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Posted on Thursday, June 18th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
But Will Have Limited Impact, Innocence Project Says
(WASHINGTON, DC; June 18, 2009) – Today’s U.S. Supreme Court decision denying post-conviction DNA testing to an Alaska prisoner is flawed and disappointing but will have a limited impact on cases across the country, according to the Innocence Project. (more…)
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Posted on Monday, May 11th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
Thomas Haynesworth has been maintaining his innocence of a 1984 rape for nearly 25 years, and now it appears DNA may prove his case. (more…)
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Posted on Friday, May 1st, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
Beverly Monroe spent 11 years trying to prove her innocence after being convicted of a crime she did not commit. In March of 1992, Monroe found her long time boyfriend dead with a pistol in his hand. Because prosecutors withheld evidence showing the likely cause of death to be a suicide, Monroe was found guilty of both first-degree murder and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. Monroe was sentenced to 22 years in prison.
Convinced of her mother’s innocence, Monroe’s eldest child, a lawyer, quit her job and spent the next six years trying to find evidence to prove it. Kate Monroe assembled a team of lawyers to take on her mother’s case. Due to her tireless efforts, Beverly Monroe was released after 11 years’ imprisonment. However, Monroe was never compensated for the time she spent in prison. (more…)
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Posted on Thursday, April 23rd, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
A new study published in the Virginia Law Review found that forensic experts gave flawed testimony in the trials of 82 men, including four men convicted in Virginia in the 1980s. Brandon L. Garnett, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, and Peter Neufeld, cofounder of the Innocence Project, examined the trial transcripts of 137 people during whose trial’s forensic experts had testified on behalf of the prosecution and who were later exonerated through testing of DNA evidence. In these 137 trials, Garnett and Neufeld found that 60 percent contained flawed forensic expert testimony. However, Garnett and Neufeld’s study did not suggest that the flawed testimony was necessarily the source of the wrongful convictions.
The four Virginia men whose trial transcripts were examined in the study are Willie Davidson II, who was cleared of a 1980 rape; Earl Washington Junior, cleared of capital murder and a 1982 rape; Edward Honaker, cleared of a 1984 rape; and Tony Webb who was cleared of a 1988 rape. One of the most common errors that can lead to a wrongful conviction is mistaken eyewitness identification. Mistaken eyewitness identification coupled with flawed forensic expert testimony results in many wrongful convictions. One possible solution that Peter Marone, the Director of Technical Services at the Virginia Department of Forensic Science, offers is the standardization of methods and technology.
For a more detailed summary of the report, please click here .
To read the full text of the report, please click here . Once the page has loaded, click download and follow the instructions to save it to your computer.
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Posted on Thursday, April 23rd, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
In an article published in the March 2009 issue of the Virginia Law Review, Brandon L. Garrett and Peter J. Neufeld conclude that in the majority of trials of innocent people who were later exonerated by post-conviction DNA testing, forensic analysts testifying for the prosecution provided invalid testimony at trial. Garrett and Neufeld located and reviewed trial transcripts for 137 of the 156 DNA exonorees in whose trials forensic analysts had testified. They found that in 82 cases or 60% of the trials, forensic analysts provided “invalid” testimony, meaning they had presented conclusions that either misstated empirical data or that were entirely unsupported by empirical data. This invalid testimony did not come from a small group of analysts –not just the “bad apples”–but from 72 different analysts from 52 laboratories, practices, or hospitals in 25 states. Garrett and Neufeld’s study revealed that the analysts’ invalid testimony fell into two basic categories. The first is “the misuse of empirical population data” by presenting non-probative evidence as inculpatory, by discounting exculpatory evidence, or by presenting inaccurate statistics. For example, in the case of Gary Dotson, who was wrongly convicted of rape and aggravated kidnapping, the analyst presented inaccurate statistics when he testified that Dotson was included in 11% of the population that could have been the source of the semen found on the victim, whereas in reality 100% of the population could have been the source of the semen. The second main type of invalid testimony is “making conclusions regarding the probative value of evidence that are unsupported by empirical data.” This includes the presenting of statistics or other statements without backing them up with data or making a conclusion that evidence originated from the defendant even if there is no empirical data to permit such a conclusion. In the case of Timothy Durham, who was wrongly convicted of rape and robbery, the analyst said that the specific color of hair found at the crime scene belonged to “about 5 percent of the population” when in reality no empirical data exists on the frequency of hair color. In their study of the trial transcripts, Garret and Neufeld found that defense counsel rarely cross-examined analysts concerning invalid testimony and rarely retained their own experts, because funding is often denied for defense experts. Prosecutors presented the invalid accounts of forensic evidence during their closing arguments. If the defense challenged the evidence, judges seldom provided relief. Garrett and Neufeld believe that our criminal justice system is simply not well suited to preventing this kind of unscientific testimony. Based on the results of their study, they recommend that the scientific community issue nationally enforceable standards for written reports and testimony to ensure that forensic science in criminal cases is presented in a way that maintains the integrity and fairness of the criminal process.
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Posted on Friday, April 10th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
On July 15, 2008, MAIP hosted its first annual awards luncheon. The winner of our Champion of Justice award was former Virginia Governor Mark Warner. MAIP honored Governor Warner for his extraordinary contribution to the cause of justice.
[Click here photographs from the event]
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Posted on Tuesday, April 7th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
The Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project (MAIP) commends Governor Tim Kaine on his decision to grant full pardons to Arthur Lee Whitfield and Victor “Bo” Burnette.
“We are relieved that the governor recognized the need to correct the miscarriage of justice that occurred in these two men’s cases,” said Shawn Armbrust, Executive Director of MAIP. (more…)
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Posted on Thursday, March 19th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
MAIP To Represent Haynesworth
Twenty-five years ago the Richmond area was shaken by a series of robberies and rapes. On the strength of eye witness identification, Thomas Haynesworth was sentenced to seventy-four years in prison. Though Haynesworth never stopped maintaining his innocence, he was unable to prove that he had been wrongfully convicted. Now, after having spent more than two decades in prison, DNA evidence may exonerate him.
In 2005 Commonwealth Governor Mark Warner launched a project that would re-examine DNA evidence from convictions that occurred between 1973 and 1988. A semen sample from Haynesworth case was among the evidence being retested. The Department of Forensic Science failed to find a genetic profile that matched his.
Shawn Armbrust, the Executive Director of the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, met with Haynesworth and believes this is a case of mistaken identity. Armbrust and MAIP have agreed to represent Haynesworth.
If succesful, Haynesworth will become the eleventh Virginian to be exonerated of rape by DNA evidence.
Click here to read the Richmond Times-Dispatch's coverage.
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Posted on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
On March 2, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the matter of District Attorney's Office v. William G. Osborne. Peter Neufeld, co-founder of the Innocence Project at the Cardozo School of Law, argued on behalf of Mr. Osborne. The case raises questions over the existence of a constitutional right to post-conviction DNA testing.
In 1994 an Alaska state court found Osborne guilty of kidnapping and sexual assault. Osborne subsequently sought access to evidence for DNA testing, but was denied by the District Attorney's Office. The D.A.O.'s decision was reached despite their admission that testing could exonerate him and that the testing would come at no cost to the state. In response to their refusal, Osborne filed a lawsuit in federal district court, alleging that his due process rights had been violated. After a favorable decision for Osborne by the Court of Appeals, the DAO appealed the case to the Supreme Court. (more…)
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Posted on Thursday, February 19th, 2009 by Christian Van Buskirk
Thursday, February 26, 2009; 12:30 p.m.
Phillip H. Hart Auditorium (McDonough Hall), Georgetown University Law Center
An unprecedented gathering of people from around the country who have been exonerated through DNA testing, leading legal authorities on federal post-conviction remedies, a crime victim from a recent high-profile Texas wrongful conviction case, and others will discuss District Attorney’s Office v. William G. Osborne, which is set for oral argument at the U.S. Supreme Court on March 2. The state has arbitrarily refused Osborne’s requests for DNA testing for years – even though the testing would be performed at no cost to the State, and the State now concedes that DNA testing could prove his innocence for a 1993 rape and attempted murder in Alaska. On March 2, the Innocence Project will argue before the U.S. Supreme Court that Osborne has a constitutional right to DNA testing that can prove his innocence.
Confirmed speakers include:
Marvin Anderson, who served 15 years in prison for crimes he didn’t commit. He was exonerated with DNA testing in 2002 – becoming the first person in Virginia exonerated through post-conviction DNA testing.
Bruce Godschalk, who served 14 years in prison for a 1986 rape in Pennsylvania before DNA exonerated him. Godschalk was the first person in the U.S. granted post-conviction DNA testing under federal law (his appeals for DNA testing in state court were denied; his exoneration led Pennsylvania to enact a statute granting post-conviction DNA testing).
Rickie Johnson, who served 25 years at Louisiana’s notorious Angola Farm Penitentiary for a 1982 rape he didn’t commit. Johnson was exonerated in 2008 after the Sabine Parish District Attorney quickly agreed to DNA testing in his case.
Dennis Fritz, who was convicted of murder in Oklahoma and served 11 years in prison before DNA testing exonerated him in 1999. The wrongful convictions of Fritz and his co-defendant, Ron Williamson, are the subject of John Grisham’s best-selling nonfiction book, "The Innocent Man."
Michele Mallin, who was brutally raped in 1985 when she was a 20-year-old sophomore at Texas Tech. She was the fifth victim of a serial rapist on campus, and she identified Timothy Cole as her assailant. Cole was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison. In 1999, Cole died in prison at the age of 39. Last year, Mallin learned about evidence of Cole’s innocence and joined his family in an effort to exonerate him posthumously. Mallin testified at an unprecedented hearing in Austin earlier this month, where a judge recommended throwing out Cole’s conviction.
David Rudovsky, one of the nation’s leading authorities on post-conviction remedies under federal law. Rudovsky is a Senior Fellow at University of Pennsylvania Law School and has written scholarly articles and litigation-related books on criminal law, constitutional criminal procedure and evidence. He recently presented about the Osborne case to a National Institute of Justice conference.
They will be joined by several other people exonerated through DNA testing and other leading attorneys in the field. The event is sponsored by Georgetown’s Office of Public Interest and Community Service, the Innocence Project and the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project. For more on the Osborne case, go to: http://www.innocenceproject.org/Content/1852.php. For more information, contact Eric Ferrero at the Innocence Project; mailto: eferrero@innocenceproject.org; 212-364-5346.
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- Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP
- Baker Botts LLP
- The Bivings Group
- Cozen O'Connor
- The DC Bar Foundation
- DLA Piper
- DTI Associates, a Haverstick Company
- Georgetown University Law Center
- Hogan & Hartson LLP
- Holland & Knight LLP
- Latham & Watkins LLP
- McGuire Woods LLP
- The Public Welfare Foundation
- Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP
- Sullivan & Cromwell LLP
- Venable LLP
- Virginia Law Foundation
- Washington College of Law
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