PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "In June 2017, the Innocence Project submitted a request to conduct research in the archive, which contains the records of the American Board of Forensic Odontologists (ABFO), the body that accredits bite mark experts. The Museum has standard procedures for allowing individuals to conduct research and had previously provided information from the ABFO archive to others. After consulting with the ABFO, however, the Museum refused to allow Innocence Project researchers access to the archive’s key collections. The Museum denied access because it (or the ABFO) disagreed with the Innocence Project’s research objectives, which included identifying wrongful convictions and further understanding the flaws in bite mark methods. “The ABFO has been overtly hostile to the Innocence Project’s work to establish that bite mark methods are unreliable and to identify people wrongfully convicted as a result,” said Fabricant. “This federal museum appears to have sided with the ABFO to block our access to the archive and stifle our research.” The lawsuit, filed today in federal district court in Manhattan, asserts that the Museum violated the First Amendment because it denied access on account of the Innocence Project’s professed viewpoint and research objectives. The Innocence Project has worked for years to establish that bite mark methods are scientifically invalid and to exonerate people wrongfully convicted based on bite mark evidence. The ABFO has often vigorously opposed these efforts."
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RELEASE: "Innocence Project sues for access to bite-mark archive that could expose wrongful convictions," published by The Innocence Project on February 20, 2019.
GIST: "The Innocence Project has sued for access to a federal archive that may hold the key to exonerating untold numbers of people who were wrongfully convicted on the basis of faulty “bite mark” evidence. The archive, which is housed at the Department of Defense’s National Museum of Health and Medicine, holds the only centralized catalogue of cases in which forensic bite mark evidence was used. It also includes documents that could reveal how this discredited forensic method evolved. The Innocence Project has already helped to exonerate dozens of people who were convicted on the basis of bite mark evidence. “This archive could be the only way to identify unknown cases in which bite mark evidence was used and, potentially, produced wrongful convictions,” said Chris Fabricant, the Innocence Project’s Director of Strategic Litigation. “By denying us access to this federal archive, the government is preventing us from investigating the devastating toll that unreliable bite mark evidence has imposed on our criminal justice system. In June 2017, the Innocence Project submitted a request to conduct research in the archive, which contains the records of the American Board of Forensic Odontologists (ABFO), the body that accredits bite mark experts. The Museum has standard procedures for allowing individuals to conduct research and had previously provided information from the ABFO archive to others. After consulting with the ABFO, however, the Museum refused to allow Innocence Project researchers access to the archive’s key collections. The Museum denied access because it (or the ABFO) disagreed with the Innocence Project’s research objectives, which included identifying wrongful convictions and further understanding the flaws in bite mark methods. “The ABFO has been overtly hostile to the Innocence Project’s work to establish that bite mark methods are unreliable and to identify people wrongfully convicted as a result,” said Fabricant. “This federal museum appears to have sided with the ABFO to block our access to the archive and stifle our research.” The lawsuit, filed today in federal district court in Manhattan, asserts that the Museum violated the First Amendment because it denied access on account of the Innocence Project’s professed viewpoint and research objectives. The Innocence Project has worked for years to establish that bite mark methods are scientifically invalid and to exonerate people wrongfully convicted based on bite mark evidence. The ABFO has often vigorously opposed these efforts. The lawsuit also asserts claims under the Freedom of Information Act. After being denied ordinary research access to the archive, the Innocence Project filed a FOIA request for the records. A year later, the Innocence Project has yet to receive a meaningful response. “This case is about a taxpayer-funded, federal museum deciding to improperly favor one viewpoint over another,” said John Zakour, a student attorney with the University at Buffalo School of Law’s Civil Liberties & Transparency Clinic, which is litigating the case on behalf of the Innocence Project. “The First Amendment does not allow the government to deny access to public archives just because it does not like what a person might say or do with the information they learn.” Fabricant and Dana Delger of the Innocence Project, which is affiliated with the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University, are counsel in the lawsuit, along with student attorneys Samantha Winter, John Zakour, and John Kuebler, and supervising attorney Jonathan Manes of the University at Buffalo School of Law."
The entire release can be read at:
https://www.innocenceproject.org/innocence-project-sues-for-access-to-bite-mark-archive-that-could-expose-wrongful-convictions/
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/