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Rodney Reed; Texas: His battle from death row for post-conviction DNA testing; Chuck Lindell of the American-Statesman reports that a judge has issued conflicting orders on his appeal for additional testing..."Bastrop County District Attorney Bryan Goertz on Thursday asked the appeals court to return the matter to Shaver with an order to clarify his position within 14 days. As it stands now, Goertz said, Shaver has agreed with defense lawyers who believe the chain of custody is intact, and with prosecutors who insist that some items Reed wants tested could have been cross-contaminated because they were handled without gloves during Reed’s trial and weren’t stored in separate packages after trial."

Next: Melissa Calusinski: Illinois: Bulletin: The former day care worker convicted of the murder of a toddler was back in court today (Friday, September 16) seeking new trial........"Among those who are backing the defense's conclusion — that Benjamin died not by Calusinski's hand but by a previous head injury — is Dr. Nancy Jones, former Cook County chief medical examiner, who consulted on the case early on but did not examine the remains, and reviewed the case again at Rudd's request. A new sworn statement by Jones was entered into the record Friday. In her report to Rudd, Jones wrote that she was in "complete agreement" with him that Benjamin had a previous injury that was missed by examiners and that could have re-bled, causing his death. She also stated that Calusinski's video statement to investigators was "entirely inconsistent" with Benjamin's injuries, because she said she held the boy's face away from her when she hit his head on the floor, but the injuries were near the back of his head. Jones resigned as chief medical examiner for Cook County in 2012, amid claims that the office was mismanaged and criticism from employees that bodies were stacking up in the morgue's cooler. She now works on her own as a consulting forensic pathologist." Reporter Robert McCoppin; Chicago Tribune.
Previous: Marco Lopez; Illinois; Major development. (eyewitness identification); Illinois Supreme Court opens the door to calling experts to testify on the reliablity of eyewitness evidence..."In recent years, Illinois courts were generally reluctant to allow experts to tell jurors during trials why eyewitnesses sometimes get it wrong. But a recent Illinois Supreme Court ruling has opened the door much wider to such testimony, nodding to a growing body of scientific evidence that we can't always believe our own eyes — and that jurors and judges shouldn't always, either. In a case involving a man accused of killing his neighbor in Chicago, the high court justices wrote in their January ruling that in the last 25 years, "we not only have seen that eyewitness identifications are not always as reliable as they appear, but we also have learned, from a scientific standpoint, why this is often the case. ... Today we are able to recognize that such research is well settled, well supported, and in appropriate cases a perfectly proper subject for expert testimony.".........But it was the January state Supreme Court ruling in the case of Eduardo Lerma that provided defense attorneys the new tactic for blunting the impact of eyewitnesses." Reporter Robert McCoppin: The Chicago Tribune; Chicago Tribune;
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STORY: "Judge’s conflicting orders roil Rodney Reed appeal," by reporter Chuck Lindell, published by the American-Statesman on September 16, 2016.

HIGHLIGHTS: Judge signs two documents, with conflicting recommendations, on additional DNA tests sought by Rodney Reed;Death row inmate wants DNA tests on crime scene items; prosecutors are opposed to the testing;

GIST: A judge has issued conflicting recommendations for resolving death row inmate Rodney Reed’s request for additional DNA testing, throwing into disarray an appeal that has already lasted two years and two months. The latest legal fight began in July 2014, when Reed — on death row since 1998 — filed a request to conduct DNA testing on crime scene evidence that Bastrop County prosecutors opposed. Visiting Judge Doug Shaver rejected the request toward the end of 2014, and Reed appealed. Last June, the Court of Criminal Appeals returned the case to Shaver to determine whether evidence from the 1996 killing of Stacey Stites was still available for testing, whether its chain of custody was preserved and whether the items were likely to contain DNA traces. Shaver, a retired judge who was appointed to Reed’s case after the original judge stepped aside, ordered prosecutors and defense lawyers to draft proposed answers to the questions — a common practice — and both sides submitted a written list of findings and conclusions they hoped Shaver would adopt. Problems arose when Shaver signed both sides’ proposals last week and forwarded them to the Court of Criminal Appeals, even though they came to opposite conclusions about the chain of custody and the likelihood that the items contain biological material to test.  Defense lawyer Bryce Benjet opposes returning the case to the judge.“This is a new one. I’ve never quite seen anyone rule for both sides at the same time,” said Bryce Benjet, Reed’s lawyer. “Not only is he just affixing his name on the bottom, he didn’t even figure out whose side he was taking.” Bastrop County District Attorney Bryan Goertz on Thursday asked the appeals court to return the matter to Shaver with an order to clarify his position within 14 days. As it stands now, Goertz said, Shaver has agreed with defense lawyers who believe the chain of custody is intact, and with prosecutors who insist that some items Reed wants tested could have been cross-contaminated because they were handled without gloves during Reed’s trial and weren’t stored in separate packages after trial. Rodney Reed, shown in a 2014 hearing, has been on death row since 1998.“Both cannot be right,” Goertz wrote. Benjet said he intends to object to returning the case to Shaver, arguing that the Court of Criminal Appeals should be able to decide whether to grant the DNA testing based on a voluminous record that has been developed in hearings and briefs. If the appeals court wants definitive answers from the court below, Benjet said he will ask that the case be assigned to another judge — one who will give proper consideration to a matter involving the death penalty.........Reed, now 48, was 10 days from execution when the Court of Criminal Appeals issued a delay in February 2015. Reed’s lawyers claimed that a new look at old forensic evidence would show that he did not kill Stites, a 19-year-old Giddings resident who was strangled 18 days before her wedding date. Her body was found along a rural road in Bastrop County."
















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