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James Giles is expected to be cleared of 1982 rape on Monday

Posted: April 6, 2007

In a hearing Monday in Dallas, Innocence Project attorney Vanessa Potkin and attorneys from the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office will present evidence that proves James Curtis Giles didn’t participate in the 1982 gang rape for which he served 10 years in prison. Giles, 53, has been on parole as a registered as a sex offender for 14 years.

The crime was committed by three men who were acquaintances, and police were told that one was named James Giles. The victim identified James Curtis Giles in a lineup, even though he did not match her initial description of the perpetrator. DNA evidence now links two other men to the crime – and shows that they were both closely associated with another man, James Earl Giles, who lived near the crime scene and fits the victim’s initial description. New evidence shows that information linking the three true perpetrators to the crime – James Earl Giles and the two other men – was available to police and prosecutors before James Curtis Giles was convicted, but was illegally withheld from his defense attorneys.

Giles has fought for nearly two decades to prove his innocence. The Innocence Project began investigating his case in 2000, and the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office began reinvestigating it earlier this year after the Innocence Project filed initial legal papers to vacate the conviction. New evidence from both investigations will be presented in court Monday. He will still not be officially exonerated, however, until he is granted a writ of habeas corpus from Texas’ highest criminal court or a pardon from the governor.

On Tuesday, Giles will join Texas exonerees James Waller, Chris Ochoa and Brandon Moon, Innocence Project Co-Director Barry Scheck and legislators in Austin for a press conference and legislative hearing on bills to improve the criminal justice system in Texas.

Read more on this case in today’s news:

Rape victim is for exoneration: She ID'd man, now backs DA's bid to clear him in '82 case (Dallas Morning News, 4/6/07)

Hearing set for man who claims innocence in 1982 rape (Houston Chronicle, 4/5/07)

For more information on attending the hearings and press conferences Monday and Tuesday, email us at info@innocenceproject.org



Tags: James Giles, Government Misconduct, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Editorial: Antonio Beaver exoneration should spark reforms in Missouri

Posted: April 6, 2007

Last week, Antonio Beaver was freed from prison in Missouri after serving a decade behind bars for a carjacking he didn’t commit. An editorial in today’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch argues that steps to long-lasting criminal justice reform should be started immediately before more injustices can occur.

Eyewitness error is the leading cause of wrongful convictions nationwide, according to the Innocence Project, a national litigation and public policy organization based in New York….

The Missouri Bar Association or St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce could begin to repair this broken cog in the criminal justice system by appointing a commission made up of police, prosecutors, judges, defense attorneys and other experts to study reforms implemented elsewhere and formulate guidelines for more accurate identification procedures.

Read the full editorial here. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 4/6/07)
Read more about Antonio Beaver’s case



Tags: Missouri, Antonio Beaver, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Focus on reforms as 200th exoneration nears

Posted: April 13, 2007

198 people have been exonerated through DNA evidence nationwide since 1989. The 200th DNA exoneration is expected to occur later this month – an important milestone in the criminal justice system. As we approach this moment, critical reforms are taking hold around the country.

An article in yesterday’s Cleveland Plain Dealer points to the need for reform and discusses an ongoing Cleveland case, in which DNA testing has proved that a forensic expert gave false testimony that led to the conviction of Innocence Project client Thomas Siller of a 1997 Cleveland murder.

Read the full story here. (Cleveland Plain Dealer, 4/12/07)

A column in today's Plain Dealer calls for an Ohio innocence commission. Read the full column here.



Tags: Innocence Commissions, False Confessions, Eyewitness Misidentification

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DNA exonerations continue to cast doubt on eyewitness identifications

Posted: April 18, 2007

Eyewitness identifications are still among the most common form of evidence in American courtrooms. Meanwhile, DNA exonerations and solid scientific research have shown that witnesses make mistakes and that police will sometimes bolster witness’ confidence in a questionable identification.

An article in the Austin American-Statesman reviews a 1988 murder case in which a defendant was acquitted after a child victim made an unreliable identification.

A growing body of research has improved the scientific understanding of witness testimony, shattering long-held beliefs about the reliability of first-hand observation.

The results have gained credibility as DNA testing has exonerated 198 inmates nationally, 152 of whom were wrongly convicted based on witness testimony, according to the Innocence Project, which pursues DNA exonerations.

Today, it's known that fear plays a key role in impeding the ability to form and process memories, Wells said.

"The natural tendency for all humans is fight or flight from fear. All of one's mental resources get devoted to survival, and forming a detailed memory of things around you does not help you survive," Wells said.

Read the full story here. (Austin Amerian-Statesman, 4/15/07, Payment required for full article)
Read more about Eyewitness Misidentification in our Understand the Causes section.



Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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Calls for reform continue to grow nationwide

Posted: April 30, 2007

Columns published in the last three days in Milwaukee, Baltimore, New York and across the country continued to raise the need for criminal justice reforms nationwide, highlighting the causes of Jerry Miller’s wrongful conviction 25 years ago. Miller was exonerated last week, becoming the 200th DNA exoneree nationwide.

  • In the Baltimore Sun, columnist Gregory Kane discusses cross-racial identification as a major cause of wrongful conviction. Read the full column (Payment required for full article).
  • In the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Columnist Gregory Stanford writes about his junior year at Marquette University, when he became a rape suspect simply because he is black. He compares his experience to Miller’s and wonders where the police questioning could have led him. Read the full column.
  • In New York Newsday, Columnist Les Payne discusses cross-racial identification and the Innocence Project benefit event last week. Read the full column.
  • In a national column, Marie Cocco of the Washington Post compares Jerry Miller's case and the Duke lacrosse case. Read the full column (Payment required for full article).

Read more media coverage of our month-long “200 Exonerated, Too Many Wrongfully Convicted” campaign.

Get Involved! Click here for 10 things you can do to prevent wrongful convictions.




Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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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.

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.
Read the full article here. (New York Times, 5/20/07)

Innocence Project Web Feature: “200 Exonerated, Too Many Wrongfully Convicted



Tags: Innocence Commissions, False Confessions, Informants/Snitches, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Harold Buntin exonerated in Indianapolis

Posted: June 8, 2007 11:02 am

DNA testing has proven that Harold Buntin served 13 years in Indiana prisons for a rape he didn’t commit. His last two years in prison came after he was officially exonerated, because paperwork ordering his release was lost in court files. Buntin finally walked out of prison in April of this year after the error was rectified. He told press that “somebody has to answer” for the injustice he suffered.

"I'm going to move on and take care of my business," he told The Indianapolis Star for a story Tuesday. "But I feel like somebody has to answer for that. I never should have been in jail -- and I spent two more years there after they knew I was innocent."

Read the full story here. (Associated Press, 4/24/2007)
Buntin was represented by a private attorney. The Innocence Project tracks all DNA exonerations nationwide and recently completed an examination of the case. Harold Buntin is the 203rd person exonerated by DNA testing nationwide and the fifth in Indiana. Read more about his case in our Know the Cases section.



Tags: Indiana, Harold Buntin, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Is your local police department conducting fair lineups?

Posted: June 15, 2007 5:15 pm

Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful conviction, and Iowa State Professor Gary Wells has studied the issue for three decades. In an article published this week on the website of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University, Wells writes guidelines for local reporters and activists to question whether their local law enforcement agency has enacted important identification reforms based on solid scientific research.

Click here to read the article. (Nieman Watchdog, Harvard University, 6/12/07)

Get Involved: Learn about your local law enforcement procedures and help improve them to prevent wrongful convictions.



Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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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

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California considers legislation to prevent wrongful convictions

Posted: June 27, 2007 4:00 pm

Three new bills that would help prevent wrongful convictions passed in California’s Assembly Public Safety Committee yesterday. The bills, based on the recommendations of the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice, call for the recording of all interrogations of suspects in violent felonies, the corroboration of any jailhouse informant testimony and new guidelines for line-up procedures. Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas, sponsor of the bill on lineup procedures, underscored the importance of reforms that address the leading causes of wrongful convictions.

"When opponents" of the bill say wrongful convictions are infrequent, "I say tell that to the guy who spent 17 years in prison for something he didn't do," Ridley-Thomas said. "If we're not vigilant it will happen more frequently."
Last year, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed similar bills after they had passed in both houses. This year’s bills address the governor’s concerns.

Read the full story here. (Los Angeles Times 6/27/07)

Read the full text of SB 756, which includes eyewitness identification reforms. (PDF)

Get an update on the status of SB 756



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Social scientists say Illinois identification report is unreliable

Posted: July 12, 2007 1:49 pm

Last year, a report released by Illinois police departments claimed that a non-scientific eyewitness identification review had called into question the practice of using “sequential double-blind” lineups, a reform underway nationwide and supported by the Innocence Project. But this month a panel of leading social scientists reports in a law journal that the Illinois report was fatally flawed and its results should be viewed with extreme caution.

This month’s report, which was published in the journal Law and Human Behavior, states that the Chicago report’s “design guaranteed that most outcomes would be difficult or impossible to interpret. The only way to sort this out is by conducting further studies.”

The Center for Modern Forensic Practice of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice organized the July report’s “blue ribbon” panel of authors, which included Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman of Princeton and Harvard professor and author Daniel Schachter.

According to James Doyle, Director of the Center for Modern Forensic Practice, “We convened some of the nation’s leading experts to look at the Illinois report because it’s critical that criminal justice policy be based on sound science. They found, unequivocally, that the Illinois report cannot be relied on to determine whether sequential double-blind procedures are effective. Most importantly, they recommend that future study of these procedures be designed in consultation with qualified scientists from the beginning, so that such studies can produce solid, reliable guidance for practitioners and policymakers.”

Read the John Jay press release and the full article here. (John Jay College)
Sequential double-blind lineups, which are supported by the Innocence Project as a means to reduce misidentifications, are conducted by an administrator who does not know the identity of the suspect. Lineup members, or their photos, are presented one at a time to avoid any comparison between them. Social science research has supported these reforms for three decades, and field studies of identification reforms continue nationwide.

The Eyewitness Identification Reform Blog this week called the Chicago report “junk science” and calls for further study. Read the blog post here.

Eyewitness misidentification was a factor more than 75% of wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA testing. Read about reforms supported by the Innocence Project here.



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Texas column: Don't always believe your eyes

Posted: July 13, 2007 11:31 am

A column in today’s Daily Texan points to the prevalence of eyewitness misidentification among wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA and calls for reforms nationwide to both lineup procedures and the way judges instruct juries on eyewitness testimony.

The problems with eyewitness testimony are known, and guidelines to ensure unbiased eyewitness testimony are available. Incorrect eyewitness identification has condemned innocent people to life in prison and even the death penalty. Judges should make sure that juries understand the nature of eyewitness testimony, with all its caveats and pitfalls.

Read the full story here. (Daily Texas, 07/12/2007)
Read more about a “blue ribbon” panel report on identification studies released this week, and learn about reforms supported by the Innocence Project.



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Doing time for no crime

Posted: July 13, 2007 11:44 am

Arthur Carmona was 16 when he was convicted of two robberies in California. He would serve three years before evidence of his innocence began to mount. He was offered a plea agreement that ended his incarceration, but he would not be fully exonerated. He has now devoted himself to fighting the causes of wrongful conviction. He writes in today’s Los Angeles Times about why he supports three bills pending before the California legislature.

Senate Bill 756, sponsored by Mark Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles), would require the state Department of Justice to develop new guidelines for eyewitness identification procedures. For example, guidelines in other states limit the use of in-field show-ups like the one that led to my wrongful conviction.

Senate Bill 511, sponsored by Elaine Alquist (D-Santa Clara), would require recording of the entire interrogation, including the Miranda warning, in cases of violent felonies. Electronic recording of interrogations would not only help end false confessions but also discourage police detectives from lying during interrogations — as they did in my case by claiming to have videotaped evidence of me.

Senate Bill 609, sponsored by Majority Leader Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles), would prevent convictions based on uncorroborated testimony by jailhouse snitches.

The Legislature should pass all three bills, and the governor should sign them. These reforms are urgently needed to prevent wrongful and unjust incarcerations.

Prison is no place for an innocent man, let alone an innocent kid.

Read the full column here. (Los Angeles Times, 07/13/2007)
Read more about the reform bills pending in the California legislature and a recent hearing of the California Commission on Fair Administration of Justice.



Tags: False Confessions, Informants/Snitches, Eyewitness Misidentification

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North Carolina lawmakers approve sweeping reforms

Posted: July 24, 2007 5:14 pm

The North Carolina House and Senate gave unanimous approval yesterday to bills that will reform the state’s criminal justice system based on the lessons learned from wrongful convictions.

Under the new rules, many of which some local police departments already follow voluntarily, a lineup would be administered by someone not in the investigation and has no information about the potential suspect, with some exceptions.

The lineup would be administered by presenting photos or individuals to the eyewitness one at a time, rather than all at once, as a way to lead to an accurate outcome. Investigators also must document the witness' confidence level of an identification.

Another change would require all interrogations in a homicide investigation to be recorded by video or audio as a way to ensure that officers perform them properly.

Read the full story here. (The Charlotte Observer, 07/23/07)
North Carolina is among several states to take major steps in 2007 toward a fairer criminal justice system. Learn more about reforms enacted nationwide this year.

Read more on the Eyewitness Identification Reform Blog.



Tags: North Carolina, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Chicago Tribune: Unscientific report on eyewitness reforms in Illinois was so flawed it is unreliable

Posted: July 30, 2007 1:13 pm

Social scientists were surprised last year when a non-scientific report from several Illinois police departments challenged the effectiveness of major eyewitness identification reforms taking root nationwide. The Illinois report was used to defeat reform legislation in several states – but a new analysis by some of the nation’s leading social scientists says the Illinois report’s methodology was so flawed that it is unreliable. The Chicago Tribune reports today that a new peer-reviewed psychology article “panned” the Illinois report and called for more research in this field to produce data that is scientifically valid and reliable.

While the debate raged on, a panel of social scientists and experts, including Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman of Princeton University, who had no previous stake in the issue, started a peer review of the study. They analyzed the Illinois pilot program's report, as well as critiques and support of the report, before writing the review, which is being published in the APA's Law and Human Behavior journal.

If the Illinois pilot program had been designed correctly, it would have compared "sequential" lineups, in which a witness is shown a person or photo one at a time, to "simultaneous" lineups, in which potential suspects are shown in a group, but it would have used an administrator who doesn't know who the suspect is in both. That method is called the "double-blind" method.

Comparing group and individual lineups, while at the same time using some administrators who knew suspects and some who didn't, was like comparing "apples to dolphins," said James Doyle, director of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice's Center for Modern Forensic Practice, which coordinated the panel review.

"Just putting the two of them together doesn't make it a scientific review," Doyle said. "You've changed two variables at once. You can't do that."

Read the full article here. (Chicago Tribune, 07/30/07)
Read more about eyewitness identification reforms in our Fix the System section.

Get involved: Watch a video of exoneree Marvin Anderson describing the questionable lineup procedure in his case, and send us your own video clip explaining why eyewitness identification reform matters to you.




Tags: Illinois, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Eyewitness blog: The problems with jury instructions

Posted: August 15, 2007 1:49 pm

The instructions that judges most commonly give to juries when an eyewitness testifies, called a Telfaire instruction after a 1972 circuit court decision, asks jurors to consider the “strength” of the identification and the circumstances under which the identification was made . In a recent post on the Eyewitness Identification Reform Blog, public defender Ben Hiltzheimer argues that Telfaire is based on outdated research and needs to be updated to reflect new practices and knowledge in the field of eyewitness identification.

It's time to stop misinforming juries based on the antiquated, unscientific musings of an old Court, and to start letting science into the courtroom at every phase of trial. The Constitution demands it, and the rights of the wrongfully accused depend on it.

Read the full post here.
Read about eyewitness misidentification as a cause of wrongful conviction.



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Dallas to study new identification procedures

Posted: September 26, 2007 2:55 pm

Since 2001, 13 wrongful convictions have been overturned by DNA testing in Dallas County – more than any other county in the United States. Eleven of those 13 wrongful convictions were caused, at least in part, by eyewitness misidentification. But starting in January, Dallas officials aim to do something about the problem by participating in a major federal study of lineup procedures and reforms proven to increase the accuracy of eyewitness identifications.

The $300,000 study will be led by the Urban Institute, and will consist of more than 800 lineups in robbery cases. Four different types of lineups will be used – about 200 cases will be tested using each type – to collect scientific data on the outcome. Dallas police officials told the Dallas Morning News that they are excited to improve the county’s identification systems.

"Everybody in law enforcement wants to use the best system," said Dallas police Assistant Chief Ron Waldrop, commander of the criminal investigations bureau. "Once it's been shown scientifically which is the best system, I think everybody will move to that system."
Among the lineup styles being tested will be “sequential double-blind,” in which the lineup administrator doesn’t know which lineup member is the suspect, and the witness views individuals one at a time, instead of all at once. Social science research, including a field study in Hennepin County, Minnesota, have shown that this method reduces misidentifications. A report last year in Illinois challenged this format, but today’s Dallas Morning News article notes that the Illinois report “has come under withering criticism from experts who say it had major design flaws, including a lack of uniformity in the way the lineups were conducted.”

The Innocence Project strongly supports additional field study of “sequential double-blind” – particularly field study that, unlike the Illinois report, uses solid scientific methodology.  The Dallas County study may also include field testing of “blind” administration as compared to “non-blind” administration, but the Innocence Project and leading researchers in the field have long expressed concerns about the ability to effectively field study the impact of “blind” administration on the accuracy of eyewitness identifications.

Read the full story here. (Dallas Morning News, 09/26/07)

Read more about eyewitness misidentification and the Innocence Project’s proposed reforms to prevent wrongful convictions.



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Barry Scheck testifies before Georgia identification panel today

Posted: October 22, 2007 10:00 am

In an effort to examine eyewitness identification procedures used by law enforcement agencies statewide, Georgia legislators this year created a House Study Committee on Eyewitness Identification Procedures. Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions and was a factor in the convictions of all six innocent Georgians who have been exonerated by DNA.

Today, at the panel’s third meeting, Innocence Project Co-Director Barry Scheck will testify on eyewitness misidentification as a cause of wrongful conviction and will also outline reforms underway nationwide to improve the accuracy of identification procedures. Iowa State Psychology Professor Gary Wells will testify on social science research in the field of eyewitness identification, and Jennifer Thompson-Cannino will discuss her experience as the victim in a case involving misidentification.

Download the panel’s full schedule here.

Read a previous blog post on this topic
.





Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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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

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Another misidentification conviction prevented

Posted: November 14, 2007 12:53 pm

Stories on this blog often focus on wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing, including more than 150 convictions based on faulty eyewitness identification. We don’t often write about the thousands of cases in which a suspect is arrested and charged but cleared before trial when DNA or other evidence proves their innocence. These cases are the close calls that could have become wrongful convictions, and they number in the thousands. In a National Institute of Justice study of 10,000 cases in the 1990s, 25 percent of suspects were cleared before trial by DNA tests. How many defendants didn’t have additional evidence to refute a questionable eyewitness identification or unreliable science?

The case of Richard Houston Jr. in Modesto, California, illustrates the power of eyewitness identification to lead to a wrongful arrest. Houston spent 55 days in the county jail waiting for trial on an armed robbery he didn’t commit after an eyewitness said he was “100 percent sure” he saw Houston in the dark from 125 feet away with his shirt pulled over his nose. He identified Houston in a “show-up” procedure on the night of the crime, where police brought the eyewitness to the house where they found Houston, pulled Houston’s shirt over his nose and shined lights on him for the eyewitness.

A district attorney, however, watched a surveillance videotape recently from a store where the victim saw the gunman. The tape showed that Houston could not have been the perpetrator and Houston was released after serving nearly two months in jail.

"I felt reborn when I walked through the gate," said Houston, 20, about his release from the Stanislaus County Public Safety Center. Houston splits his time between Modesto, where his stepmother lives, and his father's home in Stockton. "I spent 55 days in jail. That time's double when you're in there for nothing."
While cases like Houston’s illustrate that eyewitness identification can often be unreliable, prosecutors and defense attorneys disagree on whether they prove that the system is broken, or that it works.
For the wrongfully accused who wind up in Houston's shoes in Stanislaus County, there's a chance their innocence could be overlooked. In her experience, situations such as Houston's happen at least several times a year, said Martha J. Carlton-Magaña, a Modesto defense attorney who worked for the Stanislaus County public defender's office for two decades before retiring in April. It's impossible to know for sure how often this happens, because DNA evidence, which isn't available in most cases, is the primary tool for exonerations.

"Our system is broken in this county because we don't have the checks and balances in place that we should," she said.
Chief Deputy District Attorney John Goold said Houston's release shows the opposite.
"As much as possible, we can't have people in jail who did not commit crimes. When it happens, we want to find out as soon as possible," he said. "In all honesty, you have to say the system as a whole worked, even though he had to spend some time in jail."
Read the full story here. (Modesto Bee, 11/13/2007)
Read more about eyewitness identification as a cause of wrongful conviction.



Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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John Jerome White Cleared by DNA in Atlanta

Posted: December 12, 2007 1:00 pm

John Jerome White became the seventh Georgia man to be cleared by DNA evidence yesterday. White was wrongfully convicted in 1980 for the rape and robbery of a 74-year-old woman. DNA from hairs found at the scene excluded White and matched a convicted rapist serving time in a Georgia state prison. That man was arrested Tuesday. In each of the Georgia cases, eyewitness misidentification was a factor contributing to the wrongful conviction. White’s case underscores the need to reform identification procedures, said Aimee Maxwell of the Georgia Innocence Project which represented White.

Maxwell said her organization is working with state lawmakers and authorities to require all law enforcement agencies to develop and follow clearly written procedures for doing an eyewitness identification with a victim, Maxwell said. The organization says 82 percent of the 355 Georgia law enforcement agencies surveyed do not have any type of written eyewitness standards.
Read the full story here. (AP, 12/12/07)
Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA evidence. The Innocence Project advocates reforms that are proven to reduce the incidence of misidentifications. For more information about how eyewitness misidentifications occur and how they can be prevented click here.



Tags: Georgia, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Cross-Posted: Georgia lawmakers advance eyewitness identification reform

Posted: February 13, 2008 11:02 am

Ben Hiltzheimer wrote this week on the Eyewitness Identification Reform Blog about reforms pending before Georgia's legislature. The full post is here:

GA House Committee Approves Eyewitness ID Reforms

A Georgia House of Representatives committee recently approved two pieces of legislation designed to reform police procedures for collecting eyewitness evidence.

The Non-Civil Judiciary Committee voted unanimously to approve HB 997 and 10 to 5 to approve HR 1071. The legislation now heads to the House Rules Committee for consideration with a favorable recommendation.

The bill, known as the Witness Identification Accuracy Enhancement Act, calls for the state law enforcement agency to develop a set of guidelines for the collection of eyewitness evidence in showups, photo arrays, and live lineups. It also calls on the state public safety training center to work with prosecutors to develop a training program for implementation of the procedures.

The House Resolution outlines specific best practices for conducting the identification procedures. Importantly, the resolution “strongly encourages” double-blind lineup procedures, where the administrator of the lineup would be a “neutral independent administrator, when feasible, and no person familiar with the identity of the suspect should be present during a photographic lineup or physical lineup.” This is arguably the most important requirement of the two pieces of legislation, as social scientists are broadly in agreement that the communication of subtle cues — either inadvertent or intentional — to witnesses by lineup administrators regarding the identity of the police suspect is the primary flaw in status quo lineup practices that lead to misidentification, and ultimately wrongful conviction.

The full test of the best practices outline in the resolution are as follows:
(1) It is strongly encouraged that the administrator of a photographic lineup or physical lineup should be a neutral independent administrator, when feasible, and no person familiar with the identity of the suspect should be present during a photographic lineup or physical lineup;
(2) Prior to beginning a photographic lineup or physical lineup identification procedure, the administrator should instruct the witness that:

(A) The witness does not have to make an identification, and the identification procedure is important to the investigation whether or not an identification is made;
(B) The individuals depicted in the photographic lineup or physical lineup may not appear exactly as the witness observed on the date of the crime because features such as hairstyles and facial hair are subject to change;
(C) The perpetrator may or may not be among those shown in the photographic lineup or physical lineup;
(D) When a neutral independent administrator is conducting the photographic lineup or physical lineup, the administrator is not aware of whether the suspect is included in such photographic lineup or physical lineup; and
(E) Regardless of whether an identification is made, law enforcement will continue to investigate the crime; and(3) When conducting a photographic lineup or physical lineup, the administrator should preserve the outcome of the procedure by documenting any identification or nonidentification result obtained from a witness. All witness responses to the photographic lineup or physical lineup participants should be documented using the witness´s own words, either in writing or with an audio or video recording.
 

State Rep. Stephanie Stuckey Benfield is the author of this welcome piece of legislation, and has made significant progress in bringing the interested parties together to move it through the legislative process over the last couple of years.

Unfortunately, law enforcement officials continue to resist the resolution, despite the systemic wrongful conviction problem that continues to plague the Georgia criminal justice system.
[Terry Norris, executive vice president of the Georgia Sheriff’s Association] told Committee Members that while the resolution is not legally binding, he still feels the State is dictating to law enforcement what to do.
Given that law enforcement agencies across the state have failed to adopt well-settled best practices on their own and the substantial cost associated with failing to do so, a legislative mandate hardly seems out of line. We’ll be following this one closely.
Read more about eyewitness identification reforms supported by the Innocence Project.

All seven people exonerated by post-conviction DNA testing in Georgia were convicted in part based on eyewitness misidentifications. Read about their cases here.

Visit the Eyewitness Identification Reform Blog



Tags: Georgia, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Misidentification led to false charges in Pittsburgh case

Posted: February 15, 2008 4:32 pm

While Michael Disimo spent two months in jail for a bank robbery he didn’t commit, he lost his job and missed his son’s birthday. Disimo was arrested for the 2005 bank robbery when a police officer thought he looked like the description of the perpetrator. A bank teller was then brought to the location of the police stop to identify Disimo, in what is called a “show up” identification procedure. She said she was 100 percent sure it was him.

He was questioned by police and the FBI.

Disimo said, "They had given me the polygraph test and they said that I failed it and at that point, ya know, I was really like confused, shocked, scared, definitely scared because I had never been arrested before."

Disimo was taken to the Allegheny County Jail and held on $50,000 bond. Money he didn't have.

"I flipped out and basically had a breakdown. They had put me on a suicide watch." Disimo said. 
Disimo was freed after the eyewitness withdrew her identification and another man confessed to committing the robbery.

Read the full story here. (Pittsburgh.com, 02/15/08)

Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful conviction, contributing to 75 percent of the 213 cases overturned by DNA testing to date. Improving the identification procedures used by police around the country will prevent both wrongful convictions and wrongful arrests. A witness’ “100 percent” identification is strong evidence in a courtroom. Would Disimo have been convicted if the real perpetrator hadn’t come forward?

Read more about eyewitness identification reforms supported by the Innocence Project
.





Tags: Pennsylvania, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Exoneree and crime victim are named as Soros Justice Fellows

Posted: March 4, 2008 11:02 am

In July 1984, a man broke into Jennifer Thompson-Cannino’s North Carolina apartment and raped her. She identified Ronald Cotton in a lineup as the man who had attacked her, and he was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. In 1994, DNA testing on evidence from that rape proved that Cotton had been misidentified and wrongfully convicted. He had served more than a decade in prison before he was exonerated.

Yesterday the Open Society Institute announced that Cotton, Thompson-Cannino and author Erin Torneo are recipients of a 2008 Soros Justice Fellowship, which will provide support for the group to continue their work to raise awareness about wrongful convictions and eyewitness identification reforms. For years, Cotton and Thompson-Cannino have traveled around the country speaking about the dangers of wrongful conviction and reforms needed to prevent the eyewitness misidentifications.

Read more about the Soros Justice Fellowships here.

Read more about Ronald Cotton’s case here
.

Jennifer Thompson-Cannino’s op-eds have been published in New York Times, the Durham-Herald Sun, and the Tallahassee Democrat. Read her New York Times op-ed, “I was certain, but I was wrong,” here.





Tags: North Carolina, Ronald Cotton, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Connecticut Considers Criminal Justice Reform Legislation

Posted: March 10, 2008 4:44 pm

In an op-ed piece in today’s Hartford Courant, Innocence Project Policy Director Stephen Saloom argues that the Connecticut Legislature should pass a bill that would help prevent eyewitness misidentification. Connecticut’s governor recently proposed expanding the state’s DNA database, saying it would help protect the innocent and identify the guilty. The Innocence Project believes that reforms proven to prevent wrongful convictions should be a top priority. Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing – and was the cause of James Tillman’s wrongful conviction. Tillman served over 16 years in Connecticut prisons before his release in 2006.

If better eyewitness identification procedures had been in place two decades ago, James Tillman might not have been wrongfully convicted. At his trial in 1989, the primary evidence was the victim's identification of Tillman as her attacker. Even though the attack happened in a parking garage at night when the victim was impaired and under extreme duress, she identified him in a photo array.

Read the full op-ed here. (Hartford Courant, 03/10/08)
Read more about Tillman’s case here.

 



Tags: Connecticut, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Dispatch from the Field: Kentucky Moves Toward Eyewitness Identification Reform

Posted: March 12, 2008 4:47 pm

By Rebecca Brown, Innocence Project Policy Analyst

Today I will be providing testimony before Kentucky’s House Judiciary Committee on HB 298, a bill that can greatly enhance the accuracy of Kentucky’s eyewitness identification procedures. The introduction of this bill resulted, in part, from a statewide conference held in November of last year in Louisville, hosted by the University of Louisville and co-sponsored by the Salmon P. Chase College of Law, the University of Kentucky College of Law and Eastern Kentucky University’s College of Justice and Safety. The conference focused on the state of Kentucky’s criminal justice system and sought to bring stakeholders from all corners of the criminal justice system under one roof for dialogue and consensus on systemic reform. Attendees heard about a range of issues, prominent among them the potential for misidentification by eyewitnesses to crimes.

Audience members were moved to tears as Jennifer Thompson-Cannino, a crime victim who misidentified her rapist at two different trials in the 1980’s, described her feelings of re-victimization when she learned that flawed eyewitness identification procedures led her and the police to the wrong man. She told listeners that her misidentifications placed an innocent man, Ronald Cotton, in prison for over a decade. (DNA testing years later exonerated Mr. Cotton and a hit in the national DNA databank identified the true perpetrator, Bobby Poole.) Ms. Thompson expressed her feelings of guilt and horror after she learned how her inadvertent misidentification had created another victim, and described how her experiences drove her to become a devoted crusader to reform identification procedures.

Ms. Thompson-Cannino was followed by Gary Wells, an academic whose life’s work has focused upon the science of misidentification. Much of his research addresses the fallibility of human memory and its susceptibility to inadvertent or deliberate influence. Professor Wells described the simple, but effective reforms that are necessary to stem the tide of misidentifications in Kentucky and across the nation. These reforms can be trusted to work; they are grounded in a large body of peer-reviewed research that has been conducted over the past quarter century by respected social scientists.

These improved practices – shown to enhance the accuracy of eyewitness identifications – have been embraced by a number of jurisdictions across the nation. Just last year, laws were passed in five states to improve the reliability of eyewitness evidence. The most comprehensive of these laws came out of North Carolina, which included all of the major reform recommendations put forth by the Innocence Project. A similarly comprehensive bill stands before the House Judiciary Committee today in Kentucky, the provisions of which are bolstered by a strong and deep body of scientific literature.

HB 298 includes the following reforms:

- the blind administration of the eyewitness identification procedure;
- the provision of instructions to the eyewitness;
- the appropriate selection of non-suspect, or filler, photographs/individuals;
- taking confidence statements upon identification;
- the video-recording of the entire procedure; and
- the sequential presentation of line-up members to the eyewitness.

It is our hope that legislators will heed the lessons of wrongful conviction, and place robust science and experiential support above resistance to change. After all, traditional lineup methods are not the product of either scientific lessons or systemic validation. The unreliability of conventional eyewitness identification procedures undermines the effectiveness of public safety nationwide – and as importantly, the public faith therein. It bears repeating that eyewitness misidentification has contributed to more than three-quarters of the nation’s wrongful convictions proven through DNA testing.

The problem is well established, as are the solutions. I am testifying in Kentucky to help their legislature understand what the Innocence Project has learned – through deep study, and more importantly, through the reality of DNA exonerations – about the value of reforming their eyewitness identification procedures.

William Gregory, a Kentucky man whose innocence was proven through DNA testing, knows firsthand about the tragic implications of flawed eyewitness identification procedures; he spent seven years in prison for a crime he did not commit after two crime victims misidentified him.
Passage of HB 298 will not only protect the public and enhance Kentuckians’ confidence in their criminal justice system – it will also prove to Mr. Gregory that his suffering was not in vain.



Tags: Kentucky, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Georgia Supreme Court denies new trial for death row inmate

Posted: March 18, 2008 11:45 am

Troy Davis has been on Georgia’s death row for 17 years for the murder of an off-duty police officer that he has consistently maintained he didn’t commit. Since his conviction, seven of the nine eyewitnesses who testified at his trial that he was the shooter have recanted their statements, saying they were unable to identify the shooter. Some of them have said they were pressured by police officers before the trial to identify Davis.

Yesterday, the state Supreme Court ruled 4-3 against granting Davis a new trial based on the witness recantations and other evidence suggesting his innocence. The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles, which granted him a stay last year when he came within 24 hours of execution, will make another ruling on his sentence, but said in a statement yesterday that it will not decide “in the near future” because of a de facto nationwide moratorium on executions.

Amnesty International has collected more than 60,000 signatures calling for a new trial for Davis. Visit Amnesty’s website today to send a letter to the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles about this case.

The Innocence Project is not involved in Davis’ case, but the 214 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA evidence have shown that eyewitness identification evidence is often wrong. More than three-quarters of the 214 wrongful convictions were caused, at least in part, by misidentification. The Innocence Project is a member of the Innocence Network, which filed an amicus brief with the Georgia Supreme Court in Davis’ case. Download the brief here.

Read more about Davis’ case.

Atlanta Journal Constitution: Condemned cop killer denied new trial (03/18/08)

New York Times: Court rebuffs Georgian on death row (03/18/08)





Tags: Georgia, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Charles Grodin: Why I support the Innocence Project

Posted: May 28, 2008 10:05 am

Actor Charles Grodin writes today in the New York Daily News about reforms taking root around the United States to address and prevent wrongful convictions. He applauds Colorado for passing evidence preservation legislation last month and calls on all states and individual law enforcement agencies to improve eyewitness identification procedures.

I shudder to think how many people are sitting in our prisons who have been wrongly convicted.

I support The Innocence Project, and I think if you can, you should too.

Read Grodin’s full article here. (NY Daily News, 05/27/08)




Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Evidence Preservation, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Texas prosecutors reflect on their role in wrongful convictions

Posted: June 9, 2008 12:05 pm

A groundbreaking article in this week’s issue of Texas Lawyer tells of a dozen Dallas exonerations through the eyes of the trial prosecutors. Their reflections on these cases represent a range of perspectives, but common themes emerge. There is consensus that eyewitness identification is unreliable on its own and that cases resting on a single eyewitness are a recipe for wrongful conviction. Prosecutors agree that forensic science has improved the quality of justice in American courtrooms. Many prosecutors remembered every detail of these convictions years later, and worked for the defendant’s release soon after learning of new DNA evidence proving innocence.

Prosecutors call these wrongful convictions “tragic” and one says that hindsight is 20-20.

"I don't fault anyone for doing what they're doing," Prosecutor Douglas Fletcher says. "But you can look back on any profession. Doctors can look back at doctors 30 years ago and say . . . "Why were they treating cancer that way?'"
Another prosecutor, James Fry, says the unreliable nature of eyewitness identifications has been exposed by these exonerations.
… "In the criminal justice system, people are being convicted on one-witness cases. And what this says to me is we've got an inherent problem about how many of these cases we're getting wrong. And it's still going on today," says James Fry, a former Dallas prosecutor who helped send a man to prison for 27 years for a crime he didn't commit. "My question to everybody involved in this across the state and across the nation is what are we going to do about this? I don't know."
Read the full story here. (Texas Lawyer, 06/06/08)

 



Tags: Charles Chatman, Wiley Fountain, Larry Fuller, James Giles, Donald Wayne Good, Andrew Gossett, Billy Wayne Miller, David Shawn Pope, James Waller, Gregory Wallis, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Judge: Chicago police can keep study data secret

Posted: July 2, 2008 5:38 pm

An Illinois judge ruled this week that the Chicago Police Department doesn’t have to share all of the raw data from its controversial and discredited 2006 report on eyewitness identification procedures. The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers filed a lawsuit last year seeking access to the data used in the report, which has been soundly discredited by leading social scientists for its lack of scientific methods. The judge ruled that the police must share closed case data, but could keep information on active cases a secret.

Access to data from closed cases alone isn't sufficient, argued Locke Bowman of the MacArthur Justice Center at Northwestern University School of Law in Chicago, which filed the lawsuit on behalf of NACDL.

A healthy public debate requires full disclosure, he said.

"If the data supports the report's findings that traditional lineups work better than reform methods, the Chicago Police have nothing to hide," he said after the ruling. "But if the data doesn't support those findings, it's time for the Chicago Police Department and departments around the state to change the way they handle eyewitness identifications."

Read the full story here. (Chicago Tribune, 06/30/08)
And a post on the Eyewitness Identification Reform blog points to an interesting first-hand account of Chicago’s lineup procedures posted in the comments section of the Chicago Tribune website.

Three decades of solid social science research has pointed to sequential lineups as a critical reform to reduce misidentifications. The Innocence Project and other leaders in the field have called for additional field study – using solid scientific techniques -- of the reform. A blue-ribbon panel of social scientists convened to review the difference in data between various studies of eyewitness education procedures, found that the Chicago report’s "design guaranteed that most outcomes would be difficult or impossible to interpret. The only way to sort this out is by conducting further studies." Read more here.





Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Three years of freedom for Pennsylvania man

Posted: August 1, 2008 10:55 am

Thomas Doswell was denied parole four times during his 18 years in prison because he refused to admit guilt to a crime he never committed. Finally, DNA testing proved his innocence and he was released and exonerated on August 1, 2005. Today marks the third anniversary of his release.

Like many wrongful convictions, eyewitness misidentification in Doswell’s case helped put an innocent man in jail. When his photograph was presented to the victim in a photo array, his was the only photo marked with a suggestive “R.” Perhaps influenced by this marker, the rape victim picked Doswell out of the line-up — even though he did not match her description of the assailant.

Read about critical reforms to eyewitness identification procedures that can prevent wrongful convictions.

Read more about Thomas Doswell and watch a video of him performing a song at the Innocence Project’s 2007 Celebration of Freedom & Justice.

Other exoneration anniversaries this week:
Wednesday: Larry Johnson, Missouri (Served 18 years, Exonerated 7/30/02)

Thursday: Jerry Watkins, Indiana (Served 13.5 years, Exonerated 7/31/00)



Tags: Thomas Doswell, Larry Johnson, Jerry Watkins, Eyewitness Misidentification

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The role of race in misidentification

Posted: August 11, 2008 4:02 pm

Social science research has shown that eyewitness misidentifications are more likely to happen when the perpetrator and witness are of different racial backgrounds. And statistics on the 218 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing to date support the evidence. More than one-third of these wrongful convictions were caused by a cross-racial identification.



Jennifer Thompson-Cannino (above) knows first-hand how a misidentification can happen. When an African-American attacker broke into her home and raped her in 1984, she made a conscious effort to note the perpetrator’s features so she could identify him later. Thompson-Cannino, who is white, helped police draw up a composite sketch, and then she viewed photographs and identified Ronald Cotton as the rapist. She told the jury she was certain, and Cotton was sentenced to life. But she was wrong.

DNA testing exonerated Cotton after he had served more than a decade in prison. Eyewitness misidentification played a role in more than three-quarters of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing, and Thompson-Cannino and Cotton now travel the country telling audiences how it can happen. And she has written a book with Cotton, scheduled for release early next year, about wrongful convictions and their unusual partnership to address the causes of this injustice and reforms to prevent it from happening again.

Read an Associated Press Sunday feature story on cross-racial identifications here.

Read more about Thompson-Cannino and Cotton here
.



Tags: Ronald Cotton, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Troy Davis set to be executed Tuesday despite evidence of innocence

Posted: September 22, 2008 3:32 pm

Nearly two decades ago, a Savannah, Georgia, police officer was killed in a fast food parking lot. Troy Davis was arrested for the crime, and nine non-police eyewitnesses testified that they saw him shoot the victim. Based almost exclusively on eyewitness testimony, Davis was convicted of the murder and sentenced to death.

His execution is set for 7 p.m. tomorrow, and despite mounting evidence of Davis’ innocence, and pleas from around the world supporting a new trial to determine the real facts in his case, the execution is still set to go forward.

Here’s what you can do to support a new trial for Davis:

Visit Amnesty International’s website to send a letter to the Georgia Board of Pardon and Parole.

Call the Georgia Board of Pardons and Parole.

Read news and commentary on the case from Davis’ sister, the Huffington Post, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, National Public Radio, and hundreds of other news outlets.





Tags: Arizona, Eyewitness Misidentification, Death Penalty

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Supreme Court quiet so far on Troy Davis case

Posted: October 7, 2008 2:45 pm

The justices of the U.S. Supreme Court will meet on Friday to discuss the fate of Troy Davis, who has been on Georgia’s death row since 1989 for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Although some observers had expected the justices to discuss the case yesterday, they issued orders in other cases and stayed mum on the Davis case. The court is considering whether Davis deserves a hearing based on new evidence of his innocence, or if Georgia can execute him. The Supreme Court issued a stay just two hours before Davis’ scheduled execution on Sept. 23.

“It’s obviously a very important case and the justices are still considering it,” Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond law professor, said. “Maybe the justices are split about it and want more time to consider it.”

Read the full story here. (Associated Press, 10/6/08)
Read more about Davis’ case here.





Tags: Georgia, Eyewitness Misidentification, Death Penalty

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Texas Senator proposes an end to ‘show-up’ identifications

Posted: October 15, 2008 4:05 pm

Eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA testing, and “show-up” identifications are among the most unreliable identification procedures still used by police. In a show-up, police officers bring the suspect and eyewitness within a sight of one another and ask the witness whether the suspect was indeed the perpetrator. Show-ups have been involved in countless wrongful convictions, including three of the 20 overturned by DNA testing in Dallas County to date.

Texas State Sen. Rodney Ellis, who serves as the Innocence Project Board Chairman, said he plans to propose a ban on show-up procedures in Texas to prevent future wrongful convictions.

"I think because of the outrageous number of wrongful convictions in Texas, it's time to begin the dialog [to ban showups]," Mr. Ellis said. "Whether or not I can get legislators to a point at which they would mandate it would not be used is a separate issue."
Ellis also supports the creation of a Texas innocence commission to study the causes of wrongful convictions.

Read the full story here. (Dallas Morning News, 10/14/08)




Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Guest Post: Learning from Wrongful Convictions

Posted: December 4, 2008 10:14 am

By Catherine K. Eloranto, J.D.
Associate Professor, Criminal Justice
Clinton Community College, Plattsburgh, NY

“Well he must be guilty of something.”  

That comment from a graduating criminal justice major floored me.  It was my second year of teaching, and I had just described Kirk Bloodsworth’s battle to prove his innocence.  That moment was a turning point for me.  I knew that this area of the state was dotted with prisons, many of which employ the parents, uncles, brothers and sisters of my students.  What I did not realize was how doggedly the students would cling to the view that if someone landed in prison, they must have committed a crime.  

As a former prosecutor and judge, I am keenly aware of the cracks in the criminal justice system.  The promise of “justice for all” is more true for some than for others.  And I knew I had to find a way to challenge the students’ perceptions and beliefs without alienating them.  This began my connection with the Innocence Project.  That first year, when we got to the issue of the death penalty in ethics class, I used data from the Innocence Project website, but students still weren’t grasping the serious flaws each wrongful conviction revealed in the criminal justice system.

As I read more from the website, I felt a greater urgency to help students understand the ramifications of wrongful convictions.  My goal was twofold:  to convey the information in a meaningful way, and to help them learn to think critically about important issues.  With these goals in mind, I created activities for my ethics and criminal procedure classes.

In ethics, I have the students write a paper analyzing the arguments for and against the death penalty.  They are required to go to www.innocenceproject.org, and read the case history of one or more individuals who were wrongly convicted and sentenced to death.  This is an eye-opening experience for the students, as for the first time they read about and see the picture of someone who could have been executed, but for the dedicated work of the Innocence Project and others.  I use case examples to demonstrate the causes of wrongful convictions. When we look at forensic science misconduct, the students examine the case of former Mississippi Medical Examiner Steven Hayne, whose misconduct was brought to light by the Innocence Project.  Through an integrated approach, the conclusions are inevitable.

In criminal procedure, I focus on eyewitness misidentification as a cause of wrongful convictions.  We discuss the constitutional requirements of Stovall v. Denno, 388 U.S. 293 (1967) (in which the U.S. Supreme Court held that unnecessarily suggestive identification procedures, and by extension any resulting conviction, would violate due process), the psychological research, and examine current law enforcement procedures.  Again, to bring it home in a personal way, they go to the Innocence Project website to read data on wrongful convictions based on misidentification, and to read and discuss specific cases where eyewitness misidentification caused wrongful convictions.

At the end of each semester, I have students write about the most important things they learned in class.  Since I have begun emphasizing the issue of wrongful conviction, 25-30% of students discuss wrongful convictions.  They get it, and I no longer hear “Well he must be guilty of something.”




Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Alabama Man Still Pursuing Evidence for DNA Testing

Posted: January 6, 2009

The Tuscaloosa News reports that Thomas Arthur's attorneys are still pursuing DNA tests to prove his innocence in a 1982 murder in Alabama.

Arthur, who faces execution for the murder of Troy Wicker, has been on Alabama’s death row for a quarter century. Last September, the Alabama Supreme Court delayed Arthur’s execution and said the state must wait for the Jefferson County Court to rule on the DNA testing claim before it can set an execution date. Last fall, the state claimed that evidence in the case is missing – the first time the state has made such a claim, even though Arthur has been requesting DNA testing on the evidence for years. Arthur's attorneys are requesting a thorough, state-wide search for the evidence, which has not been conducted.

Although there was no DNA evidence used in the original, largely circumstantial prosecution, Arthur's attorneys are asking the state for a rape kit of the victim's wife, Judy Wicker, which was collected after the murder.

“The invaluable role of DNA testing in this case cannot be seriously disputed,” [attorney Jordan] Razza wrote. “This court should therefore direct the state to undertake a thorough search, and to the extent that it is still unable to find the rape kit, Mr. Arthur requests discovery relating to this issue.”

Attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell represent Arthur; the Innocence Project is assisting in the case. Arthur's attorneys also want the court to listen to a confession made by inmate Bobby Ray Gilbert, who confessed to the murder of Troy Wicker. He also said he had sex with Judy Wicker on the day of the crime.

Judy Wicker initially told police that a man broke into her home, raped her and killed her husband. Police did not believe her, and she was convicted of killing her husband. Only then, in a deal for a reduced prison sentence, did she change her story and claim that Arthur committed the crime. DNA testing could show that her initial story was true, or it could show that Gilbert’s confession is accurate.

Read the full story here. (Tuscaloosa News, 1/5/09)

To see what kind of access inmates have to DNA testing in your state, visit our interactive map.






Tags: Alabama, Evidence Preservation, Access to DNA Testing, Eyewitness Misidentification, Death Penalty, Tommy Arthur

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Two Connecticut Men Seek New Trial Based on DNA and Other Evidence

Posted: January 7, 2009

Ronald Taylor and George Gould are currently serving 80 years for the 1993 murder of a local shop owner. Both men have always maintained that they did not commit the crime, and new DNA evidence secured by an unlikely source may help them get a new trial.

Taylor and Gould were both found guilty of murdering Eugenio Vega DeLeon 15 years ago. They were convicted largely based on eyewitness testimony and other circumstantial evidence. The men are currently waiting for a judge to decide whether they should get a new trial.

A private investigator hired by the public defender's office says that DNA found on an electrical cord used to tie the victim's hands together matches neither Taylor nor Gould. Despite the fact that this testing was done in 2006, New Haven State's Attorney Michael Dearington's office has yet to run the DNA profile from the cord in the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) databank – which could identify who actually committed the murder. In nearly 40% of DNA exoneration cases nationwide, the actual perpetrator was later identified, often through DNA database searches.

The man who helped secure the DNA testing on the cord, Gerald O'Donnell, is a former Cheshire police officer who previously did work for Dearington's office. Over the course of three years, O'Donnell has compiled a thorough report that supports Taylor's and Gould's case; among his findings:

  • fingerprints found on the door handle of a safe in the victim’s store (where he was killed) are not Gould’s or Taylor’s, and police are now either unable or unwilling to locate the fingerprints for new analysis,
  • the state's main witness now admits in a taped interview that she lied at trial because police were threatening to send her to jail, and
  • another witness recanted her testimony, now saying that she was pressured by police to say she saw two black men in the victim's store.
Gould and Taylor served time on the same cellblock as Miguel Roman, who was released from prison a couple of weeks ago when DNA testing supported his claim of innocence.

Read the full story here. (Hartford Courant, 1/4/09)

Read more about Miguel Roman’s case.

Read more about James Tillman, who was exonerated through DNA testing in Connecticut in 2006.



Tags: Connecticut, James Tillman, Eyewitness Misidentification, DNA Databases, Fingerprints

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Dallas Police to Change Identification Procedures

Posted: January 16, 2009 5:11 pm

The Dallas Police Department has announced that it will change the ways its officers conduct eyewitness identification procedures, employing the ‘sequential double-blind’ lineup method which has been proven to reduce misidentification.

After two years of delays, the department announced this week that it would not be participating in a planned study testing various identification procedures for accuracy, effectiveness and feasibility.  Police Chief David Kunkle said yesterday that the department couldn’t wait any longer to make the necessary improvements.

"The study was taking way too long, and even with the results, I don't know that it would change where we would end up," Kunkle said. "The standard to where the department should be is a little clearer than it was a few years ago."

Read the full story here. (Dallas Morning News, 01/16/09)
In a sequential double-blind lineup, the administrator does not know which participant is the suspect, and he or she presents suspects one-by-one. Presenting lineup members one-by-one (sequentially), rather than all at once (simultaneously) has been proven to reduce inaccurate eyewitness identifications.

Dallas becomes the eighth department in Texas to use sequential double-blind lineups, joining the states of New Jersey and North Carolina and several other major police departments in implementing the policy.





Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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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

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Maine Art Show Benefits the Innocence Project

Posted: March 5, 2009 2:22 am

 

An exhibit this month in Portland, Maine, featuring the works of photographer Donald Verger will benefit the Innocence Project. Verger said he was inspired to support the Innocence Project’s work after he was wrongfully accused of a crime two months ago.

On the afternoon of New Years Eve, Verger was shopping in Portland, Maine, when two police officers stopped him. A salon had been robbed hours before and Verger was similar to the victim’s description of the perpetrator. The officers conducted a “show-up” identification in which the victim viewed him on the street and said he was the robber. Verger was arrested and spent two nights in jail before friends bailed him out.

Verger said he had nothing to do with the crime, and the charges were finally dropped a month later – but not before his eyes were opened that anyone can be wrongfully accused (or convicted) of a crime they didn’t commit. He tells the Portland Press Herald that he was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

(Verger’s attorney Peter) DeTroy also noted that not all people accused of serious crimes have the means to hire a top-shelf defense team. Had Verger been indigent, DeTroy said, "I think he would have been indicted (and gone to trial), I truly do."

That same thought occurred to Verger even as he was riding to jail in the back of the police cruiser. It was an epiphany of sorts, he said, knowing that he was innocent, that he had a lot of well-placed people who would (and did) write letters on his behalf, and that however traumatizing the whole thing was, he would soon get his life back.
But what, he wondered, if he were poor? Or homeless? Or not Caucasian? Or uneducated?"I don't know that that person would be out of jail and not prosecuted for a crime they did not commit," he said.
The incident inspired Verger to devote his show this month to raising money for the Innocence Project. The show’s opening reception is scheduled for tomorrow night at the North Star Music Café in Portland, and 100% of proceeds through the month will benefit the Innocence Project.
Above: Verger’s photo “Dawn of Peace”

Read a story on Donald Verger’s case in today’s Portland Press Herald.

Learn about the event and see more of Donald Verger’s artwork.

More coverage: Munjoy Hill News - Photographer Donald Verger Helps Himself by Helping Others



Tags: Maine, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Friday Roundup: Identification and Informants

Posted: April 17, 2009 6:45 pm

A Georgia death row inmate lost his federal appeal this week and a Chicago man goes to trial next week for the third time for a murder he says he didn't commit. Here are stories of injustice and reform from the week:  

A federal court rejected Troy Davis’ appeal this week and announced a 30-day stay of execution so he could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Davis has been on Georgia’s death row for two decades for a murder he says he didn’t commit and has come within hours of execution three times before receiving stays.

Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn wrote that Juan Rivera’s third trial for a murder he says he didn’t commit – set to begin on Monday – sounds eerily similar to the wrongful conviction and repeated trials and appeals of exoneree Rolando Cruz.

The Texas Senate passed bills this week requiring law enforcement agencies in the state to establish written identification procedures, and requiring corroboration for testimony from jailhouse informants. Meanwhile, the Globe and Mail reported that Ontario has nearly phased out the use of jailhouse informants.

The Constitution Project released a groundbreaking report on the state of indigent defense in America. The report, “Justice Denied,” says that public defense systems are struggling across the country, and that many are failing. Read more about the effects of bad and overburdened lawyers in wrongful conviction cases.






Tags: Informants/Snitches, Bad Lawyering, Eyewitness Misidentification

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Reforms Move Forward in Texas

Posted: April 29, 2009 2:13 pm

An editorial in yesterday’s Dallas Morning News calls for quick passage of a bill in the Texas Senate that would increase the compensation paid to exonerees after their release. The new bill would increase the maximum amount paid by the state to the exonerated to
$80,000 per year served for a wrongful conviction, and includes the option of monthly annuity payments for life. The bill, named for deceased exoneree Timothy Cole, passed the House last week and is currently pending in the Senate. From the editorial:

Without this measure, the state will continue committing a double injustice to these people – once for their wrongful imprisonment and again for the failure to help them rebuild their lives once they're set free. Two wrongs make the Timothy Cole Act the right thing to do.Read the full editorial here. (Dallas Morning News, 4/28/09)
The Austin American-Statesman joined this week with an editorial of its own.

Meanwhile, Texas lawmakers are also considering requiring law enforcement departments in the state to adopt written procedures for eyewitness identification. Exoneree Johnnie Lindsey recently testified on behalf of this effort – watch a video featuring Lindsey here.



Tags: Exoneree Compensation, Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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The Science of Memory

Posted: June 16, 2009 5:42 pm

As readers of this blog know, eyewitness misidentification is the leading cause of wrongful convictions overturned through DNA testing. More than three decades of social science research has shown that human memory is fallible and that reforms to eyewitness identification procedures can reduce misidentifications. Could neuroscience also hold some clues to the mystery of memory?

A recent article in Seed Magazine reported on a unique multi-university project underway to explore the intersections of neuroscience and the law. A group of 40 neuroscientists, lawyers and philosophers are working together to examine the biology behind memory and to answer the question of how memory works.

One reason that such technologies are so alluring is that people tend to be poor judges of the quality of their memories. The circumstances in which eyewitnesses find themselves might render their recollections particularly untrustworthy, says Elizabeth Loftus, a professor of psychology at the University of California and a pioneer in the field of eyewitness research. “When it comes to brief episodes of memory, like in many criminal cases, poor lighting, passage of time, biased or suggestive questioning all can produce an erroneous memory,” she says.
Scientists working on the project are careful not to promise that their research will lead to new forms of evidence, however.
“We can tell surprisingly well what people are thinking from brain scans,” says (Princeton Psychology Professor Ken) Norman. “But if you’re going to convict someone, ‘better than chance’ is not good enough.” (Standford Law Prof. Hank) Greely also believes that neuroscientific information may be unduly persuasive to people.

Read the full story here. (SEED Magazine, 6/13/09)
Read more here about eyewitness misidentification and wrongful convictions.





Tags: Eyewitness Misidentification

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New Report: Ways to Prevent Misidentification and Wrongful Convictions

Posted: July 16, 2009 4:06 pm

An Innocence Project report released today examines eyewitness misidentifications, the leading cause of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing, and recommends simple reforms states and local jurisdictions can take to address the problem.

Titled “Reevaluating Lineups: Why Witnesses Make Mistakes and How to Reduce the Chance of a Misidentification,” the report lays out the problems with traditional eyewitness identifications procedures and lists six simple reforms to reduce misidentifications.

As shown in the graph below, eyewitness misidentification was a factor in 75% of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing.



Nine states have taken action to prevent eyewitness misidentifications, and 17 more states have considered legislation on the issue in the last two years. The Innocence Project announced today that it will focus on implementing reforms over the next year in 10 states, including New York, Texas, Kentucky, New Mexico, Ohio, Michigan and Rhode Island.

“We know from social science research and real-world experience that these reforms work. We’re looking forward to working with police and policymakers in several key states over the next year to help them understand the need to improve lineups and the benefits of these reforms,” Innocence Project Policy Director Stephen Saloom said.  “Victims are denied justice, innocent defendants are sent to prison and the public’s safety is at risk when real perpetrators go undetected.”

Read the executive summary here.

Download the full report.

Read today’s press release.

Share the link to the new report on Twitter or Facebook.



Tags: Eyewitness Identification, Eyewitness Misidentification

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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

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