Friday, January 29, 2021

Sue Neill-Fraser: Australia: (series: part 1): Author/Blogger Andrew Urban asks a chilling question, as the appeal draws near: "Sue Neill-Fraser appeal to start soon - but will it end the nightmare?"..."Her final appeal against her conviction is scheduled to begin shortly (March 1, 2021) but is it just a matter of ‘going through the motions’ with only local judges on the bench (contrary to accepted practice)? "

BACKGROUND: ”Sue Neill-Fraser was convicted of murdering her partner Bob Chappell on Australia Day 2009, on board their yacht, Four Winds. She has maintained her innocence. She has been granted leave to appeal (in March 2019) after a three year process in which then homeless 15 year old Meaghan Vass admitted she was a witness to the murder and Neill-Fraser was not involved. Vass’ DNA was found on the deck." As per Yahoo News: 2020: "Ten years after being found guilty of murdering her partner Bob Chappell, Hobart grandmother Susan Neill-Fraser's second appeal against her conviction will be heard. Neill-Fraser is serving 23 years' jail for killing Mr Chappell on Australia Day 2009 on the couple's yacht in Hobart. Her legal team argues there is "fresh and compelling" evidence that places then-homeless teenager Meaghan Vass on board the boat the night in question.

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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: 

In his post on 'New Years hope for old injustices' Author/Blogger Andrew L. Urban includes Sue Neill-Fraser on his list of, "poor unfortunate souls who have suffered the catastrophe of a wrongful conviction" - and expresses the hope that in 2021, "the criminal justice system will correct those wrongful convictions, in many cases far too long after the verdict was delivered."..."To recap, a middle aged man (Bob Chappell) disappears from his yacht (Four Winds) overnight, never to be found. Police charge his female partner (Sue Neill-Fraser) with murder. At the subsequent trial, the prosecutor, contrary to the law but unchallenged by the judge, speculates freely on how she might have murdered him (perhaps with a wrench) and dumped his body into the dinghy and then in Hobart’s Derwent river, but offers no evidence to support any of this. The accused is convicted and jailed for 23 years." Much has happened since then.  Stay tuned!


Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

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PASSAGE ONE  OF THE DAY: "Sue Neill-Fraser, 65, has never hugged her grandchildren outside prison. She was arrested# on August 20, 2009, charged with murdering her partner Bob Chappell on Australia Day 2009. We hereby mark the bleak 12th anniversary. She has always maintained her innocence (as have many supporters and several lawyers) but her nightmare has continued, as the Tasmanian legal system failed her every step of the way."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: “It should be noted,” says Flinders University legal academic Dr Bob Moles, “that the reason used by the prosecution to support the Vass explanation that she was not there was based upon an hypothesis that the deposit of DNA on the boat could have arrived there on the sole of the shoe of a police office who had picked it up elsewhere in the vicinity of the boat. However, that explanation does not accord with the facts. “If we call the deposit on the boat the “terminal” deposit – and it resulted from being a deposit from the sole of a shoe of a police officer, then to support that theory, the investigator would expect to find another deposit two paces away from the terminal deposit – assuming that the shoe deposit theory only relates to one shoe and not both of them. Also, the deposit terminal minus one would expect to be a more substantial deposit than the terminal deposit as with each step the material on the sole of the shoe would be diminishing. That exercise can be repeated, finding increasingly substantial deposits every two paces and which lead back to the original deposit wherever that may be. “In the absence of other deposits at two-pace intervals, one would have to assume that the police officer landed on the boat from a helicopter, or hopped between the original deposit and the terminal deposit. Neither of which is supported by the evidence. “Therefore, the ‘deposit on the sole of the shoe’ theory is not only unlikely or improbable, but is plainly inconsistent with the forensic evidence.”

PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "

POST: "Sue Neill-Fraser post to start soon - but will it end the nightmare?"  by Andrew L. Urban, published on his superlative Blog "The Wrongful Conviction Report, on January 24, 2021. Andrew L. Urban is the author of Murder by the Prosecution (Wilkinson Publishing), featuring the case of Sue Neill-Fraser and several others; 

Wrongful Convictions Report | Exploring and exposing miscarriages of justice

GIST: Sue Neill-Fraser, 65, has never hugged her grandchildren outside prison. She was arrested# on August 20, 2009, charged with murdering her partner Bob Chappell on Australia Day 2009. We hereby mark the bleak 12th anniversary. She has always maintained her innocence (as have many supporters and several lawyers) but her nightmare has continued, as the Tasmanian legal system failed her every step of the way.* Her final appeal against her conviction is scheduled to begin shortly (March 1, 2021) but is it just a matter of ‘going through the motions’ with only local judges on the bench (contrary to accepted practice)? 

Sue’s daughter Sarah and her husband Mark Bowles were planning their round the world honeymoon, cancelled at the last minute at considerable emotional and financial cost, when Sue was arrested. Their two children were born in the following tough and costly years as the family fought a system that seems prejudiced against her.

The appeal will be heard by three Tasmanian judges (Justices Helen Wood, Stephen Estcourt and Robert Pearce) who may be called on to consider matters concerning the trial judge, who is now their Chief Justice, Alan Blow AO. This would put them in a conflicted position, as a former judge has pointed out and should not happen. It doesn’t in other states.

Sue Neill-Fraser was denied bail and has been in jail ever since August 2009. At her trial the following year, she was convicted and sentenced to 26 years jail (reduced to 23 on appeal) with a non-parole period of 18 years (reduced to 13 on appeal). Sentencing her, then Justice Blow (now Chief Justice) told her she deserved an extra long sentence because she refused to tell the police where to find Bob Chappell’s body. Even the otherwise dismissive appeal court found this to be in error on the part of the learned judge and reduced the sentence and the non parole period.

Justice Blow had said: “As a result of the means that she adopted to kill Mr Chappell and dispose of his body, Ms Neill-Fraser made it necessary for the police to undertake a very time consuming investigation that involved a large number officers making thorough inquiries over a long period. In my view, the steps that Ms Neill-Fraser took on the night in question to conceal her crime and the inconvenience and expense of the investigation that she made necessary are aggravating factors that I should take into account.” The absurdity is astonishing, especially as there was no primary evidence that she killed Chappell. And it is wrong in law, as the Court of Criminal Appeal pointed out:

It is impermissible to increase the sentence in order to mark the court’s disapproval of the accused having put the issues to proof or having presented a time-wasting or even scurrilous defence.

The learned judge had also made the error of allowing prosecutor Tim Ellis SC to speculate how Neill-Fraser may have murdered Bob Chappell, without any supporting evidence. Will these appeal judges now find this also ‘impermissible’ – enough to warrant a mistrial? Or even sufficient to quash the conviction? (It is arguable that all the legal professionals in court at the trial bear responsibility for this catastrophic failure of the justice system.)

The 2020 appeal court could also find fault with the judge’s decision to side with the prosecutor – who dismissed the DNA issue as a red herring – in refusing to recall Meaghan Vass for further examination in the witness box, when it was discovered she had lied about her whereabouts on the night Chappell disappeared. It was Vass’ DNA, after all, that had been found on the deck of Four Winds, from which Chappell had disappeared. Together with the prosecutor’s impermissible speculation, is this enough to convince the judges that Neill-Fraser did not get a fair trial?

The jury, acting rationally, should certainly have entertained ‘reasonable doubt’ and the judge should have so directed:

Things had started badly: the police investigation was carried out with all the hallmarks of tunnel vision, its singular focus on Neill-Fraser, squeezing and manipulating evidence to fit her as the only suspect. It was so slapdash, the police didn’t even talk to her ex husband, then living around the corner in Hobart. For a fuller critique of the police investigation, read former detective Colin McLaren’s thoroughly researched book, Southern Justice (Hachette).

And speaking of the DNA, it is central to this new appeal, given that Vass has (since the first appeal in 2011) admitted she was indeed on board Four Winds at the time Chappell was involved in a fight with two males who accompanied Vass that night, boarding the yacht in the mistaken belief that no-one was on board. The dinghy was missing. It had been taken ashore by Sue Neill-Fraser (to meet her sister in law for lunch at the yacht club), leaving Bob Chappell to work below decks – with a mobile phone at hand to use if needed.

in bad company:

Vass, then a 16 year old homeless girl, was in bad company. When testifying at the trial, she denied having been on board. She didn’t say this at the time, but she had been traumatised by the incident and terrified of the consequences if she bore eye witness to what she saw. In 2018, Neill-Fraser was in court seeking leave to appeal under new legislation; Vass (almost hysterically) denied having been on board, contradicting her own affidavit.

It wasn’t until March 10, 2019 that Vass finally admitted it was her and her vomit on the deck that yielded the DNA; she did so publicly on Channel 9’s 60 Minutes (the episode wasn’t shown in Tasmania) and vowed to repeat that in court when called to testify at the upcoming appeal.

That fact throws into sharp relief why the cavalier treatment of the crucial DNA evidence by the prosecution (and the judge) was so wrong. Ironic, really, given it was the only actual, primary evidence available at the trial – and it pointed to the possibility of Neill-Fraser’s innocence; a third party had been at the crime scene. The DNA may not have been that of the murderer, but DNA evidence couldn’t be just left aside.

Which brings us to the High Court’s refusal to grant leave to hear an appeal from Neill-Fraser. This was based upon the prosecutor’s dismissive claim that Vass could not have been on the boat and the DNA was not a direct deposit but perhaps something transferred on the shoe of a police officer. The High Court accepted his argument – false, as it turns out.

DPP wrong footed on DNA: 

“It should be noted,” says Flinders University legal academic Dr Bob Moles, “that the reason used by the prosecution to support the Vass explanation that she was not there was based upon an hypothesis that the deposit of DNA on the boat could have arrived there on the sole of the shoe of a police office who had picked it up elsewhere in the vicinity of the boat. However, that explanation does not accord with the facts.

“If we call the deposit on the boat the “terminal” deposit – and it resulted from being a deposit from the sole of a shoe of a police officer, then to support that theory, the investigator would expect to find another deposit two paces away from the terminal deposit – assuming that the shoe deposit theory only relates to one shoe and not both of them. Also, the deposit terminal minus one would expect to be a more substantial deposit than the terminal deposit as with each step the material on the sole of the shoe would be diminishing. That exercise can be repeated, finding increasingly substantial deposits every two paces and which lead back to the original deposit wherever that may be.

“In the absence of other deposits at two-pace intervals, one would have to assume that the police officer landed on the boat from a helicopter, or hopped between the original deposit and the terminal deposit. Neither of which is supported by the evidence.

“Therefore, the ‘deposit on the sole of the shoe’ theory is not only unlikely or improbable, but is plainly inconsistent with the forensic evidence.”

The Office of the Tasmanian DPP could have responded to the many doubts raised in this case by the DNA at the crime scene differently.

Dr Moles notes: “in the Victorian case of Mr Farah Jamah (2008), it became clear that his conviction had been based upon misleading interpretations of the DNA in his case. Once the prosecutor had identified the fact that such an error had occurred, he took steps to ensure that the case was put before the Court of Appeal at the next available opportunity. The judgment of the appeal court was but a single sentence, ‘The Court, having read the materials filed by the parties and having considered the submissions and concessions of the Crown, is satisfied that it is appropriate to order that the conviction relating to the applicant be set aside and a verdict of acquittal be entered.”


It is not the only example that should have been followed. “It was made clear in the SBS Insight program “Wrongful Convictions”, (September 3, 2019), that the prosecutor in the 2001 Queensland case of Frank Button recognized that a significant error had occurred in relation to the DNA in his case. As a consequence, the prosecutor ensured that the case was before the Court of Appeal within 24 hours. In its judgment, the appeal court judges made it clear that Mr Button had been wrongly convicted. The judgment opened with the words, ‘today is a black day in the history of the administration of criminal justice in Queensland’.

“The Court expressed approval of the fact that the DPP had put in train the necessary processes to ensure that an enquiry would take place to find out what had gone wrong.

“The appeal court judgment is but a single page – it does not cite any case-law or legislation in its judgment. It merely says that an unacceptable error had occurred, that it ought not to have happened, the fact that it did was most regrettable, and that not only must the conviction be overturned, but that everyone should know that Mr Button is innocent of this crime.”

Dr Moles comments: “As I have always said with the Sue Neill-Fraser case, with the DNA clearly indicating an error in that the trial was misinformed about the significance of the DNA, along with the manifest errors on the record of the trial (such as the absurd statements by the prosecutor) the Crown should have conceded that appealable error had occurred. Yet they prolong the farce, just as in South Australia they did with the Keogh case pretending that there is nothing wrong.”

Will Neill-Fraser’s appeal judges, Justices Helen Wood, Stephen Estcourt and Robert Pearce, regard Vass’ testimony as fresh and compelling evidence – and exculpatory – and taken together with the other failures at trial (not all of them outlined here), serve the interests of justice by quashing the conviction? Will they end the nightmare? Or, since she twice in court has denied being on the yacht, might they declare Vass an unreliable witness – just when she is telling the truth? Will the real murderer/s be sought?

Will Sue Neill-Fraser finally get to hug her grandchildren at home?

* Every Step of the Way: 
* Police investigation 2009 – poorly conducted, tunnel vision driven
* Trial 2010 – poorly conducted, prejudicial behaviour, rule of law ignored
* Appeal 2011 unsuccessful – irrational findings, repetition of errors at trial; read this discussion of it
* High Court seeking leave 2012 refused – judges misinformed re importance of DNA
* Further right to appeal 2016-2020 – DPP declines opportunity to redress trial errors

# In fact, we argue that there was never a valid, rational reason to charge Sue Neill-Fraser with murder. It is seen as irrational when applying formal logic, as outlined in a detailed 3-part analysis by Benjamin Dean."

The entire story can be read at: 

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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Thursday, January 28, 2021

Charles Don Flores: (Texas): Bulletin: (Major (Unwelcome) Development: "The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to take up his death row case involving police hypnosis," the Dallas Morning News, (Reporter Lauren McGauchy) reports..."The decision was a blow to inmate Charles Don Flores, who was sentenced to death for the murder of Farmers Branch resident Elizabeth “Betty” Black in 1998. It was also a setback for critics of the use of hypnosis by Texas law enforcement officers, who had hoped the Supreme Court would rule that investigative hypnosis is junk science that has no place in U.S. courts Flores’ lawyer, Gretchen Sween, said she will continue to fight for her client’s release from prison, but she wished the high court had taken a look at how hypnosis helped put him there. “I do think one of the positive things that has come out of this litigation is that Charles’ case has unsettled a lot of people. There is a lack of awareness that this is something the police do,” Sween said Monday."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Investigative hypnosis is a technique used by police attempting to guide witnesses or victims into a trance so they might better recall details of a crime. Dallas Morning News investigative series published last year revealed Texas has become the country’s premier destination for police hypnosis — both in training and practice — even though the scientific consensus is that the practice can warp memories. While many other states ban the testimony of people who have been hypnotized, or bar the introduction of evidence elicited during hypnosis sessions, law enforcement officers in Texas have used hypnosis to investigate hundreds of crimes over the years, sending dozens to prison — and some to their deaths. Flores challenged his conviction based on the fact that police tried to use hypnosis to refresh the memory of a witness who saw two men enter Black’s home on the morning of the crime. The justices denied his petition for review without comment Monday. Sween said this decision meant the court decided not to take up the case; it did not make any judgment on the merits of the case or the challenge against investigative hypnosis.

She will now return to state court and continue fighting to overturn Flores’ conviction on other grounds. While declining to provide specific details about her upcoming argument, Sween said she has recently learned additional details about the prosecution that raised questions about her client’s conviction. “There are other quasi-science [methods] that were used in the guilt phase of trial that would not withstand scrutiny,” Sween said. “We’re challenging the fundamental fairness of the entire trial.”


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STORY: "U.S. Supreme Court declines to take up Texas death row case involving police hypnosis," by reporter Lauren  McGauchy, published by The Dallas Morning News on January 25, 2021.

SUB-HEADING: "The High Court denied Charles Don Flores petition for review without comment, leaving it up  to Texas legislators to determine whether police should continue the controversial practices."

INTRODUCTION: Investigative hypnosis, a practice deemed dubious by researchers and courts in other states across the country, has sent dozens of men to Texas prisons — and some to their deaths. On Monday, Jan. 25, 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up the case of a Texas death row inmate who challenged his murder conviction because police used hypnosis during the investigation of the crime. The Texas Association for Investigative Hypnosis sold these commemorative medallions to members at its 2019 annual conference in Huntsville. The association is one of the few, if not the only, remaining societies for police employing hypnosis in criminal investigations. 


GIST: "The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from a Texas death row inmate who argued that hypnosis helped convict him of murder.


The decision was a blow to inmate Charles Don Flores, who was sentenced to death for the murder of Farmers Branch resident Elizabeth “Betty” Black in 1998. It was also a setback for critics of the use of hypnosis by Texas law enforcement officers, who had hoped the Supreme Court would rule that investigative hypnosis is junk science that has no place in U.S. courts


Flores’ lawyer, Gretchen Sween, said she will continue to fight for her client’s release from prison, but she wished the high court had taken a look at how hypnosis helped put him there.

“I do think one of the positive things that has come out of this litigation is that Charles’ case has unsettled a lot of people. There is a lack of awareness that this is something the police do,” Sween said Monday.


Hypnosis helped put this Texan on death row, his lawyers say. The Supreme Court could soon decide his fate


Investigative hypnosis is a technique used by police attempting to guide witnesses or victims into a trance so they might better recall details of a crime. A Dallas Morning News investigative series published last year revealed Texas has become the country’s premier destination for police hypnosis — both in training and practice — even though the scientific consensus is that the practice can warp memories.


While many other states ban the testimony of people who have been hypnotized, or bar the introduction of evidence elicited during hypnosis sessions, law enforcement officers in Texas have used hypnosis to investigate hundreds of crimes over the years, sending dozens to prison — and some to their deaths.

Flores challenged his conviction based on the fact that police tried to use hypnosis to refresh the memory of a witness who saw two men enter Black’s home on the morning of the crime. The justices denied his petition for review without comment Monday.

Sween said this decision meant the court decided not to take up the case; it did not make any judgment on the merits of the case or the challenge against investigative hypnosis.

She will now return to state court and continue fighting to overturn Flores’ conviction on other grounds. While declining to provide specific details about her upcoming argument, Sween said she has recently learned additional details about the prosecution that raised questions about her client’s conviction.


“There are other quasi-science [methods] that were used in the guilt phase of trial that would not withstand scrutiny,” Sween said. “We’re challenging the fundamental fairness of the entire trial.” When asked whether she will continue to challenge the use of hypnosis in Flores’ case,  Sween added,  “wait and see.”


Now that the Supreme Court has declined to take up the issue of investigative hypnosis nationwide, the clearest path for challenging the practice here is through the state Legislature. Earlier this year, two Texas lawmakers filed bills to ban the introduction of hypnotically-induced testimony in state courts. Rep. Eddie Lucio III, one of the bill authors, said Texans deserve to have faith in the system.


“We need as much integrity in the criminal justice system as possible. The stakes are high. A person’s life — there’s no amount, there’s no dollar value you can place on [that],” Lucio, D-Brownsville, told The News in an interview on the first day of the 2021 legislative session.

Sen. Juan “Chuy’' Hinojosa credited The News’ series for revealing the extent to which police in Texas rely on hypnosis to investigate crimes: “It just confirms the depths of the problem.”

Hinojosa said he would have preferred the Supreme Court take up the issue and set a nationwide standard for investigative hypnosis. Without that, he said it is up to state lawmakers like him to crack down on the practice.

“This issue needs to be resolved on a state-by-state basis, as we are currently trying to do,” Hinojosa said Monday. “This is an issue of nationwide importance to our criminal justice system. Hypnosis is junk science.""


The entire story can be read at:


https://www.dallasnews.com/news/investigations/2021/01/25/us-supreme-court-declines-to-take-up-texas-death-row-case-involving-police-hypnosis/

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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Rosa Jimenez: Texas: Bulletin: Major (Very Welcome) Development): HL): Convicted on 'junk science' she is set to be released after more than 15 years in prison, The Appeal (Reporter Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg) reports... "Rosa Jimenez was sentenced to 99 years in prison for a crime that likely never occurred. Yesterday, a judge ordered her release on bond, but this morning Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained her, according to the Travis County District Attorney’s office. She is scheduled to be released from ICE custody today, (January 27) according to a statement released by the DA’s office."


PUBLISHER'S NOTE: 

The Innocence Project reports at the link below that Rosa Jimenez has in fact been released. 

Wonderful photo with lawyer Vanessa Potkin.

https://innocenceproject.org/innocence-project-client-rosa-jimenez-expected-to-be-released-after-17-years-in-prison/

Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "When then 20-year-old Jimenez was arrested in 2003, she was pregnant and a mother to a one-year-old daughter.  On Jan. 30, 2003, Jimenez was babysitting her daughter and a 21-month-old boy, when she noticed the boy was turning purple and having trouble breathing. After trying to clear his airways, she took him to a neighbor’s apartment for help. Another neighbor heard Jimenez screaming, came over, and called 911. Paramedics eventually dislodged what they later learned was a wad of paper towels from the child’s airways. But because of the lack of oxygen, he suffered serious brain damage and died three months later. Travis County, Texas, prosecutors charged Jimenez with murder, claiming it was impossible for a child of that age to accidentally swallow a wad of five paper towels. The case rested entirely on that argument.  With limited funds to hire credible experts to refute the state’s theory, Jimenez’s attorney called only one medical expert—a forensic pathologist—who testified that the boy’s death was an accident. His credibility was undermined, according to a petition filed on Jimenez’s behalf, because he used profanity during his testimony and had an “emotional outburst” while on the stand.  The child’s death, however, was “likely accidental,” according to the DA’s statement.  “At the hearing yesterday, three expert witnesses testified that the death of [the boy] was likely accidental,” reads the DA’s statement."

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STORY: "Rosa Jimenez, convicted on 'junk science, set for release after more tax 15 years in prison," by Reporter Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg, published by 'The Appeal' on January 27, 2020.

SUB-HEADING: "The Travis County District Attorney's office had joined the release request and, despite Jiminez being taken into custody by ICE, she is expected to be released  today."

GIST: "Rosa Jimenez was sentenced to 99 years in prison for a crime that likely never occurred. Yesterday, a judge ordered her release on bond, but this morning Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained her, according to the Travis County District Attorney’s office. She is scheduled to be released from ICE custody today, according to a statement released by the DA’s office. 

José Garza, a former public defenderwas elected district attorney in November, after running on a campaign to reform the criminal legal system. 

“Last night, the District Attorney’s Office joined counsel for Ms. Rosa Jimenez requesting Ms. Jimenez’s release,” the DA’s statement reads. “Our office joined defense in arguing that, in light of the testimony and affidavit from our expert witness, Ms. Jimenez is entitled to relief because she is likely innocent.”

Jimenez is currently suffering from advanced kidney disease.

In 2005, Jimenez was convicted of murder and injury to a child. While in prison, an ICE detainer was issued for Jimenez, according to her attorney, Sara Ann Brown, from the law firm Foley & Lardner.

“When the release order came in, by law the prison had to notify ICE that she would no longer be in their custody,” a spokesperson for Travis County District Attorney’s office told The Appeal.

Jimenez is expected to be released this evening. 

“We are looking forward to seeing her reunited with her family,” Brown said in a statement to The Appeal. Jimenez is also represented by the Innocence Project and Kirkland & Ellis. 

When then 20-year-old Jimenez was arrested in 2003, she was pregnant and a mother to a one-year-old daughter. 

On Jan. 30, 2003, Jimenez was babysitting her daughter and a 21-month-old boy, when she noticed the boy was turning purple and having trouble breathing. After trying to clear his airways, she took him to a neighbor’s apartment for help. Another neighbor heard Jimenez screaming, came over, and called 911.

Paramedics eventually dislodged what they later learned was a wad of paper towels from the child’s airways. But because of the lack of oxygen, he suffered serious brain damage and died three months later.

Travis County, Texas, prosecutors charged Jimenez with murder, claiming it was impossible for a child of that age to accidentally swallow a wad of five paper towels. The case rested entirely on that argument. 

With limited funds to hire credible experts to refute the state’s theory, Jimenez’s attorney called only one medical expert—a forensic pathologist—who testified that the boy’s death was an accident. His credibility was undermined, according to a petition filed on Jimenez’s behalf, because he used profanity during his testimony and had an “emotional outburst” while on the stand. 

The child’s death, however, was “likely accidental,” according to the DA’s statement. 

“At the hearing yesterday, three expert witnesses testified that the death of [the boy] was likely accidental,” reads the DA’s statement. “They are all nationally recognized experts in pediatric airway function. Our office also filed an affidavit from one of the original experts who testified. This expert, after having the opportunity to review statements from the pediatric airway experts, said that her original opinion has changed.""

The entire story can be read at:

https://theappeal.org/rosa-jimenez-convicted-on-junk-science-set-for-release-after-more-than-15-years-in-prison/

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;
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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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Amy Wilkerson; Wisconsin: Shaken baby syndrome case: Contesting her innocence from the outset, she was coerced into pleading guilty to capital murder for shaking to death a baby in her care in order to avoid execution. Her case cries out innocence. The bad news is that she was sentenced to life imprisonment. The good news is that The Mississippi Innocence Project, The Wisconsin Innocence Project and a private attorney are fighting to free her. Read on:


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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: In a recent post on the Dennis Glover case (link below) I referred to a reference to the Amy Wilkerson shaken baby syndrome case, which I had been following for years,  as follows:  "In several wrongful conviction cases, innocent people have pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty. In 2007, Amy Wilkerson was facing capital murder charges for shaking to death a baby in her care. Her attorney told her if she didn’t plead guilty, she would be executed. The next day, Wilkerson pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life. She maintains her innocence and is currently represented by the Mississippi Innocence Project, the Wisconsin Innocence Project, and a private attorney." I am pleased to hear that this battle is still being fought, as Ms. Wilkerson's case cries out innocence. Here is my most recent post on the Wilkerson case. (September 25, 2020):

Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

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Amy Wilkerson: Mississippi: A Shaken Baby Syndrome/False confession case, which fits the pattern of several Charles Smith wrongful conviction cases. I would have hoped that this viscerally discredited Shaken Baby Syndrome would have withered away by now. Well, sadly, it appears to be alive and well in Mississippi. (HL)..."Her lawyers say she was coerced to plead guilty to a crime that never happened," The Appeal (Reporter Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg) reports......"Wilkerson’s advocates say her case could be a study in how to obtain a wrongful conviction. The treating physician believed that Tristan had been violently shaken and investigators immediately focused on Wilkerson as a suspect. She was charged with felony child abuse the day after Tristan collapsed. After what her lawyers say was coercive questioning, Wilkerson made what the state claims was an inculpatory statement."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "This is a case where, under the threat of death, a woman who had no prior experience with the criminal justice system pled guilty to a crime she didn’t commit,” Wilkerson’s attorney, Carrie Sperling, co-director of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, told the Court of Appeals. “In fact, she pled guilty when no crime occurred at all.”  Four medical experts for Wilkerson’s appellate legal team—two forensic pathologists, a pediatric neuropathologist, and a neuroradiologist—believe that Tristan likely died from a stroke. “Tristan’s brain reflects a longstanding pathology that eventually led to collapse while in Ms. Wilkerson’s care, for reasons having nothing to do with intentional trauma,” wrote defense expert forensic pathologist Janice Ophoven in an affidavit."

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PASSAGE TWO  OF THE DAY:

"She repeatedly told Jones that she never shook him. Throughout the interrogation, she sobbed and put her head in her hands. 

“There’s no outside damage,” he told her. “It’s only consistent with shaken babies.”

Again and again, he pressed her to tell him the truth. “You have to help yourself,” he said. “We have to know that you’re not just some monster.”

“A jury is going to find you guilty with just what the doctor’s saying,” he continued. “And you need somebody to believe that you’re just a nice lady that this bad thing happened to.” 

As she sat crying, he gently rubbed her arm. Just after 5:00 p.m., she told Jones, “I stand by my word. I want a lawyer. That’s all I can do.

“Amy’s asked for an attorney,” he said at 5:09 p.m. “We’re gonna end this conversation.” He turned off the audio recorder, which was on the desk. A hidden camera was still running.

Over the next approximately 30 minutes, Wilkerson told him two more times that she wanted a lawyer, according to video of the interrogation. She sobbed frequently. “I want to die,” she said.

If she didn’t want to “go any further,” Jones said, he would leave the room, but then, “I’ll be really not happy. I’ll do whatever I have to do, because then I’ll realize that you weren’t prepared to do the right thing which means you have no soul and I don’t see that in you.” 

How did she know, Wilkerson asked, he wouldn’t end up “screwing me in the end?”

“You don’t have a choice,” he replied. “As I told you earlier, it’s just me and you in this little small world right now.”

Wilkerson relented and agreed to let him turn on the audio recorder. He turned it on at 5:41 p.m. He asked how she tried to wake Tristan. "

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STORY: "Her Lawyers Say She Was Coerced To Plead Guilty To A Crime That Never Happened," by Staff Reporter Reporter Elizabeth-Weill Greenberg, published by The Appeal on  Sept. 23, 2020.


SUB-HEADING: ACCUSED OF SHAKING A BABY TO DEATH AND FACING THE DEATH PENALTY, AMY WILKERSON SAYS SHE IS INNOCENT, BUT PLEADED GUILTY TO SPARE HER LIFE."

GIST: "ON JULY 19, 2005, SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES ARRIVED AT AMY WILKERSON’S HOME. “I CAN REMEMBER EXACTLY WHAT MY CHILDREN WERE WEARING,” SHE TOLD THE APPEAL, HER VOICE BREAKING. SHE STRAPPED HER 7-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER AND 3-YEAR-OLD SON INTO HER MOTHER-IN-LAW’S VAN. “I HUGGED THEM, AND I KISSED THEM.”

WILKERSON WENT WITH THE DEPUTIES TO THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE. SHE HASN’T BEEN HOME SINCE. 

The day before, Wilkerson was baby-sitting two-month-old Tristan Chinn in her Mississippi home

“I got the bottle ready and everything and I went to wake Tristan,” she said. “I leaned over and I picked him up and when I picked him up to turn him around to like lay him in the crook of my arm, he made this terrible face like he was gasping almost for air and it was just this most horrible look on his face and he went limp.”

Wilkerson called 911. Firefighters arrived as Wilkerson was performing CPR, according to an investigator’s report. Tristan was taken to the hospital; Wilkerson followed in her car. She, her husband, and Tristan’s family waited at the hospital. That night, she went home, and her husband went to his mother’s to pick up their two children.

“You just don’t ever know that that’s going to be your last night at home,” she told The Appeal, her voice breaking. “I let my husband put my kids to bed and I went to bed.”

Wilkerson’s advocates say her case could be a study in how to obtain a wrongful conviction. The treating physician believed that Tristan had been violently shaken and investigators immediately focused on Wilkerson as a suspect. She was charged with felony child abuse the day after Tristan collapsed. After what her lawyers say was coercive questioning, Wilkerson made what the state claims was an inculpatory statement. 

On July 20, Tristan was taken off life support and pronounced dead. Facing a capital murder charge, she agreed to a plea bargain that would spare her life. 

Of known wrongful convictions since 1989, about 20 percent of exonerees pleaded guilty to crimes they did not commit, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. The number of innocent people who have pleaded guilty is likely much higher, as most convictions are resolved through pleas—which can make it harder to challenge convictions in the future. According to a report published by the Vera Institute of Justice, more than 90 percentof convictions result from guilty pleas. When it comes to plea bargaining in death penalty cases, according to the report, “the specter of a death penalty puts prosecutors in a uniquely strong position.”

For years, Wilkerson has petitioned the courts to intervene, but has received denial after denial—a far too common occurrence for those fighting their convictions, said her attorney Randy Papetti, who is representing her along with the Wisconsin Innocence Project and the Mississippi Innocence Project. Appellate courts can be reticent to consider evidence of innocence and undo cases marred by misconduct or debunked forensics. Countless wrongful convictions have been affirmed on appeal, sometimes with courts asserting that there is “overwhelming” evidence of guilt. 

“It shouldn’t be this hard,” said Papetti. “We’re just in a cycle of garbage. Justice has almost no role in it.”

In August, arguments on Wilkerson’s request for an evidentiary hearing were held before the Mississippi Court of Appeals. A ruling is pending. If successful, an evidentiary hearing could lead to a new trial, according to her legal team. 

“This is a case where, under the threat of death, a woman who had no prior experience with the criminal justice system pled guilty to a crime she didn’t commit,” Wilkerson’s attorney, Carrie Sperling, co-director of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, told the Court of Appeals. “In fact, she pled guilty when no crime occurred at all.” 

Four medical experts for Wilkerson’s appellate legal team—two forensic pathologists, a pediatric neuropathologist, and a neuroradiologist—believe that Tristan likely died from a stroke. “Tristan’s brain reflects a longstanding pathology that eventually led to collapse while in Ms. Wilkerson’s care, for reasons having nothing to do with intentional trauma,” wrote defense expert forensic pathologist Janice Ophoven in an affidavit. 

The state, represented by the Mississippi Attorney General’s office, has opposed Wilkerson’s appeals. 

“I would have more sympathy for Ms. Wilkerson if there weren’t this mountain of evidence demonstrating that she’s guilty,” said Candice Rucker,deputy director of criminal appeals at the Mississippi AG’s office, at the August hearing. 

By the time Wilkerson walked into the interrogation room, investigators likely already believed she was guilty. Interrogators are not “fact-neutral investigators,” explained Richard Leo, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law. 

“Interrogation in America is guilt presumptive,” said Leo, co-author of the book, “Confessions of Guilt: From Torture to Miranda and Beyond.” “The goal of interrogation, first and foremost, is to get an incriminating statement.” 

In an interrogation room, detectives typically offer two scenarios to a suspect, both presuming guilt, said Saul Kassin, a psychology professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “It’s ‘did you do it this way’ or ‘did you do it that way?’ Are you a murderer or was this an accident?” said Kassin, who has written extensively on false confessions. 

Nationally, more than 300 people have falsely confessed to crimes they were later proven innocent of, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. But the true number of false confessions is unknown, said Leo. 

“False confessions happen,” he said. “They happen all the time. We don’t know how frequently they happen, but they are a regular, common occurrence.”

On July 19, 2005, at about 4:15 p.m., Wilkerson entered a room at the Sheriff’s office and sat across from Sgt. Ricky Jones, according to a video of her interrogation viewed by The Appeal. Jones thanked her for being cooperative and polite. He told her she had a right to an attorney.

“If, for whatever reason, you feel like you don’t want to talk to us just—I don’t want to talk to you,” Jones said. “You ready to talk to an attorney, talk to an attorney.”

In response to his questions, Wilkerson told him she went to wake Tristan to feed him. She picked him up. The baby gasped and then collapsed. She called 911 and began CPR. 

“That’s what I didn’t understand is why he just stopped breathing,” she told Jones. 

“He’s showing every symptom, Amy, of a woman shaking, trying to get him to quit crying,” Jones told her. 

“Amy,” he continued, “did he just upset you when he was crying that morning?”

“No,” she told him. 

The only way it happened, he said, was if she shook the baby. 

“No, I would never do that,” she said. 

The detective raised his voice: “Stop crying, Tristan! What happened? Stop it, Tristan!” The doctor said Tristan’s brain looked like it was in a car accident, he said. 

She repeatedly told Jones that she never shook him. Throughout the interrogation, she sobbed and put her head in her hands. 

“There’s no outside damage,” he told her. “It’s only consistent with shaken babies.”

Again and again, he pressed her to tell him the truth. “You have to help yourself,” he said. “We have to know that you’re not just some monster.”

“A jury is going to find you guilty with just what the doctor’s saying,” he continued. “And you need somebody to believe that you’re just a nice lady that this bad thing happened to.” 

As she sat crying, he gently rubbed her arm. Just after 5:00 p.m., she told Jones, “I stand by my word. I want a lawyer. That’s all I can do.

“Amy’s asked for an attorney,” he said at 5:09 p.m. “We’re gonna end this conversation.” He turned off the audio recorder, which was on the desk. A hidden camera was still running.

Over the next approximately 30 minutes, Wilkerson told him two more times that she wanted a lawyer, according to video of the interrogation. She sobbed frequently. “I want to die,” she said.

If she didn’t want to “go any further,” Jones said, he would leave the room, but then, “I’ll be really not happy. I’ll do whatever I have to do, because then I’ll realize that you weren’t prepared to do the right thing which means you have no soul and I don’t see that in you.” 

How did she know, Wilkerson asked, he wouldn’t end up “screwing me in the end?”

“You don’t have a choice,” he replied. “As I told you earlier, it’s just me and you in this little small world right now.”

Wilkerson relented and agreed to let him turn on the audio recorder. He turned it on at 5:41 p.m. He asked how she tried to wake Tristan. 

“At first, I tried just talking to him, and he wouldn’t wake up,” she answered. “Until I picked him up.”

“You shook him to wake him up, is that right?” Jones replied. 

“Just a little,” she said, crying. 

“It was an accident,” Jones told Wilkerson. “But you shook him too hard.”

Sobbing, Wilkerson replied, “I didn’t mean to.”

According to an investigator’s report signed by Sgt. Ken McClenic, McClenic witnessed Wilkerson’s statement to Jones from an observation room. In 2014, McClenic pleaded guilty to perjury in an unrelated case.

False confessions expert Leo watched the interrogation video at The Appeal’s request. Interrogating a person after they invoke Miranda, Leo said, is “blatantly unlawful, blatantly unconstitutional.” 

Jones was soft-spoken throughout most of the interrogation. But his demeanor, said Leo, “doesn’t mean that the interrogation itself wasn’t threatening and coercive.”

“He terrorized her here through the use of promises and threats and inducing hopelessness in her,” he said. 

Steven Drizin, co-director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, also found Jones used psychologically coercive tactics to communicate that she would be treated more harshly if she did not confess, according to an affidavit Drizin submitted to Wilkerson’s appellate counsel. Continuing the interrogation after Wilkerson invoked her right to counsel, he wrote, “contributed to her sense of powerlessness and hopelessness.” 

“It sent her a clear message that resistance was futile and that her only way out was to confess,” he wrote. 

The criminal legal system, said Kassin, often fails to recognize a coercive interrogation, mistakenly believing that it will involve “yelling, pounding the table, threats.”

“The vast majority of false confessions that I’m aware of, that I’ve worked on, were not brought about by yelling and screaming,” continued Kassin. “They were brought about by subtle, gentle forms of trickery and deceit.”

Few rules dictate an interrogator’s actions in the interrogation room. Police are allowed to lie to suspects, for example, by claiming to have an identification from an eyewitness who doesn’t exist. 

“They can say they got fingerprints or you failed the polygraph or there was surveillance video outside of the crime scene—even when none of it’s true,” said Leo. Presenting a suspect with false evidence, he said, “induces hopelessness and fear.” 

False evidence would also include a misdiagnosis, such as shaken baby syndrome, said Kassin. Even if the interrogator believes the evidence, the impact on the suspect is the same. False evidence, he said, “is the single most devastating tactic that an interrogator can use against an innocent person.”

“You’re coming to realize he’s setting me up,” he said. “You don’t know how, you don’t know why, but you’re already feeling the heat to cooperate because they have this mountain of evidence they’re going to throw at me.” 

The state said in its appellate filings that video of the interrogation was turned over to Wilkerson’s trial counsel before she pleaded guilty. But Keith Miller, one of her two trial attorneys, claimed in an affidavit that he does not recall receiving a video recording. If he had, he most likely would have tried to suppress her statement and not advised her to plead guilty, according to his affidavit. Miller said he had received transcripts of the audio recording.

In 2014, the Wisconsin Innocence Project received the video recording after the sheriff’s department turned it over in response to a public records request. In a statement emailed to The Appeal, Jackson County Sheriff Mike Ezell said, “In the best interest of the court proceedings, it’s not appropriate for me to say anything at this time. We will abide by what the court rules.” Ezell was not sheriff at the time of Wilkerson’s interrogation; he was elected in 2014. Jones has since retired, according to the sheriff’s department.  

In addition to what the police considered an incriminating statement, Wilkerson also had to contend with a diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome. Once accepted as gospel, scientific advances and exonerations have undermined the SBS hypothesis.  

Traumas such as strokes, childbirth injuries, or accidental falls can mimic the symptoms associated with SBS, which, its critics say, has never been scientifically validated. 

Before Wilkerson’s trial began, her attorneys consulted with a pathologist, Dr. Steven Hayne, who typically testified for the prosecution. Less than a week before her trial was set to begin, in a letter dated May 23, 2007, Hayne reported that the cause of death was shaken/thrown baby syndrome. The manner of death, he said, was homicide. 

Like SBS, Hayne would be discredited in subsequent years. Investigations by journalists and innocence projects have uncovered years of Hayne’s unreliable testimony, which led to several known wrongful convictions. In 2008, the Mississippi public safety commissioner removed Hayne from the state’s list of authorized medical examiners. 

Tucker Carrington, who is one of Wilkerson’s attorneys and the founding director of the Mississippi Innocence Project, wrote a book on Hayne with Washington Post columnist Radley Balko, called “The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South,” detailing the wrongful convictions of Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks. 

On the same day Wilkerson’s trial attorney, Keith Miller, received Hayne’s damning report, he presented her with a plea offer. According to an affidavit from the jail’s then-assistant nurse, Miller met with Wilkerson in the jail’s medical office and told her if she did not take the plea, she would be executed. 

“Ms. Wilkerson appeared very worried and scared,” according to the assistant nurses’s affidavit. “She did not know what to do.” 

The next day, May 24, Wilkerson pled guilty to depraved-heart murder and was sentenced to life. She would be eligible for parole when she’s 65, the judge told her. She was 31. 

“Did you shake this baby,” the judge asked. 

“Yes, sir,” she replied. 

Her voice breaking, Wilkerson told The Appeal she did not let her family come to her plea hearing.

“I didn’t want them to watch me get up on the stand, to stand up and swear on a bible, and then lie,” she said.

The Mississippi legal system was quick to accuse, charge, convict, and sentence Wilkerson. She was interrogated a day after Chinn’s collapse. Her interrogation lasted about 1.5 hours. The transcript of her plea hearing is just 18 pages. But overturning her conviction has been a Sisyphean struggle, according to Sperling of the Wisconsin Innocence Project.

“You’ve got to have so much luck in these cases,” she said. “People get out because they’re innocent and they’re lucky. Shouldn’t have to depend on that.”

Disclosure: Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg worked in the Intake Department at the Innocence Project based in New York from 2008 to 2015. In 2009, Hayne sued the Innocence Project for defamation. The case was settled for $100,000."

The entire story can be read at:

https://theappeal.org/coerced-confessions-death-penalty-wrongful-convictions/

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The  September 25, 2020 post can be read at:

https://smithforensic.blogspot.com/search?q=%22amy+wilkerson%22 

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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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