Search Term(s):
Blog Tags:
Order by: Date Relevancy
Your search returned 69 entries.
Real perpetrators sentenced in two New York wrongful convictions
Posted: May 3, 2007
A New York inmate serving time for killing his landlady was sentenced to an additional 15 years to life today for a 1996 murder that sent an innocent man to prison. Douglas Warney, 45, was convicted of the murder in Rochester, New York, after he falsely confessed. When DNA testing obtained by Warney’s Innocence Project attorneys exonerated him of the crime in 2006, it also implicated the actual killer – a man named Eldred Johnson, Jr., who was serving time in prison for killing his landlady in 1998. Johnson has pled guilty to the murder and was sentenced this morning.
“I’m aware that I will spend the rest of my life in prison,” Eldred Johnson Jr. said. “Before I go, I just want to apologize. ... Because of my action, I put this court in a position to create an injustice.”In another false confession case, the actual perpetrator in the crime for which Jeffrey Deskovic was wrongfully convicted in Westchester County, New York, was sentenced yesterday to 20 years. Steven Cunningham was linked to the 1989 murder by the DNA tests that exonerated Deskovic in 2006. Cunningham was also already serving time for another murder.
Read the full story here. (Associated Press, 5/3/07)
In the corridor afterward, Deskovic and Vasquez shared a tearful reunion, the first time they had spoken since the days after the killing. Outside the Westchester County Courthouse in White Plains, Deskovic said he was thankful for the empathy she showed him.Deskovic published a column today in the Journal-News calling for statewide criminal justice reforms. Read it here.
"She told me she felt very badly for me. She remarked that I was very strong," Deskovic said. "It was a very emotional moment for both of us. (It was) just like I was a son to her."
Read the full story here. (White Plains Journal-News, 5/3/07)
Tags: False Confessions
NY legislators join Innocence Project in supporting sweeping reforms
Posted: May 4, 2007
Leaders in the New York legislature joined Innocence Project officials and New Yorkers who were exonerated by DNA evidence yesterday in announcing broad-based reforms to fix the state’s criminal justice system and help prevent wrongful convictions from happening.
The reforms proposed in several bills before the legislature include the creation of an innocence commission, improving requirements on evidence preservation, post-conviction DNA testing, use of forensic databases to prove innocence and compensation for people exonerated after serving time in prison for crimes they didn’t commit.
Also in attendance yesterday were Alan Newton, who served 22 years in New York prisons for a rape he didn’t commit, and Douglas Warney, who served nine years after falsely confessing to a murder.
Read the Innocence Project’s press release on the reform package.
Read coverage of yesterday’s announcements in the New York Times and Newsday.
Learn more about reforms underway nationwide in our “Fix the System” section.
Tags: Innocence Commissions, Exoneree Compensation, Evidence Preservation, Access to DNA Testing, False Confessions
Raising the quality of justice in Ohio
Posted: May 10, 2007
The exonerations of 200 innocent people have raised alarming questions nationwide about our criminal justice system. Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann says the state may need to reconsider its death penalty. The Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote in an editorial that DNA exonerations have led to serious questions about whether executions should continue in Ohio and elsewhere.
A society that imposes capital punishment - a sentence this editorial board has long opposed - must always ask: What if this person is innocent? Could there be a greater miscarriage of justice than the state taking a life in error?
Those questions seem especially relevant now. Last month, an Illinois judge wiped out the conviction of Jerry Miller, an Army veteran who spent 25 years behind bars for a rape that new DNA evidence proved he did not commit. Miller's was the 200th conviction overturned using DNA since 1989, according to the Innocence Project. Those exonerations come from 31 states. Six were in Ohio. Fourteen of them rescued men from death rows. A quarter overturned cases in which the defendant had confessed. Sixty percent of the wrongly convicted defendants were black, like Miller, or Latino.
Read the full editorial here. (Cleveland Plain Dealer, 5/6/07)
Tags: False Confessions
Byron Halsey released in New Jersey, news coverage
Posted: May 16, 2007
Yesterday, a tearful Byron Halsey was released from custody after serving 19 years in New Jersey prisons for the murder of two children that he didn’t commit. DNA testing has proven his innocence, and the Innocence Project joined with prosecutors in filing for his release.
Read the Innocence Project press release here, and continuing press on the Halsey’s release below:
New York Times: DNA in Murders Frees Inmate After 19 Years
MSNBC (via Associated Press): DNA test frees man convicted of 2 child slayings
Newark Star-Ledger: Freed After 22 Years
Newark Star-Ledger: Years later, the crime still shocks Plainfield
New York Post: 'Wrong Man' free after 19 yrs. - & real 'killer' was star witness
VIDEO: CBS 2 New York: DNA evidence exonerates man wrongfully convicted of child murder
Tags: New Jersey, False Confessions
NYTimes: The DNA 200
Posted: May 21, 2007
In Sunday’s Week In Review, the New York Times examined the first 200 DNA exonerations and the patterns that have caused many more injustices nationwide. A special graphic examined “the time they lost.”
In the 200 cases, often more than one factor led to the initial convictions, the analysis showed. Three-quarters were marked by inaccurate eyewitness identification, and in two-thirds, there were mistakes or other problems with the forensic science. Fifteen percent featured testimony by informants at odds with the later evidence. There were confessions or admissions in about 25 percent of the cases. In about 4 percent, the people had pleaded guilty.Read the full article here. (New York Times, 5/20/07)
As these cases have captured the public’s attention, various states and law enforcement agencies have made reforms, including improving the standards for eyewitness identifications, recording interrogations and upgrading their forensic labs and staffs. Several states have appointed commissions to re-examine cases in which inmates were exonerated by DNA. Some states are reconsidering their death penalty statutes.
Innocence Project Web Feature: “200 Exonerated, Too Many Wrongfully Convicted”
Tags: Innocence Commissions, False Confessions, Informants/Snitches, Eyewitness Misidentification
Exoneree Doug Warney calls for end to New York death penalty
Posted: May 29, 2007
Doug Warney, who was exonerated in 2006 after serving nine years for a murder he didn’t commit, published a column in the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle last week calling for state lawmakers to abolish the death penalty for good.
In early 1996, I became the first person charged capitally under New York's new death penalty statute. The district attorney at the time said I was a monster who deserved to die. Fortunately, the grand jury indicted me only for second-degree murder. Otherwise, I could have easily received the death penalty. I was sentenced to only 25 years to life for a murder I had nothing to do with. In some ways, I was lucky.Read more about Warney’s case.
Read the full column here. (Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, 05/22/07)
Tags: Douglas Warney, Eyewitness Identification, Evidence Preservation, False Confessions
Texas murder conviction overturned
Posted: June 7, 2007 9:46 am
Michael Scott was convicted in 2002 of killing four teenage girls in a notorious Austin murder 11 years earlier. He allegedly confessed to his involvement in the crime along with another man, Robert Springsteen. Yesterday, Texas’s highest court overturned Scott’s conviction because Springsteen’s confession was improperly used against Scott at trial. Springsteen’s conviction has also been thrown out and he is expected to be tried again.
Scott and Springsteen have claimed that their confessions were coerced during long hours of interrogation by the Austin Police. Part of Scott’s interrogation was videotaped, and the tape shows a detective holding a loaded gun against Scott’s head.
Ariel Payan, the lawyer handling Scott’s appeal, says he always knew this day would come. He encourages detectives to look elsewhere for the yogurt shop murderer or murderers.
“There were fingerprints found inside the cash drawer where the money was stolen,” Payan said. “You have ask yourself, if there are fingerprints there that weren't traced to anybody, doesn't that mean that there is someone else?Read the court’s opinion here.
Read the full story here. (CBS 42, 6/6/07)
Read background on the case here.
Tags: Texas, False Confessions, Government Misconduct
The "right" answer: anatomy of a confession
Posted: June 13, 2007 1:21 pm
A New York City judge dropped murder charges last week against Ozem Goldwire, a Brooklyn man with developmental disabilities who found his sister dead in 2006 and called 911 to report the crime. After 17 hours of interrogation, Goldwire confessed to the crime, and now defense attorneys, a state psychologist and the judge agree that the situation in this case was ripe for a false confession. The prosecutor agreed to drop the charges after the psychologist issued her report. Goldwire had been in jail for a year waiting for trial.
When Mr. Goldwire was in Rikers Island, his lawyer, Gary Farrell, told prosecutors that the confession was unreliable, given his background. Kenneth Taub and Robert Lamb of the Brooklyn district attorney’s office hired a psychologist, Kathy F. Yates, who found that he was highly suggestible, eager to please. “It is likely that he wanted to meet the needs of the detectives as a well as to bring the interview to an end,” she wrote.More than one-quarter of wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA testing involved a false confession. In countless other confession cases, like Goldwire’s, charges are thrown out before trial because the interrogation methods were questionable.
No audio or video record exists of Mr. Goldwire’s interactions with detectives during the 17 hours leading up to his confession.
“Here we had the ingredients of the perfect storm for false confession,” Judge Gustin L. Reichbach said in court last week, dismissing the charges at the request of the prosecution and the defense. “You’re actually innocent of this crime.”
Read the story here and listen to Goldwire’s 911 call. (New York Times, 6/13/07, Membership Required)
The Innocence Project supports criminal justice reforms mandating the electronic recording of all custodial interrogations nationwide. View a map of state laws requiring recorded interrogations.
Tags: New York, False Confessions
Harper’s Index: Wrongful conviction by the numbers
Posted: June 22, 2007 4:10 pm
The July issue of Harper’s magazine includes several important statistics on wrongful conviction, eyewitness misidentification and false confessions:
- Number of wrongful convictions since 1989 (as of press date): 201
- Percentage who had been mistakenly identified by eyewitnesses: 77
- Chances that a judge in a 2003 study deemed a taped confession to be voluntary if only the suspect appeared on camera: 4 in 5
- Chances if both the suspect and the interrogator were filmed: 2 in 3
Tags: False Confessions, Eyewitness Misidentification
District Attorney's report shows need for reform in New York
Posted: July 2, 2007 5:45 pm
A 35-page report issued today by Westchester County, New York DA Janet DiFiore identifies the factors contributing to Jeffrey Deskovic’s wrongful conviction and provides recommendations for reform. Deskovic was convicted of raping and murdering his high school classmate in 1990 based on a false confession that he later retracted. He spent over 15 years in prison before his exoneration in 2006.
The “Report on the Conviction of Jeffrey Deskovic” calls for access to forensic databases that can identify true perpetrators, creation of an Innocence Commission, recording of police interrogations, and proper storage and preservation of evidence. These measures could have prevented Deskovic’s wrongful conviction and enabled him to prove his innocence. In recent months, the State Legislature considered reforms that would address these same issues. The report underscores the need to pass this legislation and implement systemic reforms in New York State. When the legislature reconvenes on July 16, it will have another opportunity to pass the legislation.
Here is an excerpt of the report:
“One can imagine a situation in which police, prosecutors, defense counsel and the courts each discharged their functions in a perfectly appropriate way, yet the result achieved was calamitously wrong. One can imagine such a case, but Jeffrey Deskovic’s case is not such a case…we attempt to analyze what went wrong for Jeffrey Deskovic in the hope that a broader understanding of his tragedy will help those in the criminal justice system take the steps necessary to protect others from his fate."Read more about Jeff Deskovic's case.
Learn more about the reforms in New York.
Read a copy of the report here.
Read the Innocence Project press release here.
Tags: New York, False Confessions
Pennsylvania appeals court hears arguments today in Innocence Project case
Posted: July 10, 2007 7:00 am
Philadelphia prosecutors filed papers in May arguing that Anthony Wright, who was convicted of murder in 1993, should not have access to DNA testing because he confessed to the crime. In these papers they cited the case of Byron Halsey, saying testing in Halsey's case was “properly denied where trial evidence, which included defendant’s confession, was overwhelming.”
The flaws in the state's argument in the Wright case became clear yesterday afternoon, when New Jersey prosecutors exonerated Halsey after DNA testing conducted in 2006 showed that another man committed the child murders for which Halsey had nearly been sentenced to death. Read more about the Halsey case here.
This morning, a Philadelphia appeals court will hear arguments in Wright's case. Prosecutors have argued for two years that Wright should be denied access to testing because he allegedly confessed to the crime. However, as Innocence Project Staff Attorney Nina Morrison will argue this morning, 25% of the 205 people exonerated by DNA testing in the United States — including Halsey — falsely confessed or admitted to the crimes of which they were wrongfully convicted.
The arguments are scheduled for 10:30 this morning at the Pennsylvania Superior Court. Read more about Wright 's case in yesterday's Innocence Project press release.
A column by Elmer Smith in today's Philadelphia Daily News calls for the District Attorney's office to support testing in the pursuit of true justice:
The D.A.'s office is vigorously opposing new DNA testing. I want to believe it is fighting to keep DNA evidence out in the interest of justice.
Except that, for the life of me, I can't see how justice is served by suppressing a test result that could point to another perpetrator.
If Louise Talley's murderer is still out there, I want my D.A.'s office to go after him with the same fervor that led to Anthony Wright's conviction.
Instead, the D.A.'s office seems more interested in holding onto Wright than it is in being absolutely sure the crime is solved. That worries me.
Read the full column here. (Philadelphia Daily News, 07/10/07)
Tags: False Confessions
Wright case may lead to more DNA testing in Pennsylvania
Posted: July 11, 2007 1:25 pm
Innocence Project attorney Nina Morrison argued yesterday before a Pennsylvania appeals court panel that DNA testing should be granted in the case of Anthony Wright, who was convicted in Philadelphia in 1993 of raping and killing a 77-year-old woman. Wright signed a confession to the crime, but Morrison told the judges yesterday that more than 25% of the 205 people exonerated by DNA testing in the United States falsely confessed to crimes they didn’t commit.
"This may be one of those cases where it turns out he's guilty," his lawyer, Nina Morrison, of the New York-based Innocence Project, told a state Superior Court panel. But, she added, "the shame and, really, the horror would be if this was a case that he was not guilty."Read more about Wright’s case here.
Read the full story here. (Philadelphia Inquirer, 07/11/2007)
Understand the Causes: False Confessions.
YouTube: Watch a video of exoneree Chris Ochoa describing the interrogation that led to his false confession.
Tags: False Confessions
Closing arguments expected this week in Montana clemency hearing
Posted: August 7, 2007 10:54 am
A three-member parole board in Montana heard last week from supporters of a man who says he didn’t commit the murder he was convicted of in 1984. Barry Beach says he was coerced to confess to the murder of a high school classmate. Beach’s attorneys, and investigators at Centurion Ministries who have worked on the case for seven years, say key parts of Beach’s confession don’t match crime scene evidence.
The parole board has the power to recommend that Beach be paroled or that the governor award executive clemency, clearing Beach’s name. The panel will hear closing arguments in the case this week.
Even Pam Nees, (the victim’s) older sister, appeared at the hearing to support Beach. However, the woman was not emotionally capable of testifying herself, according to her best friend, who read Nees' written statement to the three-member panel.Read more about false confession cases.
“I honestly believe that Barry did not kill my sister,” she said in the statement. “I feel Barry's pain and his family's pain, also. Finding the truth will set Barry free.”
Read the full story here. (The Missoulian, 08/02/07)
Tags: False Confessions, Barry Beach
The Norfolk Four: False confessions in Virginia?
Posted: August 20, 2007 1:52 pm
A New York Times Magazine article today investigates the case of four men convicted of a 1997 Virginia murder based almost entirely on their questionable confessions. Read background on the case and find more resources.
Read the New York Times Magazine story.
Learn more about compelling evidence of evidence and watch an online video at Norfolk4.com.
Tags: False Confessions, Norfolk Four
California man shares story of his wrongful conviction
Posted: August 24, 2007 1:02 pm
In 2004, a California judge threw out Harold Hall’s double murder conviction because new evidence showed that he was innocent. Now, he spends his time telling his story around the state to help prevent wrongful convictions. This week he told an audience in Los Angeles why he falsely confessed to a crime he didn’t commit.
"They questioned me for 18 hours straight without food or water," said Hall, 40, who grew up in South Los Angeles and said the detectives also shackled him to a chair. "It was a strain on an 18-year-old kid. I finally just told them what they wanted to hear."After confessing to two murders, Hall spent the next 19 years in prison. He was finally released in 2004 and celebrated his third anniversary as a free man on Aug. 17. “The judge reversed my case based on false evidence,” said Hall, who has since become an advocate for the falsely imprisoned.Hall is not included in the 206 DNA exonerations tracked by the Innocence Project because DNA evidence wasn’t involved in his release. About 25 percent of the 206 DNA exonerees also falsely confessed, and since DNA evidence is only available in less than 10 percent of cases, there are many false confession cases that will never be overturned by the irrefutable evidence of DNA.
Read the full story here. (Our Weekly, 08/24/2007)
Read more about false confessions in our Understand the Causes section.
Tags: False Confessions
False confessions are more common than public thinks
Posted: October 2, 2007 3:01 pm
An article in yesterday’s Washington Post considers the public perception of confessions in the wake of the recent sex solicitation case involving Sen. Larry Craig. While the media and public often take Craig’s guilty pleas as a sure sign of guilt, dozens of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA prove that false confessions aren’t rare. A growing body of social science research has shown that interrogation methods often lead to a false confession.
"Innocence is a state of mind that puts innocent people at risk," said psychologist Saul Kassin at Williams College, who has studied the phenomenon. Innocent people, Kassin found, are more likely to waive their constitutional rights to remain silent and to have a lawyer present. Innocent people also assume that innocent people do not get convicted, or that objective evidence will exonerate them. Nearly a quarter of all convictions overturned in recent years based on DNA and other evidence have involved false confessions.Learn about the cases of innocent people wrongfully convicted after confessing to crimes they didn’t commit, and the Innocence Project’s proposals to record all interrogations – a reform shown to prevent false confessions.
Find the full article and reader comments here. (Washington Post, 10/01/07)
Watch a video of exoneree Chris Ochoa explaining the pressure on him to plead guilty to an Austin, Texas, murder and rape he didn’t commit.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Why do innocent people confess?
Posted: October 5, 2007 12:05 pm
An article on Alternet.org this week considers the reasons innocent people have confessed to crimes they didn’t commit, and discovers a common refrain from exonerees who falsely confess after long police interrogations – “I just wanted to go home.”
When 16-year-old Korey Wise entered the Central Park Police Precinct at 102nd St on April 20, 1989, he didn't realize what he was walking into. It was the day after one of the most grisly crimes in official New York memory-the brutal sexual assault of a woman who would become known as the Central Park Jogger-and Wise had been asked to come in along with other black and Latino youths who had allegedly been in the park the night before. Wise was taken to the scene of the crime and shown graphic pictures of the woman's injuries, which included a fractured skull. Eventually, his visit to the police station would lead to an interrogation and, after nine hours of questioning, a videotaped confession that was confusing, convoluted, and chilling.And visit Alternet.org today to join a lively discussion on the issue of false confessions and reforms to prevent them.
Read the full story here. (Alternet.org, 10/02/07)
Read more about reforms that can prevent false confessions.
Tags: Jeff Deskovic, Christopher Ochoa, Korey Wise, False Confessions, False Confessions, Norfolk Four
Fox News: Schwarzenegger vetoes justice
Posted: November 6, 2007 10:43 am
In a column published yesterday on FoxNews.com, Radley Balko reports on California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s decision to veto three criminal justice reform bills last month. The bills would have required law enforcement agencies to record interrogations in certain crimes, required jailhouse informant testimony to be corroborated and created a task force to develop guidelines on increasing the accuracy of eyewitness identifications.
Our criminal justice system is in dire need of repair. The spate of DNA exonerations has at least opened many Americans' eyes to the very real possibility that we're sending innocent people to prison—and even to death row.
But the number of cases in which DNA was found at the scene of a crime was properly preserved, and where testing could establish guilt or innocence, is vanishingly small. DNA testing has exposed the flaws in our system, but those flaws don't exist only in cases where DNA was significant—they also exist in the overwhelming majority of cases where it isn't. That's why we need to apply the lessons we've learned from DNA exonerations to other cases.
And it's why Gov. Schwarzenegger's refusal to adopt even modest reforms is so regrettable.Read the full column here. (FoxNews.com, 11/05/07)
Tags: False Confessions, Informants/Snitches, Eyewitness Misidentification
Michigan DA asks for investigation in wake of wrongful conviction
Posted: November 26, 2007 2:50 pm
In October, Michigan prosecutors dismissed murder charges against Claude McCollum, who had served 18 months in prison for a murder he said he didn’t commit. The charges were dropped after new videotape evidence came to light revealing that McCollum wasn’t near the crime scene at the time of the 2005 murder. McCollum’s attorneys also said that another man confessed to the murder.
In the wake of McCollum’s release, Ingham County District Attorney Stuart Dunnings III has asked the state attorney general’s office to investigate the convictions. McCollum’s defense attorneys have alleged that the videotape evidence was known to police before McCollum’s conviction but never handed over the defense attorneys.
“This thing was bad from the beginning,” said his attorney Hugh Clarke Jr. “It’s going to cause people to take a look, a real good look. People should do that. They have to search themselves.”Prosecutors told the jury at McCollum’s trial that he had confessed to the murder, because he made statements during a police interrogation about the possibility of killing the victim while sleepwalking. McCollum denied that he had confessed to the crime. Read an excerpt of the interrogation here.
Read the full story here. (Battle Creek Enquirer, 11/24/07)
False confessions or admissions have contributed to more than 25% of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing. Many false confessions can be prevented by videotaping of custodial interrogations. Read more here.
Tags: False Confessions
Michigan columnist: When will we learn about false confessions?
Posted: November 28, 2007 5:02 pm
A column in today’s Lansing State Journal calls for Michigan lawmakers to prevent future false confessions and wrongful convictions in the state by requiring that police videotape custodial interrogations. In the wake of the recent release of Claude McCollum in Lansing, community members are calling for critical reforms proven to prevent wrongful convictions.
McCollum told investigators that he could have possibly committed a murder while sleepwalking, and that evidence led to his conviction for murder. New evidence has now proven his innocence and he was released after serving nearly two years in prison.
The column also discusses the case of Eddie Joe Lloyd, an Innocence Project client who served 17 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. Lloyd allegedly confessed to the crime, but was mentally unstable at the time.
When will we learn that innocent persons do "confess" to crimes they did not commit?
When will we take a serious look at the social science that explains why individuals do falsely confess or plead guilty to crime?
When will we learn that an incriminating statement does not equal factual guilt?
When will we learn that changes to police interrogation practices are needed?
False confessions lead to the prosecution of the wrong person. The real perpetrator may continue to commit crime. It is time to stand up for Eddie Joe Lloyd, Michelle Jackson, Ron Williamson, Dennis Fritz, Debbie Carter, Ken Wyniemko and others who have been harmed by unreliable, incriminating statements. It is time for Michigan to pass legislation requiring that police interrogations of criminal suspects be videotaped.Read the full column here. (Lansing State Journal, 11/ 28/07)
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Oakland police criticized for recording only parts of interrogations
Posted: December 18, 2007 4:49 pm
An Oakland Tribune investigation published today has found that the Oakland, Calif., Police Department is alone in the Bay Area in its policy of tape recording only portions of interviews with suspects and witnesses. Two recent high-profile murder cases – including the murder of an Oakland Post editor – have bought Oakland Police practices under scrutiny, but police officials defended the practice, saying it allows them to better win the trust of the suspect or witness being interviewed.
Other local law enforcement agencies, which almost always tape entire interviews, disagree. The San Francisco Police Department records entire interrogations and has found that the practice has helped solve crimes.
"Recording is the best evidence, and we encourage it if at all possible," said homicide Lt. John Murphy with the San Francisco Police Department, which investigates an average of 85 homicides a year.California does not have a state law requiring that law enforcement agencies record custodial interrogation. Does your state have a law? View our interactive map to find out.
Read the full story here. (Oakland Tribune, 12/18/07)
Read about the need for mandatory recording of interrogations.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
NC man, held without trial for 14 years, is finally released
Posted: December 21, 2007 1:20 pm
Floyd Brown, a North Carolina man with mental disabilities, spent 14 years in North Carolina jails and mental facilities awaiting trial on a murder that he always said he didn’t commit. He was never tried because a judge had ruled he was not competent to stand trial. DNA testing couldn’t be conducted in Brown’s case because critical evidence was lost by the Anson County (NC) Sheriff’s Office. And a press investigation of the crime suggests Brown’s confession was false and also turned up evidence of a possible alternate suspect in the murder. The detectives involved in interrogating Brown were later convicted on federal charges of accepting bribes from people in exchange for not filing charges.
A North Carolina judge dismissed the charges against Brown in October and ordered him released from Dorothea Dix Mental Hospital, but he was finally released on Wednesday after his attorneys found placement for him in a group home.
Read the full story here. (Charlotte Observer, 12/20/2007)
Learn more in the Observer’s investigative archive on the case.
Tags: False Confessions
New York man granted new trial in murder case
Posted: December 21, 2007 1:40 pm
A New York appeals court today threw out the conviction of a Long Island man who has spent 17 years in prison for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Marty Tankleff was convicted 17 years ago of killing his parents in the Belle Terre, NY, home he shared with them. Tankleff was 17 years old at the time of the crime and says he woke up one morning to find his parents murdered. After hours of questioning, Tankleff allegedly confessed to the murder, saying he may have “blacked out” or “been possessed.” He quickly recanted the alleged confession, but it was used against him at his trial. He was convicted by a jury and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison.
"It is abhorrent to our sense of justice and fair play to countenance the possibility that someone innocent of a crime may be incarcerated or otherwise punished for a crime which he or she did not commit," read the decision from Appellate Division of State Supreme Court in Brooklyn, in part.
The ruling, by the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court in Brooklyn, was not only a vindication for Mr. Tankleff, but it also raised questions about police and prosecutorial methods in Suffolk County. It was not immediately clear when Mr. Tankleff, 17 at the time of the murders and now 36, would be released. It also was not clear whether a new trial would be held.More background on the case:
Read the full story here. (New York Times, 12/21/07)
Visit Marty Tankleff’s website for a case summary, legal documents and more.
Download the Innocence Project’s Amicus Curiae brief before the New York Supreme Court.
Listen to Innocence Project Staff Attorney Olga Akselrod and advocates for Tankleff in an appearance on NPR earlier this year.
Tags: False Confessions, Marty Tankleff
New York man will not be retried
Posted: January 2, 2008 5:20 pm
Marty Tankleff, who served 17 years in New York prison after being wrongfully convicted of killing his parents, will not be retried in the case, the Suffolk County District Attorney announced today. Tankleff, who has consistently maintained his innocence in the case, was released last week on bond after a panel of appellate judges tossed his conviction due to new evidence in the case.
"It is no longer possible to reasonably assert that the case ... would be successful," Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota said.Since his release last week, Tankleff, 36, has spent time with relatives and yesterday visited the graves of his parents.
He said his office will formally drop the indictment against Martin Tankleff in the 1988 deaths of Arlene and Seymour Tankleff at a scheduled Jan. 18 court conference in Riverhead.
Read the full story here. (New York Times, 01/02/08)
Read more here.
Tags: False Confessions, Marty Tankleff
Tomorrow in NY: Exonerees and experts call for recording of interrogations
Posted: April 10, 2008 10:50 am
False confessions and admissions are a major cause of wrongful conviction, and both study and practice have shown us again and again that there’s a way to stop this injustice. Electronic recording of interrogations prevents false confessions and also helps law enforcement agencies – as an investigative aid and a training tool. At a public forum tomorrow on Long Island, New York state lawmakers will consider proposals to make electronic recording of interrogations standard practice in the state.
Members of the New York State Senate Democratic Task Force on Criminal Justice Reform will hear testimony from Jeffrey Deskovic, who spent over 15 years in prison after he falsely confessed to a murder he didn’t commit. Also testifying on the merits of this legislation to prevent wrongful convictions are Innocence Project Co-Director Barry Scheck, Attorney Thomas Sullivan (who has studied and published on this topic), and representatives of Martin Tankleff, whose conviction was overturned this year after he spent 17 years in prison for murders he didn’t commit. State Sen. Eric Schneiderman chairs the task force.
Read more about the public hearing here.
Members of the public or media planning to attend can email us for more information.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Another false confession uncovered, and a wrongful conviction avoided
Posted: June 17, 2008 4:40 pm
A Tennessee man who allegedly confessed last year to a 1994 murder could not possibly have committed the crime because he was in a mental institution at the time, new court documents show. Police said Ronald E. Greene, who has a history of mental illness, confessed to a murder while undergoing a court-ordered evaluation, but his defense lawyer filed documents last week proving that the confession was false.
"I realize a motion to dismiss is an unusual move at this juncture, but given the obvious strength of the alibi Mr. Greene has, I found it important to get this information in front of the court as quickly as possible," Greene’s attorney Steve Sams said.False confessions or admissions have contributed to 25 percent of the 218 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing, and certain mental illnesses and limitations have been shown to make a suspect more likely to confess to something he or she didn’t do. Read more about false confessions and wrongful convictions here.
Read the full story here. (Knoxville News, 06/13/08)
Tags: False Confessions
Another false confession revealed
Posted: July 1, 2008 3:48 pm
Robert Gonzales, 22, spent more than two years in a New Mexico jail awaiting trial for a murder he didn’t commit before DNA testing led authorities to the actual perpetrator of the crime. Gonzales, who has a history of mental illness, allegedly confessed to his involvement in the rape and murder of an 11-year-old girl in 2005, and a grand jury decided that the confession was enough evidence to hold him for trial. But new DNA testing indicates that Israel Diaz, in custody for another crime, actually committed this murder and rape. Gonzales’ attorney, Jeff Buckels, said he confessed because he wanted to please the officers interrogating him.
"For Robert, it basically was a matter of finding out 'What is it that these police officers want me to say,?'" said Buckels. " When he found out, he said it."Read more on this case on the Center on Wrongful Convictions’ blog.
Read the full story here. (KOAT Albuquerque, 06/27/08)
False confessions or admissions have played a part in more than 25 percent of the 218 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing to date, and have been involved in a countless number of cases like Gonzales’, in which a defendant is arrested based on a confession or admission, then released when other evidence reveals the truth.
The Innocence Project recommends electronic recording of police interrogations to prevent false confessions. Read more on this critical reform here.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
A false confession in Missouri?
Posted: July 21, 2008 12:25 am
A leading false confession expert testified Friday at a Missouri hearing that Chuck Erickson may have made false statements to police implicating his classmate Ryan Ferguson in a murder he didn’t commit.
Richard Leo, a professor at the University of San Francisco, said improper interrogation tactics used by Columbia, Missouri, police officers in their interview with Erickson could have led him to give a false admission and to implicate his innocent classmate, Ferguson. They interrogated him after he had read a newspaper article about the crime and allegedly had a dream about possibly killing the victim.
“The goal of the police should be to get the truth, not to get a confession,” Leo said. “It has the hallmarks of a persuaded false confession.”
Ferguson was convicted by a jury in 2005 of committing the 2001 murder and sentenced to 40 years in prison. Erickson testified against Ferguson and pled guilty to murder. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
Watch a videotape of Erickson’s interrogation on YouTube.
Read more about this case in the Columbia Missourian.
Learn more about this case on CBS News’ ’48 Hours’ website.
Buy Richard Leo’s new book “Police Interrogation and American Justice” on Amazon.com. (A portion of proceeds will benefit the Innocence Project if you use this link)
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Tankleff, finally free of charges, calls for reforms
Posted: July 25, 2008 12:17 pm
Marty Tankleff was released from a New York prison in December, but it took until this week for charges against him to be officially dropped. On his second day as an officially free man, he told to a group of attorneys on Long Island yesterday about the dangers of false confessions and critical reforms to prevent them.
"For 20 years, in my case, there have been two competing versions of what took place in the interrogation room," Tankleff told the audience, going on to speak about the importance of videotaping complete interrogations so juries can see the facts for themselves.
Tankleff, who woke up one morning in 1988 in the Long Island home he shared with his parents to find his mother dead and his father unconscious, allegedly told police he may have “blacked out” and committed the crimes. His father later died in the hospital, and Tankleff, 17, was convicted of the murdersand sentenced to 50 years to life in prison. He served 17 years before his release in December.
Watch video from yesterday’s speech at Newsday.com.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions, Marty Tankleff
Virginia DNA tests point to real perpetrator and could clear a wrongful conviction
Posted: August 13, 2008 1:10 pm
New DNA tests could posthumously exonerate Curtis Jasper Moore, who was convicted in 1978 of killing and raping an 88-year-old Virginia woman three years earlier. Moore, who suffered from schizophrenia, was committed to a state mental hospital for three years, until he was released when his conviction was overturned on appeal due to law enforcement officers’ failure to properly advise Moore of his rights before interrogating him. Prosecutors never retried him. Moore died of natural causes four years ago.
New DNA tests, conducted as part of a thorough review of hundreds of Virginia cases in which DNA testing could overturn wrongful convictions, have pointed to the involvement of another man, Thomas Pope, Jr., who has now been arrested and charged with rape and murder in connection with the case.
Moore was arrested shortly after the crime in 1975 after police received complaints about his “suspicious behavior.” Three police officers questioned Moore for some time, promising that he could go home if he told them what had happened at the murder scene. Police brought Moore to the victim’s home, and he allegedly made statements incriminating himself in the crime. A federal court reviewed the record and determined that Moore’s conviction, based on illegally-obtained admissions of guilt, must be vacated.
A Virginia spokesperson said the state is reinvestigating the crime to determine if Moore may have had a role.
Read more:
Richmond Times-Dispatch: New DNA test leads to arrest in ’75 rape, slaying (8/12/08)
Richmond Times-Dispatch: Man not cleared despite DNA test (8/13/08)
The ongoing review of hundreds of DNA cases in Virginia was ordered over two years ago by then-Gov. Mark Warner. The process has its roots in the 2002 exoneration of Innocence Project client Marvin Anderson. After officials declared that evidence in Anderson’s case had been destroyed, samples of evidence were found preserved in the notebook of a lab technician, along with samples from hundreds of other cases. After DNA testing on this evidence led to the exonerations of Anderson and two other men (Julius Earl Ruffin in 2003 and Arthur Lee Whitfield in 2004), the Innocence Project urged officials to conduct a broader review of cases. Gov. Warner ordered a review of a 10 percent sample of the 300-plus cases in which the technician had saved evidence. Two more men (Phillip Thurman and Willie Davidson) were proven innocent by this review and Gov. Warner ordered a systematic review of all convictions with biological evidence.
The review came under fire last year for not moving quickly enough because testing had not been completed on even 30 cases. The Washington Post now reports that lab workers have gone through 534,000 case files and sent thousands of relevant samples for testing.
Last week, Virginia officials announced that they would notify defendants by certified mail if biological material was found in their file, rather than using pro bono attorneys to track down and contact the defendants.
Tags: Virginia, False Confessions
The case for recording interrogations
Posted: August 27, 2008 2:25 pm
In a forthcoming article in the California Law Review entitled “Mourning Miranda,” professor Charles D. Weisselberg argues that the safeguards guaranteed by the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Miranda v. Arizona decision (which requires law enforcement officers to read a suspect his or her rights before detaining them) have become ineffective and even detrimental to the criminal justice system. Law enforcement officers, Weisselberg writes, have learned how to skirt Miranda and interrogate a suspect without a lawyer present.
Blogger Grits for Breakfast wrote yesterday about Weisselberg’s findings, saying that recording interrogations would be a step toward more just police procedures. About 25% of the 220 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing involved a false confession or admission, and very few of these were recorded.
From the Tuscaloosa news (via Grits):Download Weisselberg’s paper here, and read the Grits for Breakfast post (and other commentary on police interrogation and electronic recording) here.The F.B.I., in documents defending its policy [not to require taped interrogations], argued that taping was not always possible, particularly when agents were on the road, and that it was not always appropriate. Psychological tricks like misleading or lying to a suspect in questioning or pretending to show the suspect sympathy might also offend a jury, the agency said.That's not an acceptable reason to oppose taped interrogations, particularly in circumstances where a suspect has been isolated and read their Miranda rights. Just like cockroaches scatter when you turn on a light, my guess is that recording and thus exposing these tactics to scrutiny by judges and juries would, in the long run, result in their defenestration. At a minimum, recording would allow more comprehensive post-investigative analysis by researchers to identify unproductive approaches and best practices. Until then, for the foreseeable future, coercive tactics will remain a routine part of American police interrogation.
“Perfectly lawful and acceptable interviewing techniques do not always come across in recorded fashion to lay persons as proper means of obtaining information from defendants,” said one of the once-secret internal Justice Department communications made public as part of the investigation into the dismissals of the United States attorneys.
Watch an interview with exoneree Chris Ochoa, who explains how police pressure led him to confess to a crime he didn’t commit.
Tags: Christopher Ochoa, False Confessions, False Confessions
Today on Oprah: Marty Tankleff discusses false confessions
Posted: October 20, 2008 11:50 am
Marty Tankleff served 17 years in a New York prison for the murder of his parents before new evidence proved his innocence. He was a teenager when he woke up to find his mother dead and his father unconscious in the family’s Long Island home. His father would die weeks later in a hospital, and officers immediately treated Tankleff as a suspect. During an intense interrogation, Tankleff told officers he may have “blacked out” and committed the crime. He was convicted and sentenced to 50 years to life.
Today he will tell his story as a guest on the Oprah Winfrey Show, and discuss reforms that could prevent false confessions and admissions like his. Visit Oprah’s website for local listings and more information.
Read more about the recording of interrogations here.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
DC Police Officer Makes Case for Recording Interrogations
Posted: October 24, 2008 5:35 pm
In an op-ed today in the Los Angeles Times, Washington, D.C., police detective Jim Trainum explains why he believes all law enforcement agencies should videotape interrogations.
I've been a police officer for 25 years, and I never understood why someone would admit to a crime he or she didn't commit. Until I secured a false confession in a murder case.Trainum goes on to write that this case was a turning point for him. State lawmakers, he says, should begin to require the recording of interrogations to prevent false confessions and wrongful convictions. While more than 500 jurisdictions currently record interrogations, only 10 states mandate it. “The only police officers I've met who don't embrace recording interrogations are those who have never done it,” Trainum writes.
I stepped into the interrogation room believing that we had evidence linking the suspect to the murder of a 34-year-old federal employee in Washington. I used standard, approved interrogation techniques -- no screaming or threats, no physical abuse, no 12-hour sessions without food or water. Many hours later, I left with a solid confession.
Then we discovered that the suspect had an ironclad alibi. We subpoenaed sign-in/sign-out logs from the homeless shelter where she lived, and the records proved that she could not have committed the crime… Even though it wasn't our standard operating procedure in the mid-1990s, when the crime occurred, we had videotaped the interrogation in its entirety. Reviewing the tapes years later, I saw that we had fallen into a classic trap. We ignored evidence that our suspect might not have been guilty, and during the interrogation we inadvertently fed her details of the crime that she repeated back to us in her confession.
Read the full Op-Ed here. (LA Times 10/24/08)
Does your state require the recording of interrogations? Find out here.
Tags: False Confessions
FBI Agents Call for Justice in Virginia Case
Posted: November 12, 2008 4:10 pm
A group of more than two dozen retired FBI agents called on Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine this week to pardon four men who say they were wrongfully convicted of a murder in Norfolk in 1997. The men, known as the “Norfolk Four” say they falsely confessed to involvement in the rape and murder of a 19-year-old woman. Three of them are still behind bars today, thr fourth was released after serving his full sentence but he also seeks a pardon to clear his name. Another fifth man, whose DNA matches evidence from the crime scene, has since confessed to committing the crime alone. He is also in prison for the crime.
The group of FBI agents sent a letter to Kaine in July, but they haven’t received a reply. They held a press conference on Monday to announce their position. Jay Cochran, Jr, a 29-year FBI veteran and former commissioner of the Virginia State Police, is a leader of the group.
"They stand falsely convicted and imprisoned for a crime they did not commit," Cochran said. "Our members are not bleeding hearts. We do not have an interest in the outcome. Our only interest is in serving the interests of justice." …Delacey Skinner, a Kaine spokeswoman, said Monday that the governor is "committed to giving the case thorough and thoughtful consideration" but has made no decision and has not established a deadline for doing so. Lawyers for three of the Norfolk Four, working for free on behalf of the Virginia Innocence Project, first filed clemency petitions … when Mark Warner (D) was governor.Read more:
Read the full story here. (Washington Post, 11/11/08)
The Disturbing Case of the Norfolk Four (Time Magazine, 11/11/08)
Visit the Norfolk Four website for a complete background on the case.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
A Mohammad Ali Fight and a Wrongful Conviction
Posted: November 20, 2008 3:40 pm
Students and attorneys at the Medill Innocence Project and the Center on Wrongful Convictions, both affiliated with Northwestern University, have uncovered evidence that could uncover a 1981 wrongful murder conviction.
Anthony McKinney was convicted of shooting a security guard on Sept. 15, 1978, the night Mohammad Ali defeated Leon Spinks for the heavyweight championship. McKinney was 18 at the time, and says he signed a false confession after police beat him with pipes.
Two witnesses, ages 15 and 18, allegedly told police they had seen McKinney kill the victim, shortly after the 10th round of the Ali fight. But the victim was dead, and the police had been called, before the fight reached the 9th round. Both witnesses have also said that police coerced them to testify against McKinney. Attorneys at McKinney’s trial knew about evidence pointing to other perpetrators, but the jury never heard it.
The journalism students were working on McKinney's case under the direction of David Protess, director of the Medill School of Journalism Innocence Project.
"Anthony's plight is about the most tragic I've ever seen," Protess said. "He not only has been locked up for almost two-thirds of his life for a crime he did not commit, but the actual perpetrators were known right from the start."Read more about the case at the Medill Innocence Project website.
Read the full story here. (Chicago Sun-Times, 11/20/08)
Tags: Illinois, False Confessions, False Confessions
A Wrongful Conviction is Overturned in South Korea
Posted: December 1, 2008 6:00 pm
Jeong Won-seop was finally cleared on Friday at age 73 after serving 15 years in a South Korean prison for a rape and murder he has always said he didn’t commit. Friday’s hearing was the culmination of a decade-long legal battle to show that he falsely confessed after being tortured by police.
Sentenced to life for allegedly raping a killing a police chief’s nine-year-old daughter, Jeong served 15 years in prison before he was released on parole in 1987. He filed numerous appeals before Korea’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission reopened his case as a potential human rights violation.
"It is not only a victory for me, but also a victory for Korean democracy," Jeong said after hearing the ruling (on Friday).
False confessions and the other causes of wrongful convictions are factors in every nation on Earth, and the movement to overturn wrongful convictions is gaining momentum around the world. The Innocence Network includes groups from five counties, and governments in countless other countries are working to embrace modern forensic science and reforms to prevent wrongful convictions.
Tags: False Confessions
Three years later: Restivo, Halstead and Kogut
Posted: January 2, 2009 6:00 pm
In 1986, three New York men were arrested and convicted in New York on charges of abduction, rape and murder based on a false convention and faulty scientific testimony at trial. It wasn’t until 2005, 17 years after they were first convicted, that John Restivo, Dennis Halstead and John Kogut were rightfully exonerated.
Restivo, Halstead and Kogut were loosely connected before their convictions. Both Halstead and Restivo had been interrogated by police as part of their investigation and Restivo would sometimes hire Kogut to help with his family’s moving business. However, after the police gave Kogut a polygraph exam and subsequently interrogated him for 12 hours, all the while telling him that he, Restivo and Halstead were responsible for the victim’s rape and death, that Kogut signed a confession provided to him and written by a police officer. By the time Kogut signed the confession, he had, given five other versions of the crime. In this sixth account of events, Restivo, Kogut, and Halstead were in Restivo’s van when they came across the 16-year-old girl, who they would later supposedly rape and strangle near a local cemetery.
Because of Kogut’s confession, Restivo’s van was searched and police would soon find two hairs that were deemed microscopically similar to those of the victim. The prosecution relied heavily on testimony from hair comparison expert Dr. Peter DeForest, who testified that the hairs could not have been deposited in the vehicle while she was alive. According to Dr. DeForest, the hairs found in Restivo’s van displayed “advanced banding,” a condition caused by bacteria eating away at the interior of the hair shaft.
After his confession, Kogut was tried separately in March 1986. Restivo and Halstead were tried together in November 1986 on the grounds that the two hairs corroborated Kogut’s confession. All three were convicted of rape and murder.
It wasn’t until 2003 that attorneys for the three men obtained property records from the police department that would eventually lead to the discovery of an intact vaginal swab from the original rape kit that had never been tested. The Innocence Project represented Restivo and worked closely with attorneys for Halstead and Kogut. Test results of the swab excluded all three men as perpetrators. In addition, after years of research of the hair bonding technology, the state’s expert witness at the time of the original convictions provided the defense with an affidavit declaring that the hairs could not have been shed by the victim during the time that she would have allegedly been in the van.
In light of these revelations, John Restivo, Dennis Halstead and John Kogut had their convictions vacated in June 2003. Prosecutors retried Kogut two years later, and he was found not guilty on December. 21, 2005. Little more than a week later, the Nassau County District Attorney’s office, having declared that it could not prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, dismissed all charges against Dennis Halstead and John Restivo on December. 29, 2005.
Other Exoneree Anniversaries Last Week
Leonard McSherry, California (Served 13 Years, Exonerated, 2001)
Tags: New York, Dennis Halstead, John Kogut, John Restivo, False Confessions
Still Waiting in Maryland
Posted: January 13, 2009 2:21 pm
Attorneys for a Maryland man argued before the state’s highest court recently that their client deserves a new trial based on DNA evidence of his innocence in a 1987 murder. James Thompson, 49, has been in Maryland prison for two decades for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Prosecutors at his trial said he confessed that he and his co-defendant, James Owens, committed the crime. Thompson, however, says the confession was coerced.
Owens was released in October after DNA test results showed that semen on the victim’s body came from another man – excluding Owens or Thompson.
"Thompson's the case of the phantom accomplice," his attorney, George Burns, argued in front of the Maryland Court of Appeals. "The state decides, well, Mr. Owens is not the accomplice. There's some other accomplice with Mr. Thompson."Read about Owens’ release here.
… Suzanne Drouet, an attorney with Maryland's Innocence Project, said Thompson gave a "false confession" after "trickery" from police and prosecutors.
Read the full story here. (Baltimore Examiner, 1/13/09)
Tags: Maryland, False Confessions
An End to Plea Bargains
Posted: January 13, 2009 2:27 pm
Of the 227 wrongful convictions overturned in the United States by DNA testing, 12 defendants pled guilty to crimes they didn’t commit. Almost always, they pled guilty to avoid the threat of longer sentences – or in some cases the death penalty. False confessions and admissions of guilt are a leading cause of wrongful convictions, and one Nebraska prosecutor recently said the possibility of injustice was one reason he would stop accepting plea bargains altogether starting February 1.
Randall Ritnour, the district attorney for Gage County, Nebraska, saw first-hand in recent months how plea bargaining can lead to injustice. His county is the home of the “Beatrice Six” case, in which six defendants were cleared of murder last year by DNA testing. Five of them had pled guilty and testified against a sixth, Joseph White. Although Ritnour wasn’t the prosecutor in 1985 when the six were convicted, he said presiding over the defendants’ exonerations has opened his eyes to the possibility of injustice.
White’s co-defendants have said they testified against him to avoid the possibility of execution or longer sentences. White has been fully exonerated; Nebraska officials will meet on January 26 to consider pardon applications from his five co-defendants.
"You can't help but have something like that influence your thinking to some extent," Ritnour told The World-Herald Friday. "Hopefully, this would limit the potential for that kind of mistake to happen again. Our point is to do the right thing, and the right thing is to charge people with the crime they actually committed, not to bounce around making deals."
Read the full story here. (Omaha World Herald, 01/03/09)Even if prosecutors across the country wanted to follow Ritnour’s course, however, the American court system couldn’t handle the spike in jury trials without drastic increases in funding. More than 90 percent of felony convictions in state courts across the U.S. are obtained by guilty plea. As Scott Greenfield writes on Simple Justice:
Plea bargaining, for all its many flaws and horribly coercive nature, has a purpose. Our legal system lacks the facilities and finances to try most cases, and depends on the vast majority of cases to "go away" via a plea to allow it to work. While this may not necessarily be desirable, it is a reality that government relies upon in budgeting and building. Change the equation by forcing the vast majority of cases to trial and the system can't withstand the burden.
Tags: Joseph White, False Confessions
False Confessions and the Integrity Unit
Posted: January 14, 2009 3:29 pm
At a meeting yesterday of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ Criminal Justice Integrity Unit, Professor Richard Leo testified about how false confessions happen. Scott Henson recaps Leo’s testimony on his blog Grits for Breakfast and compares the common causes of false confessions with the facts in the ongoing “Yogurt Shop” case in Austin.
Leo insisted that police interrogation tactics are the primary cause of false confessions, but thinks that a secondary cause has to do with individual personality types. At risk individuals include juveniles, the mentally retarded, the mentally ill, people who are highly suggestible or compliant, or who have poor memory or high anxiety.We wrote about the “Yogurt Shop” case in this space last week, when the two incarcerated defendants in the case were in court for a hearing on DNA test results excluding them on evidence from the crime scene. Robert Springsteen and Michael Scott were convicted of killing four teenage girls in an Austin yogurt shop 17 years ago, and allegedly made admissions of guilt. They say their admissions were coerced by police officers. A final DNA test report is expected in the case this week.
Most false confessors, he said, are "mentally normal" individuals, but those in a risk group are more likely to falsely confess.
There are three types of false confessors, said Leo: Voluntary, Compliant, and Persuaded. To use a current, local example, all three of these false confession types were in play in Austin's Yogurt Shop murders.
Read Henson’s full post here. (Grits for Breakfast, 01/13/09)
Tags: Innocence Commissions, False Confessions, False Confessions
Do False Confessions Contribute to Misidentifications?
Posted: January 29, 2009 4:21 pm
A new study has found a link between false confessions and the confidence in incorrect identifications made by eyewitnesses. The study, conducted by psychologists at Iowa State University and John Jay College and published in the January issue of Psychological Science, found that the eyewitnesses became more confident in their identification when they learned that someone confessed to the crime.
The study was conducted by staging a fake crime in front of students in a university laboratory:
At some point, a person walked in, picked up a laptop from the desk, and walked out of the room. A few minutes later, the research assistant entered the room and announced, with obvious distress, that her laptop was missing. The group of students were the eyewitnesses and were asked to help solve the crime. The students were first asked to identify the thief from a line-up (however, unbeknownst to them, the actual thief was not in the lineup) and rate the confidence of their answers. The students returned two days later, to continue helping with the investigation. When they returned, they were told either that all of the suspects denied involvement or that a specific suspect confessed to the crime. The students were then to reconsider their original identification and rate how confident they were.
The vast majority of study volunteers identified an innocent man as the criminal, and many did so with confidence. That's disturbing in itself, but it gets worse. While few were persuaded by claims of innocence - that happens all the time - a disturbing number changed their mind when a suspect confessed. An astonishing 60 percent who had fingered one suspect flip-flopped when a different man confessed. Even those who had been very sure of their original identification experienced a steep drop in confidence. When asked to explain their change of heart, most said they had been mistaken earlier, that their memories had fooled them.
Read more here. (Science Daily, 01/29/2009)
Tags: False Confessions, Eyewitness Identification, False Confessions, Eyewitness Misidentification
How False Confessions Can Sway a Jury
Posted: February 4, 2009 5:25 pm
Lee Dye writes on ABC News today about the issue of false confessions and two recent laboratory studies of false confessions and the effect of misinformation on witnesses.
The research adds to a growing body of scientific literature revealing that we often don’t see what we think we’ve seen, and even credible witnesses are vulnerable to false testimony and harsh interrogations. It is particularly timely with the approaching trials of suspected terrorists now housed in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, because there will likely be many confessions in connection with those cases, and some of them will almost certainly be false.Read more about false confessions and wrongful convictions here.
Read the full article here. (ABC News, 02/04/09)
Tags: False Confessions
Charges Dropped in Illinois and a Confession is Questioned in Michigan
Posted: July 7, 2009 4:49 pm
Two Chicago men are expected to be freed today after prosecutors announced that they did not have sufficient evidence to retry them. Ronald Kitchen, 50, and Marvin Reeves, 43, have served more than two decades in prison for give murders they say they didn’t commit.
Kitchen supposedly confessed to committing the crime after hours of interrogations and alleged beatings by Chicago detectives including Jon Burge, who is now facing federal charges for his role in several wrongful convictions. Based on the alleged confession and the testimony of a jailhouse informant, Kitchen was sentenced to death and Reeves to life. Kitchen’s death sentence would later be commuted to life.
The Center on Wrongful Convictions sought the men’s freedom based on evidence of their innocence, and presiding judge Paul Biebel ordered all charges against the men dismissed today.
“This is wonderful day I’ve been praying for this day for 20 years,” Reeves’ mother, Pollyanna Reeves, said after the hearing this morning.Meanwhile in Michigan, a judge is considering whether to allow false confession expert Richard Leo to testify at the trial of Jerome Kowalski, who says he falsely confessed to killing his brother and sister-in-law in 2008.
Read the full story here. (Chicago Sun-Times, 07/07/09)
"Mr. Kowalski comes to believe he committed a crime and desperately searches for details ... despite the fact (of) having no memory to do so," testified Richard Leo, associate professor of law at the University of San Francisco.While police say the defendant confessed, they also acknowledge there are some discrepancies in the defendant's story and the crime scene.The Innocence Project urges state legislatures and individual police departments to require the recording of custodial interrogations to prevent false confessions. Not only do the recordings provide an accurate record of an interrogation for a judge and jury, they also serve as investigative and training tools for law enforcement officers. Read more here.
Read the full story here. (Livingston Daily, 07/07/2009)
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Judge Bars False Confession Experts
Posted: July 27, 2009 6:24 pm
A Michigan judge ruled today that two false confession experts couldn’t testify at the trial of a man accused of killing two people.
Jerome Kowalski is charged with shooting his brother and sister-in-law in 2008, and police videotaped him admitting guilt at the end of an interrogation. Kowalski’s attorney is seeking to present evidence regarding false confessions and the possibility that Kowalski gave a false confession under duress. At a pre-trial hearing the judge heard testimony from University of San Francisco law professor Richard Leo, a false confession expert, and psychologist Jeffrey Wendt.
District Court Judge Theresa Brennan called the testimony of two expert witnesses -- a California law professor and a clinical psychiatrist -- "unreliable and irrelevant."About 25% of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing involved a false confession or admission. Read about how false confessions happen – and the reforms that can help prevent them.
Defense attorney Walter Piszczatowski said he plans to appeal the ruling because his client's Sixth Amendment rights to present a proper defense were denied.
...Although Jerome Kowalski is videotaped as to saying, "I did it," attorneys claimed that there are some discrepancies in his statements and evidence at the crime scene.
Read the full story here. (Detroit News, 07/27/09)
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Florida Man Freed After 25 Years
Posted: September 11, 2009 3:05 am
Anthony Caravella walked out of a Florida courthouse yesterday a free man for the first time in 25 years. New DNA testing of crime scene evidence that suggests someone else committed the murder and rape for which Caravella was convicted in 1983, when he was just 15 years old. He allegedly confessed to committing the crime, but has since said he only made admissions after police beat and coerced him.
A judge ordered Caravella be released while prosecutors consider whether to retry him for the crime. No date has been set for his next hearing, and in the meantime he is required to wear a GPS monitoring bracelet and report to officers daily.
Caravella was joined by his brother and sister at his exoneration, and asked to visit the memorial plaque for his mother, who died while he was in prison.
"I believe the world's big enough to start over,'' Caravella said.
Read the full story here. (Sun Sentinel, 09/10/09)About one-quarter of the 242 people exonerated through DNA testing in U.S. gave a false confession or admission. Read about false confessions and the five other leading causes of wrongful conviction.
Tags: False Confessions
Indiana Court Orders Recording of Interrogations
Posted: September 16, 2009 4:26 pm
The Indiana Supreme Court yesterday issued a new rule requiring law enforcement agencies to record suspect interrogations starting in 2011. The court ruled 3-2 in favor of the change, which will only allow evidence gathered in interrogations to be entered in a courtroom if the interrogation was recorded.
The move makes Indiana the 17th state to require the recording of interrogations in at least some crimes. The court explained the reasoning for the new rule in a statement:
"The rule change is aimed at helping police, prosecutors, courts and juries in their search for truth, justice, and due process of law. A complete audio-video recording, which captures the voice, facial expressions and body language of the suspect and interrogator, can be a valuable tool for law enforcement, courts, and citizens.Several cities and counties in Indiana already record interrogations, but others will have nearly two years to equip their facilities to begin recording. Indiana State Rep. Matt Pierce said the rule change is a positive step for the state’s criminal justice system.
"The electronic recording can provide strong evidence of guilt, confirm police gave suspects all required warnings, and ultimately lead to more guilty pleas," the statement said. "The recordings are also likely to lessen factual disputes in court and reduce the number of motions to suppress evidence."
"It gives a clear, objective record of how the interrogation went," he said. "If the police officer was out of line, you are going to see that. And you will also see when the officer did nothing wrong."The Innocence Project strongly recommends that states require electronic recording of interrogations; as the practice aids law enforcement by creating a clear record of proceedings and can prevent false confessions and admissions that lead to wrongful convictions.
Read the full story here. (Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, 9/16/09)
Read more about the Innocence Project’s stance on recording of interrogations here.
Tags: Indiana, False Confessions, False Confessions
Deadline Extended: Help Us Pay for DNA Testing
Posted: September 24, 2009 2:05 pm
We have been honored and moved by the strong interest in our campaign this month to raise funds for client DNA testing. We deeply appreciate the generosity of hundreds of people from all over the world who have given so far this month. It is thanks to your support that we are able to free the innocent.
We have just $5,470 to go in order to reach our goal of $25,000 and we think we can make it. That’s why we extended the deadline to September 30. For one more week, you can donate here and 100% of your gift will go to support DNA testing.
Spreading the word about this work is critical as well - click here to post this campaign to Facebook and here to post on Twitter.
Thank you from all of us at the Innocence Project.
Tags: False Confessions, Unvalidated/Improper Forensics, Informants/Snitches, Bad Lawyering, Government Misconduct, Eyewitness Misidentification
Charges Dismissed in Texas Case
Posted: October 28, 2009 6:05 pm
A Texas judge today dismissed murder charges against two men who served more than six years in prison for 1991 murders in Austin, Texas, they have long maintained they didn’t commit. Robert Springsteen and Michael Scott were freed on bond in June after DNA testing from the crime scene pointed to someone else. Today, prosecutors asked a judge to drop the charges against them.
The men allegedly made admissions of guilt during police interrogations, but later said they were coerced and threatened. One image from the interrogation room shows an officer holding a gun to Scott’s head.
Springsteen was originally sentenced to death for the crime and spent five years on Texas’ death row before his conviction was overturned in 2006. Scott was sentenced to life in 2003 and served six years behind bars before he was freed in June.
Scott, gripping his wife’s hand, was reserved outside court.Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg said in a statement that dropping charges was her only path of action. “Given that we now have unknown DNA evidence in the case, I believe it would be imprudent and, in fact, unfair to proceed to trial at this time,” she said.
“This has been a long time in coming,” he said. “I’m happy to be here.”
Read the full story here. (Austin American-Statesman, 10/28/09)
Tags: False Confessions
Supreme Court Reviews Miranda Warnings
Posted: December 8, 2009 5:20 pm
The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments yesterday in a case challenging the wording of the Miranda rights that law enforcement officers read to suspects before questioning. Miranda rights, established in a 1966 Supreme Court decision, alert suspects to their rights before and during an interrogation, including the right to remain silent and to speak with an attorney. At issue in Monday’s case was the wording about the right to have an attorney present throughout an interrogation.
These details are critical to preventing wrongful convictions, because 25% of the wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing involved false confessions, many of which were made by suspects who were interrogated by police without a lawyer present.
Monday’s case, Florida v. Powell, involved a Tampa, Florida, case where the defendant, Kevin DeWayne Powell, signed a statement that included the language: “You have the right to talk to a lawyer before answering any of our questions. If you cannot afford to hire a lawyer, one will be appointed for you without cost and before any questioning. You have the right to use any of these rights at any time you want during this interview.''
Powell’s attorneys challenged the Tampa version of the rights, saying they didn’t meet the Miranda standard, which includes a clause informing suspects that an attorney can be with them during questioning, as opposed to before. The Florida Supreme Court agreed, tossing his conviction because the rights were too vague. According to SCOTUSblog, some of the U.S. Supreme Court Justices suggested at oral arguments that narrowing the required rights could be dangerous, while Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia argued that the court had established a standard set of rights that did not include a warning about the continued presence of a lawyer.
Read the full analysis at SCOTUSblog.
Read more coverage of oral arguments in the Miami Herald.
Learn more about the role of false confessions in wrongful convictions.
Tags: False Confessions
Ten Great Moments of the Decade
Posted: December 30, 2009 11:00 am
It goes without saying that DNA testing and the issues surrounding wrongful convictions have left their mark on the criminal justice system in the last ten years. When the decade began, DNA testing had been used in American courtrooms for more than 11 years, but exonerations were still fairly rare.
In the last ten years, 182 people have been exonerated through DNA testing and states have passed dozens of laws addressing the causes of wrongful convictions. Yet there is plenty of work to do — countless innocent people remain behind bars as we pass into 2010 and the threat of wrongful convictions in today’s courtrooms is still very real.
As we look forward to freeing more innocent people than ever in the decade ahead and enacting major reforms to prevent wrongful convictions, here is a list (in chronological order) of 10 seminal moments from the 2000s.
"Actual Innocence” is published (2000)— Written by Innocence Project Co-Directors Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld, with Jim Dwyer, this groundbreaking book examines the emergence of DNA testing and the causes of wrongful conviction it unveiled. During the decade, it became a blueprint for overturning wrongful convictions and reforming the criminal justice system.
Larry Mayes becomes the 100th Exoneree (2001) — Mayes spent 21 years in Indiana prisons before DNA testing obtained by the Innocence Project and the Innocence Project at the Indiana University School of Law proved his innocence and led to his release.
Illinois clears death row (2003) — Pointing clearly to the frightening rate of exonerations in his state (since 1977, 13 death row prisoners had been cleared while 12 had been executed), Gov. George Ryan granted blanket clemency to all 167 people on death row on January 10, 2003.
Congress passes the Justice for All Act (2004) — The JFAA is the most significant legislation to ever address wrongful convictions in the United States. It provides an avenue for federal prisoners to seek DNA testing and funds incentives for states to offer similar testing and to improve DNA testing capacity. It also provides compensation for federal exonerees.
“After Innocence” premieres (2005) — An award-winning documentary chronicling the lives of seven men released from prison after serving years for crimes they didn’t commit, After Innocence brought the issue of wrongful convictions to America’s movie theaters and living rooms. Watch a trailer here.
“The Innocent Man” published (2006) — John Grisham’s first non-fiction book tells the heartbreaking story of a murder in Oklahoma and an unimaginable injustice suffered by two innocent men. The book reached best-seller status around the world and a film version is in development. Following the book’s publication, John Grisham joined the Innocence Project’s board of directors. Several other excellent books also chronicled wrongful conviction cases during the decade, check back tomorrow for the decade's must read list.
Jerry Miller becomes the 200th Exoneree (2007) — It took 12 years to exonerate the first 100 people through DNA testing. It was just seven years later that Innocence Project client Jerry Miller became the 200th person exonerated through DNA. He served 25 years in Illinois prisons before he was cleared.
Dennis Fritz and Peggy Carter Sanders Dance on Stage (2008) — the history of criminal justice in the United States is filled with poignant moments of injustice overturned, from tear-filled homecomings to stirring speeches and courtroom victories. One of the most memorable is the moment Dennis Fritz, who was exonerated after 11 years in prison for an Oklahoma murder he didn’t commit, unexpectedly danced onstage with the mother of the murder victim at a New York event. Watch this touching moment on video here.
50th Member Joins the Innocence Network (2008) — the Innocence Network is an international affiliation of groups working to overturn wrongful convictions. As the field has broadened over the last 10 years, more organizations have been created to meet the growing need for pro bono legal services and advocacy. In 2008, the Innocence Network reached a membership of 50 organizations, today there are 54.
National Academy of Sciences releases forensic report (2009) — Faulty forensic evidence played a role in more than half of the wrongful convictions later overturned through DNA testing. Many forensic techniques used in courtrooms today have never been subjected to rigorous scientific evaluation. In 2009, the National Academy of Sciences released a landmark report calling for the U.S. federal government to create a federal entity to oversee and support the forensic disciplines. Learn more here.
Photo: Innocence Project client Luis Diaz was exonerated in Florida in 2005 after 25 years in prison for a series of crimes he didn't commit. Courtesy South Florida Sun Sentinel.
Tags: Innocence Commissions, Exoneree Compensation, False Confessions, Eyewitness Identification, Forensic Oversight, Evidence Preservation, Access to DNA Testing, False Confessions, Unvalidated/Improper Forensics, Informants/Snitches, Bad Lawyering, Government Misconduct, Eyewitness Misidentification
How to Stop False Confessions
Posted: January 7, 2010 9:45 am
A new article in the journal Law and Human Behavior by John Jay College Professor Saul Kassin and several other false confession experts examines the causes of false confessions and calls for law enforcement agencies videotape all interrogations to prevent injustice.
False confessions were a factor in about one-quarter of all wrongful convictions overturned to date through DNA testing. The contributing factors discussed in the new article are found in many DNA exoneration cases, including juvenile or mentally challenged suspects, intoxicated suspects, long periods of interrogation and infliction of harm by interrogators.
Kassin and the paper's other authors reach a clear conclusion: recording interrogations prevents false confessions. Empirical studies have shown that recording reduces the chance for false confessions. More than 500 jurisdictions across the country already record interrogations, and they have found that the practice also creates a valuable record for police and prosecutors to use at trial. The paper also calls for reforms to interrogation methods in tandem with the introduction of recording.
Download the full paper here.
Gideon, blogging at a public defender, delves deep into the article and offers tips for public defenders dealing with confession cases. Read his post here.
Read about the Innocence Project's recommendations on recording of interrogations.
Watch a video of Texas exoneree Chris Ochoa describing his false confession and eventual exoneration.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Chicago Man Freed After 23 Years
Posted: January 14, 2010 5:16 am
Michael Tillman was freed today in Chicago after serving more than 23 years in prison for a murder he has always maintained he didn’t commit. He was convicted in 1986 of killing a 42-year-old woman in Chicago based mainly on a confession that he says was false and given to stop torture by officers working under the supervision of former Chicago Police Department Commander Jon Burge. Even when another man was convicted of the crime based on physical evidence in 1991, Tillman's conviction was upheld based on the confession.
Prosecutors joined with Tillman’s attorney in asking a judge to overturn his conviction today, citing a “forced confession.” Tillman says police officers waterboarded him with 7-Up, punched him in the face and stomach until he vomited blood and put a plastic bag over his head to force him to admit to a crime he didn't commit. Burge, who was a Chicago police officer from 1970 until he was suspended in 1991, is facing federal charges for his alleged role in wrongful conviction cases.
“It felt good, and I’m glad justice finally prevailed,” Tillman said after being released.
Read the full story here. (Chicago Sun-Times, 01/14/10) and watch video coverage of Tillman’s release (NBC Chicago)False confessions have played a role in 25% of wrongful convictions later overturned through DNA testing. Recording of interrogations can prevent this injustice. Read more here.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
250 Reasons to Act
Posted: February 11, 2010 3:45 pm
It has been a week since Freddie Peacock became the 250th DNA exoneree in New York, and the news is inspiring support for reforms across the country.
The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle ran an editorial yesterday calling for reforms, and funds, to ensure that the next exoneree doesn’t have to wait 33 years for justice.
Peacock’s wrongful conviction was caused in part by an alleged false confession. In the last several years, New York has led the country in the number of wrongful convictions overturned that involved false confessions.
In an op-ed at the Empire Page, Innocence Project Policy Director Stephen Saloom called for reforms in New York to prevent wrongful convictions, especially the recording of interrogations to prevent false confessions. Saloom wrote:
While it’s encouraging that Monroe County and others are starting to record some interrogations, this shouldn’t be a piecemeal approach with a handful of counties implementing parts of a critical reform on their own. For years, bills have languished in Albany that would require interrogations to be recorded statewide. It’s time for the State Legislature and the Governor to take action. If they don’t, the state’s high court should mandate recording of interrogations. We owe at least that much to Freddie Peacock.In another editorial, The Los Angeles Times wrote that shows like “CSI” have fooled us into believing that DNA is tested in every case where it’s needed. That’s not true -- and in fact evidence is often lost or destroyed in cases as old as Peacock’s by the time courts order action.
Saving DNA evidence is not simply a matter of compassion for the wrongfully incarcerated. It should also be a top priority for those who want to see wrongdoers punished. Because for every Frederick Peacock who went to jail for a crime he did not commit, a perpetrator went free.Innocence Project supporters have sent hundreds of letters to newspaper editors around the country, and the letters have begun to appear in print, helping to spread the word about the issue of wrongful convictions. A letter from Courtney Cotton ran yesterday in the Daily Nonpareil in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and a letter from Scott Tudehope ran in the Tracy (CA) Press.
Send your own letter today.
Tags: Freddie Peacock, False Confessions, False Confessions
What Do Jurors Know About False Confessions?
Posted: May 13, 2010 5:46 pm
Jurors believed that they would be able to differentiate a true confession from a false confession by watching a videotape, but were less confident about making such a differentiation from an audio recording. A large majority of the sample reported that it would be helpful to hear expert testimony about interrogation techniques and reasons why a defendant might falsely confess to a crime.
Non-white jury candidates had much less confidence in law enforcement than white jury candidates and they also gave substantially larger estimates of false confession rates.
Read an excerpt of the article here.
Learn about false confessions and mandatory recording of interrogations here.
Tags: False Confessions
Former Chicago Police Commander Convicted in Torture Case
Posted: June 29, 2010 4:40 pm
The statute of limitations on the claims of torture had already expired, but in 2008, federal prosecutors indicted Burge because he had allegedly lied about the brutal misconduct. The Chicago Tribune reports:
The torture scandal sent innocent men to prison, tarnished the reputations of the Police Department and the Cook County state's attorney's office and led to blanket commutations that emptied the state's death row as well as repeated lawsuits that drained millions in taxpayer dollars from the city.
Burge faces up to 45 years in prison under the federal criminal statutes, but his attorneys will seek probation.
Read the full story here.
False confession has been a factor in 25% of wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing to date, and coercion by police played a role in many of these cases. Illinois is now one of 17 states that require police departments to record interrogations, at least in some investigations. Learn more about reforms to prevent false confessions here.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
"An Overdependence on Confessions"
Posted: July 12, 2010 3:33 pm
About 25 percent of wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing have involved false confessions or admissions. Rob Warden, the Executive Director of Northwestern University’s Center on Wrongful Convictions, told the Tribune that it’s often hard for juries to grasp why someone would confess to a crime they didn’t commit.
"You can't imagine you'd ever confess to something you didn't do," said Warden. "But at some point people simply lose their will to resist. That's the danger of prolonged interrogation."
Read more about false confessions and wrongful convictions.
Tags: False Confessions
After Five Years in Jail, Illinois Man Is Freed
Posted: August 5, 2010 3:50 pm
While 258 people have been exonerated through post-conviction DNA testing, countless others have spent months or years in prison while facing charges before they are freed. In a 1995 study of 10,000 criminal cases by the by the U.S. National Institute of Justice, suspects were excluded 25 percent of the time after DNA tests came back. While wrongful convictions are avoided in these cases, the contact with the criminal justice system and time spent behind bars is incredibly damaging to the life of an innocent individual.
The Chicago Tribune recently examined the cases of Hobbs and another Illinois man, Kevin Fox, who spent eight months in jail awaiting trial for the murder of his daughter before DNA tests pointed to his innocence. Unlike Fox’s case, however, Hobbs remained in prison for four years after the results came back.
False confessions play a role in more than 25 percent of wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing. Read more about the Innocence Project recommendations to record all custodial interrogations.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions, Death Penalty
Frontline: False Confessions and the Norfolk Four
Posted: November 5, 2010 3:10 pm
In the Norfolk Four case, four U.S. Navy sailors served between eight and 11 years in prison for a murder that evidence shows they didn’t commit. DNA tests have pointed to the involvement of another man, who says he committed the crime alone.
The police officer who allegedly coerced the men to confess was convicted last month of accepting bribes from criminal defendants in exchange for giving them breaks in court. http://hamptonroads.com/2010/10/cops-conviction-taints-other-cases.
The episode is producer by award-winning documentary filmmaker Ofra Bikel, who produced Frontline’s “Requiem for Frank Lee Smith,” among many others about wrongful accusation and conviction.
Read more about the Norfolk Four case.
Visit Frontline’s website to watch clips from the documentary and to find local showtimes.
Learn more about recording of interrogations, a reform shown to prevent false confessions and assist in law enforcement investigations.
Tags: False Confessions, Norfolk Four
Holder Overturns Bush-Era DNA Waivers
Posted: November 18, 2010 5:11 pm
Tags: False Confessions
Man Locked Away 14 Years Without Trial
Posted: February 4, 2011 4:43 pm
Brown’s attorney, Kelley DeAngelus explained the problems of the confession to CNN.
In the confession, Brown allegedly stated his address, even though, according to DeAngelus, he didn't know where he lived. The confession also quoted Brown as saying he awoke at 6 a.m., even though he couldn't accurately tell time.
The charges against Brown were dismissed in October 2007, and he was placed in a group home that December.
Brown currently lives with a full-time caretaker and is employed as a janitor.
Read the full story.
Watch CNN’s coverage below.
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Prosecutors Would Block Review of Confession Cases
Posted: May 10, 2011 5:18 pm
Innocence and Justice Clinic at the Wake Forest University School of Law Co-director Carol Turowski disagrees, saying that all cases should be considered by the commission.
"There have been a number of people who accepted pleas who were innocent," Turowski said. "I don't think that the innocence commission should eliminate cases involving pleas. People take plea bargains because they are scared of losing jury trials. They might suffer more serious consequences such as a longer sentence."
For many reasons – including mental health issues and aggressive law enforcement tactics – innocent people sometimes confess to crimes they did not commit.
Read the full article.
Read more about criminal justice reform commissions.
Understand the Causes: How False Confessions Happen.
Tags: North Carolina, False Confessions
PBS Frontline Gets Emmy Nod for "The Confessions"
Posted: July 19, 2011 4:44 pm
Tags: False Confessions
False Confessions Lead to Additional Evidence Flaws, New Study Shows
Posted: November 17, 2011 6:00 pm
Tags: False Confessions, False Confessions
Wrongful convictions affect all New Yorkers
Posted: March 5, 2012 2:00 pm
Tags: Reforms, False Confessions, Eyewitness Identification, False Confessions, Eyewitness Misidentification, DNA Databases
False Confession Experts Now Allowed to Testify in New York State
Posted: April 3, 2012 12:00 pm
Tags: New York, False Confessions
New Documentary Examines Police Interrogation Tactics
Posted: April 6, 2012 5:45 pm
Tags: False Confessions
New York Governor Proposes Criminal Justice Reforms in State of the State Address
Posted: January 9, 2013 5:50 pm
Tags: New York, False Confessions, Eyewitness Identification, False Confessions, Eyewitness Misidentification
Federal Lawsuit Filed Against Law Enforcement in Mississippi False Confession Case
Posted: January 18, 2013 4:30 pm
Tags: Mississippi, Phillip Bivens, Bobby Ray Dixon, Larry Ruffin, False Confessions
48 Hours Revisits Missouri False Confession Case
Posted: February 28, 2013 3:35 pm
Tags: Missouri, False Confessions


















