QUOTE ONE OF THE DAY: "The defense relied on an expert, Dr. Ira Kanfer, who was a
forensic pathologist but neither an expert in pediatrics or choking.
After prosecutors grilled Kanfer about his credentials, according to the
court record, he testified that he had said during a break that the
prosecutors “could go fuck themselves.”
--------------------------------------------------------
QUOTE TWO OF THE DAY: "It wasn’t like the state made it
out to be,” said Anna Vasquez, director of outreach for the Innocence
Project of Texas, who was in the courtroom Tuesday. “You can make any
kind of accusation, unless there are the right experts to dispute it,”
she said. Vasquez and three other women were exonerated more than a decade after they themselves were convicted
of child assault. She now works on behalf of other defendants who she
believes are wrongly convicted, particularly women. Vasquez said that
women face a particular onus when accused of harming a child, because
the act disrupts expectations in our society that women possess a
maternal instinct. “It’s very hard to fight, when a woman is accused
of harming a child,” she said. “For society, nothing can be worse than
harming a child.”
---------------------------------------------------------
PASSAGE ONE OF THE DAY: "The
case hinged on prosecution expert testimony that a toddler could not
have stuffed the paper down his own throat, and therefore Jimenez was
guilty. The defense relied on an expert, Dr. Ira Kanfer, who was a
forensic pathologist but neither an expert in pediatrics or choking.
After prosecutors grilled Kanfer about his credentials, according to the
court record, he testified that he had said during a break that the
prosecutors “could go fuck themselves.” In a series of
post-conviction proceedings, new defense experts provided evidence that
contradicted the prosecution’s argument that Bryan could not have shoved
the towels down his own throat."
---------------------------------------------------------
PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "The president of Mexico cited the Jimenez case in
2012 as an example of how Mexican nationals could not be fairly tried in
the United States, urging the U.S. Supreme Court to grant her a new
trial. Before magistrate Austin stepped in, the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals had refused to overturn the verdict. Austin, in his
later opinion, wrote that the ruling was “based on several factual
determinations that were plainly unreasonable in light of the record
before the state court.” Austin characterized Jimenez’s court saga as
the “rare case in which justice and fundamental fairness require
granting the petitioner a writ of habeas corpus.” “The judge who
presided over the trial has explicitly stated that he had ‘serious
doubts’ about the verdict and that ‘there is a substantial likelihood
that [Jimenez] was not guilty,’” Austin wrote. “He also stated that his
confidence in the verdict was further undermined when he became aware of
the expert testimony at the state court habeas proceedings.” His
opinion also noted that a former appeals and state district judge, who
presided over the state habeas evidentiary hearing, concluded that
Jimenez didn’t get a fair trial, and suggested that the jury would have
likely reached a different verdict if the experts from the habeas
hearings had testified at the trial."
-----------------------------------------------------
PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY: "Jimenez has not been able to see her own teenage children,
the youngest of whom was born after she was incarcerated, in recent
years. The mother also suffers from kidney disease that likely will
require dialysis or a transplant, her attorneys said. Nevertheless
the state attorney general, along with local prosecutors, appeared in
court Tuesday to oppose granting relief to Jimenez. They contend she
should remain in custody while they appeal Austin’s grant of Jimenez’s
petition to the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals."
-----------------------------------------------------
STORY:
"Amid doubts of Texas woman’s guilt, federal jurist ponders releasing her after 17 years, by Rick Tulsky, published by Injustice Watch on January 14, 2020.
Injustice Watch: Rick Tulsky (co-director of
Injustice Watch) developed a sense of the power of exposing social
wrongs as a young reporter at the Jackson, Ms., Clarion Ledger; and has
retained his dedication to that work at The Philadelphia Inquirer, the
Los Angeles Times, the San Jose Mercury News and the Center for
Investigative Reporting. His work has received more than two dozen national awards including a Pulitzer Prize, and has been a nominated finalist in two other years.)
SUB-HEADING:
"A federal magistrate has rejected Texas prosecutors’ effort to delay
the release of Rosa Estela Olvera Jimenez, until an appellate court can
consider the state’s appeal of the magistrate’s order granting a new
trial. The ruling opens the door to her release from prison after she
served 14 years, convicted of a murder, amid evidence of her innocence."
GIST:
"Rosa Estela Olvera Jimenez has long insisted that she didn’t kill a
toddler she was babysitting in 2003, who suffered fatal injuries from
paper towels that prosecutors accused her of stuffing down the boy’s
throat. Nevertheless, a jury convicted Jimenez, an undocumented
immigrant living in Austin, Tx., and sentenced her to 99 years in
prison. But now, after 17 years in prison, Jimenez appears likely to be released. At
a Tuesday hearing, a federal magistrate judge in Austin said that he
would rule shortly on a motion to release Jimenez on bail against the
objections of prosecutors who are appealing the grant of her petition. The
magistrate judge, Andrew W. Austin, had previously concluded in an
opinion last fall that “justice and fundamental fairness” compelled him
to enter an order overturning the verdict against Jimenez, requiring the
state to either release her or retry her by Feb. 25. There were no
witnesses to help explain how five paper towels got in the throat of her
alleged victim, 21-month-old Bryan Gutierrez, according to the court
record. Jimenez had been watching Bryan after his mother dropped him off
at Jimenez’s house on Jan. 30, 2003, and contended that as soon as she
saw the child turning blue, she took him to a neighbor, where they tried
to revive him and called 911. Bryan died from his injuries several weeks later. The
case hinged on prosecution expert testimony that a toddler could not
have stuffed the paper down his own throat, and therefore Jimenez was
guilty. The defense relied on an expert, Dr. Ira Kanfer, who was a
forensic pathologist but neither an expert in pediatrics or choking.
After prosecutors grilled Kanfer about his credentials, according to the
court record, he testified that he had said during a break that the
prosecutors “could go fuck themselves.” In a series of
post-conviction proceedings, new defense experts provided evidence that
contradicted the prosecution’s argument that Bryan could not have shoved
the towels down his own throat. “It wasn’t like the state made it
out to be,” said Anna Vasquez, director of outreach for the Innocence
Project of Texas, who was in the courtroom Tuesday. “You can make any
kind of accusation, unless there are the right experts to dispute it,”
she said. Vasquez and three other women were exonerated more than a decade after they themselves were convicted
of child assault. She now works on behalf of other defendants who she
believes are wrongly convicted, particularly women. Vasquez said that
women face a particular onus when accused of harming a child, because
the act disrupts expectations in our society that women possess a
maternal instinct. “It’s very hard to fight, when a woman is accused
of harming a child,” she said. “For society, nothing can be worse than
harming a child.” The president of Mexico cited the Jimenez case in
2012 as an example of how Mexican nationals could not be fairly tried in
the United States, urging the U.S. Supreme Court to grant her a new
trial. Before magistrate Austin stepped in, the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals had refused to overturn the verdict. Austin, in his
later opinion, wrote that the ruling was “based on several factual
determinations that were plainly unreasonable in light of the record
before the state court.” Austin characterized Jimenez’s court saga as
the “rare case in which justice and fundamental fairness require
granting the petitioner a writ of habeas corpus.” “The judge who
presided over the trial has explicitly stated that he had ‘serious
doubts’ about the verdict and that ‘there is a substantial likelihood
that [Jimenez] was not guilty,’” Austin wrote. “He also stated that his
confidence in the verdict was further undermined when he became aware of
the expert testimony at the state court habeas proceedings.” His
opinion also noted that a former appeals and state district judge, who
presided over the state habeas evidentiary hearing, concluded that
Jimenez didn’t get a fair trial, and suggested that the jury would have
likely reached a different verdict if the experts from the habeas
hearings had testified at the trial. In seeking her release from
custody while prosecutors appeal Austin’s ruling, Jimenez’s attorneys
noted what they called exceptional circumstances that warranted her
release. Jimenez has not been able to see her own teenage children,
the youngest of whom was born after she was incarcerated, in recent
years. The mother also suffers from kidney disease that likely will
require dialysis or a transplant, her attorneys said. Nevertheless
the state attorney general, along with local prosecutors, appeared in
court Tuesday to oppose granting relief to Jimenez. They contend she
should remain in custody while they appeal Austin’s grant of Jimenez’s
petition to the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals."
--------------------------------------------
Update
10 a.m. cst 1/15/20: A federal magistrate has rejected Texas
prosecutors' effort to delay the release of Rosa Estela Olvera Jimenez,
until an appellate court can consider the state's appeal of the
magistrate's order granting a new trial. The ruling opens the door to
her release from prison after she served 14 years, convicted of a
murder, amid evidence of her innocence.
----------------------------------------------
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;
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FINAL WORD: (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases): "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."
Lawyer Radha Natarajan:
https://www.providencejournal.com/news/20191210/da-drops-murder-charge-against-taunton-man-who-served-35-years-for-1979-slaying
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The entire story can be read at:
https://www.injusticewatch.org/news/2020/amid-doubts-of-texas-womans-guilt-federal-jurist-ponders-releasing-her-after-17-years/?utm_source=Injustice+Watch+Newsletter+Subscribers&utm_campaign=37242d9caa-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_01_24_10_12_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_1a5f79d769-37242d9caa-356919369