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Areli Escobar: Texas; Court to determine if the Austin Crime Lab botched death penalty evidence. Reporter Chuck Lindell; American-Statesman..."In a brief order issued Wednesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals directed state District Judge David Wahlberg to examine claims that the crime lab produced false or misleading conclusions from DNA evidence in the case, particularly on tests performed on the shirt, jeans and shoes that tied Escobar to the murder."..."Defense lawyers also argued that problems discovered at the crime lab after Escobar’s trial — including poorly trained analysts, reports of cross-contamination of samples and questionable analytical methods — tainted the DNA results used to convict Escobar of capital murder. “Areli Escobar’s capital murder conviction rests on forensic evidence developed by incompetent scientists using bad science,” defense lawyers with the state Office of Capital and Forensic Writs said in his latest appeal."..."The appeals court also ordered Wahlberg to examine two other claims raised by Escobar’s lawyers: Whether a fingerprint examiner relied on scientifically invalid methods to link a partial bloody print, found on a lotion bottle 2 feet from Maldonado’s body, to Escobar. • Whether prosecution experts overstated the significance of cellphone activity — said to put Escobar in the vicinity of Maldonado’s apartment when she was killed — based on calls and texts routed through nearby cell towers."

Next: State crime lab scandal: Massachusetts; Radley Balko: His heading says it all! "Another week, another crime lab scandal." This week it's "another forensics nightmare" caused by a Massachusetts state crime lab..." In a report released Monday, state public safety officials concluded that the Office of Alcohol Testing routinely withheld documents from defense lawyers in a lawsuit challenging the reliability of breathalyzer test results due to an “unwritten policy not to turn these documents over to any requester. The documents included evidence that breath testing devices had failed to properly calibrate during the office’s certification process, the report found. “We conclude that OAT leadership made serious errors of judgment in its responses to court-ordered discovery, errors which were enabled by a longstanding and insular institutional culture that was reflexively guarded . . . and which was inattentive to the legal obligations borne by those whose work facilitates criminal prosecutions,” the report found. The most important word in the above excerpt is “culture.” The drug tests scandal was blamed on a single analyst, Annie Dookhan. But these sorts of things rarely happen in isolation. Now we have an entire “office” within the crime lab accused of not turning over exculpatory evidence. At some point, we need to start asking pointed questions. Among them: Why would crime-lab analysts feel pressure to fake incriminating test results and to hide exculpatory results? Are they feeling pressure from police or prosecutors? We already know that, incredibly, some crime labs only get funding when their analysts produce results that help win convictions. Is that what’s happening here? There are numerous public and private grants and awards tied to driving-under-the-influence enforcement, both for police departments as a whole and for individual officers. Was that a factor here?"
Previous: Larry Swearingen; Anthony Shore: Texas: "Texas inmate Larry Swearingen, who has been sitting on death row for 17 years, may have been plotting to avoid his date with the execution chamber in November by having a serial murderer take the fall for his crime, according to a county prosecutor. But an attorney for Swearingen denies such a plot exists with a second death-row inmate, Anthony Shore, and Shore has not tried to take the rap for Swearingen's convictions. The attorney said over the weekend that the county prosecution's collusion accusation is false and part of a series of blunders in a faulty prosecution."..."District Attorney Brett Ligon said in the letter his office had evidence that Shore would take blame for the Trotter murder and falsely claim responsibility. "We remain absolutely certain of Swearingen's guilt of Melissa Trotter's murder," Ligon said. On the day of Shore's execution, however, no such claim had been made and his court-appointed attorney said the allegations of a scheme to confess to the Trotter murder were unfounded."..."Lawyers for Swearingen for years have said he is innocent and that they have experts who can show he could not have taken part in the murder. The lawyers have argued there were serious flaws in his prosecution and no physical evidence tying him to the murder. James Rytting, an attorney for Swearingen, said there was no collusion with Shore and dismissed the allegation from prosecutors. "As far as I am concerned, they have bamboozled their way through this," Rytting said in a telephone interview."
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STORY: "Court: Examine if Austin crime lab botched death penalty evidence," by reporter Chuck Lindell, published by The American-Statesman on October 18, 2017.

PHOTO CAPTION: Death row inmate Areli Escobar, shown during a November 2014 hearing in Austin, is seeking to overturn his murder conviction. 

HIGHLIGHTS: "State’s highest criminal court orders examination of questions raised about DNA evidence in Austin murder. Areli Escobar was sentenced to die for the 2009 stabbing death of his neighbor, Bianca Maldonado, 17.

GIST:  "The state’s highest criminal court on Wednesday ordered a closer examination of death row inmate Areli Escobar’s claims that shoddy work by the Austin police crime lab compromised evidence in his case. Escobar is seeking to have his conviction overturned, and a new trial ordered, after a Travis County jury sentenced him to death in the 2009 sexual assault and stabbing of his neighbor, 17-year-old Bianca Maldonado, an LBJ High School student who was attacked at her East Austin apartment with her year-old son, who survived, nearby. In a brief order issued Wednesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals directed state District Judge David Wahlberg to examine claims that the crime lab produced false or misleading conclusions from DNA evidence in the case, particularly on tests performed on the shirt, jeans and shoes that tied Escobar to the murder. Defense lawyers also argued that problems discovered at the crime lab after Escobar’s trial — including poorly trained analysts, reports of cross-contamination of samples and questionable analytical methods — tainted the DNA results used to convict Escobar of capital murder. “Areli Escobar’s capital murder conviction rests on forensic evidence developed by incompetent scientists using bad science,” defense lawyers with the state Office of Capital and Forensic Writs said in his latest appeal. Austin police officials closed the DNA portion of the crime lab in June 2016 after an audit by the Texas Forensic Science Commission, a state agency that includes leading forensic scientists, found that some staff members were not properly trained and that incorrect methods had been used to examine DNA samples. “In light of these developments, a comprehensive, independent review of … Mr. Escobar’s case is critical,” defense lawyers told the Court of Criminal Appeals. The appeals court also ordered Wahlberg to examine two other claims raised by Escobar’s lawyers:  Whether a fingerprint examiner relied on scientifically invalid methods to link a partial bloody print, found on a lotion bottle 2 feet from Maldonado’s body, to Escobar. • Whether prosecution experts overstated the significance of cellphone activity — said to put Escobar in the vicinity of Maldonado’s apartment when she was killed — based on calls and texts routed through nearby cell towers. The case next returns to Wahlberg’s court, where Travis County prosecutors will have a chance to respond to the claims raised by defense lawyers. Wahlberg can order hearings and briefings to help him form a recommendation on whether he believes the Court of Criminal Appeals should toss out Escobar’s conviction and order a new trial. There is no deadline for the judge to issue his findings or for the appeals court to issue its ruling. During Escobar’s 2011 trial, prosecutors argued that DNA evidence established his guilt after tests found Maldonado’s blood on his shoes and shirt. In addition, blood on the inside of the victim’s door was linked to Escobar, while tests on blood found in Escobar’s car could not exclude the victim as the source, prosecutors told the jury. However, tests performed last year on the same evidence were less certain — finding, for example, that the blood on the door could not be interpreted without additional testing, or the samples on the shirt and shoes were inadequate for comparison techniques, defense lawyers said. “In stark contrast to what the jury heard, the (new testing) demonstrates that the results for these items are inconclusive and do not connect Mr. Escobar to the crime,” the lawyers said. In addition, the lawyers argued that Escobar, 38, deserves a new trial based on recent information detailing “gross incompetence and negligence at the APD lab.” Documents showed 11 “contamination incidents” of samples at the lab between 2005 and Escobar’s 2011 trial, they said, including seven by the analyst who tested items in the Maldonado case and three by the forensic scientist who screened evidence for the presence of DNA. When combined with the forensic science commission’s criticism of the lab’s training and practices, the information raises significant doubts about Escobar’s conviction, they told the appeals court. “The widespread problems at the lab … call into question all of the DNA evidence in Mr. Escobar’s case,” the lawyers said."

The entire story can be found at:
http://www.mystatesman.com/news/court-examine-austin-crime-lab-botched-death-penalty-evidence/J6UzQpz2uxmzYYLPEJzVAJ/
 
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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