Friday, July 12, 2024

William Henry Jamerson: Oklahoma; (Newly discovered exculpatory DNA evidence): Major (Welcome) Development: (Enough to make one weep!) This case is so pathetic; His conviction has been quashed after serving 24 years in prison for rape, and as The Frontier (Reporter William Goforth) has reported, the exonerating evidence includes the complainants recantation of her testimony, and a test one semen recovered from the crime was found not to match William Jamerson's DNA…Jamerson’s 1991cconviction was largely based on testing on semen recovered during sexual assault exam of the victim, Kayleen Dubbs, and her supposed positive identification of Jamerson, including in a police photo lineup. The Frontier does not identify victims of sexual assault, but Dubbs, who attended Tuesday’s hearing, consented in multiple interviews to her identity being used. In 2022, a defense team working on Jamerson’s behalf found semen recovered from Dubbs’ sexual assault examination. New tests on the sample excluded Jamerson from being the source. Dubbs spoke with The Frontier in 2023 and said she did not identify Jamerson as her attacker in 1991. Dubbs, who was 16 at the time of the attack, said police first told her it was Jamerson who attacked her."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY:  "Guten ruled that if the jury had known the DNA did not belong to Jamerson, and had Dubbs testified that she did not believe Jamerson was her attacker, the trial outcome likely would have been different."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "Dubbs told The Frontier following Tuesday’s hearing that helping to clear Jamerson’s name was an important moment for her. “To be able to hear a judge finally listen to us and do what is right means everything to me,” Dubbs said. “It’s been a long time coming.” After the hearing, Dubbs and Jamerson embraced outside of the courtroom. “I’m so sorry,” Dubbs told Jamerson and his family members.

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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY: "Authorities said during Jamerson’s trial in 1991 that tests on semen recovered from Dubbs put Jamerson in a “narrow class” of people who could have been the rapist.  Back then, advanced DNA techniques were not widely used. Instead, police in his case relied on more rudimentary tests to determine whether blood had been secreted, which enabled them to determine blood type. Trial transcripts show prosecutors told jurors those tests couldn’t confirm Jamerson as the source, but they couldn’t rule him out either. Jurors took about three hours to come back with a guilty verdict and Jamerson was sentenced to 34 years in prison on three felony counts."

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PASSAGE FOUR OF THE DAY: "Jamerson has maintained for more than three decades that he did not rape Dubbs, and pleaded with the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office in letters and court motions to find and test the rape kit for DNA. Authorities said each time that the sexual assault examination evidence had been destroyed.  But those repeated claims by police were wrong. The evidence police insisted for more than two decades had been destroyed was instead found last year in a police property storage facility. Once that evidence was tested, Jamerson was excluded as being the source.

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PASSAGE FIVE OF THE DAY: "Tulsa County prosecutors argued against vacating Jamerson’s sentence, placing blame on Dubbs and Jamerson for not coming forward sooner. Assistant District Attorney Kevin Leitch told the judge he had at times questioned why the state was attempting to maintain the  conviction, given that Jamerson had already served his sentence and been released from prison. However, Leitch said, a jury found Jamerson guilty, and even with the newly discovered DNA evidence and Dubbs’ recantation, it was too late to overturn the conviction. Why, Leitch asked, did it take more than 30 years for Dubbs to say she didn’t believe Jamerson was her assailant? “Thirty-three years later and you’ve done nothing to rectify it?” Leitch said."

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PASSAGE SIX OF THE DAY: "The judge noted in his ruling that Jamerson had claimed in court filings that Tulsa police and the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office withheld information important to his defense, known as a Brady violation.  “Evidence that seems material seems to have been withheld,” he said, referencing the biological samples taken during the rape exam.  “The one that’s most troubling is that there is evidence that someone other than Mr. Jamerson was identified as the assailant. … It should have been disclosed,” Guten said."

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PASSAGE SEVEN OF THE DAY: "Prosecutors told Guten they intended to appeal his ruling. Dubbs told The Frontier she was a poor, pregnant teenager at the time of her attack, and she trusted that police were telling her the truth.  “I was coerced to believe it was his DNA, and they hounded me that he was the guy, and they gave me his name,” Dubbs said. “They kept me away from the courtrooms because I was pregnant and young … I couldn’t read the newspapers, I couldn’t watch the television. They wouldn’t allow me to. They hid me from everything or this wouldn’t have happened.”

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STORY: "Tulsa judge tosses rape conviction after man’s three-decade quest to prove his innocence," by Reporter William Goforth, published by The Frontier, on July 9, 2024.

SUB-HEADING:  "William Henry Jamerson’s 1991 conviction was vacated Tuesday after a judge found newly discovered evidence, which included The Frontier’s interview with the victim, “undermines confidence in the verdict.”


PHOTO CAPTION: "William Henry Jamerson, left, embraces Kayleen Dubbs after Jamerson’s sentence was vacated on Tuesday. Jamerson had been convicted in 1991 of raping Dubbs, but his sentence was vacated after Dubbs recanted her testimony and a test on semen recovered from the crime was found to not match Jamerson’s."


GIST: A judge threw out the conviction on Tuesday of a Tulsa man who served 24 years in prison after being convicted of rape. The Frontier profiled Wiliam Henry Jamerson  last year, reporting on new evidence that cast doubt on his conviction.

In vacating the sentence, District Judge David Guten found that “newly discovered evidence undermines confidence in the verdict” from 1991.

Jamerson watched Guten intently as the judge made his remarks, then hugged his attorney, Dan Smolen, after Guten announced he was vacating the sentence. Jamerson’s friends and family, more than a dozen of whom attended the hearing, erupted in cheers.

“It’s a blessing,” Jamerson said afterward, noting “mixed emotions” while thinking about all he’d missed while in prison. “I missed a lot. My three brothers passed away … I’ve still got my little brother, my mom and my sister, and they’ve been beside me.”

Jamerson’s 1991cconviction was largely based on testing on semen recovered during sexual assault exam of the victim, Kayleen Dubbs, and her supposed positive identification of Jamerson, including in a police photo lineup. 

The Frontier does not identify victims of sexual assault, but Dubbs, who attended Tuesday’s hearing, consented in multiple interviews to her identity being used.

In 2022, a defense team working on Jamerson’s behalf found semen recovered from Dubbs’ sexual assault examination. New tests on the sample excluded Jamerson from being the source. Dubbs spoke with The Frontier in 2023 and said she did not identify Jamerson as her attacker in 1991. Dubbs, who was 16 at the time of the attack, said police first told her it was Jamerson who attacked her. 

Guten ruled that if the jury had known the DNA did not belong to Jamerson, and had Dubbs testified that she did not believe Jamerson was her attacker, the trial outcome likely would have been different.

Dubbs told The Frontier following Tuesday’s hearing that helping to clear Jamerson’s name was an important moment for her.

“To be able to hear a judge finally listen to us and do what is right means everything to me,” Dubbs said. “It’s been a long time coming.”

After the hearing, Dubbs and Jamerson embraced outside of the courtroom.

“I’m so sorry,” Dubbs told Jamerson and his family members.

Smolen said after the hearing that Jamerson’s case was an example of a broken justice system.

“This case in a very profound way shows how broken the criminal justice system has been through the years and continues to remain in a state of disrepair,” Smolen said. “It needs to be fixed so that people like Henry Jamerson don’t spend their entire lives in prison.”

Jamerson said he spent years being angry at Dubbs while he was in prison, but that his sister had urged him to forgive her.

“My sister told me you have to forgive to move forward,” Jamerson said. “It’s over with and I thank her for going up there and clearing my name.”

“You’re innocent,” Dubbs replied. “You always have been.”

Authorities said during Jamerson’s trial in 1991 that tests on semen recovered from Dubbs put Jamerson in a “narrow class” of people who could have been the rapist. 

Back then, advanced DNA techniques were not widely used. Instead, police in his case relied on more rudimentary tests to determine whether blood had been secreted, which enabled them to determine blood type.

Trial transcripts show prosecutors told jurors those tests couldn’t confirm Jamerson as the source, but they couldn’t rule him out either. Jurors took about three hours to come back with a guilty verdict and Jamerson was sentenced to 34 years in prison on three felony counts. 

Jamerson has maintained for more than three decades that he did not rape Dubbs, and pleaded with the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office in letters and court motions to find and test the rape kit for DNA. Authorities said each time that the sexual assault examination evidence had been destroyed. 

But those repeated claims by police were wrong. The evidence police insisted for more than two decades had been destroyed was instead found last year in a police property storage facility. Once that evidence was tested, Jamerson was excluded as being the source.

Smolen argued there was no longer any evidence tying Jamerson to the crime without positive testing or Dubbs identifying him.

Tulsa County prosecutors argued against vacating Jamerson’s sentence, placing blame on Dubbs and Jamerson for not coming forward sooner.

Assistant District Attorney Kevin Leitch told the judge he had at times questioned why the state was attempting to maintain the  conviction, given that Jamerson had already served his sentence and been released from prison. However, Leitch said, a jury found Jamerson guilty, and even with the newly discovered DNA evidence and Dubbs’ recantation, it was too late to overturn the conviction.

Why, Leitch asked, did it take more than 30 years for Dubbs to say she didn’t believe Jamerson was her assailant?

“Thirty-three years later and you’ve done nothing to rectify it?” Leitch said. 

The judge noted in his ruling that Jamerson had claimed in court filings that Tulsa police and the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office withheld information important to his defense, known as a Brady violation. 

“Evidence that seems material seems to have been withheld,” he said, referencing the biological samples taken during the rape exam. 

“The one that’s most troubling is that there is evidence that someone other than Mr. Jamerson was identified as the assailant. … It should have been disclosed,” Guten said. 

Prosecutors told Guten they intended to appeal his ruling.

Dubbs told The Frontier she was a poor, pregnant teenager at the time of her attack, and she trusted that police were telling her the truth. 

“I was coerced to believe it was his DNA, and they hounded me that he was the guy, and they gave me his name,” Dubbs said. “They kept me away from the courtrooms because I was pregnant and young … I couldn’t read the newspapers, I couldn’t watch the television. They wouldn’t allow me to.

“They hid me from everything or this wouldn’t have happened.”

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/tulsa-judge-tosses-rape-conviction-after-mans-three-decade-quest-to-prove-his-innocence/

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. 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.

SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:


https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985


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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;