August 24



USA----Books

BLOODSWORTH -- By Tim Junkin, Algonquin 294 pp., $24.95


The genetics of justice


After years in prison for a murder he didn't commit, DNA testing finally
freed Kirk Bloodsworth


Books about wrongful convictions have proliferated during the past decade,
as DNA evidence shows that police, prosecutors, judges, and juries combine
far too frequently to arrest, incarcerate, and sentence innocent people.
Most of these books are valuable up to a point. The trouble is that few of
the authors make an effort to view the big picture. It is easy for
well-intentioned readers to view any book on wrongful convictions as
sensationalistic by nature, and probably an aberration.

5 years ago, in an effort to bring the big picture into better focus, I
led a national study of prosecutors involving journalists, lawyers,
professors, database experts, and librarians. Our team examined more than
12,000 appellate court opinions going back to 1970 in which the defense
alleged improper behavior by prosecutors. We discovered that wrongful
convictions involving all kinds of crimes occur in many, many of the 2,341
US jurisdictions served by local district attorneys. (The nonpartisan
Center for Public Integrity in Washington, D.C., published our findings
under the title "Harmful Error.")

"Bloodsworth" involves just one of those cases, but Tim Junkin makes
subtle, useful allusions to the big picture throughout his book.

Twenty years ago, somebody raped and murdered 9-year-old Dawn Hamilton in
Baltimore County, Md. Police received tips about the murderer, who had
allegedly been hanging around an apartment complex where Dawn lived.
Eventually, detectives worked from a composite heavily dependent on
conflicting eyewitness descriptions provided by a 7-year-old boy and his
10-year-old buddy.

Detectives had no reason to suspect Kirk Bloodsworth. He was in his early
20s with no criminal record. He came from a solid family background. He
had moved to the Baltimore area recently mostly because of his marriage.
But the marriage was falling apart, and he had begun using drugs. He came
to the attention of police only because he had left his wife after
numerous arguments and she had retaliated by filing a missing person's
report suggesting abandonment.

When Baltimore area police started hearing that Bloodsworth somewhat
resembled the composite drawing and possessed personality traits that
might be consistent with a profile based on FBI suppositions, detectives
tracked him down. During questioning, Bloodsworth explained himself
poorly, making statements that detectives misinterpreted.

But still, he should have been a free man after each of his jury trials.
Prosecutors failed to turn over evidence that might have changed the
outcome of the first jury's deliberations. The police ignored obvious
suspects. The eyewitness accounts were contradictory and tainted.

Bloodsworth won his freedom from prison in 1993 only because of his
persistence, his parents' willingness to live in poverty so they could
finance his appeals, the advances in DNA testing, and lawyers who truly
cared.

The Bloodsworth case has been chronicled extensively before, but this
book, by lawyer-novelist Tim Junkin, is the most extensive treatment yet.
Told mostly through the perspectives of Bloodsworth and his various
lawyers, the book explains everything that went wrong to place an innocent
man on death row for a crime he knew nothing about.

The prosecutors cared so little about justice in the Bloodsworth case
that, after his exoneration, they did almost nothing to locate the real
murderer until Bloodsworth pushed them to act. Finally, law enforcement
agents analyzed a DNA sample, which led them to the real killer, who had
struck again after Dawn Hamilton's death.

Reforms already instituted in some jurisdictions, notably in Illinois, can
help avoid mistakes like this. Photo arrays and lineups conducted properly
can minimize mistaken eyewitness identifications. Interrogations
videotaped from start to finish can minimize false confessions. Complete
disclosure of potentially exculpatory evidence by prosecutors can lead to
the best possible representation for the accused. The most important
safeguard, though, is police refraining from a rush to judgment.

The wrongful conviction problem is difficult to avoid, but not unsolvable,
as this harrowing story shows.

(source: Steve Weinberg is a freelance journalist in Columbia, Mo.; Book
review in the Christian Science Monitor)



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