"Charles
Flores, a Texas death row inmate who was scheduled to be executed next week
June 2, was granted a stay of execution late Friday afternoon. The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed Flores’ execution date and sent his case
back to the trial court for a hearing based on his claim that improper hypnosis
was used on the main eyewitness in his murder trial. As
Fusion reported
earlier this month, Flores was convicted for the 1998 murder of Elizabeth
“Betty” Black in a Dallas suburb. A jury sentenced him to death the following
year even though prosecutors presented no physical evidence linking him to the
crime, and the only witness who saw him at the scene, Jill Barganier, was
hypnotized by police. As
part of Flores’ final appeal, which was filed
last week, psychology professor Steven Lynn said in an affidavit that
recent research shows the hypnosis could have made Barganier create false
memories. “Clearly, the techniques that were used to refresh Ms. Bargainer’s
memory would be eschewed today by anyone at all familiar with the extant
research on hypnosis and memory,” Lynn wrote. That
hypnosis was the crux of the appeals court’s ruling. The court approved his
application for a writ of habeas corpus by essentially finding reason to
believe a reasonable juror may not have convicted him if they had heard
evidence like Lynn’s testimony. Now,
the trial court in Flores’ case will hold a hearing specifically on the
hypnosis issue and the eyewitness identification. If Flores’ lawyers can show
by a preponderance of the evidence that a jury would acquit him today after
hearing new scientific evidence, it would lead to a brand new trial for Flores,
more than 17 years after he was convicted.........Two
of the nine judges on the appeals court, which is the highest court in Texas
that hears criminal cases, dissented from granting a stay. Only one of the
judges who supported Flores’ application, David Newell, wrote an opinion
explaining his thinking. “Eyewitness
misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions across the
country,” Newell wrote. “We may ultimately grant relief. We may ultimately deny
relief. But either way, given the subject matter, by granting a stay this Court
acknowledges that whatever we do, we owe a clear explanation for our decision
to the citizens of Texas.”
http://fusion.net/story/307796/charles-flores-texas-stay-execution