Friday, February 6, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE: PART TEN; ANALYSIS OF CIRCUMSTANTIAL AND PHYSICAL EVIDENCE; DR. GLENN LARKIN; ONE OF FOUR DISSENTING PATHOLOGISTS;


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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One of the four pathologists who take issue with the pathology evidence used to convict Larry Swearingen, has analysed the circumstantial and physical evidence also used to place Swearingen on Death Row;

Dr. Glenn Larkin's analysis has been published on the Texas Death Penalty Blog which is published by Texas Students Against the Death Penalty;

"Even the circumstantial evidence is raunchy, as well as some of the physical evidence," the analysis begins;

"1) The pubic hair found in the vaginal area:

This strongly suggests that intra-vaginal intercourse took place with the man who dropped the hair. It also means that this event --- consensual or not --- occurred AFT$R Trotter had her last shower or bath, presumably that morning.

Or if Trotter was alive for days after 8 December, it merely states that she was killed AFTER her last intercourse.

Trotter had a vaginal or cervical biopsy performed shortly before her death, and an area of red discoloration was misdiagnosed by Dr Carter as traumatic injury, implying rape. The alleged trauma was iatrogenic --- or surgically caused.

2) The "blood" found under one of Trotter's fingernails: This blood was tested for DNA and was not --- repeat not--- matched to Swearingen's DNA. The state p[roposed two equally preposterous theories;

2.1) One of the detectives at the scene cut himself shaving that morning, and the drop fell of his face, and flew UNDER Trotter's finger nail. For one thing, blood from
} a shaving "nick" would have dried, unless the detective had hemophilia or some
other coagulopathy. For another, how did that blood get UNDER the finger nail? There is an old medical aphorism that states, "When you hear hoof beats, think of
horses and not zebras (Common things are common; rare things are rare.).

2.2) The second theory, equally ludicrous, is that the blood cames from air dispersion through the morgue's air conditioner system. Curious, I am not aware of this unique source ever happening before, and I wounder if any other cadavers had been contaminated this way, especially the same day (January 3, 1999). How many autopsies ere performed at the same time as Trotters. Note that Trotter's autopsy was performed as the second of 1999, starting at 2:15 pm, with a gaggle of witnesses; that presupposes that either one or no autopsies were performed that day, and if one was performed, it could have been either before this autopsy, at the the same time, or after this one, which makes the air route of contamination most unlikely. The defense never questioned this probability because it did not come up at trial.

3) The pantyhose fragments:

3.1 As previously stated, a segment of pantyhose was found around Trotter's neck, damp, discolored, and knotted. It also was no doubt moved by the rodents that feasted on Trotter's larynx. This noose was removed in the proper manner, and photographed, but not measured properly (diameter has no meaning here).

3.2 A second fragment, containing the pelvic portion, and the attached leg portion was found in a dumpster at the traier park where Swearingen lived, and shared by the other tenants. Note that Swearingen's trailer was searched several times and the
pantyhose fragment was not found . If the dumpster was emptied between 8 December and 11 December, it would not contain the pantyhose fragment . If
the pantyhose was found in the dumpster after the last pickup, Swearingen could
not have placed it in the dumpster. This evidence therefo0re has a murky
provenance

3.2 It is not stated how the two fragments were "matched". If done my eye-ball, this is certainly subject to challenge --- being manipulated by rodents distorted the cut edge, and the moisture affected the elasticity, to cite a few problems, even if the class characteristic "matched". The class characteristics are not sufficient evidence for court.

4. "The last person to see her alive":

4. 1 Again, this is specious; while Swearingen did meet Trotter on campus, they were
and were dating off and on for weeks or months. Trotter relied on Swearingen to protect her from a probable former playmate, or playmate to be who was harassing and threatening her, as stated by several of her co-workers.

4.2 Since they were dating, it is no surprise that some of her head hairs were found in
Swearingen's truck. It cannot be determined WHEN those hairs got there. Likewise, there is evidence to support that Trotter did not visit Swearingen's trailer the day of her disappearance. He was entering and leaving alone, and Trotter was not with him, unless he sprinkled her with whiffle dust.

5. The last preposterous theory the state proposed is that Swearingen killed Trotter on December 8th, and stuck her body in a cooler. Then a friend dropped her in the forest while he was in the county jail.

5.1 There is no evidence to support this wild assumption on several accounts..

Freezing will stop decomposition completely, but when the body is thawed, deposition proceeds at an accelerated rate. This is because the ice crystals rupture the cell membranes, allowing all the cell juice to mix when thawed.

A cooled but not frozen body behaves like chopped meat; put a pound of raw hamburger in your refrigerator, and forget it for two weeks; your nose will then remind you. This scenario was used in a detective novel "Silent Witness" Robert Parker, but does not work in the real world.

There is still other evidence of a non-medico-legal nature better left to others; I believe that General Gregg Abbott Esq is putting his foot deeper into his mouth every time he speaks; he conveniently forgets that Swearingen only has to proffer PLAUSIBLE evidence of actual innocence to get a hearing; if what Swearingen has demonstrated in not plausible, nothing ever is. Mr Rytting has stated, "Swearingen is guilty by imagination."

I maintain that anything less than a pardon of innocence for Swearingen is a moral obscenity. G M Larkin MD Charlotte NC;


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Thursday, February 5, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE: PART NINE: PROCEDURAL HISTORY; REMEDIES REPEATEDLY DENIED; ACTS AS OWN LAWYER MUCH OF THE TIME;


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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Here is a "procedural history" of Larry Swearingen's battle against the death penalty which was set out by Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott in a news release;

The history shows a lengthy trail of rejected appeals which brought Swearingen closer and closer to his death - until the appeal court finally intervened;

It also shows a number of crucial hearings where he was fighting for his life without a lawyer.

Jan. 26, 1999 – A Montgomery County grand jury indicted Swearingen for kidnapping-related capital murder.

Nov. 2, 1999 – He was reindicted, with rape-related capital murder added.

June 28, 2000 – A jury found him guilty of capital murder.

July 11, 2000 – After a separate punishment hearing, the court sentenced him to death.

Mar. 11, 2002 – Swearingen filed his initial state application for habeas corpus relief.

Mar. 26, 2003 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence.

May 21, 2003 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied Swearingen’s initial application for habeas corpus relief. He filed his petition for habeas corpus relief in the federal court, Southern District, Houston Division.

Oct. 19, 2004 – In the trial court, Swearingen, acting without a lawyer, sought additional DNA testing.

May 21, 2004 – Swearingen filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in a Houston U.S. district Court.

April 7, 2005 – The trial court denied his request for additional testing.

April 8, 2005 – Still acting without counsel, in connection with this testing request, Swearingen sought mandamus review with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

May 20, 2005 – Again acting without counsel, Swearingen filed a second application for mandamus review with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

June 8, 2005 – The Court of Criminal Appeals denied both requests for mandamus review.

Sept. 1, 2005 – Swearingen filed petition for writ of certiorari with the U.S.
Supreme Court asking that Court to review the state court’s denial of his second mandamus request.

Sept. 8, 2005 – In federal habeas corpus proceedings, the district court denied relief but allowed Swearingen to appeal.

Sept. 9, 2005 – Swearingen filed a notice of appeal with the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Feb. 1, 2006 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Swearingen’s appeal in connection with his request for DNA testing.

Feb. 21, 2006 – Swearingen sought rehearing from the Court of Criminal Appeals in connection with his DNA testing request.

Mar. 27, 2006 – The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review of state court’s denial of mandamus review.

May 10, 2006 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied his request for rehearing on his DNA appeal.

July 31, 2006 – The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the federal district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief.

Nov. 22, 2006 – Swearingen filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court.

Jan. 22, 2007 – Swearingen filed a second application for state habeas corpus relief.

Jan. 23, 2007 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals remanded the application for a hearing.

Feb. 20, 2007 – In federal court, after the Fifth Circuit Court affirmed the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief, the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review.

Jan. 16, 2008 – As for Swearingen’s second state habeas corpus application, when the case returned after remand, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief.

Jan. 22, 2008 – Swearingen filed a third state application for habeas corpus relief.
Mar. 5, 2008 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals remanded the third application for a hearing.

July 31, 2008 – Swearingen, without an attorney, filed a third application for mandamus review with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

Nov. 26, 2008 – In a separate action, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Swearingen’s motion to recuse, filed without an attorney.

Dec. 4, 2008 – Swearingen, without an attorney, for the fourth time sought mandamus review with the Court of Criminal Appeals.

Dec. 17, 2008 – As for his third state habeas corpus application, upon return after remand, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief. The court also rejected Swearingen’s third request for mandamus review. The convicting court set the execution date for January 27, 2009.

Jan. 6, 2009 – The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rejected his fourth request for mandamus review.


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE: PART EIGHT; AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN EDITORIAL: WHY DIDN'T TEXAS COURTS DIDN'T STOP EXECUTION OF POSSIBLY INNOCENT MAN;


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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The powerful Austin-American Statesman editorial ran on January 27, 2009, under the heading: "U.S. Court stops execution that Texas courts wouldn't; Experts believe condemned man Swearingen could not have committed the murder."

"Once again, a federal court has had to intervene to prevent Texas from executing a death row inmate whose conviction is in doubt. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday issued a reprieve to Larry Swearingen, whose execution by lethal injection was scheduled for today," the editorial began;

"And once again, Texas courts and officials did nothing to prevent a possible miscarriage of ultimate justice," it continued;

"The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals had denied Swearingen's petition to hear new information from pathologists who reviewed the case. Nor did Gov. Rick Perry issue a reprieve. And Texas Attorney General Abbott opposed Swearingen's appeal to the 5th Circuit, which ruled that Swearingen's petition could be heard by a federal district court.

Expert scientific analysis strongly indicates Swearingen might not have committed the 1998 murder of college student Melissa Trotter, 19. Based on a report by four pathologists, Swearingen's attorney appealed to the state criminal appeals court, the governor's office, the federal appeals court and the U.S. Supreme Court asking for a stay of execution to review the information.

One of those pathologists with a new interpretation of the case is former Harris County Chief Medical Examiner Joye Carter, who performed the autopsy on the victim. Carter says her original estimate of the time of death was wrong, as do several other professionals.

This case is about timing. Trotter was last seen leaving the Montgomery County Community College campus in Conroe with Swearingen on Dec. 8, 1998. Her body was found in Sam Houston National Forest near Conroe on Jan. 2, 1999. She had been strangled, and a portion of her panty hose was found around her neck.

Swearingen was a good bet for the crime. He was twice accused of rape and had been seen with Trotter the day she disappeared. There was other circumstantial evidence implicating Swearingen, too. But if he had killed Trotter and left her in the national forest on Dec. 8 or soon after, the body would have been badly decomposed. Instead it was quite well preserved.

Pathologists, including Carter, say the body could not have been in the forest more than 14 days and likely was there as few as four days before it was discovered. If true, that means Swearingen could not have killed Trotter and left her body in the woods because he had been in jail since Dec. 11 on outstanding traffic warrants.

The science behind the claim that Trotter's body had not been in the forest for more than two weeks is strong. It is based on proven rates of organ decomposition, on insect infestation and other well-tested factors that pathologists use to determine times of death.

This expert analysis presented a strong argument to delay Swearingen's execution until the information can be evaluated. Had the jury heard these scientific facts during Swearingen's trial, it might have rendered a verdict of not guilty.

Despite that, neither the state appeals court, the attorney general nor the governor did anything to prevent the execution of a possibly innocent man. The lack of interest in fairness and justice by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in capital cases continues to baffle, frustrate and infuriate."


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE: PART SEVEN; SUPPORTIVE EDITORIAL; DALLAS NEWS EXPRESSES "RELIEF" AT STAY OF EXECUTION;


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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The "Dallas News" editorial ran on January 26, 2009, under the heading: "Court stay in death case;"

"It was a relief to see a stay issued in federal court yesterday in the scheduled execution of a Montgomery County man who might have been behind bars when his alleged murder victim was killed," the editorial began;

"Doubts have lingered over the conviction of Larry Swearingen for months, ever since a medical examiner essentially recanted her pivotal testimony about the probable time of death of the victim, college student Melissa Trotter," it continued;

"Yet state courts have declined to examine the expert's new analysis on its merits, citing a technicality to move the case along. Something's wrong here. A key expert witness says her testimony created the wrong impression, and Texas courts don't come to grips with it?

The case against Swearingen was mostly circumstantial. He had a history of abusive behavior toward women. The 19-year-old victim had broken off a date with him shortly before she disappeared in December 1998. He was the last person seen with her, as she left the Montgomery College library. Fibers and hair on his jacket and in his truck linked him to the victim.

Trotter was strangled with pantyhose that allegedly matched a piece found at his mobile home. Her body was found 25 days after her disappearance. All too coincidentally, Harris County Medical Examiner Joye Carter testified at trial that the body had lain in the woods about 25 days.

That's not what she says now. Based on a closer look at decomposition details in the autopsy report, Dr. Carter filed a sworn statement that the body was exposed outdoors no longer than two weeks. Other forensic experts support that finding as well, based on new analysis of insect activity.

The belated findings pose a major problem to the prosecution's case, because Swearingen was jailed on unrelated warrants three days after the victim's disappearance and would not have been free at the time of her death.

The stay of execution in the case should give the courts time to sort through the new analysis and allow the defense to do new tests on the pantyhose.

The medical examiner all but admits she made a mistake in this case. That admission should have obligated Texas courts to call off the execution. There's no margin for error when it comes to Huntsville's death chamber."


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Monday, February 2, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE; PART SIX; EDITORIAL SUPPORT FROM HOUSTON CHRONICLE TWO DAYS BEFORE DATE SET FOR EXECUTION;


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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Editorial support can be an important tool for obtaining a stay of execution;

Larry Swearingen had the support of the Houston Chronical which ran an editorial headed,"Room for doubt: Convicted murderer’s execution should be stayed pending reconsideration of evidence," on January, 22, 2009, two days before he was to be executed;

"Larry Ray Swearingen has lived on Texas death row for eight years, convicted of the rape-murder of a Montgomery County coed in 1998," the editorial began;

"He is scheduled for execution by lethal injection in Huntsville next Tuesday, despite the fact that a growing body of evidence indicates he could not have strangled 19-year-old Melissa Trotter and dumped her body in Sam Houston National Forest," the editorial continued;

"With the inmate facing an irreversible sentence — capital punishment — it is imperative that Texas Gov. Rick Perry stay the execution to prevent the death of a possibly innocent man.

While plenty of circumstantial evidence indicated Swearingen, a convicted rapist, was a logical suspect, forensic facts not presented at his trial point elsewhere. Trotter’s body was discovered 10 years ago on Jan. 2, nearly a month after her disappearance from the Montgomery College campus in Conroe.

However, Swearingen was jailed on traffic warrants three days after the woman went missing. Although prosecutors theorized that Trotter was killed and her body dumped in the forest the day of her disappearance, the corpse was amazingly well preserved when discovered. Six physicians and forensic scientists who reviewed the evidence concluded that the victim died well after Swearingen’s arrest.

Former Harris County Chief Medical Examiner Joye Carter, who testified against Swearingen in his trial, reexamined the physical evidence and has concluded that Trotter’s death occurred at least a week after Swearingen was taken into custody.

One expert, using a technique familiar to viewers of the CSI TV series, confirmed that finding by dating the development of insect larvae in the victim’s body.

Other exculpatory evidence included blood samples found under Trotter’s fingernails and a pubic hair recovered from a vaginal swab that came from someone other than Swearingen.

The strongest evidence linking the inmate to the murder was the fact he was seen with Trotter on campus the day she disappeared, and a torn stocking matching a piece used to strangle her was found at the man’s trailer. Oddly, the hose turned up after the trailer was twice searched by Montgomery County deputies. Lawmen did not disclose during the trial that Trotter had received phone threats from another man.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals correctly stayed Swearingen’s execution last year on the basis of the new evidence. It inexplicably later denied his appeal for a new trial without addressing the seeming impossibility of his involvement in the woman’s killing.

The inmate’s attorney, James Rytting, is currently working on a new appeal with the assistance of the New York-based Innocence Project. They are seeking DNA testing of the pantyhose and blood samples. Rytting told the Chronicle’s Lisa Falkenberg that despite the contradictions, prosecutors continue to spin far-fetched theories, such as the possibility that Swearingen had refrigerated Trotter’s body and then had an unknown accomplice dispose of it while he was jailed.

Dr. Glenn Larkin, a retired forensic pathologist who reviewed the case, told Texas Monthly that “no rational and intellectually honest person can look at the evidence and conclude Larry Swearingen is guilty of this horrible crime.”

He may not be a saint, but Swearingen does not deserve to die for someone else’s crime.

Governor Perry should halt the execution to allow more testing that may exonerate the convict and point toward an at-large killer.


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

ANOTHER BRITISH PATHOLOGIST CHALLENGES "SHAKEN BABY SYNDROME;" SUE ARMSTRONG INTERVIEWS DR. WANEY SQUIER;

"WE ALL BELIEVE THAT BABIES ARE INJURED BY PARENTS AND CARERS, BUT SOME ARE SO PASSIONATE IN THEIR BELIEF IN CHILD ABUSE THAT THEY WON'T BROOK ANY QUESTIONING. I'M REGARDED AS A BIT OF A MAVERICK, BECAUSE I KEEP SAYING, "I NEED TO SEE SOME EVIDENCE, BEFORE I ACCEPT IT."

DR. WANEY SQUIER;
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The following extracts of an interview with Dr. Waney Squier are extracted from, "A Matter of Life and Death: Conversations with Pathologists, by Sue Armstrong."

Dr. Waney Squier is described as a Consultant paediatric neuropathologist, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, who challenged conventional thinking on shaken baby syndrome

How common is shaken baby syndrome?

I probably see a new case every week. Just this morning two policemen brought me a case and I said to them, "I don't think it's shaking; there's no evidence. The baby doesn't have a broken neck; there are no grip marks. This baby may well have been impacted - either dropped, or smacked across the head or thrown against something." But they kept saying, "Yes, well if the father hadn't done it ..." , and they were making this shaking gesture. They just can't get away from the idea that "this is what families do to babies".

As the pathologist, aren't you in a powerful position to say: "This is not shaking?"

The detail is so important - in some of these cases we find a huge subdural haemorrhage during postmortem. Well, that goes with shaken baby syndrome. But then you go back to the scan that was taken the day the baby was admitted to hospital, soon after the collapse, and there's no subdural. A scan two days later and there's a bit of bleeding; then you come to postmortem and there's a lot of bleeding. The hawks will grab this and say: "Subdural haemorrhage - it must have been shaken."

But then I ask: "What about the scans?" What's happened, I think, is that the blood is coming from somewhere else and it's oozing; the baby's sick and it's on a ventilator; the liver's not working; blood clotting is not working; this blood is collecting over a period of days.

Do they agree with you that there are bigger questions?

I don't know. I'm saying: "I think this baby's probably had impact injury on separate occasions." But that's not very good for the police; they want it to be shaken, and they want the injury to have happened "at 12 o'clock in the morning, November 3, 2003", or whatever, because there was only one person with the baby then, and it makes it really easy for them to identify a perpetrator.

Is this the first time you've found yourself challenging the orthodoxy?

We're quiet people who go away and work in the backroom and send out the diagnoses. But there is a lot to be gained if we can prevent miscarriages of justice. So I'm willing to be as controversial as it takes - if I've got the evidence.

Building up the evidence, of course, means retaining tissues from autopsy to study and to archive. How good are you at broaching this issue with families?

Well, I'm actually quite impressed with myself! I thought it would be terrifying. But going through the whole Alder Hey thing - having very angry, grieving parents storming up to the hospital saying, "You stole my baby's brain; how could you do it, you people?", and having had a few that I've sat down with who've gone away saying, "Oh, now we understand. You learnt something; his little life wasn't in vain" - that really gave me confidence to believe that sometimes I was getting it right.

To order a copy of "A Matter of Life and Death: Conversations with Pathologists, by Sue Armstrong" for £11.99 with free UK p&p, go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop;

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Sunday, February 1, 2009

LARRY SWEARINGEN CASE: PART FIVE; COURT TV STORY ON HIS "CRIME";


One of the lessons of the Goudge Inquiry was the ease with which innocent persons could be convicted of murder strictly on the basis of the pathological evidence on questions such as the time and cause of death - which all too often was wrong.

Many Canadians reacted in horror to the spectre of innocent parents put through the horror of being charged with murdering their own children because of faulty pathological evidence.

That sense of horror is compounded where there is the possibility that an innocent person is being executed by the state in circumstances where there are strong suggestions that the pathologists got it wrong.

The Larry Swearingen case is very much in point;

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Court TV reporter Emanuella Grinberg describer Larry Swearingen's "crime" in a story headed: "His crime: A college student's murder and a telltale note from prison," which accompanied an extensive interview that ran before his scheduled execution date; (January 24, 2009);

"Melissa Trotter, a student at Montgomery College in Texas, was last seen alive on Dec. 8, 1998, as she left campus for a lunch date with electrician Larry Swearingen," the story began;

"One month later, authorities found her decomposed body in Sam Houston National Park, her shirt pulled up and a leg of pantyhose wrapped around her neck," it continued;

"An autopsy determined that the 18-year-old had been strangled and then stabbed in the neck while she was still alive.

Swearingen, already considered a suspect, was charged with capital murder during the course of a kidnapping after Trotter's body was found. In November 1999, a grand jury indicted Swearingen on an additional count of attempted sexual assault.

When Swearingen stood trial in 1999, he faced circumstantial and forensic evidence tying him to the crime.

Witnesses placed the married father of two talking to Trotter at a convenience store on Dec. 6, 1998, two days before she disappeared.

The next day, Swearingen's co-workers recalled him bragging about a lunch date he had with a woman named Melissa.

His co-workers told police that when she didn't show up the next day, he became irate. Swearingen was overheard rescheduling the date for the next day and remarked to his boss that with any luck, he'd "have Melissa for lunch."

Witnesses also placed him on the campus with Trotter the day she was last seen alive. Swearingen admitted to the meeting, but insisted that he left her in the parking lot and never saw her again.

But Montgomery County prosecutors claimed that the two went to McDonald's and brought back lunch to the trailer Swearingen shared with his wife and son.

There, prosecutors contended, Swearingen strangled Trotter after she rebuffed his sexual advances and tried to leave. Before he left her body in the woods, prosecutors said, Swearingen stabbed her in the neck to ensure she was dead.

Investigators found McDonald's containers in Swearingen's garbage, along with a lighter and a pack of Marlboro Lights, which was Trotter's brand.

Swearingen's wife also testified that she came home to find the bed rumpled, but there were no signs that someone had burglarized the home.

Forensic experts also testified that hairs found on the pantyhose wrapped around Trotter's neck were consistent with samples from Swearingen's wife.

They also testified that they found clothing fibers and hair in Swearingen's truck that were consistent with samples from Trotter.

But perhaps the most damaging evidence came from Swearingen's cell.

While awaiting trial, Swearingen sent his mother a letter written in broken Spanish, claiming to be from a person who witnessed Trotter's murder and knew the real killer.

The letter contained details of the case that had never been revealed to the public, including the color of Trotter's underwear and her manner of death.

A fellow inmate also testified that he wrote the letter at Swearingen's request. Police searched Swearingen's cell and found a Spanish-English dictionary, along with a sheet of paper listing translations of words that appeared in the letter.

Even so, Swearingen still took the stand to assert his innocence. Against his lawyer's advice, he testified that he met Trotter at the college library on Dec. 8 and listened to her complain about a man who was sending her suggestive e-mails. After that, he said, he left campus without her.

He also testified that he saw Trotter the day before her disappearance at a convenience store with a mystery man. Swearingen testified that the two came into his home for a few minutes, in an apparent effort to explain the existence of her fibers in his truck and home.

A jury convicted him of murder after less than three hours of deliberations.

To sentence him to death, the jury only needed to find that the crime has been committed during the course of either a kidnapping or an attempted sexual assault. After nearly three more hours of deliberations, they sentenced him to death without indicating which aggravating factor they had relied upon.

After his conviction, Swearingen attempted to gather DNA samples from the officials who presided over Trotter's autopsy to determine the source of a red speck of genetic material that was found under her fingernails. The request was denied.

In an interview with CourtTVnews.com, Swearingen also said that he possessed evidence showing that Trotter died after he was jailed on Dec. 11. He referred to a letter from a forensic entomologist who said that evidence of insect activity on the victim's body revealed a later time of death than the time of death named by the medical examiner.

Swearingen claims the evidence exonerates him because he was already in jail when Trotter was killed and placed in the woods.

To date, he has been unable to present the claims in court. He is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Jan. 24."


Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;