BACKGROUND: As the Washington Post reported to day at the link below, The U.S Supreme Court tossed Curtis Flowers’s death-row conviction, ruling it was racially biased. This case belongs in our 'enough to make you weep department' - as Curtis Flowers has been tried an extraordinary six times for a quadruple murder in
1996 - and as America's highest court found that found that that a white prosecutor once again had improperly kept
African Americans off the jury. Outrageous. Also outrageous, is that Curtis Flowers was convicted in part on the basis of now discredited ballistics evidence. As the Washington Post story, by reporter Robert Barnes, published on June 21, 2019 notes: "In recent years, however, a number of legal scholars and scientists
have begun to challenge the theories underlying the field of ballistics. In
2009 the National Academy of Sciences published a landmark report that
questioned the reliability of many forensic methods, including
ballistics. The report said the practice was "based on unarticulated
standards." "Today this is still a largely subjective science,"
said Alicia Carriquiry, who directs the Center for Statistics and
Applications in Forensic Evidence, an independent research group based
at Iowa State University created in response to the 2009 NAS report."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/supreme-court-overturns-mississippi-mans-murder-conviction-in-case-that-raised-questions-of-racial-bias-orders-new-trial/2019/06/21/6fc1b2d8-942d-11e9-b570-6416efdc0803_story.html?utm_term=.36f8d8a9d18d
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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "To say that a
bullet was definitely fired by a particular gun is an overstatement. "I
doubt that today you would hear a firearms examiner use the phrase 'to
the exclusion of all of the guns in the world,'" said Andy Smith,
vice-president of the Association for Firearm and Toolmark examiners.
"That's something we've never been able to say because we can't test
every single gun." When testifying, Smith cautions examiners not
to overstate their findings. Rather than saying a bullet was fired by a
gun to the exclusion of all others, he prefers to say he's confident in
his opinion that the examined items came from the same gun. Balash
is a bit less cautious in stating his findings in the Flowers case. "I
am 100 percent certain that these bullets were fired from one gun,"
Balash said during a recent interview with APM Reports. "I wouldn't call
it unless I were convinced in my own mind 100 percent that that came
from that gun and no other gun, period." He describes his opinion
as a subjective certainty, honed after 45 years of experience.
"[Ballistics analysis] has never been called a science," he said. "It's
always been called an art form using scientific materials and equipment,
and it's always been an opinion."" (Balash, a retired Michigan state trooper who's a
ballistics and explosives expert with decades of experience in the
field, testified at the five subsequent trials that the gun Flowers
allegedly stole was the murder weapon. This was a key piece of evidence
linking Flowers to the crime. At Flowers' last trial, in June 2010,
Balash was unequivocal that the bullets found at the crime scene matched
Doyle's gun. "It has to be 100 percent or I will not offer that
opinion," he testified.)
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STORY: "Curtis Flowers: ballistics. APM reports: In the Dark Could they really match those bullets in the Tardy Furniture case?," by reporter Rehman Tungekar, published by APM Reports on May 8, 2018.
SUB-HEADING: "Ballistics evidence helped send Curtis Flowers to death row, but critics say the field is subjective and unscientific."
GIST:
"In the dark: Episode 3: The gun: "From
the start, investigators had faced a fundamental problem: They didn't
have the murder weapon. They knew a .380-caliber handgun had been used
to kill the four employees at Tardy Furniture in 1996, but the gun had
never been found. How could they link a suspect with a gun they didn't
have? Ultimately, they uncovered two bullets they believed had
been fired by the gun belonging to Doyle Simpson, who was Curtis
Flowers' step-uncle. It's the gun prosecutors say Flowers stole the
morning of the murders. Investigators dug those bullets out of a wooden
post on the property of Simpson's mother and compared them to a bullet
that they recovered from a mattress at the crime scene. The Mississippi
Crime Lab in Jackson had matched the bullets. But prosecutors wanted
another expert opinion. That's where Balash came in. He
first examined the evidence in 1998, after Flowers had been found
guilty the first time. Balash, a retired Michigan state trooper who's a
ballistics and explosives expert with decades of experience in the
field, testified at the five subsequent trials that the gun Flowers
allegedly stole was the murder weapon. This was a key piece of evidence
linking Flowers to the crime. At Flowers' last trial, in June 2010,
Balash was unequivocal that the bullets found at the crime scene matched
Doyle's gun. "It has to be 100 percent or I will not offer that
opinion," he testified. But how could he be so sure? Balash
reached his conclusion using ballistics analysis, which rests on the
idea that every gun leaves a unique impression, similar to a
fingerprint, on the bullets it has fired. This results from microscopic
imperfections inside the barrel of a gun — created through normal use
and random variations in manufacturing — that etch scratches into the
bullet as it passes through the barrel. To link a gun to a crime,
the idea goes, an examiner need only compare bullets and casings found
at a crime scene with samples from a suspect's weapon, which are
normally obtained by test firing the weapon in a controlled environment.
In recent years, however, a number of legal scholars and scientists
have begun to challenge the theories underlying the field of ballistics. In
2009 the National Academy of Sciences published a landmark report that
questioned the reliability of many forensic methods, including
ballistics. The report said the practice was "based on unarticulated
standards." "Today this is still a largely subjective science,"
said Alicia Carriquiry, who directs the Center for Statistics and
Applications in Forensic Evidence, an independent research group based
at Iowa State University created in response to the 2009 NAS report. Her
group is trying to develop statistical and scientific foundations for
forensic disciplines like ballistics. To
Carriquiry, the belief that a gun will produce a unique mark is largely
unproven. It hasn't been subjected to the kind of massive peer-reviewed
testing that would be required to prove such a claim. But even
if you accept the premise that a gun will leave a unique signature on a
bullet, proving that two bullets were fired from the same gun involves a
subjective analysis. It's literally in the eye of the beholder. "What
we're actually talking about is somebody looking at two bullets and
determining if they look similar," Carriquiry said. An examiner
typically can conclude two bullets were fired from the same gun if the
marks on them are in "sufficient agreement." This essentially means that
the marks on the two bullets look alike when compared under a
microscope. It's a subjective standard applied by examiners based on
their years of experience. There aren't well-defined guidelines on how
many scratches or markings need to be shared for an examiner to deem two
bullets a match. Carriquiry believes this lack of a consistent standard
poses a problem for the field of firearm identification. "You
have this very undesirable situation where two examiners looking at the
exact same samples might reach different conclusions," she said. The
bullets examined in the Curtis Flowers case had been pried out of a
wooden post. Typically, a firearms examiner will obtain bullets from a
suspect's gun by firing it into a tank of water, thus helping to ensure
that the bullet remains in pristine condition. Simpson's gun was never
found, so examiners couldn't do this. Instead, they had to rely on the
bullets from the post. It's
not unheard of to compare bullets recovered from a wooden post, said
Kurt Moline, a firearms examiner with nearly 30 years of experience. In
fact, he said he'd performed similar comparisons. But, he said,
precautions were usually taken to ensure the bullets remained in good
condition. For instance, he'd advise investigators to send him whole
sections of tree trunks that contained a bullet, rather than extracting
the bullet themselves. In the Curtis Flowers case, investigators removed
the bullets from the post with a knife, possibly introducing additional
markings on the bullet in the process. Even if the bullets had
been recovered under ideal conditions, and appeared to be in sufficient
agreement — and you believe that every gun produces a unique fingerprint
— experts say there's a limit to what examiners can claim. To say that a
bullet was definitely fired by a particular gun is an overstatement. "I
doubt that today you would hear a firearms examiner use the phrase 'to
the exclusion of all of the guns in the world,'" said Andy Smith,
vice-president of the Association for Firearm and Toolmark examiners.
"That's something we've never been able to say because we can't test
every single gun." When testifying, Smith cautions examiners not
to overstate their findings. Rather than saying a bullet was fired by a
gun to the exclusion of all others, he prefers to say he's confident in
his opinion that the examined items came from the same gun. Balash
is a bit less cautious in stating his findings in the Flowers case. "I
am 100 percent certain that these bullets were fired from one gun,"
Balash said during a recent interview with APM Reports. "I wouldn't call
it unless I were convinced in my own mind 100 percent that that came
from that gun and no other gun, period." He describes his opinion
as a subjective certainty, honed after 45 years of experience.
"[Ballistics analysis] has never been called a science," he said. "It's
always been called an art form using scientific materials and equipment,
and it's always been an opinion.""
The entire story can be read at:
https://www.apmreports.org/story/2018/05/08/ballistics-match-bullets-tardy-furniture
See Wikipedia entry at the link below: "On the morning of July 16, 1996, a retired employee of Tardy
Furniture entered the store and found four bodies: the owner and three
workers at the store; all of whom had been shot. Curtis Flowers was
suspected after police learned that he had been fired from the store 13
days prior to the murders.
[8]
He also owed Bertha Tardy $30 for a cash advance on his paycheck.
Certain eyewitnesses said they saw Flowers near the front of the store
on the morning of the shootings. No gun was ever found, but bullets from
the scene were determined to be the same caliber as a gun that had been
stolen from a car. No direct evidence tied Flowers to the gun or the
gun to the crime.
[9] Flowers was nevertheless charged with murder in the shooting death of the four victims.
1997 trial: The
prosecutor decided to try Flowers in one trial for the death of the
store owner, as occurring in the course of a robbery. Evidence submitted
for the prosecution, which was asking for the death penalty, stated
that bloody footprints found at the crime scene were a 10½, the size
worn by Flowers. They were identified as
Fila's Grant Hill style, which witnesses said Flowers had been wearing that morning.
[10] In addition, projectiles found at the crime scene were most likely from a
.380
caliber weapon, matching a gun stolen from Flowers's uncle on the
morning of the murders. Forensic evidence also showed that there were
gunshot particles on Flowers's thumb. $287 was found to be missing from
the till, and $255 was found at the home of Flowers's girlfriend.
According to two of Flowers's cellmates in jail, he admitted to them
that he had stolen the money and committed the murders. Flowers denied
this.
[11] Two of the witnesses later retracted their testimony.
[12] Flowers denied the murders. He said he never admitted any crimes to his cellmates. He said he was wearing
Nike
shoes, the clothes he was wearing that day did not match the
description given by witnesses, and said he had been handling fireworks
the day before the murders to explain the particulate matter found on
his hands. He was convicted of the murder of the store owner and
sentenced to death in
Montgomery County in 1997."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtis_Flowers
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/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com. Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog;