Search Term(s):
Blog Tags:
Order by: Date  Relevancy

Your search returned 6 entries.

John Dixon celebrates six years of freedom

Posted: November 29, 2007 1:36 pm

Today marks the sixth anniversary of John Dixon’s exoneration. He was wrongfully convicted of rape, kidnapping and burglary in New Jersey in 1991 and sentenced to 45 years. He spent 10 years behind bars before DNA testing proved his innocence and led to his exoneration on November 29, 2001.

Dixon was misidentified by the rape victim in two photo arrays conducted in the weeks after the attack. Misidentification was a major factor in Dixon’s wrongful conviction and has played a part in 77 percent of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing to date. Since Dixon’s exoneration in 2001, New Jersey has adopted eyewitness identification reform policies aimed proven to prevent wrongful convictions. Learn about New Jersey’s reforms and those in other states in our interactive map.

Hear an audio interview with Dixon about his first six years of freedom on the New York Times website.

Other exoneration anniversaries this week:

Friday: Dale and Ronnie Mahan, Alabama (Served 11.5 years, Exonerated 11/30/1998)





Tags: John Dixon, Ronnie Mahan, Dennis Maher

Permalink

 

Stronger justice in Vermont around the corner?

Posted: December 19, 2007 2:25 pm

In the next few days, leading criminal justice experts will release their recommendations on improving Vermont’s criminal justice system to prevent and address wrongful convictions.

In an op-ed published today in the Rutland Herald, Innocence Project Policy Director Stephen Saloom writes that legislation passed this year in Vermont advanced the state’s justice system. The reform package provided DNA testing access to convicted people, created a system for compensating the exonerated. The legislation also created task forces to review procedures on evidence preservation, recording of interrogations and eyewitness identification procedures. Saloom, Massachusetts exoneree Dennis Maher and many criminal justice experts testified at the Vermont Legislature in support of the reforms this year. The panels are scheduled to release their findings in the coming days.

Since the task forces were formed, five more innocent people have been exonerated through DNA evidence. The state Legislature and the task forces are positioned to prevent such injustice in Vermont. The opportunity to enhance the state's criminal justice system is in their hands. In the next few days, we'll find out what they choose to do with it.

Read the full op-ed here. (Rutland Herald, 12/19/2007)
View Vermont’s legislation and find your state’s criminal justice reform stance on our interactive map.





Tags: Vermont, Dennis Maher, False Confessions, Eyewitness Identification, Evidence Preservation

Permalink

 

Wednesday marks first anniversary of Anthony Capozzi's exoneration

Posted: March 31, 2008 10:50 am

One year ago Wednesday, Anthony Capozzi was released from prison after spending 20 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit. He was wrongfully convicted in 1985 of two brutal rapes that took place in Delaware Park in Buffalo, New York.

Capozzi became a suspect in a series of rapes committed in a Buffalo park after passersby noticed him acting strangely in the area. His noted behavior was in part due to his medically diagnosed schizophrenia. Although his physical appearance didn't match the victims' descriptions of the attacker, he was identified in court by all three victims and was sentenced to 35 years in prison.

Last year, biological evidence from the crimes - believed for years to be lost - was found in a hospital drawer at the Erie County Medical Center and was finally tested for DNA. The DNA results not only excluded Capozzi of the crime, but also pointed to the identity of the actual perpetrator, a man named Altemio Sanchez, who is currently incarcerated for similar crimes.

Watch a Dateline NBC episode on the case, "On the Trail of the Bike Path Rapist"

Read more about Capozzi's case here.

Other exoneration anniversaries this week:

Thursday: Eddie Lowery, Kansas (Served 9.5 years, Exonerated 4/3/03)

Dennis Maher, Massachusetts (Served 19 years, Exonerated 4/3/03)

Friday: Harold Buntin, Indiana (Served 13 years, Exonerated 4/4/05)

Saturday: Terry Chalmers, New York (Served 7.5 years, Exonerated 4/5/95)



Tags: Harold Buntin, Anthony Capozzi, Terry Chalmers, Eddie James Lowery, Dennis Maher

Permalink

 

Upcoming events in Seattle and New Hampshire

Posted: April 10, 2008 10:40 am

A cello concert tomorrow night in Seattle and a symposium April 17 in New Hampshire will help raise funds and awareness about the causes of wrongful conviction and the countless innocent people still waiting for justice.

Paul Rucker will perform a solo cello concert in Seattle tomorrow night (Friday, April 11) to raise money for the Innocence Project. Tickets are $5-$15. More information (and a video of Rucker performing) is here.

Exoneree Dennis Maher will speak at a symposium on April 17 at Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire. The discussion, entitled “When Justice Fails, Perspectives of the Exonerated Defendant and His Prosecutor,” will also feature comments from J.W. Carney Jr., who was the prosecutor in both of Maher’s convictions and also worked actively for Maher’s exoneration when evidence of his innocence came to light. The event is free and open to the public. Learn more here.





Tags: Dennis Maher

Permalink

 

The Art of Innocence

Posted: October 27, 2008 4:00 pm

A four-day event next week in Utica, New York, will feature speeches by three men exonerated through DNA testing, along with film screenings, a theater production, an art contest and more. “The Art of Innocence” is scheduled for November 5 – -9, and will feature talks with exonerees Roy Brown, Alan Newton and Dennis Maher, as well as Innocence Project Staff Attorney Alba Morales.

Other event highlights include a performance of the play “The Exonerated,” and a screening of the new documentary film “Blanchard Road, Murder in the Finger Lakes” about Roy Brown’s case.

Learn more about “The Art of Innocence.”




Tags: Roy Brown, Dennis Maher, Alan Newton

Permalink

 

Two Men Mark Six Years of Freedom

Posted: April 3, 2009 5:10 pm

Six years ago today, Dennis Maher was exonerated in Massachusetts and Eddie Lowery was cleared in Kansas. Both had spent about two decades behind bars for crimes they didn’t commit.

Dennis Maher’s nightmare began in November of 1983, when there were two consecutive assaults in Lowell, Massachusetts. Although no biological evidence linked him to the crime, Maher’s clothing matched the victim’s description, and items found in his vehicle seemed suspicious. In addition, though their descriptions varied, all three victims identified Maher in photographic lineups. Relying heavily on these misidentifications, Maher was charged with both attacks, as well as an unsolved rape that occurred the previous summer in Ayer, Massachusetts, where biological evidence was introduced but never tested. Though the Innocence Project began working with Maher in 1993, it was not until 2001, after years of being told that the biological evidence taken from the victims could not be located, that a law student discovered evidence from the first rape in the basement of the Middlesex County Courthouse. The evidence was tested and found to exclude Maher as a possible semen donor. Soon after, evidence from the Ayer case was tested and the same conclusion was reached. Finally, in 2003, Maher was exonerated.

Today, Maher works as a mechanic for Waste Management and is married with two children. His daughter is named Aliza, after his attorney, former Innocence Project staff attorney Aliza Kaplan.

In July 1981, Eddie James Lowery, then 22, was arrested for the attack and rape of an elderly resident of Ogden, Kansas. He was questioned all day without food and was told he did not need a lawyer after requesting one. Investigators supplied Lowery with details of the crime – the house, the entry, the weapon, and specifics about the rape. The details were incorporated into a confessions, which Lowery immediately said was coerced and false.

Although Lowery recanted the statements and his attorney filed to suppress them, the court ruled that the confession was made voluntarily and allowed it into the trial. It became the cornerstone of the prosecution's case and, coupled with inaccurate testimony linking Lowery to the crime through serology, led to his 1982 conviction and sentence of 11 years to life. He served nine years in prison and was released on parole in 1991. In 2002, Lowery procured DNA testing on the biological evidence. He had been forced to register as a sex offender every year since his parole and wanted to clear his name. The test results confirmed his innocence. After spending nearly a decade in prison – and another decade as a registered sex offender – for a crime he didn’t commit, Lowery was finally exonerated on April 3, 2003.

Today, Lowery works as a wedding photographer.

Other Anniversaries this week:


Sunday: Antonio Beaver, Missouri (Served 10 years, Exonerated 03/29/09)

Thursday: Anthony Capozzi, New York (Served 20 years, Exonerated 04/02/07)

Saturday: Harold Buntin, Indiana (Served 13 years, Exonerated 05/20/05)
 



Tags: Eddie James Lowery, Dennis Maher

Permalink