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  • 3
    Apr
    2013
    3:21pm, EDT

    Law enforcement leads the way in overturning bad convictions, group says

    Reza A. Marvashti / The Free Lance-Star via AP

    Michael Wayne Hash is escorted to a police car in Culpeper, Va. on March 14, 2012. A Culpeper County Circuit Judge ordered Hash's release after his life sentence for killing an elderly woman was tossed out by a federal judge. That judge overturned Hash's 2001 murder conviction, citing prosecutorial and police misconduct and an inadequate defense.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The number of cases in which prosecutors or police helped exonerate people convicted of crimes surged in 2012, passing 50 percent for the first time, a research group said Wednesday.

    Authorities led or cooperated on investigations into 34 of last year’s 63 known exonerations, the group said.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    “To the extent that they are focused … on correcting errors that have been made, that’s really good news,” said Professor Sam Gross, editor of The National Registry of Exonerations, a project of the law schools at the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. “That means that more innocent people will be released and that we’ll, over time, learn more about the process that produces mistakes like this and avoid more tragic errors.”

    The development may reflect the spread of what are often known as Conviction Integrity Units in district attorney’s offices in major cities across the country as well as changes in state laws making it easier to do post-conviction DNA testing, according to the registry, which launched last year and provides information about exonerations since 1989.

    Gross said it was an important change, noting that police and prosecutors are the “central actors” in the criminal justice system and had the key role of investigating crimes and pursuing justice. “They have more information; they have more power than anybody else,” said Gross.

    But Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorneys Association, took exception to the report’s findings, particularly that it was the first time law enforcement helped in a majority of such cases.

    “It’s offensive because that’s our job all the time is to … hold the guilty accountable, but our job is (also) to make sure that the innocent are acquitted or exonerated,” he said. “We do that in every case.”

    He also objected to some of the exonerations, saying that in decades-old crimes being challenged today, there were bars to prosecutors re-trying these cases, such as dead witnesses or lost evidence.

    “A number of these people are not innocent,” he said. “I can’t stress this enough because you have victims out there. … If you live through that kind of stuff it’s maddening.”

    He also noted that the 1,089 exonerations found by the registry from 1989 to 2012 was a small number compared to the more than 10 million felony cases that prosecutors nationwide handle annually.

    Man held for 42 years in deadly Arizona hotel fire freed from prison

    The registry uses its own criteria to determine when someone has been exonerated, since there is no such legal category. People have been exonerated through a governor’s pardon, court dismissal of the case, acquittal on retrial and a few through court-issued “certificates of innocence” or “declarations of wrongful imprisonment.” This includes cases where DNA testing was a factor. Some people have been exonerated posthumously.

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    The 2012 exonerations included those charged with murder, including: Damon Thibodeaux, who was cleared by DNA testing in the rape and killing of his 14-year-old step cousin and was released from death row; Michael Hash, who was was freed after 12 years following his life sentence conviction in the killing of an elderly woman. A federal judge vacated the conviction, citing misconduct by the prosecutor and police, and an inadequate defense.

    The conviction integrity units, have emerged in recent years in Dallas, Houston, New York (Manhattan and Brooklyn), Santa Clara, Calif., and Lake and Cook counties in Illinois to review disputed cases. Some state attorneys general, such as in Virginia and Colorado, have also undertaken programs to facilitate exonerations or help particular defendants.

    A snapshot of the 1,050 individual exonerations from January 1989-December 2012:

    --  93.2 percent were men; 6.7 percent were women.

    --  The race of the defendants was known in 97.6 percent of the cases: 47.3 percent were black, 38.5 percent were white, 12.2 percent were Hispanic and 1.8 percent were Native American or Asian.

    --  9.4 percent pled guilty. The rest were convicted at trial: 82.2 percent by juries and 7 percent by judges. In about 1 percent of the cases, the Registry could not determine whether the trial conviction was by a jury or judge.

    --  32.4 percent were cleared at least in part through DNA evidence

    --  67.5 percent were cleared without DNA evidence.

    --  Nearly all had been in prison for years: half for at least 9 years; more than 75 percent for at least 4 years.

    Related:

    Wrongfully imprisoned for 23 years, freed man suffers heart attack a day after release

    Conviction: Reporter's 10-year quest for answers in little-known murder case

    Witness error: How mind tricks can put the innocent behind bars

    18 comments

    I'm glad they are FINALLY helping. It also brings into mind why one of the many reasons why the DA's in Texas had obvious hits on them. Not saying that is what was behind it, but certainly could be.

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    Explore related topics: death, national, testing, murder, row, dna, unit, registry, prosecutors, conviction, exonerations, integrity
  • 9
    Dec
    2011
    3:19pm, EST

    Man condemned to death in Conn. home invasion

    Dr. William Petit speaks to reporters after a Connecticut jury sentences Joshua Komisarjevsky to death for his part in the murders Petit's wife and two daughters.

    By NBC News and news service reports

    Updated at 3:54 p.m. ET

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- A jury has condemned a Connecticut man to death for killing a woman and her two daughters in a 2007 attack in their suburban home.

    AP

    A jury condemned Joshua Komisarjevsky to death Friday for killing a woman and her two daughters. (AP Photo/Connecticut State Police, File)

    The jury deliberated over the span of five days before returning the verdict against Joshua Komisarjevsky.

    Komisarjevsky showed no reaction in the courtroom as he learned that he is heading to death row, along with his accomplice, Steven Hayes, NBC Connecticut reported.

    Read complete coverage from NBC Connecticut

    The two paroled burglars were convicted of tormenting the family of four in the New Haven suburb of Cheshire before killing Jennifer Hawke-Petit and leaving her daughters, ages 17 and 11, to die in a fire.

    The only survivor, Dr. William Petit, was beaten with a baseball bat and tied up but managed to escape. He appeared calm as the verdict was pronounced, his eyes blinking rapidly and his hand clenched in a fist on the seat in front of him. He later bowed his head and closed his eyes.

    The crime in the affluent suburb led to the defeat of a bill to abolish the death penalty in Connecticut and sparked tougher state laws for repeat offenders and home invasions.

    The defense asked jurors to spare Komisarjevsky's life. Lawyers argued his ultra-religious family never got him proper help after he was sexually abused as a child by his foster brother.

    The seven women and five men of the jury could have spared Komisarjevsky's life and opted for life in prison without parole, but chose to impose a death sentence on him on all six capital felony counts.

    In closing arguments, a prosecutor said the two men created "the ultimate house of horrors" by inflicting extreme psychological and physical pain on the victims that amounted to torture.

    "It was shockingly brutal. It was evil. It was vicious," prosecutor Gary Nicholson said.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    485 comments

    Fry-em! They all have some lame "excuse" for brutalizing, raping and murdering people. Childhood abuse is not an excuse. Many of us suffered child abuse and did not turn out to be vicious animalistic murderers.

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    Explore related topics: death, row, verdict, featured, conn-home-invasion

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