This TV news report from KHOU Houston reminds us that most police agencies still haven't switched from traditional, flawed lineup methods or even created policies to govern lineups. Police departments could do this on their own, and a few have done so, but I'm not holding my breath for the rest to follow suit of their own accord. The Legislature needs to go back to those policy reforms as a top priority in 2011.
To illustrate the problem, KHOU reporter Brad Woodard focuses on the case of Anthony Robinson, who:
was arrested for the rape of a woman at the University of Houston back in 1987, when DNA testing was not yet admitted as evidence in Harris County.At trial, the prosecution relied heavily on the victim’s identification of Robinson. They called her a "dream witness."
She was young. She was articulate. She was pretty.
And she was wrong. ...
Robinson, whose story was featured on the PBS series "Frontline," was paroled in 1997 and immediately began scraping together the money to pay for his own DNA tests, ultimately proving his innocence and winning a pardon from the state.
See the full report from KHOU:
Why so many Black men accused of rape?
ReplyDeleteI saw a documentry on this it was called "Reefer Madness". They smoke this weed and well you know the rest of the story.
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