"The Maryland Court of Appeals today handed down an
important decision in Maryland v.
Norton that will help guarantee that those accused of crimes are able to
fully cross examine government experts who conduct forensic testing in criminal
trials. The question presented in the case was whether Harold Norton, Jr., who
was on trial for robbery, should be permitted to cross examine the analyst who
performed DNA testing on a ski mask that implicated Norton in the case or
whether the state was permitted to call the analyst’s supervisor who was not
involved in the actual testing. The Innocence Network, with support from the
Innocence Project’s Strategic Litigation Unit, filed a friend-of-the-court
brief in the case arguing that the Constitution’s Confrontation Clause demands
that the prosecution present the analyst who actually performed the testing so
that the defendant could fully question the analyst himself about his
work. The Court of Appeals agreed. .........According to Chris Fabricant, Director of the
Innocence Project’s Strategic Litigation Unit, “This decision helps ensure that
defendants will be able to challenge incompetent or fraudulent forensic
evidence through cross-examination of the expert who actually conducted the
test. The misapplication of forensic sciences is a leading contributing factor
to wrongful conviction, and this decision will help prevent future wrongful
convictions by subjecting forensic evidence to rigorous cross-examination. ""
http://www.innocenceproject.org/news-events-exonerations/maryland-court-of-appeals-helps-protect-innocent