AltWeeklies Wire
Connecticut Tackles the DNA Questionnew
Connecticut is one of 29 states that doesn't collect DNA at the time of arrest for felonies. Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, among others, would like to see that changed.
  
    New Haven Advocate  |  
    Daniel D'Ambrosio  |  
    11-17-2009  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  How Many Innocent People Has Harris County, Texas, Sent to Prison?new
 
    
    Texas has experienced 34 DNA exonerations -- more than any other state -- and "these compounding exonerations," as State Senator Rodney Ellis says, "are clear and convincing evidence that our criminal justice system is broken."
  
    Houston Press  |  
    Randall Patterson  |  
    10-15-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  Ronald Hinton May Have Confessed to Rape and Murder, but Did He Really Do It?new
The confession of Hinton, who was convicted of raping a murdering a child, outweighed indications that he might not have done it.
  
    Baltimore City Paper  |  
    Van Smith  |  
    08-05-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  DNA Has All but Cleared Bill Dillon of a 27-Year-Old Murder; The State Doesn't Seem to Carenew
Add the recent DNA exoneration to all the problems associated with his farce of a trial nearly three decades ago, and one has to wonder why Bill Dillon still sits in state prison.
  
    Orlando Weekly  |  
    Deanna Morey  |  
    07-31-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  One Exoneree Finds Purpose in Advocacy, Closure in ID of Perpnew
Ken Wyniemko spent nearly a decade behind bars for a rape. His most pressing concern was surviving. His second was proving his innocence. He succeeded at both.
  
    Metro Times  |  
    Sandra Svoboda  |  
    07-08-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  DNA Points to Perp in Rape for Which Wrong Man Did Timenew
Five years ago, Ken Wyniemko was released from the Michigan prison system, exonerated after a decade behind bars for a rape that DNA evidence concluded he did not commit. On Wednesday, police confirmed that a match has been made to the DNA collected at the scene of the 1994 Macomb County rape for which Wyniemko was arrested, convicted and incarcerated.
  
    Metro Times  |  
    Sandra Svoboda  |  
    07-01-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  Paul House is Being Retried for a Murder that DNA Says He Didn't Commitnew
 
    
    Rather than acknowledge defeat -- never mind admitting error -- the very same prosecutor who tried House for capital murder 23 years ago announced he was going to take one more shot at convicting the ailing man for murder. But this time, he'd have to come up with a different motive, given that the theory he argued the first time -- that House killed to cover up rape -- had been shredded by the emergence of scientific evidence.
  
    Nashville Scene  |  
    Sarah Kelley  |  
    06-27-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  Life After DNA Exonerationnew
 
    
    After 27 years in prison, DNA exoneree Charles Chatman tries to pick up the pieces and catch up with a world that has left him behind.
  
    Dallas Observer  |  
    Megan Feldman  |  
    02-12-2008  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  DNA Test Will Show if Texas Executed an Innocent Mannew
One strand of hair found on the counter of an East Texas liquor store whose owner was gunned down in 1989 could help determine whether Texas executed an innocent man for the killing -- a judge has ordered the hair not be destroyed as the Observer and the Innocence Project push for DNA testing.
  
    The Texas Observer  |  
    David Pasztor  |  
    09-24-2007  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    
  Prosecution Witness Put Under the Microscope
Joyce Gilchrist was the star forensic witness for Oklahoma County prosecutors. She sent hundreds of people to jail -- several on death row, some already executed. But a case before the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals sheds light
on what some called "Black Magic."
  
    Oklahoma Gazette  |  
    Scott Cooper  |  
    03-09-2005  | 
    Crime & Justice
  
  
  
    Tags: DNA