the DNA was not run through a database.  The 
defendant’s DNA was collected for his suspected involvement in an assault.  Washington, 
653 So.2d at 363–64.  He was suspected also in another crime (a murder).  Id.  The police 
compared his DNA, obtained in connection with the assault case, to the DNA found at 
the murder scene.  Id.  Thus, this was not a cold case search of a person not suspected of 
a crime through all databases.  This search is permitted under King, but does not provide 
guidance in the present case.  
In addition, the Majority relies on State v. Hauge, 79 P.3d 131 (Haw. 2003).  Maj. 
Slip Op. at 26 n.13.  Again, DNA was collected through a warrant in a robbery case 
investigation.  Hauge, 79 P.3d at 135.  The DNA collected pursuant to the warrant was 
compared to blood found at another crime scene in which the defendant was also a 
suspect.  Id.  This situation is similar to Raynor or King.  Thus, Hauge did not involve a 
broad search as occurred in present case. 
The Majority’s reliance on Smith v. State, 744 N.E.2d 437 (Ind. 2001), is the most 
apt of the lot.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 26 n.13.  In that case, a defendant was accused of rape 
and suspected in a second rape.  Smith, 744 N.E.2d at 438–39.  He was acquitted of the 
first rape, but his DNA was run through the database.  Smith, 744 N.E.2d at 439.  It 
 
 
 (Continued…) 
24 
 
individual has been arrested for probable cause, that individual does have diminished 
privacy rights, as either an arrestee, or in some cases, an incarcerated person.  Raynor, 
440 Md. at 97–98, 99 A.3d at 768 (Adkins, J., dissenting).  Biological samples may be 
collected, DNA profiles obtained, and comparison searches may be done for the purpose 
of identification, and the search will be deemed likely reasonable.  
                                              
(…continued) 
should be recognized that, in Maryland, the biological sample and DNA profile obtained 
therefrom would have been destroyed after the acquittal.  See PS § 2-511(a)(1)(i).  Had it 
not been destroyed, but instead run through a database, the results would have been 
suppressed and the employee who ran it would have been found likely in violation of the 
Maryland DNA Collection Act.  PS § 2-504 (d)(2).  This would have followed in order to 
protect a suspect who is not convicted of a qualifying crime. 
 
The Majority relies next on State v. Bowman, 337 S.W.3d 679 (Mo. 2011).  Maj. 
Slip Op. at 26 n.13.  Bowman was convicted originally of two murders (though his 
conviction was later overturned and a new trial ordered).  Bowman, 337 S.W.3d at 683.  
Bowman consented to have his DNA taken during the investigation of those murders.  
Bowman, 337 S.W.3d at 684.  After Bowman’s conviction was overturned, that DNA 
sample was then sent to another state for specific comparison with a crime where 
Bowman was a suspect.  Bowman, 337 S.W.3d at 685.  This is a specific case 
comparison, not the general database search as in the present case.  Furthermore, 
although the DNA was tested after Bowman’s conviction was overturned and he was on 
bail, Bowman, 337 S.W.3d at 695, this does seem to be the type of identification that the 
Supreme Court referred to in King.  “Even if an arrestee is released on bail, development 
of DNA identification revealing the defendant’s unknown violent past can and should 
lead to the revocation of his condition release.”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 
1974.  Because Bowman was an arrestee with diminished expectation of privacy, and the 
type of identification there is a legitimate government interest, this case is in the same 
vein as King, but not the present case. 
 
Finally, the Majority relies on State v. Notti, 71 P.3d 1233 (Mont. 2003).  Maj. 
Slip Op. at 26 n.13.  The DNA comparison in Notti very clearly tracks King.  The suspect 
was convicted, and after his conviction, his DNA profile was run through CODIS and 
matched to DNA left at a murder scene.  Notti, 71 P.3d at 1235.  Again, this is not the 
situation in play here. To rely on this case to support the conclusion that a subsequent 
CODIS search is not a search, but rather a “use,” is incorrect.  The search occurred, but 
was deemed reasonable. 
25 
 
 
It is clear from today’s opinion that the Majority is not entirely in touch with what 
most of the people deem reasonable.  I find it hard to imagine that society-at-large would 
find it unreasonable that a person believes he or she has a privacy right in his or her 
DNA.  More precisely, society would find it reasonable that a person, who gave up 
voluntarily a biological sample and was excluded as a possible source of DNA recovered 
from the body of an alleged rape victim, had, from the moment of exclusion as a suspect, 
a re-established privacy right, in full vigor, in his or her DNA. 
Without a warrant (or an exception to the warrant requirement), in order for the 
further LDIS search to be lawful, “it must be supported by reasonable, articulable 
suspicion.”  Ferris, 355 Md. at 384, 735 A.2d at 506.  This requires the State to “‘be able 
to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences 
from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.’”  Id. (quoting Terry v. Ohio, 392 
U.S. 1, 21 (1968)). 
In this case, no rationale that warrants a further intrusion into Varriale’s DNA 
profile or “identity” exists once the County excluded Varriale as a source of the 
biological materials recovered from under the fingernails of the alleged rape victim.  
After Varriale was excluded as a possible perpetrator, there were no facts to support 
supposition that Varriale committed any crime.  There was no specific reasonable 
inference any member of the rape investigatory team could have articulated (or did 
articulate) that would provide the State with reasonable suspicion to run a separate search 
using his DNA profile, much less connect him to an unsolved commercial burglary 
committed four years earlier.  “No matter the degree of invasiveness, suspicionless 
26 
 
searches are never allowed if their principle end is ordinary crime-solving.”  King, 569 
U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1982 (Scalia, J., dissenting).   
 
“The Fourth Amendment forbids searching a person for evidence of a crime when 
there is no basis for believing the person is guilty of the crime or is in possession of 
incriminating evidence.  That prohibition is categorical and without exception.”  King, 
569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1980 (Scalia, J., dissenting).  Never has the Supreme Court 
“indicate[d] approval of a search whose primary purpose was to detect evidence of 
ordinary criminal wrongdoing.  That limitation is crucial.  It is only when a governmental 
purpose aside from crime-solving is at stake that we engage in the [] reasonableness 
inquiry . . . .”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1981–82 (Scalia, J., dissenting) 
(internal citations omitted).  In this case, the only government purpose for running this 
search was general crime-solving.  That is not a legitimate government interest that 
warrants the violation of the Fourth Amendment.  
The “traditional standard of reasonableness requires a court to weigh the 
promotion of legitimate governmental interests against the degree to which the search 
intrudes upon an individual’s privacy.”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1970 
(majority opinion) (internal quotations omitted).  Varriale’s DNA profile was protected 
by the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment from a subsequent cold-case database search 
after he was excluded as the source of the DNA recovered from the alleged rape victim.  
He had from that point the full privacy rights in his DNA that any other free citizen does.  
“Although we recognized (and no one can reasonably deny) that solving cold cases is a 
legitimate government interest, a warrantless, suspicionless search cannot be upheld by a 
27 
 
‘generalized interest’ in solving crimes.”  King, 425 Md. at 598, 42 A.3d at 578, rev’d, 
569 U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. 1958.  “Solving unsolved crimes is a noble objective, but it 
occupies a lower place in the American pantheon of noble objectives than the protection 
of our people from suspicionless law-enforcement searches.”  King, 569 U.S. at ___, 133 
S. Ct. at 1989 (Scalia, J., dissenting).  The second search was unreasonable.  
In the dissent to Raynor, Judge Adkins wrote “the majority’s opinion will likely 
have the consequence that many people will be reluctant to go to the police station to 
voluntarily provide information about crimes for fear that they, too, will be added to the 
CODIS database.”20  440 Md. at 108–09, 99 A.3d at 775 (Adkins, J., dissenting).  If the 
Majority opinion in Raynor did not diminish a free person’s desire to assist the police, 
today’s decision will certainly.  After today’s ruling, those who consent21 to the taking of 
their biological materials, in an effort to help the police, will face a certain knowledge 
                                              
20 Other than Raynor, approximately 20 other men consented to have their DNA taken by 
the police to be compared to the crime scene sample.  Raynor v. State, 440 Md. 71, 76, 99 
A.3d 753, 755 (2014).  Given today’s case, one can only imagine how many of those men 
(or any other individual who consents to a DNA swab expecting it to clear himself or 
herself) had their DNA profile run through LDIS, or how many of their DNA profiles are 
still in police possession.  If you were to ask them, I imagine they would be startled to 
know the police not only may have kept their DNA profile, but could run it through a 
cold-case database, and continue to do so as often as the police please.  Nevertheless, the 
Majority claims a reasonable person would expect such.  See Maj. Slip Op. at 5-6, 18–19. 
 
21 Unfortunately, there will be likely many more cases to come in which the DNA profile 
of an unsuspecting consenting citizen (be he or she a volunteer, such as Varriale, or a 
victim, such as the alleged victim in this matter or a victim of a shooting, see supra 
(discussing United States v. Davis, 690 F.3d 226 (4th Cir. 2012)) is uploaded to a 
database of DNA profiles and compared regularly with past and future unsolved crimes.  
Today’s Majority opinion is just a hop, skip, and a jump away from the Court licensing 
potential future police practice of, on a whim, running a victim’s DNA profile through 
LDIS, on a “flyer.” 
28 
 
that, even if not suspected or convicted of a crime, the police can, and will, hold on to 
their DNA profile forever, and may compare it at any time for any or no articulable 
reason. 
In light of the Majority’s opinion (and the potential future consequences), the time 
may be nigh for the enactment of additional legislation or regulations governing the 
collection and maintenance of DNA within local law enforcement databases to protect 
individuals such as Varriale, whose DNA is not otherwise protected by the Maryland 
DNA Collection Act. 
I would reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals in the present case 
and remand the case to the intermediate appellate court with directions to reverse the 
judgement of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County and remand the case to the 
Circuit Court for further proceedings.  
 
Judge Adkins authorizes me to state that she joins the views expressed in this dissent.