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Man Gets $45M for 20 Years in Prison While Innocent
Anyone remember Billy Ayers?
A lot of really destructive crap, too.
The 60's were a neat time to grow up in. All sorts of stuff going on. Race riots, Vietnam, protests against the war, bra burning, draft card burning, turn on - tune in -drop out, cool cars, hijacking planes to Cuba, defections, cold war, uhf tv channels, great music, some of the best shortwave radio listening ever and more.
You'll need to update your avatarI have a friend here in Ohio going through similar shit right now. I'm dumbfounded as to how his SS number was attached to a warrant for his arrest. Pretrial is Thursday and no one wants to hear they got the wrong guy. Not even his lawyer. To top things off his case is marked secret so not even his lawyer can have access to it to defend him. It's the most bizarre thing I have ever heard of. If this can happen to him it can happen to anyone and that's frightening.
That's what comes from blind faith in "experts" - without any knowledge or ways of checking their pronouncements.Hair Sample That Put a Man in Prison Turned Out to Be Dog Hair
From bite marks to shaken babies, the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences is debunking bad science.
Kate Judson is a lawyer who often deals with crimes that did not occur. As the executive director of the Wisconsin-based Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences (CIFS), her job is to examine ostensible scientific evidence to see whether it backs up prosecutors' claims.
"Some people who died were classified as victims of homicide when they were really the victim of illness, or accident, or suicide, or medical error—that kind of thing," says Judson. "We had a case of a family that lost their child. The caregiver was accused of attacking her. It was later discovered, based on new medical evidence, that the child had been really ill with a disease she was probably born with."
Evidence can't bring a child back, obviously. But it can get an innocent person out of jail. And it can give a grieving family some peace of mind. To learn that your child "was held and comforted in their last moments, instead of attacked," says Judson, "would be important to know."
More:
Hair sample that put a man in prison turned out to be dog hair
Kate Judson is a lawyer who often deals with crimes that did not occur. As the executive director of the Wisconsin-based Center for Integrity in Forensicreason.com
An exonerated Idaho man finally had his freedom. What came next was 'incomprehensible.'
Chris Tapp was working to make a difference for others wrongfully convicted when tragedy struck.www.nbcnews.com
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