Author Archives: Mark Godsey

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

DOJ Reverses No-Record Policy for Interrogations….

When I was a federal prosecutor, on one of my first days a lawyer came in with his client to proffer as a possible cooperator.  The lawyer asked if the interview could be recorded.  Since I was new, I asked my supervisor, who said, “No, we never record.” I asked why and was told, “The public wouldn’t understand how complex this is, and the things we have to do sometimes to get the truth.”  Anyway, that policy has now thankfully been reversed.

From the USA Today:

Since the FBI began under President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908, agents have not only shunned the use of tape recorders, they’ve beenprohibited by policy from making audio and video records of statements by criminal suspects without special approval.

Now, after more than a century, the U.S. Department of Justice has quietly reversed that directive by issuing orders May 12 that video recording is presumptively required for interrogations of suspects in custody, with some exceptions.

There was no news release or press conference to announce the radical shift. But a DOJ memorandum — obtained by The Arizona Republic — spells out the changes to begin July 11.

“This policy establishes a presumption that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the United States Marshals Service (USMS) will electronically record statements made by individuals in their custody,” says the memo to all federal prosecutors and criminal chiefs from James M. Cole, deputy attorney general.

“This policy also encourages agents and prosecutors to consider electronic recording in investigative or other circumstances where the presumption does not apply,” such as in the questioning of witnesses.

An accompanying message from Monty Wilkinson, director of the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, says the change resulted from lengthy collaborative efforts among DOJ and law enforcement personnel. Media representatives at the Justice Department and FBI did not immediately respond to requests for a more detailed explanation.

Paul Charlton, the former U.S. Attorney for Arizona who was fired by President George W. Bush in part because he challenged the Justice Department’s no-taping policy, welcomed the turnaround.

“It’s a great day,” Charlton said. “Really extraordinary. It’s a step in the right direction for law enforcement.”

“Hallelujah!” agreed Steve Drizin, a clinical professor of law at the Northwestern University School of Law who focuses on false convictions and false confessions. “It’s been a long time coming.”

Nancy Savage, executive director at the Society of former Special Agents of the FBI, said there’s probably no unilateral view from field agents. Although tape recorders sometimes intimidate suspects, she added, the change was probably inevitable because juries have come to expect audio and video evidence.

“This is a radical departure,” Savage said. “They want to see it in living color. … I think it’s probably just a move forward.”

Attorneys, researchers and longtime critics of the old policy say reform brings federal agencies up to modern policing standards, and removes a stigma that has damaged the credibility of America’s criminal justice system. Put simply, in the absence of recorded interviews, defense lawyers have been able to undermine honest testimony by some FBI agents while, in other cases, agents incorrectly remembered, distorted or lied about suspect statements.

The failure to maintain electronic records of interrogations also created gaps in FBI intelligence-gathering, especially terrorism cases. Instead of maintaining an accurate and largely indisputable record, agents on the witness stand for decades have relied on their memories, interpretations and handwritten notes transcribed into a form known as the 302.

Critics have said that flawed system results in botched investigations, lost evidence, unprofessional conduct and false convictions. They noted that the historic DOJ practice was problematic in trials of suspects ranging from terrorist Osama bin Laden to TV star Martha Stewart to Oklahoma City bombing defendant Terry Nichols, and thousands of defendants with no public exposure.

The FBI, considered one of the most advanced investigative agencies in the world, helped pioneer the use of fingerprints, ballistics, electronic wiretaps, psychological profiling and other advanced techniques. Yet, while local police have audio- or video-recorded suspects for decades, some FBI agents and administrators doggedly resisted the use of a device more accurate than the pen.

As recently as 2005, the FBI declined to give The Arizona Republic a copy of its written policy requiring special authorization for recordings, or even to say when and why the rule was created. Bureau assertions that taping of suspects is a logistical problem, or inhibits honest interviews, are generally disputed by street cops, detectives and professors of criminology. In fact, taping of criminal suspects is now mandatory in at least eight states, either by statute or court decrees.

In 2006, The New York Times uncovered another explanation for the DOJ policy, spelled out in an internal FBI memorandum. Basically, it argued that jurors might be offended, possibly to the point of acquitting defendants, if they observed the deceit and psychological trickery legally employed by agents to obtain information and confessions.

Drizin said the FBI has obtained a number of false convictions in homicide cases, particularly on Indian reservations, because suspect interviews were not recorded. Drizin also noted that, in some recent trials, jurors have acquitted defendants because they mistrusted FBI testimony about interrogations that could have been recorded.

Fred Whitehurst, an attorney and ex-FBI agent who turned whistle-blower, said the new policy is “delightful,” adding, “What have we got to hide?”

Mel McDonald, a former U.S. Attorney for Arizona who now does criminal defense work, said FBI interrogations involve one agent taking notes while a second conducts the interview. While 302 records and agent memories may be inaccurate, he said, their testimony trumps a suspect’s recollection. In fact, a defendant who disputes the FBI statements could be charged additionally with lying to federal authorities.

“I’ve had more clients who told me, ‘That’s not what I said.’ ” McDonald noted. “But you’ve got two agents supporting each other. It’s your word against theirs. Who are they (jurors) going to believe?”

McDonald hailed the close of “an insane policy” at DOJ, declaring, “Bravo! It’s about time. It uses science to establish the truth … That’s a no-brainer.”

The DOJ no-taping rule had been partially lifted during recent years for criminal investigations in India.

As an example of the justice benefits, Hammond pointed to the case of Tymond Preston, an 18-year-old Navajo with severe intellectual disabilities who was convicted of child rape. Preston was found guilty, but this month 11 judges on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals threw out his confession — which agents had videotaped — and ordered a new trial.

Based on video evidence, the justices unanimously agreed that the confession was involuntary because agents “fed him the details of the crime” and used numerous other coercive tactics.

The new policy contains an exception for public safety situations where a suspect must be questioned instantly to avert an imminent life-threatening danger — the so-called ticking bomb scenario. There also is an exemption for national security intelligence-gathering interviews.

 

 

Brooklyn DA Asks City Council for $1 million in Budget to Correct “Epic” Number of Questionable Convictions

From the Associated Press:

NEW YORK — Brooklyn’s district attorney says he plans to spend more than $1 million to review questionable convictions over the next budget year.

District Attorney Kenneth Thompson told a City Council budget hearing Tuesday that his office is dealing with an “epic” number of questionable convictions.

He said his Conviction Review Unit has overturned the convictions of six men.

According to the Wall Street Journal (http://on.wsj.com/1tjaOqI ), he said “With every case that’s publicized, additional cases are sent to my office for review.”

Thompson says 10 of his office’s 153 prosecutors have been assigned to the unit, in addition to three investigators and other staff.

He came into office this year promising to make addressing allegations of wrongful convictions a priority.

 

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Chicago DA Anita Alvarez and the Office of Self Promotion and Protection

From the Chicago Daily Observer:

She hasn’t had any suspects murdered in their beds yet, so that would make Anita Alvarez only the second worst state’s attorney in the modern history of Cook County. (The top of this dubious list goes, of course, to the late Edward Vincent Hanrahan whose police squad slaughtered Black Panthers Fred Hampton and Mark Clark in a notorious predawn raid of their apartment in December 1969.)

anita-alvarez-289x300

However, she matches Hanrahan for bull-headedness and, for want of a better word, sadism.  She fights like a tiger to keep prisoners locked up even though courts and appeals have exonerated them of the crimes for which they have been imprisoned; she also appears to have been involved in cover-ups of miscues by her office and is given at times to ludicrous over-charging.

     She fought for years to keep Daniel Taylor imprisoned for a murder to which he confessed but couldn’t have committed—he was in police custody when it happened. Yet now she’s investigating whether Alstory Simon’s confession—to a murder for which Anthony Porter came within two days of execution—may be false.

    Unlike Taylor’s confession, Simon’s was corroborated by other credible evidence. The primary difference between the two confessions is that Taylor’s was obtained by police and Simon’s by a defense investigator.

As Rob Warden the retiring head of Northwestern University’s Center on Wrongful Convictions puts it, “Her Conviction Integrity Unit reminds me of Orwell’s Ministry of Truth.”

Alvarez also fought hard but unsuccessfully against the appointment of a special investigator in the case of David  Koschman who was killed by a punch from R.J. Vanecko, a nephew of then-Mayor Richard M. Daley. There’s strong evidence that the police and state’s attorney’s office spent years covering for Vanecko, who only recently confessed and served jail time.

It was she who decided to charge the “NATO 3” with official “terrorism.” They were trio of drunks and stoners who made crackpot threats about attacking Barack Obama’s headquarters with slingshots and other such idiocies. A couple of undercover Keystone Kops helped them assemble primitive Molotov cocktails, which were never used nor did the stoners take any action during the NATO meetings here.

Terrorists? The charge was so laughable the jury immediately tossed it, though it convicted them of possessing the weapons the undercover cops helped them make.

Her latest gambit is seeking perjury charges against witnesses who have recanted previous testimony that have put people into jail and even onto death row. What this would do, of course, is discourage people from eventually coming forward, recanting and admitting their errors. This would keep more innocent people in jail. Wonderful.

A host of former judges, US attorneys, law school deans and professors of all political persuasions recently wrote her asking in the name of justice not to go through with the perjury charges. But, as I have noted before, Alvarez appears uninterested in justice—rather in self-aggrandizement and protection of her office even if the innocent suffer.

The real crime here was committed by the citizens of Cook County who re-elected her.

 

 

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

Breaking News: Exoneration Today in New Orleans…

by the IP of New Orleans with assistance from the local DA (who admitted intentionally prosecutorial misconduct)…

From the New Orleans Advocate:

A man serving life in prison for a 1979 murder was set free Monday after Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro acknowledged “intentional prosecutorial misconduct” in his case and false testimony from a New Orleans police detective who helped convict him.

Cannizzaro and attorneys with Innocence Project New Orleans, the nonprofit law firm, are scheduled to announce Reginald Adams’ release at an 11:30 a.m. news conference. Defense attorneys and prosecutors filed a joint motion asking Judge Laurie White to vacate his conviction, which she granted Monday morning. “You’re free to go,” White told Adams, who has been behind bars for 34 years.

“I will not tolerate intentional misconduct on the part of police or prosecutors,” Cannizzaro said in a statement, apologizing to Adams on behalf of the District Attorney’s Office for depriving him of a fair trial. “Their handling of this case was shameful. Not only did their intentional acts harm Reginald Adams, who was wrongfully incarcerated for more than three decades, but also it denied this community any opportunity to hold the real perpetrator criminally responsible for this violent crime.”

Adams was indicted in October 1980 for the first-degree murder of Cathy Ulfers, the wife of policeman Ronald P. Ulfers Sr., who was shot and killed at her Downman Road home in October 1979. Adams was tried and convicted of the killing in 1983 and sentenced to life in prison, but the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed that conviction in 1989, according to court records. He was retried for the same murder in 1990.

“The evidence against Mr. Adams at both trials consisted exclusively of a confession to the murder, made to Detectives Martin Venezia and Frank Ruiz while Mr. Adams was in the custody of the Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff’s Office,” the joint motion states, adding the confession was “in many ways inaccurate and inconsistent with the known facts of Cathy Ulfers’ murder.”

Ronald Ulfers, who retired from the New Orleans Police Department in 1989, had been a suspect in Cathy Ulfers’ slaying but was never charged, according to news accounts. He was later convicted of murder in the death of his second wife and sentenced to life in prison.

The joint motion says detectives “misrepresented that no evidence or other suspects had been found in the case until Mr. Adams confessed.” It also blames then-prosecutors Ronald Bodenheimer and Harold J. Gilbert Jr. for making “materially false” responses to discovery requests made by Adams’ defense attorney.

Christopher Bowman, a spokesman for Cannizzaro, said in a news release that Bodenhemier and Gilbert failed to turn over a supplemental police report that “fully aware of the additional suspects as well as the recovery of the murder weapon and other physical evidence and that their handling of this case amounts to intentional prosecutorial misconduct.”

Detectives and prosecutors had claimed at Adams’ trial that neither the murder weapon nor any property taken from Ulfers’ home had been recovered by the authorities. Detectives even testified no other suspects had been investigated in the slaying.

Adams’ attorneys, Emily Maw of the Innocence Project and Michael Magner, a former federal prosecutor, reviewed public records related to the case and discovered “a supplemental police report detailing the first several months of the murder investigation in 1979,” Bowman said. He said the report revealed that detectives had been notified “that a weapon similar to the weapon used in the Ulfers murder had been recovered in an arrest,” and that a ballistics expert later determined it was the murder weapon.

“In one of the sad ironies of this case, the detectives, based on this discovery, performed a thorough follow up investigation that traced the weapon back to two individuals,” Bowman added. “The detectives questioned and searched one of the two individuals, and they discovered that he was in possession of a piece of jewelry that had been taken from the Ulfers’ home in the burglary.

Bodenheimer, who later became a judge in the 24th Judicial District in Jefferson Parish, was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison after pleading guilty in 2003 to an array of charges related to corruption at the Jefferson Parish Courthouse. Bodenhemier could not immediately be reached for comment.

In his statement, Cannizzaro said that Adams’ release did not “tell a story about how bad the criminal justice system in New Orleans was.”

“I believe that this is a story about a new day in the New Orleans criminal justice system,” he said. “It is a story about a bright future for every citizen of New Orleans.”

 

Paying Tribute to Innocence Movement Visionary Rob Warden…

This is an article about the event last Friday honoring the career of Rob Warden…Congratulations Rob!

From Northwestern University:

Leaders who reframed death penalty debate come together to honor Rob Warden

May 5, 2014 | by Hilary Hurd Anyaso

CHICAGO — When the Center on Wrongful Convictions (CWC) at Northwestern University School of Law opened in 1999, wrongful convictions were viewed as anomalies. There from the beginning, Rob Warden, the co-founder and executive director of the CWC, will be honored for his award-winning work at a symposium that marks his imminent retirement.

In the tribute to Warden, the symposium also will feature other leaders whose relentless work over the years has led to a sea change in the national discourse about the death penalty, shifted public perception and policies about wrongful convictions and resulted in hundreds of exonerations.

Co-hosted by the Center on Wrongful Convictions and the School of Law’s Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, “Champion of Justice: A Symposium to Celebrate Rob Warden’s Quest to Free the Innocent” will be held from 1:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 9, at Northwestern University School of Law, 375 E. Chicago Ave., Thorne Auditorium. The event is free and open to the public.

Barry Scheck, professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and co-director of the Innocence Project, widely known for its use of DNA evidence to exonerate the wrongfully convicted, will give the keynote address at 4:45 p.m.

Larry Marshall, co-founder of Northwestern’s Center on Wrongful Convictions and currently a professor at Stanford Law School, will deliver the opening address at 1:40 p.m.

(Marshall led the 1998 landmark National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the Death Penalty. Journalists from around the world came to Northwestern Law to cover the historic gathering that for the first time brought together dozens of people released from death row with scholars, activists and lawyers in a highly publicized examination of wrongful convictions.)

The symposium will feature a number of tributes to Warden, including those given in a video sponsored by Kirkland & Ellis and the Cohen Law Group. Warden also will be interviewed on stage and receive a tribute from exonerees.

Marshall will lead a panel discussion on how innocence changed the death penalty debate; a sexual assault survivor who misidentified her attacker will give a presentation; and a panel discussion on the causes of wrongful convictions and reform initiatives will be led by Steve Drizin, a clinical professor and assistant dean at the Bluhm Legal Clinic at Northwestern Law who has done leading work on false confessions.

For more information about the event, see http://www.law.northwestern.edu/cwc.

CLE credit will be available for this event.

ABOUT ROB WARDEN

Warden, an investigative journalist whose reporting has helped to free scores of innocent men and women, co-founded the CWC with Larry Marshall, a former Northwestern Law professor, in the spring of 1999. The CWC was founded in the wake of the historic conference on wrongful convictions and the death penalty held at Northwestern University School of Law in November 1998. The conference, which gathered together the largest ever number of exonerated death row inmates on the stage of the School of Law’s Thorne Auditorium, focused the country and the world on the risk of executing the innocent and helped to reframe the debate about the death penalty.

During the 15 years since the founding of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, the work of Warden, Marshall and the CWC staff and attorneys influenced then-Illinois Gov. George H. Ryan’s decision first to declare a moratorium on the death penalty and then to grant clemency to all of the remaining Illinois death row inmates in January 2003. The Illinois legislature’s decision to abolish the death penalty and Gov. Pat Quinn’s decision to sign the abolition bill into law would never have happened were it not for the work of Warden and the CWC.

Under Warden’s leadership, CWC work also has spurred wide-ranging reforms aimed at preventing wrongful convictions. Most recently, Warden was an invited guest of Illinois State Rep. Scott Drury when Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed into law a bill expanding the requirement that interrogations of homicides be electronically recorded to include other serious felonies. Warden has been a prodigious scholar since arriving at Northwestern, publishing numerous law review articles and several books on subjects related to wrongful convictions and the death penalty. He also has been instrumental in the creation of a network of innocence clinics around the country.

In May 2012, the National Registry of Exonerations, the most comprehensive collection of exonerations in the United States ever assembled, was launched with a report covering 873 exonerations from 1989 through February 2012. Since then, the registry has added exonerations at a rate exceeding 200 per year. Warden has played a pivotal role in the formation of this joint project of the University of Michigan Law School and the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern Law. The Registry provides detailed information about every known exoneration in the United States since 1989 — cases in which a person was wrongly convicted of a crime and later cleared of all the charges based on new evidence of innocence.

Pat Vaughan Tremmel, associate director of media relations, contributed to this story.

– See more at: http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2014/05/paying-tribute-to-an-advocate-for-the-wrongfully-convicted.html#sthash.9O8YBCIl.dpuf

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Spotlight on Innocence Project South Africa

From IOLnews.com:

Cape Town -South Africans who have been convicted of crimes they didn’t commit may now be able to prove their innocence through a new project which relies on DNA testing.

In the US the Innocence Project has already helped scores of people, including some on death row, to be exonerated through the help of DNA technology. Now the Innocence Project South Africa will strive to do the same.

“It is far more important to release somebody from jail who isn’t guilty than to be putting people behind bars who are guilty,” said Professor Sean Davison, head of the forensic DNA laboratory at UWC.

“It’s a shocking crime against humanity to keep someone in jail who shouldn’t be.”

Davison is the co-founder of this project with Dr Andra le Roux, a lawyer based at Stellenbosch University.

He said that to date more than 300 people in the US had been exonerated through DNA technology. In more than half of the cases, the true perpetrator was identified.

“There have been so many cases of absolute innocence. By logic we deduced that there would be similar cases in South Africa. In fact, there will probably be more because South Africa doesn’t have a jury system.”

The project would look at cases where DNA had not been tested or where the DNA technology used at the time was inferior to current technology.

“The lab at UWC specialises in looking at highly degraded DNA, which could well be the case for DNA which has been stored for up to 15 years and may have been exposed to environmental damage before then.”

The project recently registered with the Innocence Network, the international umbrella body, and has already started getting applications from prisoners.

Davison said applications would be reviewed by a committee. Should they pass the initial screening, they would be asked to fill out a questionnaire providing further details.

“There then needs to be a search for biological evidence. We will need to obtain the detailed case docket and all the evidence related to the crime will have to be investigated.”

The team would have to work closely with the police, with whom meetings had already been held.

Flyers would be distributed in prisons to make inmates aware of the project.

Davison said that in the US the exonerations had exposed weaknesses in the criminal justice system such as false witness testimony, false confessions, and erroneous forensic science. But cases where biological evidence had been used to exonerate people were just the tip of the iceberg – many other innocent people would remain in jail because there was no biological evidence.

The project would rely on donor funding and prisoners would be helped on a pro bono basis.

Davison’s colleague, Professor Eugenia D’ Amato, said a prototype rape kit, developed by the UWC forensic DNA laboratory, was expected to be made available next year and would help to determine how many people were involved in cases in which a victim had been raped multiple times, and would help to exonerate the innocent.

 

 

New Scholarship Spotlight: Relying on Demeanour Evidence to Assess Credibility during Trial – A Critical Examination

Amna M. Qureshi from the U of Ottawa has posted the above-titled article on SSRN.  Download here.  The abstract states:

Demeanour evidence is relied on by the justice system in one of the most important assessments at a trial, namely to assess the credibility of witnesses including complainants and accuseds. This use has also been the source of recent controversy in the case of R v NS where a sexual assault complainant was ordered to remove her niqab before she would be allowed to testify. This paper examines the common law assumption that witnesses in common law criminal courts are required to testify with their faces visible and the origins of this assumption. This paper argues that based on strong social science research the reliance on demeanour cues can be a distracting and unreliable method to assess credibility and increases the potential for wrongful prosecutions and convictions, reduced access to justice for marginalized groups and has a detrimental effect on the truth-seeking function of a trial as whole.

Law shouldn’t discourage the truth

Editorial from the Chicago Sun-Times:

Our court system must always keep a door open for the truth, but too often it is closed.

Under a badly written Illinois law, a person can be charged with perjury for admitting that his or her earlier testimony — even if given many years earlier — was a lie.

That’s problematic, because a fair society wants people to come forward if they’ve caused an injustice by lying under oath. But if they fear going to prison for doing so, you can bet they’ll keep their mouths shut.

In one well-known Cook County case in 1985, a woman named Cathleen Crowell Webb came forward and said she had lied eight years earlier when she accused a man named Gary Dotson of raping her. Authorities didn’t believe her until DNA testing proved Dotson’s innocence in 1988. He finally was pardoned in 2002.

At the time, the Cook County state’s attorney could have prosecuted Webb for perjury, but he didn’t. That turned out to be a wise decision.

Now, former U.S. Attorney and Gov. Jim Thompson, who personally led clemency hearings in 1985 on the Dotson case, is among 23 highly regarded former judges and prosecutors who are worried about a new case that could have a chilling effect on future witnesses who want, finally, to come clean. On April 24, the former judges and prosecutors sent a letter to State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez expressing concern about the perjury prosecution of a man named Willie Johnson.

Johnson, who had a serious criminal record of his own, first testified in 1994 against Cedric Cal and Albert Kirkman when they were on trial for a double murder on the South Side. But seven years later, in 2011, he testified that he had lied because telling the truth back then would have endangered him and his family. By then, Johnson had moved out of Illinois, had been disabled in a car accident, was married and living on Supplemental Social Security Income, and was staying out of trouble. But a judge ruled Johnson’s recantation was not credible, just as an earlier judge had ruled Webb’s recantation was not credible, and Johnson was charged with perjury.

In their letter, the former judges and prosecutors warn that the perjury charges are “contrary to the interests of justice,” and they certainly should know. Their collective experience with our criminal justice system, from all perspectives, is deep, broad and sophisticated. They know of what they speak.

Just as they urge, the perjury charges should be dropped. And the law, we would add, should be rewritten.

The problem with the law is that it says you are automatically guilty of perjury if you give two contradictory statements, even if the second statement is the truthful one and the first is beyond the normal three-year statute of limitations on perjury. That makes doing the right thing a crime. We are reminded of the way government whistleblowers used to be treated, when they could be punished for coming forward even if they were telling the truth.

We’ve seen a parade of exonerations over the years, across the state, in which innocent people were freed from prison — even death row — and a big piece of those exonerations often has rested on admissions from witnesses that they’d lied at the original trials. Often, the witnesses had been persuaded to lie in the first place as a kind of public service — they would be putting a bad guy behind bars.

Our criminal justice system depends on witnesses taking their oaths seriously, and there should be penalties when they do not. It is also true that prosecutors cannot and should not reopen a case every time a witnesses changes a story. As in the Gary Dotson case, where new DNA evidence emerged, something more than a recantation typically is required.

But to discourage recantations that might be true by pressing perjury charges too aggressively — that turns the truth-finding mission of the courts upside down.

Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for Alvarez, said her office uses perjury prosecutions only in rare instances.

“We don’t believe it has a chilling effect, we really don’t,” she said.

We’re not so sure future would-be recanters, finally looking to tell the truth, will see it that way.

 

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

Stranger Raises 35k for Exoneree….

From ABCnews:

When Alex Sutaru heard the story of Jonathan Fleming, a Brooklyn man exonerated after doing nearly 25 years in a New York prison for a murder he didn’t commit, he knew he had to act.

“This is somebody that wasn’t guilty of a crime; he was wrongfully convicted,” Sutaru said. “After the hell he’s been through for the past 24 years he came out with a positive attitude and said he wants to live the rest of his life, go to school, be positive and today’s the first day of the rest of my life.”

Fleming had been freed three weeks ago by a key piece of evidence — a phone receipt in the case files all along that put him at Walt Disney World with his children when the murder was committed in New York.

Though his release was astounding and a long time coming, Fleming was returned with no home, no job and no money.

“I had about $93 in my account so that’s all I was given when I got out of prison, $93,” Fleming said. “I’m living from house to house with my cousins.”

Amazingly, even after all of the hardship he endured, he expressed not one ounce of resentment.

After being asked how he could not be angry after such an ordeal, Fleming said, “I just have to move forward. I’m just so happy to be out and I don’t want to live that way.”

So Sutaru, a 32-year-old Wall Street banker, moved by Fleming’s demeanor and his story, went online and created a fundraising campaign.

Click here for more information on the campaign.

Within days the campaign raised nearly $35,000 from more than 600 people in 14 countries. The money will help Fleming afford a place to live and food to eat as well as get him on his feet while he looks for a job.

“I think people recognize that donating a little they can help this person integrate back into society and build a life for himself that was wrongly taken away from him,” he said. “People are good. There is some bad out there but most people are good.”

On Monday, Fleming and Sutaru met for the first time.

“I want to thank you, man, I really do, I want you to know that, it really means a lot that you did this for me,” Fleming said. “You’re a wonderful man to do this for me. I appreciate it.”

“People, you know, I never thought they’d do this for me,” he told ABC News. “I look at things really different now, I really do, I look at things real different.”

 

 

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Man exonerated of rape charges in Sweden after 10 years in prison; now Sweden’s long-serving exoneree
  • In China, a long road to justice in recent double exoneration case
  • Rob Warden writes that the death April 20 of Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, middleweight prizefighter, heavyweight champion of the wrongfully convicted, is a vivid reminder of a plague that has long corrupted the criminal justice system — perjury by prosecution witnesses who have ulterior motives to lie.  Article….
  • Alaska Innocence Project gearing up for May hearing in the Fairbanks Four case
  • Article on how bad science leads to wrongful convictions
  • New judges’ training program in Bangladesh warns new judges to be vigilante against wrongful convictions
  • More strange twists and turns in the Montana case of Cody Marble

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Wednesday’s Quick Clicks…

R.I.P. Hurricane Carter…

That’s the story of the Hurricane,
But it won’t be over till they clear his name
And give him back the time he’s done.
Put in a prison cell, but one time he could-a been
The champion of the world.

-Bob Dylan

The legendary Hurricane Carter passed away yesterday at 76.

NY Times article

From The Nation

Rest in peace…