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Seven years of freedom for Ohio man

Posted: October 17, 2008 4:40 pm



Tomorrow, Anthony Michael Green will mark the seventh anniversary of his exoneration in Ohio. Although he was freed in 2001, he and the Innocence Project had been working since 1997 to clear his name. In all, he spent 13 years in prison before DNA testing proved his innocence.In 1988, a Caucasian woman in a health clinic was raped at knifepoint. The attacker cleaned himself with a washcloth before fleeing the room, and threw it on the floor. The victim immediately rinsed herself off and called security. The police collected the washcloth and brought the victim to a medical center, where a rape kit was prepared. Green, who had previously worked for the clinic, became a suspect because a security officer said the victim's physical description of the attacker reminded him of Green.

The prosecutor's main evidence at trial relied on the victim's misidentification of Green and on misleading blood type testing from a state expert. The expert testified that Green could have contributed the semen found on the washcloth – along with only 16 percent of the male population. But the percentage of the population that could have contributed the sample was actually much higher. Based in part on this faulty testimony, Green was convicted and sentenced to 20-50 years in prison.

Green’s stepfather, Robert Mandell, investigated his case relentlessly in an attempt to overturn the wrongful conviction. It was not until Mandell located the washcloth in a courthouse storage room in 2001 that DNA testing could be conducted, proving Green’s innocence. After proving his innocence, Green said, "You can't get the lost years back. You just have to pick up the pieces and go on with your life."

The DNA testing in Green’s case didn’t only exonerate him, but also led to the identity of the real perpetrator. A man named Rodney Rhines confessed to the rape after reading an Ohio newspaper article that documented Green's ordeal. Also, the city of Cleveland agreed to compensate him and created the "Anthony Michael Green Forensic Laboratory Audit." The audit addresses the causes of faulty and falsified forensics, a factor that played a significant role in many wrongful convictions. Read more about unreliable and limited forensic science here.

Other Exoneree Anniversary This Week:

Thursday: Troy Webb, Virginia (Served 7.5 Years , Exonerated 10/16/1996 )





Tags: Anthony Michael Green, Troy Webb

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Three Years Later, a Somber Anniversary

Posted: October 13, 2009 5:00 pm

Three years ago this week, post-conviction DNA testing proved Allen Coco innocent of the crimes for which he was serving a life sentence.  By the time he was exonerated, Coco had spent more than 11 years in custody – nine of them behind bars – chiefly as a result of eyewitness misidentification. Sadly, Coco died a short time after his release.

One late-May morning in 1995, a Louisiana woman awoke in her home to a man standing over her bed.  The man grabbed her, held a knife to her throat and sexually assaulted her. However, the victim struggled and eventually managed to get hold of the knife, stabbing her assailant in his buttocks.  Attempting to run, the man jumped out the window and was caught in the mini-blinds, leaving significant biological evidence on the blinds and on the floor: his blood from the stab wound.

Police showed the victim a series of photographic lineups and in June– almost a month after the crime – she identified Allen Coco.  There were a number of discrepancies between the victim’s description of her attacker and Coco’s actual appearance:  Coco has large tattoos on both of his arms (including a 3½ inch tattoo of his own name) but the victim didn’t describe any tattoos, despite her telling police that the perpetrator wore shorts and a short-sleeved shirt. Coco also had no stab wounds.  

Unfortunately, the rapist’s blood stains found on the mini-blinds and floor of the victim’s home matched Allen Coco’s blood type, which only 5.8% of African Americans have. No DNA testing was conducted. The forensic evidence, combined with the eyewitness testimony, led to Coco’s wrongful conviction in 1997, and he was sentenced to life in prison without probation or parole.

The Innocence Project of New Orleans took on Coco’s case and secured an order for DNA testing.  The knife and swabs were submitted for testing and results in March 2006 proved that Coco could not have been the perpetrator of this crime.  The state of Louisiana demanded re-testing at its own laboratory and confirmed the previous test.  In July 2006, Coco’s conviction was vacated and he was granted a new trial; further tests were soon performed on his blood samples and the district attorney dropped the charges on October 12, 2006.

Eyewitness misidentifications contribute to over 75% of the wrongful convictions in the United States overturned by post-conviction DNA evidence and is the single greatest cause of wrongful convictions nationwide. What’s the law in your state? Find out here.

Other Exoneration Anniversaries this Week:

Troy Webb, Virginia (Served 7.5 years; Exonerated 10/16/96)



Tags: Allen Coco, Troy Webb

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