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Sterling Case Show Ripple Effects of Wrongful Convictions

Posted: April 30, 2010 5:40 pm

Luckily for Sterling, he had the support of his longtime friends, Sharon and Jim Adam, who were in Rochester for his exoneration this week.  Having believed in his innocence for the past 18 years and stood by him steadfastly, Sharon was overwhelmed and brought to tears when her friend was finally released.

The victim’s son, Robert Manville, said he and his family are still unable to escape news about his mother's murder. He feels badly for Sterling’s terrible ordeal and doesn’t understand how the police investigation went awry with a false confession (after a deeply flawed interrogation)

Evidence now implicates Mark Christie, who is imprisoned for the 1994 murder of 4-year-old Kali Ann Poulton, as the real perpetrator in Manville’s murder, begging the question: “If Christie had been arrested and convicted of Manville’s 1988 murder, would Kali Ann still be alive?”  Her mother tries not to think about it and feels terribly for Manville’s family.  She hopes Christie does the right thing and pleads guilty, sparing the family the pain of another trial.

Meanwhile, two police involved in Sterling’s arrest and conviction also spoke out. Retired Monroe County Sheriff's Investigator Tom Vasile and retired Investigator Patrick Crough, who worked on Manville’s murder investigation, said they believed they had the right man and were shocked by Christie’s confession. Vasile helped convict Sterling and claims that Sterling was “compassionate” when he falsely confessed to the crime after a flawed interrogation – and further claims that such compassion often suggests the person is guilty, even if there are major factual discrepancies in a supposed confession.




Tags: Frank Sterling

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"I Did It" -- New York Magazine on False Confessions

Posted: October 4, 2010 6:50 pm

Sterling says the police never asked him to say in his own words what happened. "Yes' and grunts-that's basically what the whole confession is about." Regarding the color of (the victim's) coat, he says, "I knew in the fall she always wore her purple jacket."

I ask him what he thinks when he watches the twenty-minute confession video now. "When you look, you'll notice I shake a little bit," he says. "But to hold on to the whole cigarette and let the whole cigarette go to ash and never take a drag off of it? I'm a smoker. Normally, I would be sitting there dragging on it, not letting the whole cigarette just sit there burning down. Yeah, I was not in the right mind, looking back at it now."

He knows some people will never understand why he admitted to a crime he didn't commit. "They say, 'Why confess if you didn't do it?' But they don't have the whole understanding of what I was going through at the time. It's like, yeah-I wanted to get it over with, get home, and get some sleep."

He laughs softly. "Eighteen years and nine months later, I finally get to go home."

Sterling is the 253rd person exonerated through DNA testing in the U.S.

Read the full article here.

Watch video of Sterling's interrogation and confession.

Click here to learn more about false confessions and wrongful convictions
.

Videotaping of complete custodial interrogations has been shown to prevent false confessions. Learn more about reforms supported by the Innocence Project.

Read more about Sterling's case.




Tags: Frank Sterling

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