"Judge
Alan Stephens has dismissed part of one of Chris Tapp’s petitions for
post-conviction relief, while allowing other parts to move forward. While Thursday’s ruling is mixed, it leaves Tapp an avenue to mount a
substantive challenge to his conviction for the 1996 murder of
18-year-old Angie Dodge. The decision came the same day Bonneville County Prosecutor Danny Clark
released the findings
of his review of the Tapp conviction. Clark does not believe there is
clear and convincing evidence of Tapp’s innocence, so he will not move
for the conviction to be vacated or for a new trial. The Post Register
will report in detail on Clark’s findings this weekend. Importantly, Stephens’ ruling allows the challenge to focus on
whether police used the polygraph “to psychologically coerce, manipulate
and trick (Tapp) into a false confession.” That has been the key finding of numerous outside experts who have
reviewed the case, including false confession experts, retired FBI
supervisory special agents and polygraph experts. The petition before the court involves two issues. The first is whether prosecutors failed to turn over video tapes of
certain polygraph and interrogations sessions at which Tapp alleges he
was psychologically coerced into a confession which had left him locked
up for nearly half his life. This claim is called a “Brady violation” after the U.S. Supreme Court
case Brady v. Maryland, which held that prosecutors have an obligation
to turn over all evidence which tends to show a defendant isn’t guilty. That claim suffered a significant blow when some of the tapes
allegedly withheld subsequently turned up in files at the State
Appellate Public Defender’s Office.........The second issue is whether Tapp can present new evidence that he was
coerced into confessing. This evidence is likely to include tapes of
the interrogations themselves, along with the testimony of expert
witnesses. “The seven polygraph videos have not previously been seen or heard by
any court,” Thomas argued in an earlier filing. “They show the police
employing extreme psychological coercion on Chris Tapp. They show how
they coerced and tricked Tapp into changing his story five times.” An earlier witness list submitted by Thomas includes retired Judge
Mike Heavey, co-founder of Judges for Justice, Boise State University
polygraph expert Charles Honts, retired FBI Supervisory Special Agent
Gregg McCrary and Professor Steve Drizin, legal director of the Center
for Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University. Stephens’ ruling is a blow to the first cause, while leaving the second issue open to move forward in its entirety. “The court views these causes of action to be separate, and its
decision regarding the Brady violation does not dispose of any part of
the other cause of action,” Stephens wrote."
http://www.postregister.com/articles/chris-tapp-coverage-news-daily-email-todays-headlines/2016/12/08/tapp-appeal-advances#