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Texas; Death penalty; Charles Flores; Robert Roberson; Shaken baby syndrome cases; 2013 'junk science' law seen as factor in 2016 precipitous drop of executions in the state, accrding to a report released thursday by the Texas Coalition to abolish the death penalty. The fewest people were put to death in the state this year since 1996, but race and mental health were still disturbing factors in who ends up on death row."..."Gregory Gardner, an attorney who represented two Texas death row defendants who received stays of execution this year—and a third client who was executed—believes the junk science law to be a powerful tool for defendants. "It shows how many convictions in the late 90s and the turn of the century were based on this crappy science that's been discredited," he said. "It's scary because we know people in Texas have been executed because of it in the past.""The courts are finally being more careful with these cases," Gardner told me. "We've seen the number of death sentences plummet, and I think that trend will continue." Casey Tolan; Vice;

Next: False confessions? Recording of entire interrogations by police; Pedro Hernandez; Alexander Bonich; Three years ago, the New York Police Department pledged to record the entire police interrogation of a suspect - turning the cameras on at the outset of the interrogation as opposed to beginning to record after a confession has been obtained. The New York Times reveals that in spite of this pledge - and the fact that New York State has paid out tens of millions of dollars to innocent people sent to prison - not much has changed..." Since October, a man named Pedro Hernandez has been on trial in Manhattan Supreme Court in the murder of Etan Patz, a child who disappeared decades ago as he walked from his home in SoHo to a bus stop. The only evidence against Mr. Hernandez is his own words. Four years ago, when he was living in New Jersey, Mr. Hernandez was questioned for hours in a room equipped with recording gear that was not turned on until he began incriminating himself. With no physical evidence, the trustworthiness of Mr. Hernandez’s confession is really the only question in his trial. Another case, now in preliminary stages in Queens, involves the interrogation in February 2015 of a man named Alexander Bonich for many, many hours — 18, his lawyer says — before the authorities were satisfied that he was prepared to incriminate himself in front of a video camera. Mr. Bonich is accused of killing a man he had befriended, a scholar of Croatian history who had recently come to New York. The defense lawyer, Spiro Ferris, is arguing that Mr. Bonich’s “will was overborne” during the hours of unrecorded interrogation. Just as with Mr. Hernandez, maybe Mr. Bonich gave a true confession. Maybe he did not. Without recordings of the interrogations, hearings on disputed confessions drag on for days, wasting time and money. Recording interrogations is a way to know whether law enforcement — and jurors — can be confident in the confessions that result. When innocent people confess, dangerous criminals are free to continue their violence." New York Times;
Previous: Melissa Calusinski: CBS News "48 Hours" corrrespondent Erin Moriarty weighs in on the case of Melissa Calusinski, a former Illinois day care worker convicted in the death of a toddler in her care. (Moriarty investigated the case in the episode, “The Fight for Melissa.”)..."With medical experts on both sides contradicting each other at trial, prosecutors asked Dr. Montez to sew up their case as the last witness, the final voice the jury would hear before determining a verdict. The addition of Dr. Montez to the witness list just two weeks before trial came as a surprise to defense attorney, Paul Deluca. Dr. Montez was not the pathologist who did the two autopsies in the case. He played only a minor part in the investigation when he was called in to do what he described as a “curbside consult,” which meant looking through the case file, photographs and reports in the Kingan case and checking the work done by the first pathologist. On the stand, Dr. Montez told the jury that, as part of that “consult,” he examined the baby’s body. Although he took no notes and prepared no report at the time, he said that he had clear recall of the event that took place nearly three years earlier. “What I found was significant trauma, violent trauma to the head,” he told the jury. Dr. Montez was certain that the child had suffered a skull fracture. “Below the layer of the scalp…was an inch long through and through fracture of the skull itself,” he said. He knew, he said, because he had touched it. “I took the gloves off because I wanted to touch the fracture itself to make sure it was fresh because it looked fresh to me,” he said. Dr. Montez could not have been clearer about the fracture. He went on to say, “The other thing I did I took the skull and moved it...what I was able to do is move it, and I saw that fracture itself.” And again, when asked by the Assistant State’s Attorney Cristen Bishop, “You told us that you were able to actually touch that with your bare hands?” Dr. Montez answered, “correct.” He also told the jury that he had examined the child’s brain and had seen for himself where the massive bleeding had taken place. That testimony, says defense attorney Deluca, devastated his case, but what Dr. Montez said afterwards was most damaging. He told the jury that an injury like that could only be caused violent act, “a tremendous external force...impacted to the head.” Paul Deluca told me later that his client’s fate was sealed with Dr. Montez’ testimony. Melissa Calusinski was convicted of murder and is serving thirty- one years in prison. The question that Paul Deluca and many others are asking today is did Dr. Montez tell the truth that day? A new witness has come forward to claim the doctor did not."..."On Sept. 30, 2016, Judge Shanes denied Melissa Calusinski’s petition for a new trial. Judge Shanes, the same trial judge who had allowed Dr. Montez to testify at trial, did not find Paul Forman credible and rejected his testimony, adding that he himself had observed Dr. Montez at trial and does not believe he perjured himself. Discounting pediatric x-ray expert Dr. Zimmerman’s testimony that the images indicate no fracture, the judge concluded that the images simply aren’t clear enough to make that determination with absolute certainty."
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QUOTE OF THE DAY: "The death penalty landscape in Texas continues to change dramatically. Prosecutors, juries, judges, and the public are subjecting our state's death penalty practices to unprecedented scrutiny and, in many cases, accepting alternatives to the ultimate punishment."

Kristin Houlé: Executive Director: The Texas Coalition to abolish the death penalty;

-----------------------------------------

STORY: "Texas Is No Longer America's Death Penalty Capital," by Casey Tolan, published by VICE News on December 15, 2016.

SUB-HEADING: "The fewest people were put to death in the state this year since 1996, but race and mental health were still disturbing factors in who ends up on death row."

GIST: "Texas has long been the heartland of the death penalty in America. Since capital punishment was reinstated by the Supreme Court in 1976, the Lone Star State has executed 538 people—more than the next top six states combined. But 2016 saw a precipitous drop in the number of executions in the state. Thanks in part to new judicial scrutiny of death sentences, just seven Texans were executed this year, the fewest since 1996. For the first time since 2001, Texas is not the most execution-happy state in the country—that grisly title belongs to Georgia, which executed nine people. This is the first year since 1984 that Texas didn't execute a single black person. And juries sentenced just three new Texas defendants to death for the second year in a row. The data was highlighted in a report released Thursday by the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. "The death penalty landscape in Texas continues to change dramatically," said Kristin Houlé, the coalition's executive director. "Prosecutors, juries, judges, and the public are subjecting our state's death penalty practices to unprecedented scrutiny and, in many cases, accepting alternatives to the ultimate punishment." The Texas numbers mirror a nationwide downturn in executions and death sentences......... "The rising number of stays suggests that the Court of Criminal Appeals is registering the concerns about the fairness and accuracy of our state's capital punishment system," Kathryn Kase, executive director of the nonprofit criminal justice legal group Texas Defender Service, told me in an email. "These stays give the court opportunities to remedy the failures of past death penalty practices for which Texas has been roundly criticized." In several of the cases where inmates received stays, the court leaned on a 2013 state law that gives inmates whose convictions were based on discredited science the opportunity for a new trial. Reformers say the law is among the most progressive in the country at fighting junk science in the courtroom. Charles Flores was sentenced to death in 1999 for a murder in a Dallas suburb based largely on the testimony of a single eyewitness who was hypnotized by police officers trying to help her regain her memory. The court stayed his execution in May after hearing expert testimony that hypnosis can actually lead witnesses to believe in false memories. And in 2003, Robert Roberson was convicted of killing his two-and-a-half-year-old daughter based on a scientific theory known as shaken baby syndrome—the idea that certain symptoms in a dead child conclusively prove they were violently shaken to death. Four medical experts testified this year that the theory had been debunked, and new research suggested Roberson's daughter could have died of a fall. The court stayed his execution in June. Gregory Gardner, an attorney who represented two Texas death row defendants who received stays of execution this year—and a third client who was executed—believes the junk science law to be a powerful tool for defendants. "It shows how many convictions in the late 90s and the turn of the century were based on this crappy science that's been discredited," he said. "It's scary because we know people in Texas have been executed because of it in the past.""The courts are finally being more careful with these cases," Gardner told me. "We've seen the number of death sentences plummet, and I think that trend will continue." 

The entire story can be found at:

http://www.vice.com/en_ca/read/texas-is-no-longer-americas-death-penalty-capital

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com. Harold Levy; Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog.


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