Saturday, June 19, 2021

Carlos DeLuna; Texas; (Part Two): False Eyewitness Identification case: "The Phantom.'... Innocence Project uses DeLuca case to show that there is a 'real' risk of executing people who are innocent in the USA...Data has shown that there is a real risk of executing people who are innocent in the United States. Since 1973,185 people who have been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death in the U.S. have been exonerated, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, including Innocence Project clients Clemente Aguirre, Rolando Cruz, and Alejandro Fernandez. About 60% of those exonerees were either Black or Latinx, underscoring the discriminatory application of the death penalty against Black and brown people. At least two of the exonerees were Spanish speakers with a limited understanding of English that made it difficult for them to adequately defend themselves in court. Others had limited access to adequate resources and quality representation. And like Mr. DeLuna, some Innocence Project clients have been executed without a fair chance to prove their innocence."

CONTEXT:  The Crime Report: 'Death penalty left in Limbo amid White House Silence," staff reporters, November 18,2021..."Despite expectations that President Joe Biden would take swift action against the death penalty as the first sitting president to oppose capital punishment, the White House has remained silent on the issue and even failed to rescind Trump-era protocols enabling federal executions to resume and allowing prisons to use firing squads that many thought the president would do on day one, reports the Associated Press. President Biden hasn’t said whether he’d back a bill introduced by fellow Democrats to strike the death penalty from U.S. statutes, and his administration also recently asked the Supreme Court to reinstate the Boston Marathon bomber’s original death sentence. The fact that the Biden administration chose to actively push for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s execution suggests the president’s opposition to the death penalty isn’t as all-inclusive as many activists believed. White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said in an email regarding the Tsarnaev decision that the Justice Department “has independence regarding such decisions.” Bates added that the president “believes the Department should return to its prior practice, and not carry out executions.” The president could take the path of least resistance, politically speaking, by telling his Justice Department not to schedule federal executions during his term. But that would fall far short of fulfilling his campaign promise, and it would leave the door open for future presidents to restart executions. He could also use his executive powers to commute all federal death sentences to life in prison, but there’s no sign of that happening. Granting full clemency to everyone on death row could be politically problematic for Biden and other Democrats, who have a slim majority in both the House and the Senate. Biden didn’t make capital punishment a prominent feature of his presidential run, but he did say on his campaign website that he would work “to pass legislation to eliminate the death penalty at the federal level, and incentivize states to follow the federal government’s example." 


https://thecrimereport.org/2021/06/18/death-penalty-left-in-limbo-amid-white-house-silence/


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BACKGROUND: "The Phantom draws from a series of interviews — including those with Mr. DeLuna’s siblings, his trial attorney, prosecutors, and eyewitnesses — casting tremendous doubt on Mr. DeLuna’s conviction and revealing new, disturbing evidence that points to his innocence. It follows a re-investigation into Mr. DeLuna’s claim about Mr. Hernandez by Columbia law professor Jim Liebman and his team, who later documented their comprehensive findings in a book titled The Wrong Carlos, an article in the Columbia Human Rights Law Review, and online." (Innocence Project);


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PASSAGE ONE OF THE DAY: "We encourage you to watch The Phantom and share your thoughts and reactions on social media. And we hope that you’ll join with us, Witness to Innocence, former prosecutors, retired judges, civil rights organizations, faith groups, and others in persuading President Joe Biden to commute the sentences of 46 people currently on federal death row. " (The Innocence Project);


urge-pres-biden-to-commute-the-federal-death-row


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PASSAGE  TWO OF THE DAY: "In 2000, Claude Jones was executed in Texas for the 1989 murder of liquor store owner Allen Hilzendager. Mr. Jones’ conviction largely rested on a single piece of evidence — a strand of hair — that was found on the counter near Mr. Hilzendager’s body. Mr. Jones’ co-defendant also testified against him but later signed an affidavit claiming that he had testified after being threatened with the death penalty. Nearly a decade after Mr. Jones’ execution, DNA testing requested by the Innocence Project revealed that the strand of hair did not belong to Mr. Jones, raising serious doubts about his guilt.  In 2004, Cameron Todd Willingham was executed in Texas after being convicted for the 1991 murders of his three daughters by arson. Mr. Willingham’s conviction was based partly on the testimony of forensic science experts who determined that the fire had been intentionally set. A jailhouse informant had also claimed that Mr. Willingham had confessed to the crime. Following Mr. Willingham’s execution, however, five independent, leading arson experts assembled by the Innocence Project, along with an investigative report by the Chicago Tribune, found that the scientific analysis that had been used in Mr. Willingham’s trial was unreliable. An arson expert hired by the Texas Forensic Science Commission also came to the same conclusion.  In another case, Sedley Alley died by lethal injection in Tennessee in 2006. Mr. Alley had been convicted in the 1985 rape and murder of Marine Lance Corporal Suzanne Marie Collins. Mr. Alley initially denied any role in Ms. Collins death, but eventually signed a statement admitting to the murder, which he said was coerced. The details of the statement contradicted aspects of the crime scene and autopsy. Moreover, a witness’ description of the suspect did not match Mr. Alley’s appearance. Mr. Alley was executed just years before the Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that the state’s post-conviction DNA statute should have allowed testing on pieces of evidence found at the 1985 crime scene — including a pair of men’s underwear believed to have been worn by the attacker. Had testing been done, Mr. Alley would have had strong proof of his innocence. "


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STORY: "The Phantom." The unjust execution of Carlos DeLuna,"  by Justin Chan, published by The Innocence Project on June 11, 2021.


SUB-HEADING: "In 1989, Carlos DeLuna was excited for the murder of a gas station employee. Yet, evidence uncovered by a Columbia law professor and his team pointed to another suspect."


PHOTO CAPTION: Carlos DeLuna was convicted of a 1983 murder based on eyewitness identification."


GIST: "In Dec. 7, 1989, Carlos DeLuna, a young Latino man, was executed for the 1983 murder of Wanda Lopez, an employee at a gas station in Corpus Christi, Texas, despite maintaining his innocence. He was just 27 years old.


At his trial, prosecutors dismissed Mr. DeLuna’s claim of an alternate suspect — Carlos Hernandez, whom he insisted had committed the murder — asserting that “Mr. Hernandez” was a “phantom” suspect whom Mr. DeLuna had fabricated. Mr. DeLuna was later convicted and sentenced to death largely based on eyewitness misidentification.


The prosecution’s description of Mr. Hernandez is now the title of a deeply disturbing documentary, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 14 and is set for release in theaters on July 2.


The documentary presents a damning portrait of the United States’ criminal legal system, which has heavily disadvantaged both members of the Latinx community and people living in poverty. Mr. DeLuna was one of three children raised by a single mother in a low-income neighborhood of Corpus Christi, where killings and fistfights were common and where poor residents were too readily charged with capital murder, convicted, and sentenced to death with little, if any, legal representation. 


The Phantom also highlights the sloppiness of the investigation, including law enforcement’s failure to look into plausible alternative suspects and the unreliability of eyewitness identification.


In truth, Mr. DeLuna’s case was one that had all the telltale signs of so many wrongful convictions.

f

The case of Carlos DeLuna:

On the night of Feb. 4, 1983, Ms. Lopez, a 24-year-old employee at a Sigmor Shamrock gas station, called police to report a suspicious individual with a knife. While on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, Ms. Lopez attempted to give the individual — whom she described as Hispanic — money in an effort to get him to leave the station’s convenience store. Seventy-seven seconds into the call, she let out a scream.

.

Law enforcement arrived at the scene shortly after to find a witness tending to Ms. Lopez, who had been stabbed twice. The witness described Ms. Lopez’s attacker to an officer as a mustachioed Hispanic man in a flannel jacket and a grey sweatshirt. 


As police began their manhunt for a suspect matching this description, a couple nearby told the same officer that they had seen a man in a different outfit running about two blocks away from the gas station. The second description was shared with other authorities as that of a second possible suspect.


Amid a chaotic manhunt for the two men described by witnesses, police received multiple calls from neighborhood residents about a man hiding underneath a pickup truck. Police followed the tip and found Mr. DeLuna, whom eyewitnesses later identified as Ms. Lopez’s murderer during a highly suggestive identification procedure.


At his trial in July 1983, Mr. DeLuna insisted that Ms. Lopez had been murdered by his acquaintance, Carlos Hernandez. But prosecutors rejected Mr. DeLuna’s claim without conducting a thorough search for Mr. Hernandez. Instead, they accused Mr. DeLuna of blaming the murder on a “phantom” person.


 The jury eventually sided with the prosecution, convicted Mr. DeLuna, and sentenced him to death. Despite Mr. DeLuna’s subsequent appeals, the courts upheld his conviction and death sentence, essentially reaffirming that Mr. Hernandez did not exist. In 1989, Mr. DeLuna died by lethal injection.


Evidence uncovered years after Mr. DeLuna’s execution reveals not only that Mr. Hernandez existed, but that he was well-known to police and prosecutors at the time of trial.

The Phantom argues that, for Mr. DeLuna, this was the ultimate miscarriage of justice.


Wrongful conviction and the death penalty:

Data has shown that there is a real risk of executing people who are innocent in the United States. 


Since 1973,185 people who have been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death in the U.S. have been exonerated, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, including Innocence Project clients Clemente Aguirre, Rolando Cruz, and Alejandro Fernandez. About 60% of those exonerees were either Black or Latinx, underscoring the discriminatory application of the death penalty against Black and brown people.


 At least two of the exonerees were Spanish speakers with a limited understanding of English that made it difficult for them to adequately defend themselves in court. Others had limited access to adequate resources and quality representation.


And like Mr. DeLuna, some Innocence Project clients have been executed without a fair chance to prove their innocence. 


In 2000, Claude Jones was executed in Texas for the 1989 murder of liquor store owner Allen Hilzendager. Mr. Jones’ conviction largely rested on a single piece of evidence — a strand of hair — that was found on the counter near Mr. Hilzendager’s body. Mr. Jones’ co-defendant also testified against him but later signed an affidavit claiming that he had testified after being threatened with the death penalty. Nearly a decade after Mr. Jones’ execution, DNA testing requested by the Innocence Project revealed that the strand of hair did not belong to Mr. Jones, raising serious doubts about his guilt. 


In 2004, Cameron Todd Willingham was executed in Texas after being convicted for the 1991 murders of his three daughters by arson. Mr. Willingham’s conviction was based partly on the testimony of forensic science experts who determined that the fire had been intentionally set. A jailhouse informant had also claimed that Mr. Willingham had confessed to the crime. Following Mr. Willingham’s execution, however, five independent, leading arson experts assembled by the Innocence Project, along with an investigative report by the Chicago Tribune, found that the scientific analysis that had been used in Mr. Willingham’s trial was unreliable. An arson expert hired by the Texas Forensic Science Commission also came to the same conclusion. 


In another case, Sedley Alley died by lethal injection in Tennessee in 2006. Mr. Alley had been convicted in the 1985 rape and murder of Marine Lance Corporal Suzanne Marie Collins. Mr. Alley initially denied any role in Ms. Collins death, but eventually signed a statement admitting to the murder, which he said was coerced. The details of the statement contradicted aspects of the crime scene and autopsy. Moreover, a witness’ description of the suspect did not match Mr. Alley’s appearance. Mr. Alley was executed just years before the Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that the state’s post-conviction DNA statute should have allowed testing on pieces of evidence found at the 1985 crime scene — including a pair of men’s underwear believed to have been worn by the attacker. Had testing been done, Mr. Alley would have had strong proof of his innocence. 


The fight against capital punishment:

The Phantom will be released nationally on July 2, which also marks the 45th anniversary of Gregg v. Georgia, a case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in a 7-2 decision, that the imposition of a death sentence does not qualify as “cruel and unusual punishment” prohibited by the Eighth and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution. The Supreme Court asserted that the cautious and judicious use of the death penalty, when employed carefully, may be appropriate in criminal cases where the defendant has been convicted of deliberately killing someone. 

Yet, as Mr. DeLuna’s case clearly illustrates, the death penalty, in fact, has been carelessly and unfairly applied. According to 2020 data from the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, approximately 2,600 incarcerated people are currently on death row. More than 55% of those people are Black or Latinx. Furthermore, a report from the Death Penalty Information Center shows that not only are Black people overrepresented on death rows across the U.S., people convicted of killing Black people are less likely than people convicted of killing white people to face the death penalty.


Given these startling statistics, we cannot ignore the racially disproportionate application of capital punishment.  The release of The Phantom comes at a time when the country has been moving away from the death penalty. Last year, for instance, saw fewer executions than any year in the past three decades. And in March, Virginia became the first Southern state to outlaw its use."


The entire post can be read at:


https://innocenceproject.org/the-phantom-the-killing-of-an-innocent-man/


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:
Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;
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FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they’ve exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!
Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;