posted by Justice on Dec 20

A report released today by the Innocence Network delves into the cases of the 27 people exonerated this year through the work of the network’s 54 member organizations. The 27 exonerees served a total of 421 years behind bars. Yesterday, James Bain was freed from prison in Florida after serving 35 years for a crime he didn’t commit.

Friday Roundup: The Innocence Network Recaps a Successful 2009

A report released today by the Innocence Network delves into the cases of the 27 people exonerated this year through the work of the network’s 54 member organizations. The 27 exonerees served a total of 421 years behind bars.

Yesterday, James Bain was freed from prison in Florida after serving 35 years for a crime he didn’t commit. He served more time in prison than any other DNA exoneree in American history, and his case was featured on CBS Evening News last night.

University of Central Florida researchers set four one-bedroom apartments on fire yesterday as they tested methods of detecting arson. The forensic science behind arson investigations has come under fire recently amid controversy over the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham in Texas.

A trial is set to begin in March in Connecticut in the case of Duane Foster, the man accused of committing the sexual assault for which James Tillman served more than 16 years in prison. Tillman was freed in 2006 after DNA testing proved his innocence and implicated Foster.

The Houston Chronicle ran an editorial on the recent report revealing fingerprint errors in the Houston Police Department crime lab, writing that “Houston still needs to move forensic investigations out of its police department.”

A new article in the Marquette Law Review examines the legal system’s blindness to eyewitness identification problems. While some police in Kansas City said they would study new lineup procedures but local departments are reluctant to change. “At this juncture I’d be somewhat reluctant to make a bunch of sweeping changes just because it’s the vogue thing to do on the East Coast,” Liberty Police Lt. Mark Balzer told the Kansas City Star.

Four Maryland crime labs will receive $1.2 million in federal stimulus funds to clear DNA testing backlogs.

An editorial in the Post-Tribune of Northwest Indiana called for sweeping changes to prevent wrongful convictions in the state.

Yesterday marked the tenth anniversary of the day Clyde Charles was exonerated in Louisiana after serving 17 years in prison. Sadly, Charles passed away on January 7 of this year at age 55. This week also marks the exoneration anniversaries of Kerry Kotler, McKinley Cromedy, Phillip Leon Thurman, Clarence Elkins, Frank Lee Smith, Antron McCray, Korey Wise, Yusef Salaam and Raymond Santana.

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posted by Justice on Aug 9

It was a big week for freedom. On Wednesday, Kenneth Ireland was freed in Connecticut. On Thursday, three Virginia men were pardoned, and today Innocence Project client Ernest Sonnier walked out of a Texas courtroom a free man for the first time in 23 years.

Friday Roundup: A Big Week
It was a big week for freedom. On Wednesday, Kenneth Ireland was freed in Connecticut. On Thursday, three Virginia men were pardoned, and today Innocence Project client Ernest Sonnier walked out of a Texas courtroom a free man for the first time in 23 years.

The three sailors pardoned yesterday in the Norfolk Four case were also freed from prison today.

Time Magazine and CNN investigated the questionable science behind dog scent evidence, and Florida exoneree Bill Dillon discussed the role of a police dog in his wrongful conviction on Detroit’s WCSX radio.

A new interview with Anthony Steel surfaced on the web this week, two years after his death. Steel spent spent more than two decades in a British prison for murder before evidence of his innocence led to his release. He never spoke publicly about the case while alive.

The Detroit Metro Times ran a feature this week on Deshawn and Marvin Reed, who were freed from prison after eight years with the help of the new University of Michigan Innocence Clinic.

A hearing is set for Monday for a judge to review DNA test results in the case of Tommy Arthur, who is on Alabama’s death row for a crime he says he didn’t commit.

Innocence Project Policy Director Stephen Saloom spoke with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette about the need for improvements in evidence handling and preservation.

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posted by Justice on Aug 9

Innocence Project client Ernest Sonnier is free today after more than two decades in Texas prisons for a rape he didn’t commit. DNA testing has proven Sonnier’s innocence of the 1985 attack and implicated two other men. Sonnier was freed on bond today by a Texas judge while he continues seeking to fully clear his name in the weeks ahead.

Houston Man Free After 23 Years

Innocence Project client Ernest Sonnier is free today after more than two decades in Texas prisons for a rape he didn’t commit. DNA testing has proven Sonnier’s innocence of the 1985 attack and implicated two other men. Sonnier was freed on bond today by a Texas judge while he continues seeking to fully clear his name in the weeks ahead.

His mother, Altha Davis, told reporters that she always knew he was innocent because he was with her when the crime was allegedly committed – on Christmas Eve 1985. “It’s been long for me, so long,” she said. “I’m happy and so sad at the same time.” Watch a video interview with Sonnier’s mother here.

Sonnier will stay with Davis while he adjusts to his newfound freedom. He was joined in court today by family members, Innocence Project Staff Attorney Alba Morales, Social Worker Angela Amel and several people previously exonerated by DNA testing in Texas. Click here to send him a personal message welcoming him home after 23 long years of wrongful incarceration.

Sonnier’s case is the latest in a string of wrongful convictions caused in part by faulty forensic testing at the Houston Police Department Crime Lab. Although blood-type testing on important crime scene evidence conducted before trial didn’t match Sonnier’s type – and even suggested that he may be innocent – an analysts testified at his trial that he could still be the perpetrator, based on a conclusion not supported by the analyst’s own report.

Houston has been an epicenter of forensic problems – but faulty forensic testing is a national problem and must be addressed in order to prevent more wrongful convictions. Earlier this year, the National Academies of Sciences called for the creation of a National Institute of Forensic Science to provide research, support and oversight in forensic disciplines to prevent wrongful convictions and help law enforcement identify the perpetrators of crime.
Read more about troubles in the Houston crime lab, and sign a petition supporting the creation of a National Institute of Forensic Science.

News coverage of today’s hearing:

Houston Chronicle: Houston Judge Orders Release of Man Convicted of Rape

KHOU: Ernest Sonnier's Mom Said She Always Knew He Was Innocent

Innocence Project Press Release

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posted by Justice on Mar 22

Advocates, exonerees, policymakers, journalists and others are coming together this afternoon in Houston, Texas for the start of the Innocence Network conference. With sessions starting an innocence effort, screening arson cases and advancing reform legislation and with special exoneree-only gatherings to discuss the challenges of life after exoneration, the conference is an invaluable annual resource for the hundreds of people involved in working to overturn wrongful convictions. The Innocence Project of Texas is hosting the conference at the South Texas College of Law in Houston.

Innocence Network Conference Starts Today
Advocates, exonerees, policymakers, journalists and others are coming together this afternoon in Houston, Texas for the start of the Innocence Network conference.

With sessions starting an innocence effort, screening arson cases and advancing reform legislation and with special exoneree-only gatherings to discuss the challenges of life after exoneration, the conference is an invaluable annual resource for the hundreds of people involved in working to overturn wrongful convictions.

The Innocence Project of Texas is hosting the conference at the South Texas College of Law in Houston.

For more on the conference, visit the Innocence Network site.

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