The L.A. County District Attorney's Office announced today that a new
team has been created to focus exclusively on possible wrongful
convictions. This new conviction review unit will consist of three veteran prosecutors, an investigator and a paralegal according to the L.A. Times,
and will focus on determining if inmates are actually innocent. In
particular, the team will review any "credible" claims from inmates who
have been convicted of serious crimes, CBS LA reports.
In April, L.A. County District Attorney Jackie Lacey requested $1
million from the Board of Supervisors to fund this new department. Los
Angeles will join 15 other D.A. offices in the U.S. that have also
established similar groups, including in Brooklyn, Manhattan and
Washington, D.C.........This new information can come from innocence projects, lawyers or the
prisoners themselves. Claims can be made to the D.A.'s office in
writing, and a formal investigation will be launched for any claims that
are found to have merit.
Investigating convictions is work that innocence project groups
around the country have already been doing. A possible wrongful
conviction was also the subject of Serial,
a wildly popular podcast that explored—without any definitive
conclusion—the possibility that a Maryland man was wrongfully convicted
of murdering his ex-girlfriend while they were both in high school. In the last few years, there have been a number of cases in
California in which inmates have been released after it was determined
there had not been enough evidence to secure a guilty conviction. Susan Mellen,
who spent 17 years in prison for the murder of a Lawndale man, had her
conviction thrown out in October after it was argued that the only
evidence to put her behind bars was the testimony of a woman with a
known history of lying to authorities. Obie Anthony,
who also spent 17 years in prison after he was convicted of fatally
shooting a man outside of a brothel in South L.A., was also released in
2011 after, once again, it was determined that the evidence against him
came from a pimp who also lied.
Last year, DNA evidence helped to release Michael Hanline,
who spent 36 years in prison for the murder of a truck driver. He was
initially put away based on the testimony of his then-girlfriend, a
known drug user. Brian Banks
spent five years in prison after being convicted of raping a classmate
at Polytechnic High School in Long Beach. He was released after the
woman he was accused of raping admitted she had lied to a private
detective. Banks will appear in an upcoming show that focuses on
wrongful convictions.
http://laist.com/2015/06/29/wrongful_convictions_team.php