STORY: "How junk forensic science was used in trial of four lesbians known as the "San Antonio Four," by Bridgette Dunlap, published by Rolling Stone on October 13, 2016;
SUB-HEADING: "Inside Case Behind Wrongful Conviction Doc 'Southwest of Salem.'
GIST: "In the summer of 1994,
22-year-old Elizabeth Ramirez and her friends Anna Vasquez, Kristie
Mayhugh and Cassandra Rivera were accused of raping Ramirez's two young
nieces during a week-long stay at her apartment in San Antonio, Texas.
The allegations against the women, all of whom were openly gay, were
outlandish and constantly changing. The nieces, their father and
grandmother told various authorities and two courts that Aunt Liz and
her friends had suddenly called the nieces in from playing one day to
strip them naked, hold them down and violently penetrate them with a
syringe of unidentified liquid, white powder and a tampon. They claimed
one of the women had put a weapon to their heads – a knife in one
telling, but later a gun, then two guns. All the women were convicted.
Ramirez was tried first and sentenced to 37 years, while Vasquez,
Mayhugh and Rivera were tried together and each sentenced to 15 years. Now, the documentary Southwest of Salem: the Story of the San Antonio Four,
tells the story of those convictions, made on the basis of inexplicable
allegations and junk forensic science. .........Homophobia and hysteria didn't deprive these women of their freedom – prosecutors did......... A
recantation never should have been necessary to see the allegations
were false, but child abuse expert Dr. Nancy Kellogg, who frequently
testifies for prosecutors, lent them credence by first telling
authorities deciding whether to prosecute, and then testifying in both
trials, that a mark she observed on the hymen of one of the girls was a
scar likely caused by painful penetration. However, as the
American Academy of Pediatrics explained in a 2007 report, "torn or
injured hymens do not leave scars as a matter of scientific fact."
Variations like the ones Dr. Kellogg claimed were evidence of traumatic
injury are normal and she has since admitted her testimony was flawed.
She suggested her methods were accepted science back then, but other
experts say they had been discredited at the time. What had definitely been debunked was the idea that satanic cults were preying on children. Yet Kellogg concluded that the alleged assault might be "satanic related" and shared her suspicions with authorities. Kellogg,
who does not appear in the film, continues to be considered an expert
in the field. She's on the faculty at the University of Texas, leads a
center specializing in assessing children for abuse and, not only trains
other medical professionals, but created a computer program for diagnosing abuse that is sold to hospitals. Dr. Kellogg has testified in over 800 abuse cases. And this isn't the only one
in which the accuser of someone she helped convict has recanted. It's
anyone's guess how many innocent people are in prison thanks to her
testimony. But Dr. Kellogg may not be so unusual. The use of junk forensic science in criminal courts is rampant.
Fortunately for the San Antonio Four, Texas is one of few states that
has taken steps to address wrongful convictions based on bad scientific
evidence. Its 2013 statute, informally known as the "junk science law,"
allows people to challenge their convictions where there is new or
changed scientific evidence, even if they've exhausted their appeals. The
film captures the court hearing in which the women challenged their
convictions under the new law. The district attorney's office agreed
Kellogg's testimony was unsound and the women were entitled to new
trials. The judge, who had admitted the testimony when he presided over
the original trial of Ramirez's friends, objects to the district
attorney characterizing Kellog's testimony as "junk science," claiming
it was accepted at the time. The judge ultimately agreed new trials
were warranted, but found the women had not proven they were actually
innocent.........Homophobia and hysteria didn't deprive these women
of their freedom – prosecutors did. The state's reluctance to take
responsibility in a case where its failings have been unusually
well-documented and publicized suggests locking up the occasional
innocent person isn't that big a deal. With that conviction-at-all-costs
mentality pervasive among prosecutors in the U.S., we can expect there
are many more innocent people in prison than we know."