Sunday, January 06, 2019

Innocence Project Math 101: Why it's certain eyewitnesses are still sending innocent people to prison in Texas

Our friends at the prosecutor association want to pretend Texas has solved its problem with eyewitnesses falsely identifying innocent suspects after the state passed non-binding guidelines for police lineups in 2011. Shannon Edmonds last night was crowing on Twitter that the last exoneration based a false ID in Texas was in 2010, and the state had solved the problem in 2011.

This is such a disingenuous claim I thought I'd dissect it without the 140 character limitations.

Texas hasn't seen more eyewitness-based exonerations because we've run out of old DNA cases. Those offered a unique window onto false convictions from which we have learned many lessons. But now that there aren't more of them, it's disingenuous bordering on mendacious to pretend that there aren't more false convictions happening.

All of the false ID cases where someone was exonerated by DNA happened because biological evidence still existed from an old, pre-DNA-era conviction that was available for testing. In new cases, DNA testing will (eventually, hopefully) happen as a matter of course where that's possible. Those DNA exonerations were a one-time thing: A window onto the system's failures provided thanks to the advance of technology.

But here's the rub: DNA evidence only exists in about 10 percent of violent crimes. And in those older cases, in the overwhelming majority of instances, biological evidence had been destroyed or damaged and could not be tested. Evidence was only available in a tiny fraction of cases, and even then, prosecutors fought tooth and nail to keep from having it tested. So for every person exonerated by DNA, there are dozens more whose false convictions could never be discovered because the evidence doesn't exist.

This is Innocence Project Math 101.

The existing crop of DNA exonerees is not remotely all the innocent people who've been falsely convicted, they're just the lucky few who could prove it.

DNA exonerations should be viewed much like a poll. A pollster may interview 500 people to gauge the opinions of 5 million. Because we know there are other criminal cases using the same, flawed evidence as in the exonerees' cases, we can infer that the problem exists more broadly in the same way a pollster can say that X% of people approve or disapprove of the president based on a small sample.

What we learned from that DNA "poll" is that faulty eyewitness IDs are the most common causes of false convictions. And studies show that those errors are reduced, but not remotely eliminated, if cops use the best practices promoted in the 2011 Texas legislation. Error rates are still significant.

Because the same practices that caused false convictions in the DNA exonerations are still being used (the guidelines are not mandatory) - and because best practices only lower the error rate, they don't eliminate it - it's a logical fallacy of the highest order to pretend that, because DNA exonerations have stopped, so have false convictions. They've just become invisible again without the fortuitous window DNA provided.

TDCAA was reacting to a New York Times story about false identifications when suspects are allowed to page through mug shot books, as is common in many jurisdictions across the country. Dallas PD was identified as a department that forbids the practice because it leads to false accusations.

The story cited a study out of Houston which analyzed whether photo lineups should be simultaneous or sequential and whether confident witnesses are more likely to be accurate. Study authors parsed data to say that simultaneous is probably better and confident witnesses are more likely to be accurate - a finding they admit contradicts "[l]aboratory-based mock crime studies."

Shannon disputed the Times' take on that research, quoting the study authors' conclusions that “eyewitness confidence is a highly reliable indicator of accuracy.”

However, there's a LOT of error still being made by witnesses: The Times mentioned one cohort in the Houston study in which 47 percent picked the wrong suspect, but overall, 29 percent of witnesses chose a filler from the lineup, while 32 percent chose a suspect. (The Times also pointed to a meta-analysis of a large number of studies that found witnesses pick the wrong person 37 percent of the time.)

One shortcoming of this analysis: The study operated under a baseline assumption that if the suspect is chosen, it's an accurate ID. That's a dubious, self-fulfilling prophecy. Some of those choices were likely errors, too. When a suspect picks a filler, the detective knows it's wrong. The innocence problem arises when the wrong suspect is in the lineup in the first place and a witness picks them.

Confident witnesses were more likely to pick the person the officer considered a suspect, but there were also less confident witnesses who did so, and some highly confident people picked fillers.

And some of the error was generated by police.

The Houston study evaluated both "blind" and "blinded" lineups. "Blind" means the officer prepares the array and shows it to the witness in a fashion so that they can't view what the witness is looking at. "Blinded" means one officer prepares the array and another detective who does not know the identity of the suspect administers it. Both methods are allowed under Texas law.

It turned out, an independent panel not involved with the crime could pick the suspect out of "blind" lineups 28 percent of the time! (It would only be 1/6 if it were random.) So the arrays themselves were biased. Researchers hypothesized that cops took more care to prepare photos where the suspect doesn't stand out if they know another officer will see their work.

Texas courts won't exclude even the most biased lineups. For example, in 2017, Grits discussed a case in which the witness described a suspect as wearing a red hoodie, and police made him put one on before having his photo taken; he was the only one dressed that way in the photo array. But the 14th Court of Appeals said the testimony was okay because the Legislature made eyewitness procedures guidelines instead of requiring them, and courts had always let it in before.

It's not that reformers didn't want best practices to be mandatory back in 2011. But the DA's association and law enforcement interests fought vigorously against it, and the Lege bowed to their wishes. Hence, biased lineups continue to taint the system. That's what's disingenuous about TDCAA's faux concern over valid lineups - they're the ones whose regressive advocacy ensured bad lineups would continue to be used in court, even after the 2011 law.

RELATED: From the New York Times: "Jazmine Barnes case shows how trauma can affect memory."

7 comments:

  1. In Houston, in the shooting of the Barnes family, at least four independent witnesses mistook two black male suspects for one older white male, who was first said to have a beard but that was changed to a 5 o'clock shadow. The older white male was also said to have been driving a red pick-up truck, which was not the type of vehicle the two black males, who are both in custody, were driving at the time of the shooting. Wow!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Scott, don't fall for the lie that Texas has run out of DNA cases. My own case would lead to exoneration if the lawyers of the Dallas Barr would stop obstructing justice. Every time I've tried to apply the law to my own case it was denied for excuses manufactured by the lawyers for the state and not countered by the lawyers assigned to represent me. I do not believe for a second that I am unique in this situation. If one person suffers from this kind of situation, it stands to reason there are others equally oppressed. My handicaps are indigence and lack of publicity. There are no advocates for strait white men without money.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree, Steven! I know of 3 people who have been in prison (TDCJ),for 10 - 30 years, that honesty DID NOT commit the crimes that they have been accused of. It's pitiful!

      Delete
  3. @Stephen, does the DNA evidence still exist? If so, I'm surprised Ch. 64 didn't get you there. IANAL, but that should bypass all the repeat-filing bars at the CCA.

    ReplyDelete

  4. I would love to know just how much a DNA test costs which is acceptable to the Courts .

    ReplyDelete
  5. What about false witnesses with out evidence? You know, policing for profit.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oprah, not her1/07/2019 04:10:00 PM

    Per TDCAA, “eyewitness confidence is a highly reliable indicator of accuracy.”

    Per from PNAS article, "Eyewitnesses who made suspect IDs or filler IDs from these lineups were asked to supply a confidence rating using a three-point scale (high, medium, or low confidence)."

    In what way is asking someone their "confidence rating" scientific? How is it measured? How is it quantitated? What are the scientific controls for measuring "confidence rating"? How confident is the eyewitness with their "confidence rating"? Is this the same measurement as "truthiness"?

    If Shannon had bothered to read the title of the paper, the authors use the word "ESTIMATING", which does not equate to 100%. Hence, probability of ZERO is not possible.

    IANAL, but I am estimating that Shannon Edwards is logically correct in asserting that there are "ZERO wrongful convictions resulting from the new procedures", but my confidence rating is near zero for this estimation. Get it?

    As an aside, the @TDCAA Twitter account should really be handled by a professional adult and not a PewDiePie-wannabe 6th grader. It is a grossly unprofessional appearance and undermines confidence in the public trust.

    ReplyDelete