Gee Marty, tell us how your really feel!
This will be the second "court of inquiry" in Baird's court aimed at clearing someone's name posthumously. Despite Bradley's protestations about jurisdiciton, the statute governing the process allows the motion to be filed in any Texas District Court. Scheck was also one of the attorneys on the Timothy Cole case, along with Innocence Project of Texas legal director Jeff Blackburn. At Timothy Cole's court of inquiry, the prosecution chose not to participate, which turned the event into more or less a one-sided shadow boxing match. But since Willingham was executed and there are death penalty (and potentially even electoral) politics involved, there may be a lot more pressure on the Navarro County DA to oppose Scheck and Co., for which reason I'd be surprised if there isn't a lot more drama in the courtroom this time around. Definitely one to watch.
Relatedly, in my Inbox this morning I received notice from the communications director for the Innocence Project of Texas declaring:
Recently, the Cameron Todd Willingham case has raised serious questions about the Texas criminal justice system. To many, the issue is whether Texas executed an innocent man. To the Innocence Project of Texas, the questions raised by this case are much bigger. To us, the real issue brought up by the Willingham case is the ongoing use of junk science to falsely convict the innocent.These aren't the only murder convictions based on faulty arson forensics in Texas, but they're iconic ones. I still think it's a shame the debate over arson science has become so wrapped up in death penalty demagoguery on all sides, but cases like Sonia Cacy may help steer the conversation back toward faulty arson science and away from arguing how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. In the bigger picture, though, there still needs to be a mechanism created by somebody - the best candidate is the AG, perhaps directed by legislation, or not - to go back through and vet older cases whenever disproven forensic methods may have convicted innocent people, as with older arson cases and dog scent lineups. If not, it will still happen piecemeal, as with these cases, but that leaves a lot of innocent folks waiting around, sometimes in prison, for someone to right an injustice.
One of the most telling instances of an innocent Texan being convicted on the basis of junk science is the case of Sonia Cacy. Sonia was wrongfully convicted of murder in Fort Stockton, Texas. The state alleged that she doused her uncle in gasoline and set him on fire. In order to prove their case, they used evidence provided by the Bexar County Forensic Lab indicating that gasoline was detected on the deceased’s clothing. Since that time, however, a number of experts have examined the results of the Bexar County lab’s testing and have all unanimously concluded that there is no indication of gasoline on the evaluated evidence. Based on this development and other evidence of innocence in Sonia’s case, it is clear that Sonia Cacy was convicted of a “crime” that never occurred. Despite that, she continues to live on parole but hopes to one day prove her innocence and officially clear her name.
MORE: On the Cacy case from the Texas Tribune. AND MORE: A commenter points out this story in the Corsicana Sun which informs us that the jailhouse snitch in Willingham's case, who is presently incarcerated in the local jail on forgery and marijuana charges, will likely testify at the court of inquiry.
Very little forensics work in court relies on the actual scientific method, which requires control samples. If there had to be four visually similar samples submitted for every test, and it was only confirmed if the real sample tested positive and others did not, then our system would be much more robust.
ReplyDeleteThat's my problem with roadside drug tests. As near as I can tell, they are designed to turn blue when they contact any sort of powder.
Kind of funny that John Bradley, who was hand-picked by Governor Rick Perry as a conservative -rabidly pro-death penalty Texas prosecutor to delay and impede the investigation into whether Texas used flawed junk science cooked up by professionally ingnorant fire investigators to execute an innocent person, is now using the word "handpicked" to criticize others.
ReplyDelete"Judge Baird has been handpicked as a liberal judge who is willing to accept a case over which he has no jurisdiction to provide a well-timed political statement for anti-death penalty advocates," Bradley said in an e-mail. "This move by a liberal New York lawyer is consistent with his disregard for the rule of law and the disrespect he has shown for the rulings of numerous state and federal courts that have already reviewed the case and upheld the guilt of Willingham."
I know we can't trust dogs, but...
ReplyDeleteFeds want more bomb-sniffing dogs to protect travelers
By Tom Fontaine, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Monday, July 12, 2010
The Transportation Security Administration wants to increase the role dogs play in sniffing out terror threats at U.S. airports and other mass transit systems.
The TSA requested $71 million from Congress to train and deploy 275 explosives detection canine teams -- bomb dogs and their handlers -- at transportation facilities. The agency has 700 teams, including five at Pittsburgh International Airport.
"The teams have proven to be a very reliable, effective and flexible layer of security," said TSA spokeswoman Ann Davis.
Of course Bradley would attack Judge Baird and Attorney Scheck. Bradley is repulsed by integrity. It goes against everything he stands for.
ReplyDeleteAre you kidding me? Bradley is a self righteous liar and bully. His tactics work in WilCo just ask those who work with him. His day is coming.
ReplyDeleteI don't know what Lowell Thompson, the Navarro Co. DA, will have to say about this. The Corsicana city attorney, a shill for the city and fire department, already wrote a nonsensical response to the IPOT's inquiries restating the junk science that has already been widely discredited with a slight twist here and there.
ReplyDeleteLowell's a smart guy--smarter than Bradley, the former DA, and even Willingham's own defense lawyer combined, and I would be very surprised of he parroted what the above have said time and time again even in the face of insurmountable evidence of it being flawed. I think he will do the best he can, which is to argue that the science may have been flawed but the folks investigating did the job they knew how to do at the time.
Then my fellow Navarro County hillbillies may just run his ass out of office next time he's up for election.
Good luck Lowell. Do the right thing.
I am very interested in the Willingham case. Outside of the new scientific studies, it appears Willingham himself did not help his cause. I have heard many "facts" (accounts) that lead me to believe Willingham was probably guilty even though the science wasn't very reliable
ReplyDelete10:03, many facts have been discredited. Facts such as his confession to his ex, which her brother says he made, but she says he didn't. And multiple accounts of how it could have happened, which were his attempts at saying that he didn't do it, but maybe it was this, or maybe it was that. Of course, using the junk science of the day the investigators excluded those, and concluded he did it. My personal favorite is that many people say he beat his pregnant wife to try to induce a miscarriage. Even the wife said that didn't happen, but it keeps being tossed around as a "fact" again and again.
ReplyDeleteIt's all completely bullshit. He was convicted with junk science that a pathetic defense attorney didn't fight, and rumors. That's it.
Interesting story in Corsicana's paper today. The jailhouse snitch, who is still in jail in Navarro County, will testify in Austin.
Bradley spends much of his time at the courthouse on the computer commenting on various news articles on crime and justice in Texas. He post under various names, using misleading information.
ReplyDelete