Friday, June 5, 2026

Back in action: Charles Flores: Death Row: Texas: Junk (hypnosis) science: Senior Reporter Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg writes in 'The Appeal' that although experts “investigative hypnosis” creates an unacceptably high risk of false testimony, Texas courts have refused to hear Flores’s case - and now his life is in the Supreme Court’s hands. in a story sub-headed, "Psychological experts have roundly condemned hypnosis as junk science. But that isn’t stopping Texas from trying to execute Charles Flores, who was sent to death row based on the testimony of one eyewitness who identified him after she was hypnotized." A consumate reporter, Ms. Weill Greenberg provides one of the most through accounts of the debunked hypnosis session Charles Flores was exposed to, and its terrible aftermath, HL;


PASSAGE OF THE DAY:  "Since 1989, 28 known wrongful convictions have involved the hypnosis of eyewitnesses, according to the National Registry of Exonerations.  Hypnosis is premised on two false ideas: One, that memory acts as a recording, and two, that hypnosis can unlock allegedly repressed memories. In reality, memory can be easily corrupted, manipulated, and altered. Flores appealed his conviction based on a state law that allows people to challenge their conviction after the discovery of relevant scientific evidence that was not available at the time of trial or scientific evidence that contradicts what was presented at trial.  “[T]he ‘controversy’ around investigative hypnosis [has] transformed into complete rejection of the concept by the relevant scientific community,” Flores’s legal team wrote in their request for a new trial.  Last year, in a two-page ruling, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Flores’s petition “without reviewing the merits of the claims raised.” Since the statute’s passage more than ten years ago, theappeals court has rejected every death row prisoner’s petition that invoked the law, according to Flores’s legal team."

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STORY: "Experts say “investigative hypnosis” creates an unacceptably high risk of false testimony, but Texas courts have refused to hear Flores’s case. Now his life is in the Supreme Court’s hands.
Elizabeth Weill-GreenbergMay 27, 2026

GIST: "Psychological experts have roundly condemned hypnosis as junk science. But that isn’t stopping Texas from trying to execute Charles Flores, who was sent to death row based on the testimony of one eyewitness who identified him after she was hypnotized. 

At least 28 states, including Texas, have banned testimony influenced by hypnosis from being introduced in criminal trials. But Flores, who was convicted in 1999, hasn’t benefited from Texas’ state law, which took effect in 2023 and is not retroactive. 

In February, Flores appealed his case to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court is expected to decide in June if it will hear his case, according to his legal team. 

“Sooner or later, the truth’s gonna come out,” Flores recently told Pablo Torre on his podcast, Pablo Torre Finds Out. “And I’m going to have that opportunity to see life after this.”

More than 25 years ago, Flores was convicted for the murder of Elizabeth Black. Flores has always maintained his innocence. 

The prosecution’s case hinged on the eyewitness testimony of Black’s neighbor, Jill Barganier.

At about 6:45 in the morning on Jan. 29, 1998, Barganier saw two men park in Black’s driveway and exit a Volkswagen Beetle. She said it looked like they were heading to the front door. A couple hours later, Elizabeth’s husband returned home and found his wife and their dog had been fatally shot. 

Barganier’s description of the men—two white males with long hair—bears no resemblance to Flores, a Hispanic man who, at the time, was heavyset and had short, shaved hair. 

Prosecutors theorized that the perpetrators broke into the Black’s house to steal a large amount of cash hidden by their son, Gary, who was incarcerated at the time on drug-related offenses. On the day of the murder, police found close to $40,000 in the Black’s home. 

The police almost immediately suspected that Richard Childs, who was known to use and sell drugs, was involved in the crime. However, they first spoke with Childs’s brother, Roy, who told them Richard had recently started selling drugs for a man named Charles Flores. Richard and Roy’s father had been a police officer in the Irving Police Department, one of the agencies involved in the case. 

Barganier identified Childs, who is white and had long hair at the time, as the driver from two photo arrays. 

During a police interview with Childs, part of which was recorded, the police can be heard telling Childs to implicate Flores while “they all joked around together and the officers described Flores in racist terms,” according to Flores’s petition.

Flores says he panicked when he learned the police were looking for Childs’s car, which Childs had abandoned outside Flores’s trailer. 

“I’m having the realization that car is behind my house,” he recently told NBC News. “I’m getting set up.”

He burned the car and fled to Mexico. When he returned, he led police on a high-speed chase and crashed his car. 

“It was just pure, raw fear,” Flores told NBC News of his decision to flee. “I had that thought, ‘They’re gonna kill me, they’re gonna kill me.’ And you know what? I was right.”

On Feb. 4, the police conducted a hypnosis session with Barganier, which was recorded and has been posted on YouTube. 

“When we get you into a deep state of hypnosis, we’re going to take you into a movie theater,” the officer told Barganier. “It’s going to be your own private theater. You’re going to be seeing a documentary, and you’re going to be seeing a film of the events that occurred on that day, on that morning.” 

The officer asked Barganier questions that appeared designed to alter her recollection of the perpetrators’ appearance. He asked if the driver’s hair was “short,” “shaved,” or “neatly cut.” He asked whether the passenger’s hair was “neatly cut or [was] it trimmed?” 

She continued to maintain that both men had long hair. 

Towards the end of the session, the officer seemed to prime her to create new memories, telling her she “will be able to recall more things as time goes on.”

Immediately after the session, she used a computer to create a composite sketch of the passenger; the picture depicts a white man with long hair. She was then shown a photo array of Hispanic men with short hair, including Flores, whose hair was almost buzzed down to his scalp. She did not pick anyone out.About a year later, Flores was on trial for murder, accused of fatally shooting Black. Without an eyewitness identification or any physical evidence, the State’s case was weak. 

But all that changed when Barganier arrived in court. She saw Flores, the only Hispanic person in the courtroom, sitting at the defense table. Local news outlets had published his picture numerous times over the previous year, the same picture she had viewed in the photo array. For the first time, she told prosecutors that he was the passenger in the car. 

On the witness stand, Barganier said she was “[o]ver 100 percent” certain. Barganier’s confidence is not surprising. Research has shown that hypnosis can lead witnesses to become more confident in their memory, even if it is false. Confidence can be persuasive to members of a jury, who can wrongly assume confidence correlates with accuracy. 

The jury found Flores guilty and sentenced him to death. 

Childs did not testify at Flores’s trial. After Flores was convicted, Childs submitted a confession to the court stating that he shot Black, contradicting the prosecutor’s assertion at Flores’s trial that Flores was the shooter. 

Childs pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 35 years. In 2016, Childs was paroled after serving only a portion of his sentence. That same year, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Flores a stay, just days before he was scheduled to be executed. 

Since 1989, 28 known wrongful convictions have involved the hypnosis of eyewitnesses, according to the National Registry of Exonerations

Hypnosis is premised on two false ideas: One, that memory acts as a recording, and two, that hypnosis can unlock allegedly repressed memories. In reality, memory can be easily corrupted, manipulated, and altered.

Flores appealed his conviction based on a state law that allows people to challenge their conviction after the discovery of relevant scientific evidence that was not available at the time of trial or scientific evidence that contradicts what was presented at trial. 

“[T]he ‘controversy’ around investigative hypnosis [has] transformed into complete rejection of the concept by the relevant scientific community,” Flores’s legal team wrote in their request for a new trial

Last year, in a two-page ruling, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Flores’s petition “without reviewing the merits of the claims raised.” Since the statute’s passage more than ten years ago, theappeals court has rejected every death row prisoner’s petition that invoked the law, according to Flores’s legal team.

“Texas courts are arbitrarily preventing prisoners on death row like Mr. Flores, with credible innocence claims, a chance to even get inside a courthouse to prove their innocence,” his attorney, Gretchen Sween, said in a statement to The Appeal. “That is why the last hope is Supreme Court review to affirm that there is some basic floor of federal due process, guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, that applies to this dire circumstance.”

Numerous organizations and individuals have filed briefs urging the Supreme Court to review Flores’s case, including the American Psychological Associationcrime survivor and advocate Jennifer Thompson, and magicians Penn Jillette and Teller, better known as Penn and Teller. 

In Penn and Teller’s brief, they explain that the officer’s “suggestion-based memory manipulation” is the same technique magicians use to “convince [an audience] that things have happened when, in reality, those things never occurred.”

For instance, they wrote, a magician may pretend to shuffle a deck of cards and hand the deck to members of the audience, asking them to cut the deck. Then the magician may say, “We all shuffled the cards, you cut them.” But the participants did not shuffle the cards; they only cut them. The magician’s statement may cause at least some audience members to falsely remember they shuffled the deck. 

“[L]aw enforcement conducted an investigative hypnosis session that was junk science of the worst sort,” they wrote to the Supreme Court. “Use of investigative hypnosis as a purported memory-retrieval tool is precisely the type of deceptive practice that Penn & Teller feel dutybound to expose.''
The entire story can be read at: 

https://theappeal.org/charles-flores-hypnosis-junk-science-penn-teller-texas/

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.  Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog. FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project; FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true;


Thursday, May 28, 2026

Stefon Morant: New Haven Connecticut: Bulletin: Ongoing Federal Civil Rights Wrongful Convictions case: Jury to resume its deliberations at 8.30 A.M. tomorrow (Friday May 29): NBC Connecticut;


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.  Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog. FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project; FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true;

Charles Flores: Death Row: Texas: Forensic hypnosis = Junk Science: Police hypnotized a witness. Now a Texas man faces death Author and advocate for criminal justice reform Jennifer Thompson's extraordinary Washington Post column headed, "Police hypnotized a witness. Now a Texas man (Charles Flores HL) faces death," and sub-headed, "My honest error once put a man in prison. Now I’m fighting for another innocent," noting that:"In 1984, a man broke into my home and brutally raped me. Under the influence of trauma and suggestive police procedures, I identified Ronald Cotton as my attacker. At trial, I was 100 percent confident. I was wrong. But the jury responded to my honest belief in Cotton’s guilt and convicted him. He spent more than a decade behind bars before DNA evidence revealed the truth — he was innocent of the crime, and the real perpetrator was someone else. Cotton was exonerated and released. The scientific consensus now supports the belief that the procedures used in my case — suggestive lineups, repeated exposure to the same suspect and post-identification validation by detectives — contaminated my memory and manufactured the confidence I expressed at trial."

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PASSAGE ONE OF THE DAY: "Flores’s argument is that the hypnosis session essentially created an opening for the witness’s mind to move from her original description of a White man with long hair to her in-court “identification” of short-haired, Hispanic Flores more than a year later. And that is one way wrongful convictions happen."


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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY:  "To be clear, the witness, who did the best she could under outdated and suggestive methods, is not to blame.  It is the responsibility of the legal system to solve crimes using reliable techniques. It is also the responsibility of the legal system to correct its past mistakes when the scientific consensus changes. Investigative or forensic hypnosis, introduced to American jurisprudence after World War II, is now widely criticized as junk science. In fact, inspired by Flores’s case, the Texas legislature in 2023 banned evidence obtained through this method from criminal proceedings. But because that law is not retroactive, Flores remains at risk of execution."


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COMMENTARY: "Police hypnotized a witness. Now a Texas man faces death," by Jennifer Thompson, published by The Washington Post, on May 25, 2026.


SUB-HEADING: "My honest error once put a man in prison. Now I’m fighting for another innocent. (Jennifer Thompson is an author and advocate for criminal justice reform.)


GIST: "In 1984, a man broke into my home and brutally raped me. Under the influence of trauma and suggestive police procedures, I identified Ronald Cotton as my attacker. At trial, I was 100 percent confident.


I was wrong.


But the jury responded to my honest belief in Cotton’s guilt and convicted him. He spent more than a decade behind bars before DNA evidence revealed the truth — he was innocent of the crime, and the real perpetrator was someone else.


Cotton was exonerated and released. The scientific consensus now supports the belief that the procedures used in my case — suggestive lineups, repeated exposure to the same suspect and post-identification validation by detectives — contaminated my memory and manufactured the confidence I expressed at trial.


Wrongful conviction harms not only the person convicted but also the initial crime victim and the community as a whole. 


Cotton spent more than 10 years in prison for something he hadn’t done. 


The justice I thought I had received was ripped away, replaced first by fear, then by paralyzing sadness. 


And my real attacker — a man named Bobby Poole, whose photograph was not shown to me in the aftermath of my rape — went on to commit numerous rapes, sexual assaults and burglaries while he remained free.


After Cotton’s exoneration, he and I became friends, and together we have written and spoken widely about the potential inaccuracy of eyewitness identification and the devastating impact of wrongful convictions.


Which brings us to the case of Charles Flores, who sits on Texas’s death row based on unreliable testimony by a witness who had been hypnotized — literally, hypnotized — by law enforcement.


 The only evidence putting Flores at the site of the January 1998 murder of Betty Black was the in-court identification by this witness, the victim’s neighbor, who testified that she was “100 percent sure” she saw Flores there that day.


The jurors who convicted him never saw the video showing the witness being subjected to suggestive “investigative hypnosis” by a police officer six days after the crime.


The jury also never heard that on the day of the crime itself, and again soon afterward, this witness — whose name I am choosing not to use here — told police she had seen two White men with long hair outside Black’s house on the morning of the crime. 


One she readily picked out of a photo lineup as Richard Childs, who was known to drive the showy pink and purple Volkswagen she also saw at the crime scene. The other, she said, looked “similar” to Childs — thin, White, longhaired.


Flores was a thickset Hispanic man, who in 1998 had short, shaved hair. His photo was placed in a lineup, but the witness did not pick him out.


Flores was implicated in the case by two people who immediately came under police suspicion — Childs and his girlfriend, who had children with Black’s incarcerated son. 


Childs eventually pleaded guilty to shooting and killing Black; he was sentenced to 35 years in prison and paroled 17 years later. He is a free man today.


Flores is not. During his trial, 13 months after the crime, the neighbor-witness who had been hypnotized pointed to him as being the other person she saw outside Betty Black’s house.


 Flores was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.


Here’s what the science of memory teaches is true: Our most reliable recollections are the first ones.


The original video of the witness’s hypnosis session was apparently lost, but a verified recording exists and has been admitted into the court record in Flores’s case. 


If you watch that video — and I encourage you to do so — you will see how the witness’s memory might have been contaminated.


 During the session the detective-hypnotist asked whether she had seen a man with short, shaved hair on the scene, though she had not previously mentioned such a man. 


He also repeatedly suggested she might “recall other things” later on.


In the following weeks, police started referring to Flores as the chief suspect in the crime.


 That was reported in the coverage along with his photograph, which the witness could easily have seen. Experts say that this kind of exposure has been shown to contaminate original memories.


Flores’s argument is that the hypnosis session essentially created an opening for the witness’s mind to move from her original description of a White man with long hair to her in-court “identification” of short-haired, Hispanic Flores more than a year later.


And that is one way wrongful convictions happen.


To be clear, the witness, who did the best she could under outdated and suggestive methods, is not to blame. 


It is the responsibility of the legal system to solve crimes using reliable techniques. It is also the responsibility of the legal system to correct its past mistakes when the scientific consensus changes.


Investigative or forensic hypnosis, introduced to American jurisprudence after World War II, is now widely criticized as junk science.


 In fact, inspired by Flores’s case, the Texas legislature in 2023 banned evidence obtained through this method from criminal proceedings. But because that law is not retroactive, Flores remains at risk of execution


(Flores was scheduled to be executed in June 2016; a stay was entered only days before the scheduled date. More recent efforts by the state to execute him have been held in abeyance.)


 The Texas courts have refused even to consider the evidence indicating that he is an innocent man, convicted with the aid of flawed forensic evidence and a witness’s contaminated memory.


Flores is now asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case. He argues that the Texas courts’ refusal to fairly apply state laws designed to protect the innocent from wrongful execution violated his right to due process.


In a supporting brief, I urge the Supreme Court to conduct the review and ensure that Flores is not wrongfully executed based on unreliable eyewitness identification. 


Others who have filed briefs sharing this concern include the American Psychological Association, whose brief details the current scientific understanding of memory, and the renowned magicians and entertainers Penn & Teller, who stress that hypnosis can manipulate people into believing false memories are true.


According to the Innocence Project, misidentifications are the leading cause of wrongful convictions. 


I know firsthand how suggestive procedures can produce such errors.


 I also know that wrongful convictions inflict lasting harm on everyone involved. Crime victims, survivors and those who care about them do not want an innocent person to be convicted. 


We want and deserve to know that the person who actually caused this harm is the one held accountable. 


When the system gets it wrong, innocent people are torn from their families, and victims are led to believe justice has been done, only to learn that the true perpetrator has gone unpunished.


 Meanwhile, the community remains at risk of being harmed by the true perpetrator.


Ronald Cotton was given a chance to prove his innocence in North Carolina. 


Texas has created a pathway for people like Flores to do the same. Yet thus far the courts have refused to let him pursue it. 


The Supreme Court has the power to intervene and ensure an innocent man is not executed based on an unreliable identification. 


There is still time to correct this injustice before it becomes irreparable.""


The entire post can be read at:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/05/25/witnesss-hypnosis-should-preclude-texas-death-sentence/


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.  Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog. FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project; FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true;