Wednesday, May 13, 2026

May 13: Stefan Morant: New Haven: Connecticut: Ongoing federal civil-rights wrongful conviction trial: From our 'Something is wrong in this picture' department'...As the New Haven Independent (Reporter Mona Mahadevan) reports:"In 2013, a federal judge overturned Scott Lewis’s murder conviction on the basis of police misconduct. Four years later, the City of New Haven paid Lewis $9.5 million in a wrongful-conviction settlement. But in a federal courtroom on Tuesday, an attorney representing the City of New Haven questioned Lewis as if he were indeed the killer. “Did you threaten [Stefon Morant] not to say anything about your involvement with the Turner-Fields homicide?” asked Thomas Gerarde, an attorney representing the city. “I knew nothing about the Turner-Fields homicide,” responded Lewis." Go figure! HL;


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: Lewis was questioned by Gerarde, not as a defendant, but as a witness in an ongoing civil-rights trial for his alleged co-conspirator, Stefon Morant. Both Lewis and Morant were convicted of the 1990 double homicide of former alderman Ricardo Turner and his partner, Lamont Fields. Both spent two decades in prison. Both have long claimed they were framed by former city police Det. Vincent Raucci because of a drug debt. Almost 20 years after his criminal trial, Lewis’s conviction was overturned. Under the Toni Harp administration, the city later awarded $9.5 million to Lewis in a settlement. Morant, meanwhile, spent 21 years behind bars before receiving a sentence reduction and pardon. He eventually won a $5.84 million wrongful-conviction award from the state. Now, Morant is pressing a federal case called Stefon Morant v. City of New Haven in the Hartford courtroom of U.S. District Judge Sarala Nagala."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "In contrast to the city’s claim in court that no wrongdoing took place in the investigations of Morant and Lewis, retired Det. Michael Sweeney and his lawyer, Michael Ryan, have admitted that police misconduct occurred. Since 1999, Sweeney has maintained that his former colleague, Raucci, coerced witnesses and fabricated evidence. Even so, he is one of the named defendants in Morant’s case. In court on Tuesday, Ryan asked Lewis if he was aware that Sweeney testified on his behalf at his habeas trial. Through tears, Lewis said yes. “I’m thankful,” he said. “I gave him a hug” earlier on Tuesday. “You wouldn’t have gone up and given Mr. Sweeney a hug if you thought he was a dirty cop, correct?” asked Ryan. Lewis responded, “Correct.""

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STORY: "City puts Lewis back on trial," by  Reporter Mona Mahadevan, published by The New Haven Independent, on May 13, 2026.

GIST: "In 2013, a federal judge overturned Scott Lewis’s murder conviction on the basis of police misconduct. Four years later, the City of New Haven paid Lewis $9.5 million in a wrongful-conviction settlement.


But in a federal courtroom on Tuesday, an attorney representing the City of New Haven questioned Lewis as if he were indeed the killer.

“Did you threaten [Stefon Morant] not to say anything about your involvement with the Turner-Fields homicide?” asked Thomas Gerarde, an attorney representing the city. 

“I knew nothing about the Turner-Fields homicide,” responded Lewis.

Lewis was questioned by Gerarde, not as a defendant, but as a witness in an ongoing civil-rights trial for his alleged co-conspirator, Stefon Morant.

Both Lewis and Morant were convicted of the 1990 double homicide of former alderman Ricardo Turner and his partner, Lamont Fields. Both spent two decades in prison. Both have long claimed they were framed by former city police Det. Vincent Raucci because of a drug debt.

Almost 20 years after his criminal trial, Lewis’s conviction was overturned. Under the Toni Harp administration, the city later awarded $9.5 million to Lewis in a settlement. Morant, meanwhile, spent 21 years behind bars before receiving a sentence reduction and pardon. He eventually won a $5.84 million wrongful-conviction award from the state.

Now, Morant is pressing a federal case called Stefon Morant v. City of New Haven in the Hartford courtroom of U.S. District Judge Sarala Nagala.

Lewis was first called as a witness for Morant on Monday. He returned to the stand on Tuesday to face questions from Gerarde.

Last week, the Independent asked Mayor Justin Elicker if the city was walking back its decision to settle with Lewis by going to trial with Morant. Elicker said the two cases should not be compared. “From the outside, looking at any court case, there’s a lot of information that people – including the press – don’t have,” he told the Independent. Elicker did not respond to a follow-up request for comment by the publication time of this story.

Meanwhile, former Mayor Toni Harp in 2017 acknowledged that the justice system had failed Lewis. “We felt we had to do it [settle],” she told the Independent. “When officers do something like that, and it impacts someone’s life, the judicial system is going to exact a price. It’s unfortunate. And we’re paying for it.”

The argument now advanced by the city during Morant’s trial conflicts with Harp’s position. Since opening statements, Gerarde has argued that Lewis and Morant committed the murders.

For instance, on Tuesday, Gerarde accused Lewis of lying to police in 1991 when giving a voluntary statement to avoid implicating himself in the crime.

“Is the reason why you lied about” your involvement with dealing cocaine “when you were giving this statement because you didn’t want to put yourself as a major player…knowing that there was cocaine dealing associated with the Turner-Fields homicide?” asked Gerarde. 

Lewis admitted that he “misplayed or misstated” his involvement with the cocaine trade. “But,” he added, “I certainly wasn’t going to tell [Raucci] anything about Frank Parise when I knew about [Raucci’s] relationship with him.”

Later, Lewis made clear that he declined to sign the statement he submitted to police. “That’s because I knew it wasn’t the truth — at least the complete truth,” he said. 

At another point, Gerarde questioned Lewis about Ovil Ruiz, the key witness in the state’s prosecution of Lewis and Morant and one of multiple witnesses who have recanted their testimonies.

“If Ovil Ruiz is believed, you and Stefon Morant went to the Turner-Fields apartment with guns, right?” pressed Gerarde.

“[Ruiz’s] criminal trial testimony was false. It’s the reason why I’m sitting here today as an exonerated person,” replied Lewis.

Gerarde then targeted a letter written by Lewis to Ruiz in July 1991. The letter reads in part, “All you have to do is tell the lawyer the only reason you’re saying those things is because the prosecutor threatened to charge you with the crime and give you crazy time.” Later, it says, “I might come to court [in October]. But remember. Don’t incriminate yourself for nothing.” The letter is signed Mike Love and Mac Tonight, which are the street names for two people that Lewis believed Ruiz knew.

“That was your attempt to warn [Ruiz] he better not testify, am I right?” asked Gerarde.

“No, sir,” responded Lewis. Later, he acknowledged that he should not have sent the letter but had been feeling desperate. “The letter was stupid, I can admit that to this day.”

For his part, Gerarde told the Independent that his purpose in court was not to stake out the city’s position but to provide them with “the best defense,” which involves challenging the plaintiffs to meet their burden of proof.

When asked if the city had reversed its position from the 2017 settlement, Gerarde clarified that his position throughout the case has been consistent. Since opening statements, he has argued that “this is not a case of wrongful conviction.”

He said he could not comment on the city’s 2017 settlement with Lewis because he was not the lawyer who negotiated the agreement. When asked if there are reasons why a party might settle a lawsuit without agreeing with the plaintiff’s claims, he said yes.

In the context of Elicker’s comment, the Independent also asked Gerarde if the city has undisclosed evidence linking Morant and Lewis to the crime. He said he was not sure what the mayor might have been referring to and could not comment.

After testifying on Tuesday, Lewis shared his frustrations with the city’s continued efforts to frame him for the murders. He said he feels so much trauma from his time in New Haven that he refuses to even drive through the city.

In contrast to the city’s claim in court that no wrongdoing took place in the investigations of Morant and Lewis, retired Det. Michael Sweeney and his lawyer, Michael Ryan, have admitted that police misconduct occurred.

Since 1999, Sweeney has maintained that his former colleague, Raucci, coerced witnesses and fabricated evidence. Even so, he is one of the named defendants in Morant’s case.

In court on Tuesday, Ryan asked Lewis if he was aware that Sweeney testified on his behalf at his habeas trial. Through tears, Lewis said yes. “I’m thankful,” he said. “I gave him a hug” earlier on Tuesday.

“You wouldn’t have gone up and given Mr. Sweeney a hug if you thought he was a dirty cop, correct?” asked Ryan.

Lewis responded, “Correct.""

The entire story can be read at: 

https://www.newhavenindependent.org/2026/05/13/city-puts-lewis-back-on-trial/

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;

May 13: Part 1: Forensic Science Lab Debacles series: Aftermath: ABC News (State Political Reporter Alex Brewster) reports that Forensic Science Queenland subject of two commissions of inquiry and two reports which found a litany of issues with the lab's testing of DNA evidence - has cleared a backlog of hundreds of sexual assault kits, noting that: "A backlog of more than 600 sexual assault kits has been processed at an overseas lab, following investigations into testing failures at Forensic Science Queensland (FSQ)."


PUBLISHER'S NOTE: A troubling example of the dangerous, if not catastrophic price  to be paid when a government  abdicates its responsibility to provide the high quality of DNA-testing the public (including crime victims and innocent individuals who  may be exonerated because of the testing)  is entitled to. Yes, the government deserves some credit for tackling the harmful backlog. But you shouldn't be reading this - and I  shouldn't have had to write it.

Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

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BACKGROUND: From a previous post of this Blog at the link below, under the heading, "Queensland DNA lab at 'point of critical failure' with victims of crime waiting years for testing, report finds. (August 3, 2025). A taste: 'Systemic contamination': "Recommendations from the first inquiry saw changes to the DNA testing method, but the report found this had been done incorrectly, noting a "poor quality culture". "We've found systemic contamination. We've found shortcuts are being taken. We've found that the accreditation standards aren't being adhered to as well," Dr Wright said. "Test methods are being used that haven't been properly tested.  Dr Wright found testing was being done in a "dirty lab", resulting in environmental contamination on a weekly basis. "There was evidence of this for at least a year, a year-and-a-half."


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QUOTE OF THE DAY: "FSQ director Mick Fuller says the Brisbane-based lab could resume testing rape kits in July. What's next? About 20,000 historic DNA samples still need to be retested."

PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Failures in how testing was conducted at the lab, as well as regular environmental contamination over a year, meant tens of thousands of historic DNA samples needed to be retested."

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STORY: "Queensland's beleaguered DNA lab clears backlog of hundreds of sexual assault kits, director says, by State Political Reporter Alex Brewster, published by ABC News on May 10, 2026. (Alex Brewster is the state political reporter for ABC News in Brisbane. He files across television, digital, social, and radio news platforms. Alex joined the ABC in 2021 and has worked as a video journalist in Ipswich, and covered court, crime, housing, and outer suburban issues.)

SUB-HEADING: "Forensic Science Queensland has been the subject of two commissions of inquiry and two reports which found a litany of issues with the lab's testing of DNA evidence." (ABC);

 

SUB-HEADING: "A backlog of more than 600 sexual assault kits has been processed at an overseas lab, following investigations into testing failures at Forensic Science Queensland (FSQ).


IN SHORT: "FSQ director Mick Fuller says the Brisbane-based lab could resume testing rape kits in July. What's next? About 20,000 historic DNA samples still need to be retested."

GIST: "Queensland's beleaguered forensics lab could soon resume testing of rape kits, after it was forced to export to a US facility.

Forensic Science Queensland's (FSQ) $50 million two-year outsourcing strategy to American lab Bode Technology has processed a backlog of more than 600 sexual assault kits.

The lab was the subject of two commissions of inquiry, over failures in testing and cultural issues which may have led to miscarriages of justice.

FSQ director Mick Fuller said the US facility had been turning around test results within 60 days, but local testing would be significantly quicker.

"The goal for me is to restart the sexual assault testing in probably July this year, which means that we could be turning around within 5 or 10 working days," he said.

"We never want another backlog with the sexual assault kits, and my guarantee is as long as the labs are standing, we won't have a backlog again in that place."

Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said it meant perpetrators would face swifter justice.

This means victims of violence in particular can get answers sooner," she said.

"It means police can get their evidence to courts sooner. And importantly, it means offenders being brought before the courts much quicker."

A backlog of DNA samples from major crimes which went untested due to issues at the lab has fallen by about 70 per cent, dropping from 11,703 samples in November 2024 to 3,488 in May 2026.

Hundreds of DNA samples were sent overseas amid an overhaul of Forensic Science Queensland. (ABC News)


Historic backlog will 'take some time'

Failures in how testing was conducted at the lab, as well as regular environmental contamination over a year, meant tens of thousands of historic DNA samples needed to be retested.

A backlog of DNA samples from major crimes which went untested due to issues at the lab has fallen by about 70 per cent, dropping from 11,703 samples in November 2024 to 3,488 in May 2026.

Hundreds of DNA samples were sent overseas amid an overhaul of Forensic Science Queensland. (ABC News) reducing that backlog, a significant amount was outstanding.

t started at a number around 40,000, and it's down to 20,000. I know that's a big number," he said.

"It's just not about grabbing a vial and retesting it. You really have to look at the continuity of all aspects of it, but we are reducing it."

"I'll make a promise to all the victims in Queensland. We are getting through them, but it does take an enormous amount of time."


A 2025 report found cases in the magistrates' court relying on DNA evidence were being delayed by up to three years.

Mr Fuller was appointed in August to overhaul operations at the lab after former director Dr Linzi Wilson-Wilde, resigned following "contamination issues" being identified.

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-11/queensland-dna-lab-testing-backlog-reduced/106664810

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;

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

May 12: Stefan Morant: New Haven: Connecticut: On-going; Federal civil-rights wrongful conviction trial: The New Haven Independent (Reporter Mona Mahadevan) reports that Scott Lewis took the stand on Monday in a civil-rights trial focused on a wrongful conviction — not his own, but that of his alleged co-conspirator, Stefon Morant..."Both were convicted of the same 1990 double homicide. Both spent two decades in prison. Both have long claimed they were framed by the same crooked cop. “For Stefon to sacrifice his life just to stand by the truth — he didn’t have to do that,” Lewis said through tears in a Hartford federal courtroom. “It cost him 20 years just to stand by me.” For a few moments, the room fell silent as Lewis and Morant cried.


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "As many similarities as there are between Lewis’s and Morant’s cases, there is at least one key difference: Lewis got the city to settle his wrongful-conviction claim for $9.5 million, and Morant is taking New Haven to trial."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "In court on Monday, Lewis articulated the clearest reasoning so far this trial for why Raucci might have framed him for the Turner-Fields murders."

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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY; "Lewis said he feels angry and frustrated by the city’s decision to take the case to trial. When asked if the NHPD had reckoned with its history of wrongful convictions, Lewis said, “No, of course not. Look what the city’s trying to do right now.”  While he was not shocked that the city declined to settle with Morant, he is surprised by what he called the city’s “continued trickery” and “deceitfulness” in this case. “If you’re supposed to protect the integrity and safety of the community, then why don’t you just deal with the truth?”  He said no one but Det. Michael Sweeney had ever reached out to him to apologize, even after his conviction was vacated.  Even today, during this ongoing trial, the attorney representing the City of New Haven, Thomas Gerarde, has argued that Lewis was guilty, and that he pressured the FBI to overturn a rightful conviction. (To that allegation, Lewis responded, “I simply called the FBI and reported what I had been told…I don’t think I got that kind of power” to pressure the FBI into doing anything.)

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STORY: "Lewis stands with Morant," by Reporter Mona Mahadevan, published by The New Haven Independent, on May 11, 2026.


PHOTO CAPTION: "Scott Lewis, outside court on Monday: “I can admit to being in jail for selling drugs, but I wasn’t a murderer—I couldn’t tolerate that.” 


GIST: "Scott Lewis took the stand on Monday in a civil-rights trial focused on a wrongful conviction — not his own, but that of his alleged co-conspirator, Stefon Morant.

Both were convicted of the same 1990 double homicide. Both spent two decades in prison. Both have long claimed they were framed by the same crooked cop. 

“For Stefon to sacrifice his life just to stand by the truth — he didn’t have to do that,” Lewis said through tears in a Hartford federal courtroom. “It cost him 20 years just to stand by me.” For a few moments, the room fell silent as Lewis and Morant cried.

As many similarities as there are between Lewis’s and Morant’s cases, there is at least one key difference: Lewis got the city to settle his wrongful-conviction claim for $9.5 million, and Morant is taking New Haven to trial. 

That ongoing trial is taking place in U.S. Judge Sarala Nagala’s federal courtroom in Hartford. In the case Stefon Morant v. City of New Haven, Morant has alleged that former city police Det. Vincent Raucci framed him and Lewis for the murders of former alder Ricardo Turner and his partner Lamont Fields in 1990 in the Hill.

After his original criminal trial in 1994, Morant spent 21 years behind bars before receiving a sentence reduction and pardon. He eventually won a $5.84 million wrongful-conviction award from the state. (Lewis’s conviction was overturned in 2013; he received a $9.5 million payment from the city in 2017.)

In court on Monday, Lewis articulated the clearest reasoning so far this trial for why Raucci might have framed him for the Turner-Fields murders.

According to his testimony, Lewis had been dealing cocaine supplied by Frank Parise, a notorious drug kingpin, since 1988. In December 1990, two months after the double homicide, Parise scheduled a face-to-face meeting. 

“Parise asked me to take over his drug operation because he had gotten busted by the federal government,” Lewis told the 10-person jury. “I told him that I wasn’t interested.”

Around that time, Lewis said he was “in the process of being done with selling drugs” because he saw the tragic effects of addiction on his cousin. “I saw how it was affecting him, and it made me realize that the things I was doing to make a living and the way it was affecting other people,” he said. He paused, tearing up. “It just wasn’t for me anymore.”

After telling Parise that he did not want to take over the operation, Lewis said Parise told him that he needed to pay his debt, which was between $10,000 and $15,000. Lewis owed that money because the police confiscated the cocaine that Parise had fronted him.

“[Parise] said, ‘Vinny wants that money,” Lewis told the jury. In hindsight, Lewis believes that “Vinny” was a reference to Vincent Raucci.

Lewis’s testimony on Monday comes after Raucci’s ex-wife, Donna Desai, testified earlier in the trial that she saw Raucci using cocaine and suspected he was dealing. Ovil Ruiz, a key witness whose original interview with Raucci helped secure Morant’s and Lewis’s convictions, has testified that Raucci coerced him into providing false information to implicate men who did not commit the murders. Ruiz also told the court that he used to do drugs and get high with Raucci. Raucci, meanwhile, has denied all wrongdoing, and has said that he has never done drugs.

Lewis continued his testimony by stating that, a few months after his meeting with Parise, he learned from Morant that his name was being mentioned in connection to the double homicide. He recalled Morant “rambling” about how the police were “implicating” him in the murders. 

“I decided to go down to the police department myself and figure out what was going on,” Lewis said. He remembered meeting with Raucci and another detective to provide a voluntary statement. He told them, “I didn’t know anything about [the murders]: I didn’t know the individuals involved, nor did I know the victims.” 

“So what happened after you gave that interview?” asked Amelia Greene, one of the attorneys representing Morant. 

“I was under the impression that it would be over and done with. I knew they were kind of lying to me about talking to Stefon. I went about my life,” replied Lewis. 

“I Was A Drug Dealer … But I Wasn’t A Murderer”

In April 1991, Lewis said he was arrested during what seemed to be a traffic stop. He expected to get a ticket for making a left on red. Instead, he looked out of his rearview window and saw police officers approaching with their guns drawn. 

“They basically put the guns to my head and told me to get out of the car and that I was being arrested for murder,” he said. 

One of the cops told Lewis that the arresting officer on his warrant was Raucci. At that point, Lewis came to believe he was being framed.

Lewis said Raucci picked him up from the Milford Police Department and drove him to the New Haven Police Department. At some point during that trip, he told Lewis, “You never should have stopped selling drugs in Fair Haven.”

Lewis had limited knowledge about the form of Raucci’s involvement with Parise’s drug operation. What he did recall was that Raucci would warn them about upcoming raids. When he did so, said Lewis, “We would close down shop.”

Lewis said he called the FBI after being convicted in May 1995. “I figured that the best shot I had, given that I had no money, was to call the FBI,” he explained. He told them that he was framed by Raucci and Parise over a drug debt. 

“Did you report to the FBI the statement Raucci made to you on the day of your arrest that you never should have stopped selling drugs in Fair Haven?” asked Greene. 

“I did,” replied Lewis. “I think at that point, I was facing 240 years [in prison], and I needed somebody to look at the investigation.”

“I was a drug dealer,” he continued. “I can admit to being in jail for selling drugs, but I wasn’t a murderer—I couldn’t tolerate that.”

After submitting his complaint to the FBI, Lewis said the city’s then-police chief, Nick Pastore, visited him on his birthday in 1995. Lewis recalled telling Pastore the same story he told the FBI, in the hopes of getting help to overturn his conviction. 

“He basically walked away saying, ‘I don’t believe you. I don’t have a dirty cop on my force,’” said Lewis. 

“We Stand On The Truth”

After Monday’s hearing in court, Lewis told the Independent that the court case has strengthened the bonds between him and Morant. “We’ve always been good friends,” having both spent years in Fair Haven, he said. “And sometimes things like this can destroy friends. But this has made our friendship a lot stronger, and it’s because we stand on the truth.”

Lewis said he feels angry and frustrated by the city’s decision to take the case to trial. When asked if the NHPD had reckoned with its history of wrongful convictions, Lewis said, “No, of course not. Look what the city’s trying to do right now.” 

While he was not shocked that the city declined to settle with Morant, he is surprised by what he called the city’s “continued trickery” and “deceitfulness” in this case. “If you’re supposed to protect the integrity and safety of the community, then why don’t you just deal with the truth?” 

He said no one but Det. Michael Sweeney had ever reached out to him to apologize, even after his conviction was vacated. 

Even today, during this ongoing trial, the attorney representing the City of New Haven, Thomas Gerarde, has argued that Lewis was guilty, and that he pressured the FBI to overturn a rightful conviction. (To that allegation, Lewis responded, “I simply called the FBI and reported what I had been told…I don’t think I got that kind of power” to pressure the FBI into doing anything.)

He hopes the jury will sent a “real strong message” to the city. He said, “I think they should award [Morant] $100 million.”

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.newhavenindependent.org/2026/05/11/lewis-stands-with-morant/

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;