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Jeffrey Havard: Mississippi: (Part Seven): Levon Brooks: Reporter Billy Watkins (Clarion Ledger) describes a man who had a "rare gentleness" about him ..."They also say he never showed an ounce of bitterness, though he certainly had every right."..."Brooks’ arrest and conviction were due to “government misconduct and unvalidated or improper forensic science,” according to a report by the Innocence Project."

Next: Motherisk: Ontario; Aftermath; Part (4) Guess who were most disproportionally victimized by The Hospital for Sick Children's tragically flawed hair-testing lab: No big surprise. They always gets the short end of the stick on Ontario's justice andchild protection system (as well as in other provinces and territories). It's the province's First Nations people, according to CBC News reporter Matt Prokopchuk..."The independent commission found that the Motherisk test lab, which was run by the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto until it was closed in 2015, used bad science to remove vulnerable children from more than 50 families. The province set up the commission to analyze over 1,200 child welfare cases dating from 1990 to 2015. Of those cases, 15 per cent involved Indigenous families and, of the 56 cases that the commission determined Motherisk hair testing had a substantial impact, 12.5 per cent involved First Nations people. That's despite the 2016 census showing that Indigenous people make up 2.8 per cent of Ontario's population, Aboriginal Legal Services said. For more than two decades, Motherisk performed flawed hair-strand tests on thousands of vulnerable families across Canada, influencing decisions in child protection cases that separated parents from their children and sometimes children from their siblings."
Previous: Roy L. Watford 111: Virginia: From our 'Read This and Weep' department: He has had to bear his wrongful conviction for raping a 12-year old girl - for 41 years - after pleading guilty in exchange for a suspended sentence on the advice of his grandfather. At least he has been finally exonerated. (That begs the question as to why he was charged in the first place. Reporter Frank Green tells us that at an evidentiary hearing,"the victim testified that when she entered the vacant house, she saw one of Watford's brothers and other men inside. But she said a blanket was thrown over her head, so she did not see her assailants. She said she could not recall seeing or hearing Watford - whom she knew - at the scene or recall telling police that he was among her assailants.") Green tells the story of this exoneration in his Richmond Times-Dispatch story: "Unanimous Va. Supreme Court exonerates Chesapeake man in rape of girl 41 years ago."..."Though never jailed, he said the felony conviction has cost him many opportunities at good jobs. He has no other criminal record." Sheldon said Watford is, "Also very grateful that the Supreme Court of Virginia today recognized what he has been saying for almost 40 years – that he had nothing to do with the rape.""He looks forward to be able to secure employment and housing without the limitation and stigma of a violent sexual felony on his record. Since his unjust conviction, Watford has suffered what all felons suffer from, extremely limited opportunities in housing and employment," said Sheldon."
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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: "I have been following this case for years. Jeffrey Havard. On death row in Mississippi for the past 15 years. At the heart of the case, according to Circuit Court Judge Forrest  "Al" Johnson, is the now widely discredited so-called shaken-baby syndrome.  (Note the presence in the case of controversial former medical examiner Steven Hayne who has repudiated his initial opinion); Think of it, a man's life may be taken by the state of Mississippi because of a highly disputed theory on which experts are widely divided,  which has been repudiated by  the late British Dr. Norman Guthkelch, the pediatric neurosurgeon,  who propagated it in the first place. The good news is that Judge Johnson clearly recognizes the importance of this decision -  not just to Jeffrey Havard, whose life is in the balance. As Johnson is quoted: ""I don't anticipate sitting in this too long before I render a decision," Johnson said. "It's a pretty important case. It's a pretty big deal."  I will continue to monitor developments in this case closely."

Harold Levy: Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog.

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "The Innocence Project later discovered that Hayne performed between 1,200 and 1,800 autopsies a year — six times the professional standard — and was earning more than a million dollars annually. Hayne would usually call on West to provide testimony at other trials. One of those was an eerily similar case to Brooks’ that also happened in Noxubee County in 1992. Hayne claimed the body of a 3-year-old girl, who was raped, murdered and thrown into a water-filled ditch just a few hundred feet from her home, had human bite marks on it. West testified that the marks could only have been made by the teeth of Kennedy Brewer, who was dating the girl’s mother. Brewer spent three years in jail before going to trial. Brewer was convicted of capital murder and sent to death row. He spent 13 years in Parchman. Just as Brooks had done, Brewer proclaimed his innocence throughout. In 2001, DNA tests proved Brooks was not the killer and his conviction was overturned. He remained in jail, however, because the prosecutors said they intended to retry him. Attorneys with the Innocence Project traced the DNA to Justin Albert Johnson, a neighbor of the girl Brewer supposedly murdered. Johnson was already in prison and confessed to killing both girls. He is serving a life sentence Kennedy and Brooks were set free in February 2008."

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QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Levon even had an alibi.” He worked at a nightclub in Macon and didn’t get off until 3 a.m. “Seemed like to me the police wanted somebody to pinpoint and get the case solved. They chose Levon.”

 Levon Brooks longtime friend Mary Kay Jones.

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STORY: "Levon Brooks: An extraordinary man who wrongfully spent one third of his life in prison," by reporter Billy Watkins, published by The Clarion Ledger.



GIST: "Brooks, 58, who grew up in the Noxubee County town of Macon, died Jan. 24 after a long bout with colon cancer. Those who knew him say he had a rare gentleness about him. They also say he never showed an ounce of bitterness, though he certainly had every right. Brooks spent 18 years behind bars — 16 at the State Penitentiary in Parchman — for a rape and murder he did not commit. Levon Brooks and Kennedy Brewer of Noxubee County had the prime of their lives taken from them.  He was locked away when he was 31 and gained his freedom in 2008 at 49. The Innocence Project, which works to exonerate those who were wrongfully convicted through DNA testing, saved him from dying alone in prison.........“Levon was an extraordinary man — and so charismatic,” says Tucker Carrington, director of the George C. Cochran Innocence Project at the University of Mississippi and one of the attorneys who helped Brooks gain his freedom. “I’ll never forget taking my daughter to see Levon when she was 12. She had met him before. When we got there, Levon said, ‘My goodness, you’ve grown. Tell me, how is your lizard?’ “She had told him the first time they met about her pet lizard, and I’m standing there going, ‘Who in the world would remember that she had a lizard?’ That’s the kind of guy Levon was. His death broke my heart.”.........Police wanted somebody: Brooks’ arrest and conviction were due to “government misconduct and unvalidated or improper forensic science,” according to a report by the Innocence Project. Brooks was accused of taking the 3-year-old daughter of his ex-girlfriend from her home on the night of Sept. 15, 1990. Her body was found in a pond 80 yards from her house. Pathologist Steven Hayne performed an autopsy on the girl and claimed there were human bite marks on her wrists. He brought in Michael West to testify. West was a dentist who claimed to be a bite mark expert, even though bite marks had never been scientifically validated. West said the marks could only have been made by Brooks’ two front teeth. That was the prime reason he was found guilty. “Levon even had an alibi,” says his longtime friend Mary Kay Jones. “He worked at a nightclub in Macon and didn’t get off until 3 a.m. “Seemed like to me the police wanted somebody to pinpoint and get the case solved. They chose Levon.” The Innocence Project later discovered that Hayne performed between 1,200 and 1,800 autopsies a year — six times the professional standard — and was earning more than a million dollars annually. Hayne would usually call on West to provide testimony at other trials. One of those was an eerily similar case to Brooks’ that also happened in Noxubee County in 1992. Hayne claimed the body of a 3-year-old girl, who was raped, murdered and thrown into a water-filled ditch just a few hundred feet from her home, had human bite marks on it. West testified that the marks could only have been made by the teeth of Kennedy Brewer, who was dating the girl’s mother. Brewer spent three years in jail before going to trial. Brewer was convicted of capital murder and sent to death row. He spent 13 years in Parchman. Just as Brooks had done, Brewer proclaimed his innocence throughout. In 2001, DNA tests proved Brooks was not the killer and his conviction was overturned. He remained in jail, however, because the prosecutors said they intended to retry him. Attorneys with the Innocence Project traced the DNA to Justin Albert Johnson, a neighbor of the girl Brewer supposedly murdered. Johnson was already in prison and confessed to killing both girls. He is serving a life sentence Kennedy and Brooks were set free in February 2008. Kennedy became the first person in Mississippi to be exonerated through post-conviction DNA testing. “I knew all along my boy didn’t do it,” says Brooks’ 85-year-old father, Rich. “Anybody will tell you he’s not capable of doing something like that.” The pain of his son’s death is visible in Rich Brooks’ eyes. “It’s tough right now,” he says. “Every time I lay my head down, I see my son. I don’t know when it will stop. I’m not sure it ever will."
The entire story can be read at:   
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2018/02/15/wrongfully-convicted-levon-brooks-extraordinary-man/336210002/
  
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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