Category Archives: Events

International Expansion of the Innocence Movement in 2012

The purpose of this post is to briefly summarize organized innocence activity around the world during 2012 (If I have left items out, please let me know so I can supplement this post).  The calendar year 2012 undoubtedly saw the largest expansion of organized innocence work in history.  Well-attended innocence conferences were held in 5 different continents.  Organizations designed to free the innocent operated in every inhabited continent, and new projects launched in various Latin American countries, France, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Israel, and Taiwan, among others.  Here is a brief summary:

  • The Innocence Network, which currently consists of more than 60 member projects in the U.S., UK, Canada, the Netherlands, and Australia, issued its 2012 report, which lists the members and summarizes the 22 exonerations  its members obtained in the calendar year.  Major conferences on the subject were held in Australia, the UK and the U.S.
  • A network of organizations fighting for the innocent was launched in Latin America, Red Inocente (website here).  Red Inocente held its first annual conference in July, which was attended by more than 70 representatives from various Latin American countries.  Presentations were made about innocence efforts underway in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Mexico, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, and Puerto Rico.  Details of conference here.  The second annual conference will be held in 2013 in Buenos Aires.  Red Inocente has already seen its first exoneration, which occurred this year in Argentina.
  • In Europe, the UK has had a rich history of innocence work for decades, most recently spearheaded by the Innocence Network UK, and many other university-based groups not part of INUK.  This past year has seen innocence organizations launch in the Netherlands and in Lyon, France.  The Innocence Law Clinic in Warsaw, Poland, successfully continued its operations, which have been ongoing since 1999, and the Supreme Court of Poland held a lecture on the international expansion of the Innocence Movement, sponsored by the Helsinki Foundation.  Also in Poland, a conference was held in Krakow on on the topic of wrongful convictions, attended by judges and prosecutors from across the country.  In the Czech Republic, lectures on wrongful convictions were held at 2 major law schools, summarized in this news clip.  Interest in starting an innocent project is budding in Italy, with representatives from a major law school there planning to attend the 2013 Innocence Conference and to shadow the Ohio Innocence Project this summer.
  • In Africa, the highly-organized Wits Justice Project in South Africa continued its operations with many successes; and a new Innocence Project South Africa launched
  • The Israeli Wrongful Convictions Clinic launched
  • In Asia, projects launched with much acclaim in Taiwan and the Philippines.  China held its first major conference on the topic of wrongful conviction, attended by hundreds of judges, prosecutors, professors and defense attorneys.  Two books on wrongful convictions, False Justice and Illustrated Truth, were translated and published in China.

More False Confessions from Chicago to be Covered on “60 Minutes”

This just released by Kevin Tedesco at CBS News:

(And as previously reported in yesterday’s Quick Clicks.)

CHICAGO POLICE UNDER DOJ INVESTIGATION FOR INTERROGATIONS — SOME THAT RESULTED IN FALSE CONFESSIONS FROM TEENAGERS – “60 MINUTES” SUNDAY 

The Chicago Police Department is now the subject of a federal Justice Department investigation into its interrogation practices in at least one case that dates back more than 25 years, 60 MINUTES has learned.  The case involves juveniles who were as young as 14 years old. Now,  after serving lengthy jail times, they tell Byron Pitts they were picked up on the streets, isolated from their parents and in some cases held for days by the police, who they say forced false confessions from them under harsh interrogations.  Pitts’ report will be broadcast on 60 MINUTES, Sunday, Dec. 9 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

“Everything in that confession was fed to us, and myself and my co-defendants by the police,” Terrill Swift tells Pitts.  He signed a 21-page confession in 1994  admitting to a murder and rape of a 30-yr.-old prostitute that resulted in a 30-year sentence. Watch a clip.

“You are being cuffed up and beat on by the police..they can get you to do what they want you to do,’’ says Robert Taylor, who would sign a confession in another case that resulted in being jailed for more than 19 years.

Continue reading

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

  • NPR interview with Raymond Santana of the Central Park 5
  • Exoneree Marty Tankleff speaks today in NY at Sarah Lawrence College
  • Review of speech by exoneree Gary Drinkard at University of Alabama
  • Four men who were cleared last year of the 1994 rape and murder of a woman in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago are filing federal lawsuits claiming they were framed by police.  “To these detectives, one young black man is as good as another,” said attorney G. Flint Taylor, of the People’s Law Office.  WBBM Newsradio’s Mike Krauser reports the four men are filing federal lawsuits against the city, the Chicago Police Department, and Cook County prosecutors, alleging they were framed for the 1994 rape and murder of Nina Glover, despite the fact that no physical evidence linked them to the crime and DNA evidence taken from the victim exonerated them.  The four — Michael Saunders, Harold Richardson, Terrill Swift, and Vincent Thames — were teenagers when they were convicted of Glover’s murder, ranging in age from 15 to 18 when they were arrested.

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Article and performance video of The Exoneree Band
  • Yesterday, the Northern California Innocence Project hosted exoneree Gloria Killian, co-author of “Full Circle, A True Story of Murder, Lies and Vindication” at its Breakfast Briefing series. Killian gave a presentation to 70 attendees detailing her wrongful conviction for murder and robbery, the result of what a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals judge referred to as one of the worst cases of prosecutorial misconduct he had ever seen. A third-year law student at the time of her arrest, Killian spent 17 years in prison. While imprisoned she became a zealous advocate for victims of domestic violence serving sentences for killing their batterers. Killian’s legal work assisted many women, and she was instrumental in helping create a USC law clinic devoted to assisting women in prison. Released ten years ago, Killian has continued to advocate tirelessly for incarcerated women and to shed light into the particular systemic injustices perpetrated in women’s prisons. Beginning in Fall 2013, Killian will re-enter law school at the University of La Verne on a full scholarship.
  • The film West of Memphis helps draw attention to the plight of the West Memphis 3
  • Northwestern’s Center on Wrongful Convictions files DNA testing application in the Illinois murder case of defendant Johnny Lee Savory
  • Dallas exoneree Claude Simmons arrested on a drug charge
  • The Innocence Project concerned there may be many more innocent prisoners who were victims of misconduct by St. Louis police department

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

False Confession Conference at Temple Law a Success…

From Philly.com:

It’s a staple of pulp fiction and film noir: the sweating suspect, the good-cop bad-cop interrogators, and a confession extracted by crafty questioning, a glaring light, and some strategic smacks.

These aggressive questioning techniques – now frowned on by the courts – sometimes resulted in suspects confessing to crimes they did not commit. The stranger reality, say criminologists, is that physical coercion is not needed to obtain a false confession.

“It’s incredibly counterintuitive how common false confessions are. It boggles my mind,” said Peter Neufeld of the Innocence Project at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York City.

Of 300 people freed through DNA evidence uncovered by the Innocence Project, Neufeld said, 25 percent had been convicted in part by their own false confessions.

“Twenty-five percent false confessions is a much higher number than I or anyone Continue reading

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Exoneree Julie Rea speaks at University of Illinois Springfield tonight
  • It appears that by wrongfully convicted Michael Morton, Texas law enforcement allowed the true perpetrator to commit an additional murder
  • Japanese official apologizes to Nepalese man, who was recently exonerated
  • Video of talk by Damien Echols of the West Memphis 3
  • Congressman writes letter to Missouri AG asking him to drop appeal in George Allen case
  • Exoneree Anthony Graves says solitary confinement is a form of torture

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

  •  In Canada, appellate court overturns exoneration that had been based in part on the unreliability of bite mark evidence
  • In Massachusetts, exoneree Shawn Drumgold (who had previously served more than a decade for a murder he didn’t commit) acquitted of drug charges
  • Ohio man who served 8 years in prison for a crime he says he didn’t commit, sues state for alleged bogus testimony of toxicologist who put him behind bars
  •  In Ohio, oral arguments set for January 8th in front of Ohio Supreme Court in the case of Tryone Noling; the Ohio Innocence Project seeks DNA testing in the case
  • Profile of the Innocence Clinic at Wake Forest University
  • Controversial documentary ‘The Central Park Five’ plays at Chicago film festival as lawyers demand filmmaker Ken Burns turn over footage so city can defend itself in $250M federal lawsuit
  • Exoneree Edwin Arnell Chandler of Kentucky given $8.5 million in compensation by state of Kentucky
  • Exoneree James Bain speaks today at Florida Southern College

Boston Drug Lab Scandal – Over 1,000 Cases Effected

Police arrested Annie Dookhan, a chemist at a Boston drug lab, on Friday for allegedly faking drug results, forging paperwork and mixing samples at a state police lab in a scandal that has lawyers scrambling to figure out how to handle the 1,140 inmates who were convicted using possibly tainted evidence.

Dookhan, 34, was arrested at her home in Franklin, about 40 miles southwest of Boston. She is scheduled to be arraigned in Boston Municipal Court on Friday afternoon.

Dookhan’s alleged mishandling of drug samples prompted the shutdown of the Hinton State Laboratory Institute in Boston last month and resulted in the resignation of three officials, including the state’s public health commissioner.

Huff Post story here

CBS News story here

Boston Globe story here.

Thursday’s Quick Clicks…

  • On November 9th, the Temple Law Review and the Pennsylvania Innocence Project will hold a symposium on false confessions
  • Police officers in New York City will soon videotape many more interrogations of suspects because jurors are so used to seeing taped interviews on television shows like “CSI” they’ve come to expect recordings as routine, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said yesterday
  • Review of the 10th Anniversary run of The Exonerated in NYC
  • Exoneree Danny Colon seeks $120 million from NYPD and a prosecutor for wrongful conviction
  • Wrongful convictions still at risk in the UK
  • Book by Damien Echols of the West Memphis 3 is released

Anniversary of Troy Davis Execution Prompts Discourse

Tomorrow, September 21, is the one-year anniversary of the controversial execution of Troy Davis in Georgia. (See report from a year ago here.) Since 1989 DNA has revealed that wrongful conviction—the conviction of a person totally innocent of the crime—does happen, and more frequently than most Americans believe. That reality begs the question of whether or not an innocent person has been executed in the United States. Troy Davis’s execution elevated this question Continue reading

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Montana Innocence Project files motion for new trial in murder case of Richard Raugust, based on new evidence that someone else committed the murder, and evidence that the judge improperly pressured the deadlocked jurors to reach a decision; Montana Innocence Project also files for new trial in the case of Robert J. Wilkes, who was convicted of killing his infant son, on the basis of new medical evidence showing the cause of death was a liver disorder
  • John Thompson, exonerated death-row inmate and founder and director of Resurrection After Exoneration, will visit the University of Toledo College of Law to share his story and describe his work to assist ex-offenders and individuals wrongfully convicted as they re-enter their communities.  Thompson will speak Tuesday, Sept. 18, at noon in the newly renovated Richard & Jane McQuade Law Center Auditorium.
  • Johnny Depp says of West Memphis 3:  “It could have been any of us.”
  • More on the Cardiff 3 case in Wales and the botched attempt to prosecute the police officers responsible

Friday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Brooke Shields, Stockard Channing and Brian Dennehy set for The Exonerated’s Off-Broadway return (New York Times article here)
  • Wrongful convictions in India
  • Connecticut Supreme Court rules that eyewitness identification expert witnesses are proper and admissible
  • Michigan Innocence Clinic wins new trial in child molestation case based on recanting witnesses

Successful Wrongful Convictions Conference in China Held August 6-8, 2012…

The “foreign” delegates with conference host Professor Jiahong HE (front row, center).  More than 150 Chinese scholars, judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys attended the intense 3-day event.

China has had many high-profile and well-publicized wrongful convictions and exonerations in the past decade, and this was the first conference in China to focus on the problem of wrongful conviction.  The conference was held August 6-8, 2012 in Changchun, China, which is in the north near North Korea and Russia.  The conference was packed with interesting speakers (program with speakers and topics here), and I can attest (as can anyone else who was present) that the more than 150 Chinese scholars, judges (including Supreme Court Justices), defense lawyers and high-level prosecutors were extremely concerned about the problem and keen on getting the Chinese system to start working on reforms to minimize it.  China recently passed reforms requiring videotaped interrogation in many cases, and is working diligently to update the criminal procedure rules and to get other innocence reforms in place.

The thing that many of us from the “West” commented to each other throughout the conference was how open the judges and prosecutors were to the problem, and how they seemed to be on the same page with the scholars interested in reform.  You rarely see that kind of cooperation in the U.S. or, as Innocence Network UK founder Michael Naughton noted, in the UK.  [Note:  Naughton is on the far right of the back row in the above picture]

Some of the causes of wrongful conviction that the Chinese speakers frequently noted were false confessions due to intense interrogation methods, political interference in the cases from the local communist party officials who sometimes take an interest high-profile cases and want them to come out a certain way, tunnel vision of police and prosecutors, and the evaluation and promotion process for judges and prosecutors that rewards high conviction rates.  Restructuring the system that so the judiciary is totally independent (from both other branches of government and the Communist Party) seemed to be most frequently cited as the next reform to tackle.  Discussion was open, frank, and filled with a spirit that reform is the air in China, and that anything is possible (eventually).

In addition to being an outstanding conference substantively, a nice perk was that conference attendees had the option of going to the Changbai Volcano on the border of North Korea.  It was remarkably beautiful; I took this photo with my Iphone

One interesting point that was discussed was the Chinese legal system’s distrust of confessions (due in part to the history of torture to obtain them), and the growth of the Mutual Proof Rule, which requires a judge to determine that the objective facts of the case match the suspect’s confession before considering the confession as probative evidence of guilt.  Cases were discussed in which the Mutual Proof Rule resulted in confessions being disregarded because the details varied too far from the undisputed facts.

Another interesting point that was discussed was how the judiciary in the Hunan Province, after a troubling exoneration a few years ago, declared May 9th each year to be set aside for the local judicial system to reflect on wrongful convictions and discuss reforms.  Each year on May 9th the province judicial council issues a report on wrongful convictions and what progress the province has been made to remedy the problem in the past year.

My favorite moment of the conference was when an American professor congratulated the Chinese reformers on how far they have come in recent years, but noted that only 30% of defendants in China are entitled to counsel during trial.  One of the Chinese scholars retorted:  “America put the right to counsel in the Bill of Rights in the 1790s and didn’t make it a universal reality until the 1960s.  It took you almost 200 years.  We have only had serious reform in China for 1o or 20 years, so we’re on track to beat America by more than 150 years.  And we’re gonna do it!!”

If this conference is any indication of the Chinese resolve for reform, then this statement may very well end up being true.

Me with Norwegian Professor Ulf Stridbeck, who was instrumental in founding the Norwegian CCRC, which some believe is the most effective governmental body designed to fight wrongful convictions anywhere in the world…

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

Tuesday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Innocence Project co-founder Barry Scheck takes the stage with Miss America to advocate for prison reform in the U.S.
  • North Carolina’s president of NAACP will speak at rally for the Wilmington 10
  • Mark Alan Norwood of Texas, who is charged for the same murder that wrongfully sent Michael Morton to prison, has his trial moved to a new county
  • California exoneree Brian Banks files for his state statutory compensation of $100 per day of wrongful conviction
  • Supporters of Kirstin Blaise Labato are seeking signatures petitioning the District Attorney to take a different stance than his predecessors and allow DNA testing on evidence, which may shed new light on the case. Jason Kreag, an attorney with the Innocence Project, frames the issue in a letter to District Attorney Steven Wolfson. “My question is simple: what do you have to lose by consenting to testing? If the results confirm Ms. Labato’s involvement in the murder, then that would effectively end the case, and Ms. Labato’s conviction would stand. . . But if the testing identified someone other than Ms. Labato as the murderer, then that result could not only serve as compelling evidence of Ms. Labato’s innocence but also bring the true perpetrator to justice.” 

Monday’s Quick Clicks…

  • Review of book The Dreyfus Affair, about a famous wrongful conviction in France
  • Jail “damaged” wrongfully convicted mother Lindy Chamberlain, says her former husband
  • Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project’s Young Professionals group to hold a Cocktails and Conversations event on July 10th with the legal team that freed the West Memphis 3 and exonerees Marvin Anderson and Thomas Haynesworth
  • Supporters of Illinois Innocence Project client Pamela Jacobazzi gathered in front of capital building yesterday to ask Illinois governor to grant her clemency on grounds that the “shaken baby syndrome” science used to convict her has proven to be unfounded

Exoneree Band Rocks the House and Raise Both Money and Awareness….

From ABC4.com:

Click to watch video story about the jam here

A unique band came to Salt Lake City Sunday night to raise money for a cause that is close to their hearts. All of them served several years in prison for crimes they did not commit.

The group of exonerated musicians performed several original songs at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center in front of a packed house. The event was to raise money for the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center, which works to free wrongly convicted people in Utah. The center has helped exonerate two people in the past year, including Deb Brown, who served 17 years in prison for a murder she didn’t commit.

The band sang about the pain of being locked up unfairly, and the joy of regaining their freedom. “It was Jesus who set me free!” Darby Tillis sang, during the concert’s opening song.

“This group just formed recently,” said Katie Monroe, the Director of RMIC. “This was their very first public performance.”

Some of the musicians, like Tillis, were locked up for ten years. Others were behind bars for nearly three decades.

“It was a total travesty,” said William Dillon. He spent 27 years in prison after being wrongly convicted of murder in Florida.

“I was young. At first I didn’t believe it because you believe in the justice system.”

Dillon gained his freedom in 2008.

“It was quite amazing, because I just got apologized by (Florida) Governor Rick Scott.”

“They’re just an inspiration,” said Melissa Shaughnessy, who attended the concert. “They’re usually upbeat and positive about their situation. They could be very bitter. I would be!”

The Innocence Center estimates that there are hundreds of wrongly convicted people in Utah prisons. They plan to use all the funds raised by Sunday night’s concert to help those people get their freedom.