Author Archives: Mark Godsey

Another Texas Exoneration Calls Bite Mark Evidence Into Question

From: Texas Monthly

Steven Chaney became the twenty-sixth person to be wrongly convicted or indicted based on bite mark evidence. The two dental experts who testified against him have also testified in numerous other cases—and they’ve been wrong before.

By Michael Hall

After serving 28 years in prison, Steven Chaney walked away a free man last Monday when a Dallas judge overturned his 1987 murder conviction. The clincher that sent Chaney to prison nearly three decades ago? Bite mark testimony, given at his trial by two forensic odontologists. The clincher that secured his freedom? Discredited bite mark testimony.

The outcome of Chaney’s case is yet another notable strike against the controversial practice of using bite marks to secure convictions. For decades, testimony from forensic dentists—who inspect the injuries of victims and attempt to match them to the dental patterns of alleged perpetrators—has been admissible in court. Often, this testimony is the prosecutor’s only physical evidence.

Chaney was on trial for the murder of John Sweek, a drug dealer found stabbed to death on his kitchen floor. Chaney, a construction worker, had been one of Sweek’s customers. During the trial, Homer Campbell, a forensic dentist from Albuquerque, told the court that there was a “reasonable dental certainty” that the bite marks on Sweek’s arm came from Chaney. Jim Hales, chief dental consultant for the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office, piled on with an alarming statistic: that there was a “one to a million chance” someone other than Chaney was the biter. Even though Chaney had nine alibi witnesses, the jury placed considerable stock in the word of these experts. One juror, when asked why he voted for Chaney’s guilt, said, “The bite mark.”

But now, in an affidavit filed with the court, Hales has admitted what critics of bite mark evidence have been saying for years: even an expert can’t reliably match bite marks to teeth.

Conclusions that a particular individual is the biter and their dentition is a match when you are dealing with an open population are now understood to be scientifically unsound. Under today’s scientific standards, I would not, and could not, testify to a reasonable medical/dental certainty as I testified at the time of trial nor could I testify that there was a ‘one to a million’ chance that anyone other than Mr. Chaney was the source off the bite mark.

Chaney’s lawyers—Julie Lesser, with the Dallas County Public Defender’s Office, and Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project—challenged the conviction, citing Texas’s junk science law, passed in 2013, which says that a conviction can be attacked in a writ of habeas corpus if there is new science that contradicts the science that was used at trial.

The truth is, there was never any conclusive data or rigorous studies to back up bite mark evidence, which has been under fire from scientists and defense lawyers ever since it was first allowed in court in 1974. Tests of bite mark evidence reliability have found error rates between 12 and 64 percent, but since no court ever ruled against its admissibility, it was allowed.

Bite marks are nothing like DNA profiles.

Forensic odontologists sometimes can’t even agree on whether marks found on – skin—a malleable, inconstant medium—came from teeth or not. The first official red flag about bite mark evidence came in 2009 when a report from the National Academy of Sciences said, “The scientific basis is insufficient to conclude that bite mark comparisons can result in a conclusive match.” Around that time a husband and wife team of researchers at SUNY Buffalo began doing research on bite marks using cadavers, and after more than a dozen studies, they found that “statements of dental uniqueness with respect to bitemark analysis in an open population are unsupportable.” In other words, bite marks are nothing like DNA profiles—and there are certainly no statistics to back up accurate comparisons between sets of teeth, like Hales did when he said there was a “one to a million chance” anyone but Chaney was the biter.

It was significant that Dallas County DA Susan Hawk concluded that “the bite mark evidence that was critical to [Chaney’s] conviction has been discredited”—he is now the twenty-sixth person to have been wrongly convicted or indicted based on bite mark testimony—but county prosecutors knew about his case for months. All summer long the Texas Forensic Science Commission—which for the past five years has been blazing a trail of state-wide criminal justice reforms via numerous investigations of labs and forensic disciplines—has been looking into bite marks after a complaint was filed by Chaney’s lawyers, who asked the commission to “exercise its statutory mandate to investigate and report on ‘the integrity and reliability’ of bite mark evidence.” The FSC has already held one meeting to look into bite marks—last month in Dallas—and Chaney’s name came up often. His name will come up again when the FSC convenes again next month in Fort Worth.

One of the things Chaney’s lawyers asked the FSC to do is go back and vet cases where bite mark testimony was used in Texas in the same way the FSC has been re-investigating old hair microscopy cases. When it does so, the commission will find other troublesome Texas cases, including three that Campbell (now deceased) and/or Hales handled at the same time as Chaney’s.

One of those cases involved two men convicted for the rape and murder of Juanita White in Waco in 1986. When investigators found what they believed to be bite marks on White’s body, they took a dental mold of a suspect named Calvin Washington and drove it to Dallas for Hales to inspect. His conclusion? Washington’s teeth matched the wounds on White’s body. But the story didn’t end there. Investigators began to suspect Washington had an accomplice, a man named Joe Sidney Williams, and they made a mold of his teeth too. This mold—along with Washington’s mold and White’s autopsy photos—was sent to Campbell, who saw things differently than Hales: Williams was the biter, not Washington. Prosecutors chose to go with Campbell’s identification, not Hales’s, and in August 1987 Williams went on trial. The only physical evidence were the bite marks. Campbell identified four of them on White’s body and said Williams’s teeth were consistent with an injury on her hip. “The research states that there are no two people that have the same position [of their teeth],” Campbell testified, though no such research has ever been done. Williams was found guilty, as was Washington in a later trial where almost the same evidence was presented.

But both Campbell and Hales were wrong, a fact not found out until 2000, when the semen in the rape kit was compared to the DNA profile of another man. It matched the new suspect and Washington was freed. (Williams had been freed in June 1993 because testimony from a jailhouse informant had been ruled inadmissible.) The two men served a total of 19 years in prison for a murder they had nothing to do with—all based on bogus bite mark testimony.

The third case is even more troubling because it involved an execution. The defendant’s name was David Spence, and he was, oddly enough, Juanita White’s son. (For more on this labyrinthian case read “The Murders at the Lake.”) Spence was convicted in two trials, in 1984 and 1985, of the murders of three Waco teens and given the death penalty. The only physical evidence against him: bite marks on the bodies of two of the victims. The expert who testified: Homer Campbell. Spence, Campbell said, was “the only individual” to a “reasonable medical and dental certainty” who could have bitten the women. According to jurors, Campbell’s words were powerful. “We had life-size pictures of the marks and a cast of [Spence’s] teeth brought into the jury room,” remembered one juror afterward. “The testimony—‘everyone’s bite mark is different, like a fingerprint’—was very convincing.”

Spence’s appellate lawyers tried to attack Campbell’s methods with other forensic odontologists. One, Thomas Krauss, a former president of the American Board of Forensic Odontology (ABFO), said Campbell’s methodology was “well outside the mainstream.” Krauss helped the lawyers set up a blind panel of five odontologists to analyze the autopsy photos and vet Campbell’s work by comparing the marks with dental molds from Spence and four other subjects. The results were astonishing. Though the five experts identified several patterns that were possibly bite marks, they couldn’t say much more. One of them said the photos were too poor in quality to compare to the molds. A second wrote that the marks were “more likely than not made by insects or artifacts.” A third thought that some of the marks were probably bite marks, but he couldn’t match any of the molds to them. Two of the experts did indeed match one of the marks to one of the molds, but it was not Spence’s. It belonged to a housewife from Phillipsburg, Kansas. Unfortunately for Spence, the study wasn’t completed until after the deadline for Spence’s writ. He was eventually executed, despite numerous questions about his guilt—the biggest coming from the fact that the only physical evidence against him came from Campbell.

Campbell made at least one other embarrassing mistake that we know of. In 1984, a few years before he testified against Spence and Chaney, he was asked by a lieutenant in the sheriff’s department in Coconino County, Arizona, for help in identifying the body of a young woman found alongside I-40 near Flagstaff. The lieutenant had a hunch the girl was a missing runaway from Jacksonville, Florida, named Melody Cutlip, who had left home in 1981. Campbell compared the corpse’s teeth with those in a photo of Cutlip that he enlarged. “They matched exactly,” he told the Ocala Star-Banner. Cutlip’s family was notified and the corpse was buried in a Williams, Arizona, cemetery under a headstone with her name. In 1986, Cutlip contacted her mother. She was alive. Campbell was wrong.

A review of old bite mark cases will almost certainly reveal more false identifications, simply because of the nature of the way experts thought and testified. As Hales said in his affidavit in Chaney’s case:

At the time of the trial in December 1987 both the ABFO guidelines and the scientific field of Forensic Odontology supported use of the terms match and biter to relate a suspected person to a bite mark and it was permissible for experts to testify to a reasonable degree of medical/dental certainty that an individual was the biter in a case.

And indeed, if you go back and look at old cases, the word “match” is constantly used by experts, dating back to that very first 1974 case (“The bite mark matches the teeth reproduced in the model”). If experts didn’t say “match,” they said words that meant the same thing: “no question in my mind” (the defendant bit the victim); “it could be no one but [the defendant] that bit this girl’s arm.” Sometimes, as Hales did in Chaney’s trial, they would go further and use statistics, even though no studies had ever been done. Campbell did it in a 1977 Arizona case, when he testified that marks found on a murder victim’s breasts and a model he’d made of defendant’s teeth were “consistent,” which he then quantified by saying, “The probability factor of two sets of teeth being identical in a case similar to this is, approximately, eight in one million, or one in 125,000 people.”

Statements like these were, in Hales’s own contemporary words, “scientifically unsound”—opinions from well-intentioned experts with little to guide them but their own eyes and their own experience. (We reached out to Hales, who declined to comment for this article.) Campbell himself acknowledged the basic problem with bite mark analysis during the Joe Sidney Williams trial in 1987, when he was asked about its inherent subjectivity. “It is subjective,” he said. “I’ll admit it.”

– See more at: http://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/another-texas-exoneration-calls-bite-mark-evidence-into-question/#sthash.oOh4ghum.dpuf

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60 Minutes Profiles Glenn Ford Exoneration

Glenn Ford was released from prison in March 2014 after his wrongful conviction for murder was vacated. Until that point, he had spent 29 years, three months and five days in solitary confinement on death row at Angola State Penitentiary in Louisiana. A little over a year after his release, Ford died of lung cancer at the age of 65. Three weeks prior to his death, Ford was interviewed by CBS news. His interview aired last night on a 60 minutes segment discussing Ford’s exoneration and Louisiana’s staunch support of Capital Punishment.

Marty Stroud, the former prosecutor who convicted Ford, was also interviewed. After learning of Ford’s release, Stroud came forward and publicly assumed full responsibility for the wrongful conviction. He turned himself into the Louisiana Bar Association’s Ethics Committee, asking to be reprimanded for his role in Ford’s prosecution.

Stroud’s, however, were not universally supported. Current Louisiana Prosecutor Dale Cox, who was also interviewed for the segment, expressed his belief that Stroud did not owe Ford an apology. Cox also defended Ford’s capital conviction and expressed his belief that, despite the number of death row exonerations, Louisiana needed to impose the death penalty more often.

When asked about the Louisiana’s failure to compensate Ford’s family for the 30 years he spent in prison, Cox defended the State’s sole gift to Ford: a $20 gift card.

 Cox: I got him out of jail as quickly as I could. That’s what the obligation of the state is.

Bill Whitaker: And that’s the end of the state’s obligation?

Dale Cox: As far as I’m concerned.

Cox is a vehement supporter of the death penalty, his Parish along In the sentenced more people to death per capita from 2010 to 2014 than in any other county in the United States.

To view the entire 60 Minutes segment click here.

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Northern California Innocence Project Client Larry Pohlschneider Exonerated

Earlier this week Sandee Magliozzi, Executive Director of the Northern California Innocence Project, sent out the following notification detailing a recent victory for NCIP…

Dear Friends,

We wanted to share some great news with you: yesterday afternoon the Tehama County Superior Court overturned the wrongful conviction of NCIP client Larry Pohlschneider, 46, after nearly 15 years of wrongful imprisonment! Mr. Pohlschneider’s attorneys and the Tehama County District Attorney agreed that his 2000 conviction should be vacated and the charges dismissed due to the ineffective assistance of Mr. Pohlschneider’s trial counsel.

NCIP Assistant Legal Director Maitreya Badami, Mr.

Pohlschneider’s lead attorney, commended the Tehama County District Attorney’s Office for its willingness to look at this case with fresh eyes when presented with evidence from NCIP’s investigation. “Without the District Attorney’s fairness and cooperation, Mr. Pohlschneider’s unjust incarceration might have been even more prolonged,” explained Ms. Badami. “The failure of Mr. Pohlschneider’s trial attorney to investigate and challenge the medical evidence resulted in an untrustworthy verdict and his wrongful imprisonment.”

Larry Pohlschneider and legal team
From left: NCIP Legal Director Linda Starr, NCIP Assistant Legal Director Maitreya Badami, Larry Pohlschneider, and NCIP volunteer attorney Thom Seaton beam after a Tehama County Superior Court judge overturns Mr. Pohlschneider’s conviction. Photo: Audrey Redmond.
“Today marks the first step toward freedom and complete vindication for Mr. Pohlschneider,” said NCIP volunteer attorney Thom Seaton. “An innocent man was pulled into a child-molestation case because of junk science which led police wrongly to focus on him as an additional perpetrator — despite the fact that the true, sole perpetrator, Albert Harris, had been charged, confessed, and ultimately pled guilty to the crime.”

“Tragically, junk science passing as expert testimony is a contributing factor in 22 percent of wrongful convictions and NCIP is actively working to free innocent people and establish policies to prevent wrongful convictions like Larry’s,” said NCIP Legal Director Linda Starr.

The court ordered Mr. Pohlschneider’s release, and his discharge from Tehama County Jail is expected imminently.

It is because of your support that together we are able to celebrate this victory. We look forward to telling you soon that Larry has been released!

Sincerely,
Sandee Magliozzi

Sandra “Sandee” Magliozzi, Esq.
Interim Executive Director, NCIP
Associate Dean of Experiential Learning, Santa Clara University School of Law

P.S. Send Larry a message of support here.

Donate to NCIP

From left: NCIP Legal Director Linda Starr, NCIP Assistant Legal Director Maitreya Badami, Larry Pohlschneider, and NCIP volunteer attorney Thom Seaton beam after a Tehama County Superior Court judge overturns Mr. Pohlschneider’s conviction. Photo: Audrey Redmond.

Congratulations to Mr. Pohlshcneider and the NCIP!

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The Cure for the Cynical Prosecutors’ Syndrome: Rethinking a Prosecutor’s Role in Post-Conviction Cases

“The Cure for the Cynical Prosecutors’ Syndrome: Rethinking a Prosecutor’s Role in Post-Conviction Cases” by Laurie L. Levenson  of the Loyola Law School in Los Angeles was recently published by the Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law. The abstract reads:

One of the biggest challenges facing the criminal justice system is dealing with the growing tide of post-conviction petitions claiming wrongful conviction. Each year, the number of exonerees grows. In 2014, an unprecedented 125 exonerations were recorded in the United States. In analyzing how post-conviction matters are handled, it becomes apparent that one of the key roadblocks to remedying these injustices is not, as some have suggested, the attitude of young prosecutors. Rather, senior prosecutors also suffer from a type of “Cynical Prosecutors’ Syndrome” that impairs their ability to play a constructive role in the exoneration process. This article discusses the role of prosecutors in the post-conviction process, analyzes current studies of prosecutorial attitudes, and proposes reforms to ensure that meritorious post-conviction challenges are handled properly.

You can download the full article here.

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Investigation by Sarasota Herald-Tribune Results in Release of Florida Inmate

Investigative Journalism often plays a vital role in overturning wrongful convictions. Such is true in the case of Andre Bryant. Bryant was convicted of robbery in 2006 and sentenced to serve 30 years in prison. Last year, Sarasota Herald-Tribune journalist Elizabeth Johnson began looking into Bryant’s case. After nine months of reporting, the Herald-Tribune published an investigation that raised questions about the arrest and conviction of Bryant in the 2006 robbery of a deputy’s wife and children. The investigation led the Innocence Project of Florida to represent Bryant and the State Attorney’s Office to re-examine the case. Last week, Bryant was released from prison following the the State’s decision to set aside the robbery conviction.

Kudos to Johnson and all other investigative journalists whose efforts are key to correcting the issue of wrongful conviction.

For more on Andre Bryant’s release click here

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The Ohio Innocence Project Joins In Celebration of 2nd Annual International Wrongful Conviction Day

On October 2, 2015 the Ohio Innocence Project at the University of Cincinnati College of Law and the newly formed OIP-u will unite with dozens of other organizations around the world to commemorate the 2nd Annual International Wrongful Conviction Day. This day is dedicated to recognizing those whose lives have been adversely impacted by wrongful conviction and to educating the public on the causes, consequences and complications of wrongful conviction.

The celebration will mark the launch of OIP-u, Ohio’s Collegiate Network of Innocence Advocates. The mission of OIP-u is to support the Ohio Innocence OIP-u Official LogoProject in its effort to free the innocent and prevent wrongful conviction by educating the public about its causes and consequences. OIP-u provides a way for undergraduate and graduate students all over Ohio to come together and fight for the freedom of the many innocent men and women incarcerated in this state. OIP-u and the Ohio Innocence Project will be holding events at several universities across Ohio with newly formed OIP-u chapters, featuring OIP exonerees and staff members.

Upcoming Wrongful Conviction Day Events in Ohio

October 1st
Ohio University 5-7pm Bentley Hall, Room 136
Speakers: Ohio Exoneree, Ray Towler, and OIP Staff Member, Liza Dietrich
Hosted by OIP-u Ohio University Chapter

October 2nd
The University of Dayton 3:30-5:30pm O’Leary Auditorium in Miriam Hall Room 119
Speakers: Ohio Exoneree, Robert McClendon, and OIP Director, Mark Godsey
Hosted by OIP-u University of Dayton Chapter

The Ohio State University Noon-1:30pm Saxbe Auditorium located in Drinko Hall
Wrongful Conviction Day Panel featuring Emmy Award winning correspondent, Erin Moriarty ’77, CBS News; Joanna Feigenbaum ’11, Ohio Public Defender Wrongful Conviction Project; Jennifer Bergeron, Ohio Innocence Project attorney; and Clarence Elkins, an Ohio Exoneree. The panel will be moderated by Nikki Baszynski ’13, also of the Ohio Public Defender’s office.
Hosted by the Ohio Public Defender and the OIP-u Ohio State Chapter

For a complete list of International events visit: wrongfulconvictionday.com

#WCDOhio2015 #IWCD2015

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Ohio Exoneree Ricky Jackson Receives Standing Ovation at the MET

Last Saturday Ohio Exoneree Ricky Jackson participated in a TEDxMET performance at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Ricky spoke about his love for art, one that developed when he was a child and helped him endure 39 years of wrongful incarceration. The audience was visibly moved by Ricky’s words which were met with a standing ovation.

Limor Tomer, the General Manager of Concerts & Lectures at the Metropolitan Art Museum, had the following to say about Ricky’s performance:

Yesterday Ricky inspired, touched, moved and brought the house down at TEDxMET.  His depth, humility, intelligence, perceptiveness, heart and soul shone through and touched everyone very deeply.

Click here to view Ricky’s 12 minute segment via the Met’s website. You can view all of the TEDxMET participants here.

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