Monday, October 26, 2020

Lydell Grant: Texas: Perplexing case is subject of blistering Texas Monthly article by stellar journalist Michael Hall, headed: "It's the most outrageous thing I've ever seen. It makes no sense."


NOTICE: Check out the  new (weekly)  post on my  'Selfless Warriors Blog' released earlier today today at the link below: "Gloria Killian, an innocent person who spent more than 16 years wrongfully in prison was telling the truth when  she protested from the outset that she knew nothing about the horrifying crime. She had been caught in a web of lies spun by an addict who implicated her in order to protect his wife from being prosecuted for her role in the crime. None of the 'real'  evidence in the case  implicated Gloria. But she had been convicted, lost her appeal, and lost hope, resigned to spending much of the rest of her life behind bars.  It was game over - the  rest of her life likely in prison  - until "a petite white-haired woman with piercing blue eyes"  came along. It was Joyce Ride. A truly 'Selfless Warrior.' "


selflesswarriors.blogspot.com


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BACKGROUND: "Then there's Lydell Grant: Falsely convicted despite a legitimate alibi, based on multiple eyewitnesses' testimony which DNA results later contradicted. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals wants the witnesses re-questioned, even though DNA evidence contradicted their recollections and the person the DNA matched has confessed to the crime! In essence, Texas' court system would rather uphold a bad conviction than free an innocent man, and it's hardly the first time." (Grits For Breakfast).



https://gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/2020/10/four-stories-let-public-peer-into-soul.html


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STORY: "It's  the most outrageous thing I've ever seen. It makes no sense," by  reporter Michael Hall, published by Texas Monthly, on October 21, 2020.


SUB-HEADING:"DNA evidence proved Lydell Grant's innocence. So why won't the state's highest court exonerate him?


GIST: (This is a massive, complex, multi-layered story that deserves to be read in its entirety. Here is a taste: "The reaction was swift. The Houston Chronicle called the decision  (to re-question witnesses) “shameful.” Ware  (Mike Ware, the executive director of the Innocence Project of Texas) said  he had never seen anything like it. “The trial judge, DA, and police chief—each of them says he’s innocent. All of a sudden, the judges are ignoring DNA, questioning its validity as a science, and they want the trial court to get the witnesses to recant. It’s the most outrageous thing I’ve ever seen. It makes no sense.” The DNA scientist Ambers was flummoxed (“I don’t know what else Grant could do—it doesn’t get any more definitive than that”), as were prosecutors in the Harris County DA’s office. They noted that the CCA’s order made it harder to prosecute Carter, who, based on the new DNA evidence and his statements to police, they regard as actually guilty of the murder. Multiple former CCA judges were outraged. “Lydell Grant has overwhelming evidence on his side,” said Elsa Alcala, a judge on the court from 2011 to 2018. “This is beyond reasonable doubt. This is beyond all doubt. There’s no rational explanation for the court’s action.” Alcala acknowledged that the spring was a chaotic, terrible time for the court. “But I don’t cut the CCA any slack. The Texas Supreme Court cleared its docket.” Cathy Cochran, who served on the CCA from 2001 to 2014 after working as both a prosecutor and defense attorney, said, “Another remand further delays justice for the obviously innocent Lydell Grant, and it insults the diligence of the trial judge, the DA, and law enforcement in righting this.” ................................In spite of all his experiences, Grant remains upbeat, certain the CCA will exonerate him. He has thought often about the compensation, part of which he plans to use to buy a truck and a trailer and start a trash-hauling business. “I love trucks. All my buddies at the chemical plants had trucks.” But one song he thinks could actually be a hit is a rap he wrote soon after being released. He had just had dinner at his brother Alonzo’s house, and he was sitting at the dining room table when he began spontaneously humming a beat. He found himself singing the words “I’m not guilty.” That phrase wasn’t exactly right, though. He revised it, and began repeating a new line, almost like a mantra. Soon a melody arose. He turned the new phrase over in his mind, and then pulled out a pen and paper as more words came to him. The lyrics captured the story of his life: from arrest, to trial, to prison, to freedom. Some of the lines he conjured were philosophical: “Whatever’s done in the dark, it shall surface.” Others were inspirational: “Never give up!” Still others revealed Grant’s love of rhyme and wordplay. “I don’t need the stress,” he wrote, “I’m like, what’s next? Mike Ware and the Innocence Project!” Grant sat at the table for hours, toying with rhymes, writing, rewriting, remembering. Just before sunrise, he finished. Heading off to bed, he ran through the song one more time, three long verses and a melodic chorus that was as simple and as true as he could possibly make it. “I’m actually innocent,” sang Lydell Grant, “ ’cause I didn’t do it.”"

 

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/dna-evidence-proved-lydell-grants-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:
Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;
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FINAL, FINAL WORD (FOR NOW!): "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;
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Sunday, October 25, 2020

Jason Lively: West Virginia: (Part Three): Junk arson 'science.'...Scholars expose a dangerous paradox in a highly readable academic article nicely headed: "Evidence on Fire."..."This Article contrasts the courts’ ongoing lax admissibility of unreliable fire-science evidence in criminal cases with their strict exclusion of the same flimsy evidence in civil cases, notwithstanding that both criminal and civil courts are required to operate under the same exclusionary rules for expert evidence."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Fire science, as it became known along its “progression from magic to science,” is one of several forensic disciplines that has historically generated inaccurate expert evidence. Our research indicates, however, that while civil courts closely scrutinize and often exclude unreliable fire-science evidence, criminal courts routinely allow it to go to the jury."

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PERIODICAL ARTICLE: "Evidence on Fire," by Valeena A. Beety and Jennifer D. Oliva, published in the NCL Review. (Thanks to  Dr. Michael Bowers of CSIDDS - Forensics and Law in Focus -  for bringing this important article to our attention.)

GIST: PrĂ©cised:  "Fire science, a field largely developed by lay “arson investigators,” police officers, or similar first responders untrained in chemistry and physics, has been historically dominated by unreliable methodology, demonstrably false conclusions, and concomitant miscarriages of justice. Fire investigators are neither subject to proficiency testing nor required to obtain more than a high school education. Perhaps surprisingly, courts have largely spared many of the now- debunked tenets of fire investigation any serious scientific scrutiny in criminal arson cases. This Article contrasts the courts’ ongoing lax admissibility of unreliable fire-science evidence in criminal cases with their strict exclusion of the same flimsy evidence in civil cases, notwithstanding that both criminal and civil courts are required to operate under the same exclusionary rules for expert evidence."

GIST: "Human beings have long been fascinated by the awesome and unforgiveable power of fire. From old southern stories about barn burners  to The Confession Tapes’ chronicles of false confessions to murder by arson,  fire investigations evoke the worst of human imagination. Playing off the evocative and destructive power of fire, fire experts historically conjured up pseudomagical powers in the courtroom, regaling jurors with investigatory findings that were “more art than science” and with stories about accelerant-detection dogs’ supercanine olfactory abilities, which enabled them to pinpoint a fire’s origin. The fire “expert,” imbued with gravitas due to his uncanny ability to understand the mysteries of the element, easily awes and persuades a Western jury, which, as studies have noted, is largely composed of individuals unfamiliar with how to start, maintain, or use fire.  As Professor Paul Giannelli has explained, For decades arson investigators came from the “old school” of investigators—those who used intuition and a number of rules of thumb to determine whether a fire was incendiary. Critics complained that instead of being rooted in science, the approach was based on folklore that had been passed down from generation to generation—without any empirical testing. A government report noted, as early as 1977, that common arson indicators had “received little or no scientific testing” and that “[t]here appears to be no published material in the scientific literature to substantiate their validity.” Such rules of thumb include numerous scientifically debunked myths, such as accelerant-provoked fires burn hotter and faster than incendiary fires and crazed glass indicates arson. Unfortunately, these and numerous other arson-indicator-related myths were published and preserved in two widely referenced fire-science resources: Arson and Arson Investigation Survey and Assessment and Fire Investigation Handbook Continued reliance on these unreliable resources provoked the American Association for the Advancement of Science (“AAAS”) to characterize fire investigation as a field inundated with a “widespread, persistent, and problematic literature affecting the beliefs and the behavior of practitioners.”  Fire science, as it became known along its “progression from magic to science,” is one of several forensic disciplines that has historically generated inaccurate expert evidence.  Our research indicates, however, that while civil courts closely scrutinize and often exclude unreliable fire-science evidence, criminal courts routinely allow it to go to the jury."

The entire article can be read at:

https://scholarship.law.unc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6713&context=nclr

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;

—————————————————————————————————

FINAL, FINAL WORD (FOR NOW!): "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;


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Saturday, October 24, 2020

Jason Lively: Virginia: (Part 2): Junk (outdated) arson 'science.' A well crafted 'heading' from the Washington Post - especially the last four words..."A flawed investigation left Jason Lively behind bars for a fire he did not set. He is not alone."


PUBLISHER'S NOTE: "This excellent Washington Post story by  reporter Rachel Chason is a reminder that over the decades many innocent people have been convicted of arson and related offences because of antiquated science. A prime example is Cameron Todd Willingham - the subject of many posts on this Blog over the years - who, sadly,  was put to death by the State of Texas acting on junk science. Reporter Chason introduces us to the case of Samuel Anstey, also from West Virginia (like Jason Lively) who is still in prison seeking commutation.  I will be following the Anstey case closely. Congrats to the West Virginia Innocence Project for the fine representation it provided to Mr. Lively on this difficult case. Congrats as well Craig Beyler, the scientist,  Sid Bell, the former prosecutor, who made a terrible mistake but did his best ultimately to correct to it  and to the pro bono members of the legal  team. 

Harold Levy: Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog.

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "The 2005 fire dominated local news coverage and later became the subject of a book and a true crime documentaryBut the fire-related evidence proved faulty, based on outdated science and what the state’s own experts eventually concluded was a fundamentally flawed investigation. For years after the errors were discovered, Lively remained behind bars, due to a lackluster defense, delays and legal missteps. Advocates say his case illustrates a devastatingly common miscarriage of justice, especially in poor, rural swaths of the country, where defense attorneys are frequently underfunded and fire investigators often lack education and advanced training."

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QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Everything, he said, felt like a dream. The first thing he wanted to do was eat a steak at his mother’s house. Then get out of West Virginia, marry Blankenship and begin a new life. But first, he had a question for his lawyer. “When,” he asked George, “are you going to help the next one?"

STORY: "A flawed investigation left Jason Lively behind bars for a fire he did not set.  He is not alone," by reporter Rachel Chason, published  by The Washington Post, on October 22, 2020.

GIST: "The sofa was still burning when firefighters burst into the house. Upstairs, flames that had consumed the bed were already out. Ebb "Doc" Whitley was no longer breathing.

The fire marshal concluded the blaze was deliberately set. Soon, investigators charged Charles “Jason” Lively with killing Whitley, a paraplegic and the revered only doctor in this small town.


Evidence included burn patterns on the first and second floor of Whitley’s house, and chemicals found in the charred remains after the fire. The prosecutor also cited the defendant’s history of fighting, and a witness who claimed that Lively’s mother, a nurse who worked with Whitley for 25 years, had vowed to kill the doctor during an explosive argument the night before the fire.


A jury found Lively, then 29, guilty of first-degree murder.



The 2005 fire dominated local news coverage and later became the subject of a book and a true crime documentary.


But the fire-related evidence proved faulty, based on outdated science and what the state’s own experts eventually concluded was a fundamentally flawed investigation. For years after the errors were discovered, Lively remained behind bars, due to a lackluster defense, delays and legal missteps.


Advocates say his case illustrates a devastatingly common miscarriage of justice, especially in poor, rural swaths of the country, where defense attorneys are frequently underfunded and fire investigators often lack education and advanced training.


In West Virginia, in the same prison in which Lively would spend nearly 15 years, there is another inmate whose sentence is based on a similarly problematic fire investigation, according to his lawyers. A Virginia man is fighting to prove his innocence in a different deadly blaze, aided by Lively’s most recent legal team. And in Texas, a man was executed in 2004 despite evidence he did not set the fire that killed his three children.


The Texas case helped begin the slow unraveling of Lively’s conviction, a process that culminated this fall in a West Virginia courtroom, when he and his family gathered to hear a judge decide, once and for all, his fate.


The facts of the case


The work of figuring out how fires start in America can be done by fire marshals, police officers or other first responders, depending on the size of the blaze and where it occurs.


There are no national proficiency tests or education requirements for such positions.

It was deputy state fire marshal Robert Bailey who arrived in tiny, close-knit Iaeger (pop. 305) on that March morning in 2005 to investigate the fire at Whitley’s house. Bailey had a high school education and had been with the office for about 10 months. He had attended some fire investigation classes taught by the state fire marshal; before Lively’s trial, he would complete a two-week training at the National Fire Academy.


In the living room, Bailey found the fire had burned the couch, a coffee table and the fireplace mantle. In the bedroom, flames had eaten through the thick wooden floor joists and the subfloor, damaging the bed, a table and the ceiling.


Based on what he saw, Bailey concluded that two fires had been deliberately set. The fire upstairs, he determined, was started using a liquid accelerant that contained toluene, a component that was found in one of 12 samples he collected. He believed the fire downstairs was set with an open flame to the sofa.


He and other investigators explained their findings to Sid Bell, the elected prosecutor in McDowell County since 1993, who soon named Lively as the lead suspect.

Bell had moved to the county in the 1970s to work as a reporter at a local newspaper and stayed after graduating law school. He had prosecuted Lively in other cases, most related to fighting. Even today, he describes Lively as “no angel.” It’s a characterization Lively doesn’t dispute.


Smart, charming and athletic, Lively never cared much for school. He worked in the coal mines and struggled after his father, a small-time drug dealer, died in a car accident. After a leg injury in high school, Lively started using drugs himself.


At his trial, Bailey outlined how he thought the fire started. The local bank president described Whitley’s fight with Lively’s mother. A pawnshop employee said Lively sold Whitley’s computer the day the doctor died.


Two witnesses placed Lively and his friend and co-defendant, Tommy Owens, at Whitley’s house on the morning of the fire. But Lively said he only arrived after Whitley died, and in fact ran into the house in a futile attempt to save him.


Lively’s lawyer, chief public defender Floyd Anderson, called an insurance company employee who testified that the fire’s cause was undetermined. But Anderson did not call an outside fire expert to refute Bailey’s conclusion that the fire was “willful and malicious in nature, set in order to burn the structure.”


Instead he argued that Whitley and Lively’s mother had been so close that neither she nor her son would ever hurt the doctor.


Anderson questioned the credibility of one witness, a jailhouse informant, and noted that another recanted on the stand, saying he’d been coerced by police.


The doubt:


Two months after Lively’s conviction, it was Owens’s turn to face a jury. They deliberated just 28 minutes before acquitting him of any role in the fatal fire.


A key reason appears to have been contradictory testimony by Bailey and another fire investigator. As he had in Lively’s trial, Bailey suggested the two fires were separately set. The other fire marshal, however, said there was just one blaze.


Bell, who prosecuted both cases, says he still believed Lively was guilty, based on the other evidence presented at trial. But he found himself wondering about Bailey’s conclusions.


His doubts grew larger three years later, after he read a New Yorker article about Todd Willingham, an unemployed auto mechanic from Texas who was sentenced to death for starting a fire that killed his three young daughters in 1991.


Investigators wrongly said puddle-shaped char patterns on the floor, and spider-web-like patterns on the windows, showed the fire burned “fast and hot” and thus must have been set by an accelerant.


The article detailed how a friend of Willingham’s, convinced of his innocence, asked acclaimed fire investigator Gerald Hurst to review the evidence.


Hurst, a chemist trained at Cambridge University in England, said there was little doubt the fire was accidental, likely caused by a space heater or faulty electrical wire. Accelerants don’t make fires burn hotter, he wrote, and the theory about patterns on the glass indicating an accelerant is nothing more than an “old wives’ tale.”


The Texas governor’s office and the Board of Pardons and Paroles received Hurst’s report, which said an innocent man was about to be put to death based on “junk science.” But it is not clear whether they read it.


Willingham was executed on Feb. 17, 2004, in Huntsville, Tex. He was 36.


After his execution, the state of Texas became one of a handful of states to create an independent agency to investigate forensic cases in which misconduct is alleged. That group found in 2010 that Willingham had been executed following a flawed investigation and “despite there being no reliable evidence of his guilt.”


Willingham has never been officially exonerated, and the prosecutor in his case stands by the conviction.


A few years after the New Yorker article published, Lively filed a habeas corpus petition asking West Virginia to review the evidence in his case.


Bell, at this point serving his fifth and final term as prosecutor, made an unusual request: funding to hire an outside expert after a conviction. He hoped Craig Beyler, a Harvard-trained fire expert who reviewed the Willingham case for the commission in Texas, would confirm Bailey’s finding in Whitley’s death and put Bell’s conscience at ease.


That’s not what happened.


Beyler concluded that the fire in Whitley’s house was not set intentionally and was electrical in origin, starting below the subfloor.


The upstairs blaze would have taken hours to burn through the wooden floor joists, he said. The sofa fire, on the other hand, had been burning for mere minutes, likely sparked by an ember from the fire upstairs.


If it was arson, Beyler reasoned, Lively and Owens would have had to wait in the house as it filled with smoke from the upstairs fire, then ignited the sofa on fire on their way out.

Further dismantling Bailey’s theory, Beyler found, was that the hole in the hardwood floor was smaller than the hole in the subfloor. That meant the second-floor blaze could not possibly have been set with an accelerant from above.


Bell turned the report over to Lively’s defense lawyers, as prosecutors are required to do, labeling parts of it “clearly exculpatory.”


Beyler says he assumed the longtime prisoner would be exonerated.


Mistakes and delays:


The habeas hearing, on Feb. 20, 2013, was an opportunity for Lively’s lawyers to introduce new evidence to prove his innocence. Many prisoners never get that chance.


Consider the case of Samuel Anstey, jailed since 1995 in Mount Olive Correctional Facility, the same place Lively was held, after being convicted of rigging a toaster to ignite a fire that killed his grandmother.


Anstey maintained he was innocent. His case drew the attention of the West Virginia Innocence Project, part of a national network of legal clinics that aims to free wrongfully convicted people. The group asked Hurst, the Cambridge-trained scientist, to get involved.

He determined that investigators did not meet national guidelines for arson probes set in the early 1990s, and that the volunteer firefighter who launched the investigation tampered with the evidence — moving the toaster from its original location, moving its plunger up and down and turning off the electrical breakers.


The cause of the fire, Hurst wrote, could not be determined.


But West Virginia’s highest court denied Anstey’s request for a hearing, ruling that because the state had never adopted the national fire-investigation guidelines, the question of whether this probe met those standards was irrelevant.


Anstey, now 61, remains in prison, without much hope of getting out barring a commutation of his sentence from the governor.


“I had hope but I’ve pretty much lost it,” he said in a recent interview. “I said it’s in God’s hands. But I’ve been wavering with that.”


More than half of all wrongful criminal convictions are caused by government misconduct, study finds


Lively, too, grew despondent as the years passed. Because of repeated clashes with correctional officers, he spent more than 10 years in solitary confinement.


“It seems like I’m nothing but a memory that is fading more and more with each passing day,” he wrote in his journal.


The 2013 hearing was one of his last chances to prove his innocence.


But when Lively’s new lawyer, Scott Driver, called Bell to testify, the prosecutor mischaracterized the report from Beyler.


Bell says he did not know he would be asked to discuss Beyler’s report and had not reviewed it; he assumed Driver would call Beyler as a witness. On the stand, he incorrectly said Beyler had ruled that the cause of the blaze was undetermined.


Driver did not correct the prosecutor or address the substance of Beyler’s findings. To this day, he said in an interview, he cannot explain why he failed to question Bell more thoroughly, or delve more deeply into Beyler’s report.


“I think it is safe to say that at pretty much every level of the justice system, somebody failed him,” Driver said of Lively. “It’s weighed pretty heavy on me, to the extent I contributed to that.”


The judge denied Lively’s petition. A similar request he had submitted in federal court stalled.

Increasingly desperate, Driver, too, contacted the West Virginia Innocence Project.


Andrew George, a white-collar litigator at Baker Botts in Washington who does pro bono wrongful conviction work, was skeptical at first. Then he read Beyler’s report and the transcript of the habeas hearing. His associate called Beyler, who was livid to learn Lively was still in prison.


George agreed to represent Lively and went with Beyler and a small team of attorneys to meet with lawyers in the West Virginia attorney general’s office in July 2018. The prosecutors agreed to hire chemist Glen Jackson, a professor of forensic science at West Virginia University, to review the case.


Then George called Bell, the former prosecutor, who surprised him by being willing to meet.

George and Beyler worried the encounter would be awkward. But as they sat in a conference room at a cultural center in Beckley, W.Va., that November, George said, they realized Bell was “was an honest player who made an honest mistake and wanted to own up to it.”


Bell soon signed an affidavit admitting his error at the habeas hearing. “My testimony about Dr. Beyler’s report and findings was inaccurate,” he swore. “Thus, I strongly believe, therefore, that Charles Jason Lively is innocent.”


At this point, Lively had an unlikely trio of defenders: Beyler, the scientist; Bell, the former prosecutor; and a high-powered legal team.


Lawyers and staff from Baker Botts and the West Virginia Innocence Project spoke almost every day to Lively, and nearly as often with Lively’s mother and his fiancee, Billie Blankenship, who had known Lively since high school.


Blankenship had started writing him in prison after watching “Sins and Secrets,” the Investigation Discovery documentary about his case that aired in 2012.

They planned to marry if Lively was freed.


Jackson, the WVU chemist, soon backed Beyler’s conclusion that the fire was not deliberately set. But Bailey, the fire marshal, who had left the office in 2011, remained unconvinced. After all, he told George, neither Beyler nor Jackson had been to Whitley’s house.


So Beyler and George returned to West Virginia once more. They met fire marshals at Whitley’s house, now filled with weeds and trash. The marshals sent Jackson samples from the house, which provided the final blow to the state’s original case.


Neither charcoal lighter fluid nor gasoline contain toluene as a single component, Jackson wrote. Rather than being poured to aid the fire, as Bell originally suggested, toluene was more likely to have originated through a chemical reaction after the fire started, Jackson said.


'To no one will we deny justice'


Lively’s loved ones gathered outside the Mercer County courthouse in bright sunshine on Sept. 23, passing around “Justice for Jason” T-shirts.


George had convinced Emily Miller, the new McDowell County prosecutor, to support a motion to vacate Lively’s conviction, so long as he pleaded guilty to two misdemeanors related to trespassing at Whitley’s house and selling the doctor’s computer.


The prosecutor was motivated in part by a scathing letter from Bell, who wrote in July that she should free Lively immediately. “We have had knowledge of this compelling exculpatory evidence for two years,” he wrote. “Further delay would be immoral and unethical.”


Read Sid Bell’s letter to Emily Miller


Miller said in a brief interview that she acted as quickly as she could. She did not respond to further questions.


As Blakenship waited in the wood-paneled courtroom, she shook her head in disbelief at the words inscribed on the wall: “To no one will we deny justice, to no one will we delay it.”


Minutes later, Lively, now 42, entered, his head shaved and his hands cuffed in front of him, a correctional officer to either side. He winked at Blankenship and his mother as he made his way to sit next to George, whom he was meeting in person for the first time.


Judge William Sadler walked through the facts of the case. Knowing what the state had concluded about the fire investigation, he said, a jury would not have believed arson to be the cause of the fire and thus would not have believed Lively was guilty.


His voice muffled by a mask, the judge declared the conviction vacated. Lively has been added to the national registry of exonerations, George said, though it is not clear whether he will receive any compensation from West Virginia.


In the courtroom, Blankenship and Kathy Lively-Hamilton clasped hands and raised them above their heads in celebration.


After years of delay, it seemed to them like everything that happened next was rapid-fire: The bailiff undid Lively’s handcuffs. Lively signed the plea. He hugged his mother, then Blakenship.

“You did it,” she told him.

“We did it,” he replied.

For the first time in nearly 15 years, Lively changed into street clothes.

“This is my man,” he said, clasping George’s shoulder as he introduced him to uncles, cousins and friends outside the courthouse. “Thank you.”


Everything, he said, felt like a dream. The first thing he wanted to do was eat a steak at his mother’s house. Then get out of West Virginia, marry Blankenship and begin a new life.


But first, he had a question for his lawyer. “When,” he asked George, “are you going to help the next one?""


The entire story can be read at:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/legal-issues/jason-lively-fire-innocent-west-virginia/2020/10/21/44772dba-f2b4-11ea-bc45-e5d48ab44b9f_story.html

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;
-----------------------------------------------------------------
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;
—————————————————————————————————
FINAL, FINAL WORD (FOR NOW!): "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;
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Friday, October 23, 2020

Jason Lively: West Virginia; Junk arson 'science' case. (Part One): The Charleston Gazette Mall (Reporter Rick Steelhammer) got it right with its heading): "McDowell man freed after 14 years in prison for a crime that was not committed."...



QUOTE OF THE DAY: "The Court finds that, had the jury in the defendant’s trial been presented with this substantial and competent scientific evidence, it likely would not have, indeed, could not have concluded that arson was the cause of the fire. Quite simply, without the deliberate act of arson as the cause of the fatal fire that took doc Whitley’s life, the felony murder conviction cannot be supported and the conviction cannot withstand judicial scrutiny,” Sadler ruled. The judge concluded that the “fair administration of justice and the public interest” dictate that Lively’s conviction be vacated."


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PASSAGE ONE  OF THE DAY: "In 2018, former McDowell County Prosecutor Sid Bell, who led the effort to convict Lively in the 2006 murder trial, filed affidavits with the McDowell Circuit Clerk’s Office questioning the validity of Lively’s conviction based on new evidence. The new evidence included a report on the fire by an insurance company investigator, who concluded that the fire was from a single source — a point between the floor of the second-story bedroom and the ceiling of the living room below it, where an electrical short in the wiring of a ceiling fan had been identified. Bell wrote that he hired Craig Beyler, who holds an engineering doctorate from Harvard University and is a nationally recognized expert in fire investigation and fire safety, to take a second look at the initial conclusion that the fire was the result of arson. Beyler found that the fire was electrical in origin, started near the ceiling fan assembly and was not the result of arson, according to Bell. Additional testing by Dr. Glen Jackson, a West Virginia University professor of forensic and investigative science, produced a conclusion similar to Beyler’s. “For several years, I have felt uneasy about the Lively conviction,” Bell said in one affidavit, adding that he “strongly believes” in Lively’s innocence. 


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STORY: "McDowell man freed after 14 years in prison for a crime that was not committed," by Staff Writer Rick Steelhammer, published by The Charleston Gazette-Mail on September 23, 2020.


GIST: "High on the wall of a courtroom in Mercer County Circuit Court, a quotation drawn from the Magna Carta is spelled out in one-foot-tall letters: “To no one will we deny justice, to no one will we delay it.”

In the case of Charles Jason Lively, who appeared in the courtroom Wednesday in a hearing before Judge William Sadler, the quote from the 13th-century English document establishing the right to a fair trial for all only partially lived up to the lofty intention with which it was written.

Justice was served when Sadler vacated Lively’s first-degree murder conviction, but it arrived after a 14-year delay, during which Lively was locked up in West Virginia’s maximum security prison at Mount Olive, with most of that time spent in solitary confinement.


 “At first, I wanted to scream out that I was innocent,” Lively said after the hearing. “But no one was listening.”


No one, that is, except for his mother, Kathy Lively-Hamilton; fiancée, Billie Blankenship; a steadfast group of friends and family; and, eventually, attorneys affiliated with the West Virginia Innocence Project.


Lively soon realized he needed to pursue a systematic approach through the legal system to establish his innocence. Despite setbacks that included circuit court and West Virginia Supreme Court rulings that torpedoed bids for a verdict reversal or a new trial, Lively said he never stopped believing that he would be exonerated one day.


“Without hope, you’ve got nothing,” he said.


In November 2006, a jury convicted Lively of first-degree murder and first-degree arson in the March 15, 2005, death of Ebb K. “Doc” Whitley. A physician who operated a clinic at Iaeger, Whitley served in the House of Delegates during the 1990s, and was a former McDowell County Commission president, school board member and McDowell County Democratic Party chairman. 


The trial was held in Putnam County Circuit Court, following a change of venue request by Lively’s attorney at the time.


At the time of his death, Whitley was 70 years old and partially paralyzed and unable to walk after a fall in his home several years earlier.


Lively’s mother, a nurse, worked in Whitley’s clinic for several years. For a short period before moving into the Iaeger home in which he died, the doctor lived in the home in which Lively and his mother lived.


Whitley was found dead on the floor of a second-story bedroom in his home following a house fire. The state Medical Examiner’s Office determined that the cause of death was asphyxiation due to smoke inhalation and burns that covered 90% of his body.


During Lively’s murder trial, two assistant state fire marshals testified that their investigation of the house fire showed it was caused by two intentionally set fires — one in the doctor’s bedroom and the other in a first-floor room. They also testified that traces of toluene — a component of gasoline and charcoal starter fluid — were found in the bedroom.


Witnesses called by the prosecution testified that Lively had been seen on the morning of the fire in the vicinity of Whitley’s home and a jail inmate testified that Lively had told him that he and another man had gone to Whitley’s home to rob him, and that Lively’s alleged companion had set fire to the home.

Lively denied having anything to do with Whitley’s death or being in his home on the day of the fire. He maintains that he was in Wyoming County when the fire took place.


Lively’s lawyer at the trial failed to conduct an independent investigation of the cause of the fire, although he did suggest that Whitley might have been smoking in bed.


In 2018, former McDowell County Prosecutor Sid Bell, who led the effort to convict Lively in the 2006 murder trial, filed affidavits with the McDowell Circuit Clerk’s Office questioning the validity of Lively’s conviction based on new evidence. The new evidence included a report on the fire by an insurance company investigator, who concluded that the fire was from a single source — a point between the floor of the second-story bedroom and the ceiling of the living room below it, where an electrical short in the wiring of a ceiling fan had been identified.


Bell wrote that he hired Craig Beyler, who holds an engineering doctorate from Harvard University and is a nationally recognized expert in fire investigation and fire safety, to take a second look at the initial conclusion that the fire was the result of arson. Beyler found that the fire was electrical in origin, started near the ceiling fan assembly and was not the result of arson, according to Bell. Additional testing by Dr. Glen Jackson, a West Virginia University professor of forensic and investigative science, produced a conclusion similar to Beyler’s.


“For several years, I have felt uneasy about the Lively conviction,” Bell said in one affidavit, adding that he “strongly believes” in Lively’s innocence.


In 2017, West Virginia Innocence Project attorneys, including the project’s director, Melissa Giggenbach, and Andrew George, special counsel for Baker Botts LLP in Washington, D.C., who also is affiliated with Giggenbach’s organization and the Innocence Network, began working with Lively.

They prevailed in a case before the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, which resulted in Lively being granted permission to file a new appeal to his conviction based on his initial attorney’s failure to seek an independent investigation into the cause of the fire.


One month ago, Giggenbach and George filed a motion in McDowell Circuit Court to vacate Lively’s conviction. The case was transferred to Sadler’s court, where a hearing on whether to vacate the conviction was held.


The McDowell County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office did not object to vacating the murder conviction. However, it did seek a plea agreement in which Lively would plead guilty to misdemeanor charges of trespassing and alteration and destruction of a computer. On Wednesday, Lively gave Kennedy pleas to each charge. Kennedy pleas allow defendants to avoid the admission of guilt, while admitting they would probably be found guilty of a charge if brought to trial.


In light of Lively having served 14 years for a crime he did not commit, no jail time or fines accompanied the misdemeanor charges.


Sadler ruled that analyses conducted by Beyler and Jackson, using nationally recognized fire-analysis standards, ruled out arson as the method of fire ignition.


“The Court finds that, had the jury in the defendant’s trial been presented with this substantial and competent scientific evidence, it likely would not have, indeed, could not have concluded that arson was the cause of the fire. Quite simply, without the deliberate act of arson as the cause of the fatal fire that took doc Whitley’s life, the felony murder conviction cannot be supported and the conviction cannot withstand judicial scrutiny,” Sadler ruled.


The judge concluded that the “fair administration of justice and the public interest” dictate that Lively’s conviction be vacated.


That statement brought cheers and applause from the audience, followed by Lively and his mother embracing at the defense table, after bailiffs and personnel from Mount Olive removed Lively’s shackles. Lively also hugged his fiancĂ©e, Giggenbach and George.


After being taken from the courtroom, Lively was taken to a room where he removed the orange prison jumpsuit he’d arrived in and changed into jeans, athletic shoes, a plaid shirt and a New York Yankees ball cap.


Outside, he was greeted by more than 20 well-wishers and the sounds of Kool & the Gang’s “Celebration” played on a boom box.


“I couldn’t be any happier than I am right now,” Lively’s mother said as she beamed at her son. “There are no words to describe how I feel.”


“I lost 14 years of my life due to an unfortunate accident,” said Lively, now 42, as he draped an arm over his fiancĂ©e’s shoulder. “Now I’m ready to see what the world has to offer.”


He credited Giggenbach and George for making possible his first day of freedom in 14 years.


Immediate plans include spending a few days with his mother at her Monroe County home, spending a lot of time outdoors, doing some writing, then moving to North Carolina, where Blankenship, whom he met at Iaeger High School, works as a nurse, and then getting married and putting down roots there.

“Go enjoy your freedom,” Giggenbach said after giving her client a send-off hug.


The West Virginia Innocence Project has produced several new trials for incarcerated clients, but Lively’s case was the organization’s first exoneration.


“It was a privilege to meet and work with Jason,” George said. “It’s really gratifying to see him free. It took thousands of hours of work and a lot of help from a lot of people to get to this day. This case took a lot of baby steps to move things forward. The wheels of justice can grind slowly but, eventually, they’ll get us here.""


The entire story can be read at:


https://www.wvgazettemail.com/news/legal_affairs/mcdowell-man-freed-after-14-years-in-prison-for-a-crime-that-wasnt-committed/article_d2bae68e-d7e3-50de-8294-8f164f8f3c85.html


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 (FOR NOW!): "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;


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