Oct. 20


CALIFORNIA:

Defense Witness Says Petersons Well - Off


Scott Peterson was not experiencing money problems and stood to gain more
financially if his pregnant wife remained alive, a defense witness
testified Tuesday at his murder trial.

Martin Laffer, a certified public accountant and former Internal Revenue
Service investigator, testified Tuesday that the Petersons appeared to be
in good financial shape.

Laffer said Peterson was paying $1,300 a month toward the mortgage on the
couple's home, $50 more than the minimum required payment.

"Does it appear to you they were doing well for a young married couple
with a baby on the way at their age?" defense attorney Mark Geragos asked.

"Yes, they were fine," Laffer replied.

"Is there anything you see from the credit report that indicated Mr.
Peterson did not have good credit?" Geragos prodded.

"Not at all, just the opposite," Laffer said.

Prosecutors have suggested that aside from Peterson's affair as a motive
for murder, he hoped to gain from a $250,000 life insurance policy taken
out on Laci Peterson more than a year before she vanished.

Prosecutors have tried to portray the couple as being in financial
straits. An auditor who testified previously for the prosecution said the
couple had about $210,000 in debt, including their home mortgage.

During cross-examination of Laffer Tuesday, prosecutor Dave Harris noted
the Petersons had been selling jewelry at pawn shops in the weeks before
Laci vanished.

"Just the fact that somebody's selling something doesn't mean they need
money," Laffer said.

Laffer testified Monday that while Peterson's startup fertilizer business
was struggling, the parent company had assumed all debt and in fact had
planned to lose money the first 4 years.

He also said that Laci Peterson was set to inherit part of $2.4 million
from the estate of her grandparents, including part of $480,000 from the
sale of their home. She had already inherited about $100,000 in jewelry
after her grandmother's death.

Laffer added that Peterson would have benefited from the inheritance only
if Laci were still alive and the 2 were married. The money is now being
split between 2 of Laci's siblings, he said.

An expert who testified previously for the prosecution said Peterson would
not have been able to collect Laci's insurance money for seven years if
her body remained missing.

Brian Ullrich, whose wife was a close friend of Laci's and who sold the
Petersons the policies, testified previously that it was he -- not Scott
Peterson -- who suggested the couple get the insurance and that Laci
pushed for the larger sum of $250,000 each. He said Peterson never called
him about the benefits after his wife vanished.

Prosecutors allege Peterson killed his pregnant wife, Laci, on or around
Dec. 24, 2002, then dumped her body in San Francisco Bay. The bodies of
Laci Peterson and the fetus she carried washed up about 4 months later, a
few miles from where Peterson claims to have been fishing alone the day
his wife vanished.

Defense lawyers claim someone else abducted and killed Laci, then dumped
the body in the bay to frame Peterson after learning of his widely
publicized alibi.

Tuesday marked the second day the defense has presented its case in the
five-month-old trial. There were also signs that Peterson's attorneys were
preparing him for possible testimony.

Attorney Michael Cardoza, a former prosecutor who has sat in on the trial
as a legal analyst, said he was asked by the defense to cross-examine
Peterson in 2 mock sessions last week.

"I gave him no advice," said Cardoza, who added that he took no money for
the work and still serves as a legal analyst.

(source: Associated Press)






NEW JERSEY:

Death-row inmate denied bid to avoid execution for murder


The state Supreme Court yesterday rejected claims by death-row inmate
Ambrose Harris that he deserves a new trial because his lawyers were
incompetent and should be spared execution because he is mentally
retarded.

Harris, 52, is awaiting execution for the 1992 kidnapping, rape and murder
of Kristin Huggins, a 22-year-old artist from Bucks County, Pa., who had
gone to downtown Trenton to paint a mural.

Harris gained further notoriety in 1999 when he killed 3-time murderer
Robert "Mudman" Simon during a fight on death row. A jury acquitted Harris
of all charges in connection with Simon's death after hearing testimony
that prison brawls are understood to be fights to the death and that
Harris acted in self-defense.

In upholding Harris's death sentence for Huggins' murder, the high court
took the unusual step of throwing out the conclusions reached by Superior
Court Judge Bill Mathesius and undertaking its own exhaustive analysis of
Harris's claims.

In a 189-page opinion by Justice Jaynee LaVecchia, the court castigated
Mathesius for making "outrageous, sarcastic and pejorative comments about
this state's death penalty system" and "gratuitous personal attacks
against current and former members of the court."

Among other things, Mathesius had called the system of death penalty
appeals a "noirish Rube Goldberg contraption" that never had or would put
anyone to death but costs millions of dollars to administer. He suggested
abolishing capital punishment in favor of life imprisonment without
parole. The Times of Trenton, in an editorial, hailed his remarks as
"sense from the bench."

But LaVecchia said Mathesius's comments "reveal a disdain for defendant
and a pre-ordained view" that the justices could not trust his conclusions
and had to review Harris's claims on their own.

In the end, the court rejected all of Harris's claims that the lawyers who
represented him at his 1996 trial were ineffective. Mathesius had reached
the same conclusion.

The high court also concluded, as did Mathesius, that Harris is not
mentally retarded and therefore exempt from execution under a 2002 U.S.
Supreme Court ruling. But the justices faulted Mathesius for attempting to
avoid a battle of the experts on that question by allowing only a single,
court-appointed psychologist to testify about Harris's intelligence.

"The weakness of relying on only one court-appointed, impartial expert is
precisely that experts do disagree, and with some frequency. That
procedure provides an 'illusion of certainty,'" LaVecchia wrote.

But while defendants ordinarily would have a right to present their own
experts, LaVecchia concluded that was not required in Harris's case
because there was ample evidence he is not retarded.

The court voted 5-1 to uphold Harris's death sentence. Justice Virginia
Long, the lone dissenter, said "inflammatory pretrial publicity" had
deprived Harris of a fair trial.

Deputy Attorney General Nancy Hulett, who argued the case for the state,
said she was pleased the court upheld Harris's death sentence but that his
execution is not imminent. He still can appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court
and, if he loses there, contest his sentence up through the federal
courts, she said.

Harris is one of a dozen men on New Jersey's death row. No executions have
been carried out since the state reinstated capital punishment in 1982.

(source: Star-Ledger)






ILLINOIS:

WHEN LABS FALTER, DEFENDANTS PAY----Bias toward prosecution cited in
Illinois cases


As John Willis sought to prove he had been wrongly convicted of a rape in
the Chatham neighborhood, the Illinois State Police crime lab in Chicago
came across a potential key to his innocence.

It was a single sheet of paper containing the lab results of analyst
Pamela Fish, written in a tight scrawl. They showed she did not find
Willis' blood type in semen recovered from the crime scene.

At his 1992 trial, though, Fish had testified her results were
"inconclusive," meaning she could neither include nor exclude Willis as a
potential source of the semen. Her testimony effectively denied him the
scientific evidence that could have undermined the state's case.

Dubbed the "beauty shop rapist" for a series of similar attacks, Willis
was convicted and sentenced to 100 years. 7 of those years would pass
before he walked free and DNA linked another man to the crimes.

The question of who was responsible for Fish's crucial test results not
being provided for Willis' trial remains a matter of heated debate.

What is not disputed is that Willis served 8 1/2 years behind bars for a
crime he did not commit. The city and Cook County paid him $2.5 million
and the state $100,000 to settle his wrongful conviction lawsuit, though
no one admitted wrongdoing and the city said Fish followed protocols in
her testing.

And Fish's career is in ruins. Earlier this year, the highly touted
scientist, who once trained Illinois State Police DNA analysts, was
quietly let go.

By her own account, Fish could have redone the tests in the Willis case to
clarify the results, and even her bosses still say she should have.

"Was her interpretation one of the possible answers? Yes," James Kearney,
Fish's former boss at the state police lab in Chicago, said in an
interview. "Should her work have been redone? You know my answer to
that--the work needed to be redone."

The behind-the-scenes drama of the Willis case, revealed in documents the
Tribune went to court to unseal, provides a rare look inside the
often-closed culture of Illinois' crime labs and is a vivid example of how
faulty lab practices can help convict the innocent.

Labs are supposed to be where science and the pursuit of justice merge,
but too often they are a place where mistakes, omissions and a lack of
rigor lead investigators down false trails that end in wrongful
convictions. A Tribune investigation has found that across the country,
forensic science is being undermined by unproven theories and experts who
testify in a misleading fashion.

For years, Fish has been a focus of criticism by defense attorneys and
state legislators because her testing has been at the center of two major
wrongful conviction cases involving 5 men, 3 of whom still have lawsuits
pending against her.

But the work and testimony of other Illinois state lab analysts also have
been challenged.

2 lab examiners asserted in a 1997 murder trial in Kane County that they
could definitively link the defendant to the crime through his lip prints,
even though the FBI has never validated the practice.

2 years ago, after a Cook County public defender questioned as misleading
a drug analyst's report, lab officials had to step in and clarify policy.

And earlier this month, a DNA analyst pleaded guilty to charges of
falsifying thousands of dollars of overtime claims, raising questions
about her credibility as a prosecution witness.

Through city attorneys, Fish declined to be interviewed for this article.
The city is defending her in two lawsuits involving her testing while she
worked at the Chicago Police Department crime lab.

Her supporters say she has been unfairly maligned and held to scientific
standards that have rapidly evolved in the years since she completed the
disputed Willis tests in 1991. Her testing in that case, for instance,
involved serology, a less exact method of identifying potential suspects
than current DNA analysis.

"Dr. Fish has never been found to have testified falsely or reported false
forensic results," wrote city attorney Thomas Samson in a letter
responding to Tribune questions about her work. "Despite this, unproven
allegations have ruined the career and reputation of a dedicated public
servant and a smart, educated, forward-thinking scientist."

But even Fish's current and former bosses at the lab said in interviews
that there were times she fell short. The commander of the Illinois state
crime labs, Michael Sheppo, echoed Kearney's criticism that she should
have retested the evidence in the Willis case.

Like many of her fellow analysts at the state police lab on Roosevelt Road
in Chicago, Fish joined the state system when it took over the Chicago
police lab in 1996.

Defenders of the state system object to any suggestion that the reputation
of their labs is tied to the troubles at the old Chicago Police lab, which
they say was underfunded and poorly run.

"You can't judge the Illinois State Police laboratory by work that was
done by the Chicago Police laboratory," Kearney said.

Fish testified roughly a hundred times in court over the course of her
career, most of them while she was with the Chicago police lab.

State police reviewed only casework after she left the Chicago lab and
joined the state. Sheppo said that amounted to "very few" cases because
she was a supervisor for most of her tenure at the state police lab; he
said they found no errors.

"We did not do a complete case-file review of the work that she did for
CPD," Sheppo said. "There was never anything to indicate that there was a
need to do so."

The city noted that the Chicago police lab was audited by outside experts
before the Illinois State Police took it over and that "the audit praised
Dr. Fish."

But her former boss, Kearney, acknowledged that a review of all her cases
might have been warranted.

"Maybe we should have gone back and looked at them," he said in a recent
interview. "But it didn't happen."

The specter of bias

In crime labs across the country, DNA testing has unraveled convictions
built on faulty lab work, and crime analysts have been accused of slanting
their test results to help prosecutors win convictions.

Concerns about lab bias in Illinois were enough that former Gov. George
Ryan's death penalty commission, which included prosecutors and retired
judges, recommended forming an independent state crime lab "with its own
budget, separate from any police agency or supervision." Such independent
labs are rare.

The state legislature rejected the proposal, one of several steps urged by
critics to make the crime labs' work more transparent.

"There needs to be vigorous disclosure and vigorous scrutiny in any
adversarial system," said Greg O'Reilly, chief of the Cook County public
defender's forensics unit and one of Willis' attorneys as he sought a new
trial. "In our American system of justice, we don't just rely on the
government to tell us everything is right."

In Illinois, not only do the paychecks of crime analysts come from a
police agency; state law mandates they serve the prosecution, calling for
the state police to operate a lab system to provide "forensic science and
other investigative and laboratory services to local law-enforcement
agencies and local state's attorneys"

But the commander of the state's crime labs flatly rejected any suggestion
that the labs are slanted against defendants.

"Even though we are mandated to directly work with the prosecution and law
enforcement," Sheppo said, "I totally disagree that in any way have we
been biased against any particular individual."

Even staunch defenders of the crime labs, however, note that the culture
inside the labs is more complex.

Don Plautz spent 24 years in the Illinois crime lab system as a supervisor
and director before retiring in 2002. He said he had a different
philosophy from many of his colleagues.

Many forensic scientists at the state police labs, Plautz said, saw their
role as members of the state's attorney's team. "They thought they were
prosecution witnesses," he said. "They didn't understand they were just
scientists.

"If a defense attorney called, I'd talk to them," he said. "A lot of
people felt they had to be very careful talking to them."

It was that attitude that Cook County Circuit Judge Daniel Locallo
cautioned against in a hearing earlier this year to consider releasing
internal lab documents disclosed in Willis' lawsuit.

"If I'm a defense counsel and there's science involved ... [I] should be
able to go to that examiner and be able to say, `What did you do? What was
your method? What were your findings?'" Locallo said in a hearing. "And
the people who are working at the state crime lab should not take the
position that 'we are an arm of the prosecution.'

"They're scientists. They should be an arm of the truth."

The sometimes-cozy relationship between lab analysts and prosecutors
played out in the case of Delmont Dobson.

In 2000, Dobson was charged with possession of cocaine. In June of that
year, Amy Johnson, a forensic scientist in the drug chemistry section of
the Chicago lab, reported that she had found a trace amount of cocaine in
a piece of evidence weighing less than 0.1 grams.

But Johnson stated that she had "not analyzed" a second, larger sample
that was seized.

Brendan Max, an assistant Cook County public defender, subpoenaed
Johnson's lab testing data. The data showed that, in fact, Johnson had
made a preliminary finding of possible cocaine, but she was unable to
confirm that in repeated testing.

In March 2002, prosecutors dropped the case against Dobson because the lab
tests only found trace amounts of drugs, according to a spokeswoman for
the Cook County state's attorney's office.

About that time, Sheppo said, state lab administrators learned that some
drug analysts in the Chicago lab were reporting their findings the same
way.

Prosecutors had been requesting that analysts "just put `not analyzed'
rather than giving a preliminary result in a report," Sheppo said. "They
should have reported preliminary testing indicated the presence of
cocaine, however positive confirmation was not obtained."

He said it was a holdover from a policy of Cook County prosecutors who
didn't want preliminary test results reported.

After determining that some analysts were still following that procedure
six years after the state lab took over the Chicago lab, Sheppo said, "We
immediately, immediately made the policy clear that this will not occur.
... It's definitely more accurate to report exactly what you find."

A spokesman for Cook County prosecutors, John Gorman, said, "To my
knowledge, there's never been such a policy."

The perception of crime-lab bias is further reinforced by the fact that of
the roughly 260 accredited U.S. forensic labs, 90 % are affiliated with
law-enforcement agencies, according to the American Society of Crime
Laboratory Directors' Laboratory Accreditation Board.

The accreditation board grew out of an effort to ensure that the federal
government did not dictate the operation of crime labs. Though the federal
government regulates labs that test everything from drugs to pet food,
those that handle the evidence introduced into America's courts are
self-policed.

Under a system set up by the organization, teams drawn from the nation's
crime lab directors visit each other's facilities to grant the industry's
seal of approval.

Critics say this encourages weak-kneed audits that do little to evaluate
the true quality of forensic work. The consequences, they say, are the
crime-lab scandals that have erupted across the country.

Lab defenders, on the other hand, say the scandals are the result of
effective self-policing.

"The bulk of problems I've dealt with in forensic science have been
identified by the fellow forensic scientists," Plautz said. "They police
each other carefully. ... If we weren't watching ourselves, these problems
wouldn't come to light. We blow the whistle on ourselves."

Lab star stumbles

For years, Pamela Fish was a star analyst, first for the Chicago Police
Department's crime lab, then at the state police lab. More than just a
line analyst with technical skills, she had impressive academic
credentials.

A native of Evergreen Park, Fish, now 46, graduated from Mother McAuley
High School in Chicago before getting her bachelor's and master's degrees
in biology from Loyola University. Her 1982 master's thesis explored the
homing habits of largemouth bass and other fish.

Over the years, she rose through the ranks at the Chicago police lab. The
lab was housed at the old department headquarters at 11th and State
Streets in a facility so inadequate that evidence was sometimes dried on
the roof.

In 1991, the year she completed the serology test in the Willis case, Fish
was in charge of the lab's serology unit.

She later became training coordinator for the state police lab's DNA
section. She also obtained her doctorate in biology from the Illinois
Institute of Technology, working nights and weekends for nearly 7 years
while still full-time at the lab.

"She really has excellent bench skills. She's really meticulous about
keeping records," said Benjamin Stark, an IIT professor who was Fish's
doctoral adviser.

A former boss at the lab also lauded Fish's work, noting that her imprint
remains there. "The scientists that she trained in DNA analysis--they're
the ones making all the cases now," said Laurence Mulcrone, a former
director of the state police Chicago lab.

Fish's background could not be more different from that of John Willis.
Growing up in the Arkansas Delta, he never finished the 4th grade,
chopping and picking cotton instead of going to school. Even today, at age
56, he can barely read or write.

Yet, armed with little more than his own innocence, a dogged persistence
and a rudimentary understanding of DNA gleaned from television, Willis cut
through the opaque world of the crime laboratory.

"I kept hollering about the DNA," Willis said last year in a sworn
deposition as part of his lawsuit. "I knew it would free me because I
hadn't did nothing."

A self-described career tire thief and gambler, Willis told anyone who
would listen that he had not committed a series of rapes and assaults that
terrorized the Chatham neighborhood on Chicago's South Side in 1990.

According to his deposition, Willis denied his involvement to police from
the beginning and was equally vocal in the courtroom.

"I didn't be quiet," he said. "I jumped up and I started screaming. ... I
was telling the judge, I didn't rape nobody."

Cook County prosecutors, though, had compelling evidence: The victims of
the sexual assaults had told police that Willis was their attacker.

In July 1991, as Willis neared trial, prosecutors and his lawyer, public
defender David Eppenstein, agreed on serological testing of a
semen-stained piece of toilet paper wrapper.

Although Willis had demanded DNA testing, at the time that technology was
still in its infancy; the 1st conviction in Illinois in which DNA evidence
was allowed came in 1990. Serology, which analyzed blood types, was the
primary tool used in sexual assault cases in Cook County.

Willis was certain the serology tests would clear him. He believed he even
knew who had committed the rapes: Fellow inmates in Cook County jail had
told him that a man named Dennis McGruder had been arrested on sexual
assault charges in Chatham and that he bore a striking resemblance to
Willis.

At Willis' trial, Fish took the witness stand and told the jury that the
serology tests were inconclusive.

In a letter to the Tribune, Samson asserted that even if Willis had the
test results at his trial, they would not necessarily have cleared him,
given that victims of the beauty shop rapist said he was their attacker.
"In a best-case scenario for the defense," Samson wrote, "Dr. Fish's
serology analysis would have been the basis for a disagreement among
experts, leaving the jury to rely upon the 11 eyewitness identifications
of Mr. Willis as the perpetrator."

Samson also noted that the FBI expert who wrote the lab protocol involved
in the testing "was prepared to testify on behalf of Dr. Fish that she
properly followed" it.

Nevertheless, her test results--in the form of a handwritten log she kept
as she performed her analysis--would have been a powerful piece of
evidence for his defense. They showed Willis' blood type was different
from the source of the semen.

He had blood type B and was a secretor--that is, his blood type could be
determined from his bodily fluids, such as semen or saliva. The semen
taken from the toilet tissue wrapper came from someone with blood type A.

After Willis was convicted and sent to Stateville penitentiary, lawyers
from the Cook County public defender's office began pursuing his appeal.
In 1997, they sought DNA testing.

The lab official responsible for handling such requests was Marian
Caporusso, a veteran of the Chicago police lab who, like Fish, had made
the move to the state lab.

Caporusso pulled the Willis file. After reviewing the handwritten notes,
she went into Kearney's office and told him she would have interpreted the
results differently than Fish did, according to Kearney's deposition in
the Willis lawsuit.

Kearney's response: He was relieved to learn that Fish had done the test
while working at the Chicago police lab, he said in the deposition.

"In other words, it wasn't on your watch?" Willis' attorney, Locke Bowman,
a lawyer at the MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Chicago,
asked.

"That's correct," Kearney replied.

Kearney said he then told Caporusso, who helped train Fish in serology
testing, to talk to her about the case. Fish was in the middle of a
training session when Caporusso approached her in a lab hallway.

Descriptions of what happened next vary widely, not only among the
individuals involved but between their own accounts, first to state police
investigators, then during Willis' lawsuit.

What is not in dispute is that Caporusso gave Fish the file. Fish told
state police investigators that Caporusso asked her to interpret the
results and Fish reiterated her view that they were inconclusive.

In her deposition, Fish explained why. "If your controls don't work
properly, it's not a proper scientific procedure to call the results of
that particular test," she said. "Therefore, the tests would be called
inconclusive."

Fish told state police investigators that Caporusso responded, "I wouldn't
have interpreted it that way." During the lawsuit, both women contended
that there was no confrontation.

Why Fish did not re-run the serology test is likely to remain a mystery.
In a deposition taken during Willis' lawsuit, Fish said that she
considered running it again and that it would be "my laboratory practice"
to do so, but acknowledged there was no evidence that she did.

Breakthrough in case

While DNA testing has dramatically improved the precision of evidence
testing, the Willis case centered on a more basic issue: whether
information helpful to him was improperly withheld.

Lab officials adamantly deny that contention and say Willis' attorney
never asked for her handwritten notes. Had he specifically asked for them,
they say, he would have received them.

The attorney, Eppenstein, made a standard request for documents before
trial and received Fish's typewritten lab report. It included her finding
of "inconclusive," but none of her handwritten notes.

"Before John Willis, nobody in my office or the private bar let it enter
their mind that a forensic scientist would do what was done here,"
Eppenstein said. "There was no reason to ask for notes. I didn't suspect
something was there, that it was different from the final report."

Finally, in 1998, Willis' post-conviction attorneys had a breakthrough.
Responding to a subpoena specifically asking for the test results, a clerk
in the Chicago lab faxed the public defender's office the crucial page.

His lawyers soon began to pursue a separate motion for a new trial. But it
took months for DNA tests to exclude him as the rapist--and for McGruder
to be implicated--partly because slides containing the semen evidence
initially could not be found.

He was set free in February 1999. McGruder pleaded guilty to rape.

Fish's legacy is still being written.

She is still a defendant in a lawsuit stemming from the prosecution of 4
teenagers in the 1986 rape and murder of medical student Lori Roscetti.

In that case, 1 defendant pleaded guilty and agreed to testify for the
prosecution. The others--cousins Larry and Calvin Ollins and Omar
Saunders--were tried separately.

Fish testified that her serology test could only exclude Saunders. But Dr.
Ed Blake, a DNA expert retained by a defense lawyer in another lawsuit,
analyzed her testing and concluded that she should have excluded all the
defendants. In a report for the defense, he called her testimony
"scientific fraud."

City lawyers contended Blake's criticism was unfair and based on "20/20
hindsight."

DNA testing later cleared all four men after they spent as much as 15
years in prison. After they were pardoned in 2002, Chicago police linked 2
other men to the murder and said both gave videotaped re-enactments of the
crime; they are awaiting trial.

While Calvin Ollins has settled his lawsuit for $1.5 million last year,
lawsuits filed by the other three are pending. Citing that litigation,
city lawyers declined to comment on the Roscetti case.

Last month, the Appellate Court ordered an evidentiary hearing in the case
of former death row inmate David Smith, whose attorneys had alleged that
Fish testified falsely against him at his murder trial.

The court noted that some of Fish's testimony was similar to her testimony
against Willis--in particular, serology tests that she termed
inconclusive. The panel said Smith's lawyers should be allowed to examine
Fish's lab work.

City lawyers said that once the hearing is held, "the evidence will show a
very different story."

The court, though, wrote that Smith's allegation "raises the question of
whether Fish provided testimony inconsistent with her lab notes and lab
results as she did in the Willis case."

Problems elsewhere

The work of Fish has drawn the most attention to the state crime labs, but
it isn't their only trouble.

Earlier this month, Amy Rehnstrom, a DNA analyst at the Chicago lab,
resigned after she was accused of felony theft for falsely claiming $2,400
in overtime.

Sheppo, the lab system's commander, would not comment on the Rehnstrom
case. But he said any time questions are raised about analysts, officials
review their work "to ensure the accuracy of the analysis."

Gorman, the state's attorney's spokesman, said prosecutors are confident
in her work. "She has said that she stands by her work and that she didn't
do anything untoward with her work," Gorman said, "and we have no reason
to disbelieve that."

Authorities said they would notify defense attorneys in cases that she
worked. But that may have little effect because under a plea deal,
prosecutors allowed her to plead guilty to a misdemeanor and she was
placed on court supervision.

Because Rehnstrom did not admit to a felony, some defense attorneys are
concerned that judges may prohibit them from questioning her about the
wrongdoing--preserving her credibility as a witness in the scores of cases
she has handled.

"The question for the judge or the jury is this--is her testimony reliable
if she says, 'I did this work,' because she told the lab she was at work
during certain hours, and someone has determined that was false," said
Ruth McBeth, an assistant Cook County public defender.

Attempts to reach Rehnstrom for comment were unsuccessful.

Sheppo said the state labs' quality assurance program thoroughly checks
analysts' work. One of the first of its kind when introduced in the 1980s,
he said, it includes occasional courtroom visits by supervisors to make
sure analysts are properly testifying.

Still, questions about the proficiency of the labs' analysts have been
raised in a number of instances. In the case of Harold Hill and Dan Young,
the state police's Chicago lab failed to detect semen on a piece of
evidence.

Hill and Young were convicted of the 1990 rape and murder of Kathy Morgan
but have long insisted they were innocent. A series of DNA tests over the
last 3 years--using genetic material from Morgan's fingernails as well as
from her clothes--has excluded the 2 men, turning up two genetic profiles
of other individuals.

Earlier this year, the crime lab was asked to examine other pieces of
clothing in an effort to detect semen. The lab said its tests found none.

But Hill and Young's attorneys pressed to have a private lab in New
Orleans inspect the same evidence. In August, the lab, ReliaGene
Technologies Inc., reported finding semen and sperm.

The Cook County state's attorney's office said ReliaGene was able to find
the evidence when the state lab could not because the private lab used
more sophisticated tests.

Sheppo said it was wrong to assume the state crime lab had erred and
suggested the evidence could have been contaminated. He noted that the lab
had done other DNA testing that had helped Hill and Young, including the
fingernail tests.

"My question would be, is ReliaGene correct or are we correct? I don't
know," said Sheppo, adding that the lab reviewed its work in the case and
found "no major inconsistencies."

Prosecutors hope to complete a reinvestigation of the case soon.

2 lives forever changed

The day after John Willis was released from prison, in February 1999, the
woman whose testimony helped convict him was the guest speaker at an
Illinois judges seminar in Chicago. Her role: explaining DNA profiling and
evidence to the jurists.

A few weeks later, Pamela Fish was promoted to oversee biochemistry
testing at the lab.

In the summer of 2001, a state legislative committee holding hearings on
prosecution misconduct questioned state police director Sam Nolen about
Fish's work. At the time, State Rep. James Durkin (R-Westchester) urged
Nolen to transfer Fish because of the questions about her work.

"I think right now it's probably not a good idea that she's in a position
of authority in the crime lab," Durkin said. "I'm not asking for her head.
I'm not asking for her to be fired. But I think the integrity of the crime
lab is first and foremost."

Lab bosses then moved her into a research position where she would no
longer be involved in criminal casework.

This summer, after Willis settled his lawsuit, Fish's contract was not
renewed and she left the agency.

For his part, Willis bears Fish no ill will.

"I don't got nothing against her," Willis said in a deposition for his
suit. "Like I said, I'm glad to be out. You know, whatever she do, she got
to live with God herself on it."

(source: Chicago Tribune----this is part 4 of a 5-part series)

*********************

If juries could give the death penalty to corporations, the system would
have been reformed long ago.---- Questioning the death penalty


This election year, tort reform has emerged as a major issue in state and
federal races. The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce lists tort
reform in its current public policy agenda, and Kris Kobach, Republican
candidate for Kansas' 3rd District, has made tort reform a central issue
in his campaign.

Proponents say that tort reform is needed because unreasonable jury
verdicts and court decisions are unfairly driving up costs for businesses
and insurance. An often-cited example by those in favor of tort reform is
the case of the woman who won a verdict against McDonald's because she was
burned by hot coffee.

Whether stated directly or not, the underlying premise of the tort reform
movement is that we do not have complete faith in our courts, juries and
the appellate process. Therefore, tort reform legislation is designed to
mitigate the inherent errors in our civil justice system.

If we accept tort reform and its basic premise, a far more important
question must be asked - how do we have faith in our criminal justice
system to administer the death penalty?

If we are prepared to have government state our collective distrust for
the judgment of courts and juries through tort reform legislation, we
cannot continue to claim that we trust that same legal system to determine
who lives and who dies.

There is no distinction between the potential jurors selected for a civil
case and a criminal case. All potential jurors come from the same pool and
the only factor at play in assigning them to civil or criminal trials is
random chance. Judges who hear civil cases also hear criminal cases.

Death penalty opponents have been pointing out the inconsistencies and
errors in the application of capital punishment for years. Why are factors
of race, personal wealth and geographic location statistically significant
when comparing the application of the death penalty to individuals
convicted in similar crimes? Why has DNA technology been able to exonerate
individuals convicted of capital crimes?

Our judicial system is one of the greatest aspects of our democracy, but
it is clearly not perfect. Any system that relies on human judgment will
inherently contain certain degrees of error and bias.

Interestingly, it has taken a perceived threat to business interests for
there to be serious discussion regarding the fallibility of our courts.
But regardless of how we got to this point, we cannot allow the discussion
of this issue to end with tort reform. If we question the judgment and
wisdom of our courts and juries, we must not allow them to impose a
sentence so final as death.

(source: Opinion; Thurston Cromwell is a real estate attorney and the
Democratic candidate for the Kansas Senate's 7th District seat. He lives
in Fairway; KansasCity.com)






WASHINGTON:

Death penalty again sought in rape, murder of girl, 7


For a 2nd time, the Snohomish County prosecutor will seek the death
penalty for a man convicted of raping and murdering a 7-year-old Everett
girl in 1995.

In 1997, a jury found Richard Clark guilty of aggravated first-degree
murder, 1st-degree rape and 1st-degree kidnapping of Roxanne Doll, the
daughter of a friend of Clark's. The jury also found that Clark should be
executed.

But in 2001, the state Supreme Court ruled that the jury that sentenced
Clark was prejudiced because prosecutors had told jurors that Clark
previously had been convicted of locking a 4-year-old girl in his
grandfather's garage in 1990. The high court ordered that Clark be
resentenced.

A second jury will be impaneled in May to decide whether Clark should be
executed or spend the rest of his life in prison.

Prosecuting Attorney Janice Ellis wrote a 2-page letter, dated Friday, to
Clark's lawyers saying there weren't mitigating circumstances allowing
Clark to avoid "the ultimate penalty."

The move has upset Clark's attorneys, who said Ellis broke a contractual
agreement by going public with the letter. Defense attorney Jeffrey Ellis
(no relation) said he might file a complaint because the revelation by the
prosecutor could prejudice potential jurors.

"We are confident, however, that they will answer the question
affirmatively that there is sufficient evidence to justify a sentence less
than death," Jeffrey Ellis said.

(source: Seattle Times)



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