Sep 22 2008
Emotional DNA exonerations argue strongly for reforming eyewitness ID procedures
This weekend in Fort Worth at a training event sponsored by the Innocence Project of Texas and the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, I had the privilege of meeting the people at the center of two recent emotional and high-profile DNA exoneration cases.
Johnnie Lindsey was released Friday after spending nearly 26 years in prison on a false conviction for rape. He’s a quiet, gentle and somewhat fragile-looking man who underwent chemotherapy treatments for cancer while in prison. Lindsey speaks with the commitment and humility of a cancer survivor about the value of a second chance, and pledged to work toward the release of other innocent people in prison now that he’s out.
Lindsey’s quick to flash a smile, and he lit up when I asked him if he’d gotten to see any family yet. He described a tearful reunion with his son on Friday, who was 2 years old when Johhnie was sent to prison. He’d been out of contact with his son since he was five, and now the young man is nearly the same age as was Lindsey himself when he was wrongly accused and convicted. Tiara Ellis of the Dallas News was there for their reunion and published this account:
For the first time in more than 25 years Friday, Johnnie Earl Lindsey embraced his son – and freedom.
“My son, he wasn’t even 2 years old when I left,” Mr. Lindsey said. “His name is Johnnie, but we call him J.J.”
“Nah, it’s just Jay,” said 27-year-old Johnnie Cooper, his eyes red and wet with tears as he looked at the stranger he has been told is his father.
Lindsey’s case, like so many others, resulted from a faulty eyewitness identification, but this one had a twist: Detectives on the case MAILED the lineup photos to the victim a full year after the incident occurred. Not only that, the photos in the array seemed to improperly single Lindsey out; his picture was one of two men in the photo array not wearing a shirt and the victim had described her assailant as shirtless. What’s more, a jury ignored especially strong alibi evidence - a time card and a work supervisor who said if Lindsey weren’t there the business’ work would have stopped. That goes to show just how powerful eyewitness testimony can be, even when it’s inaccurate.
I met another remarkable set of people over the weekend, including the family of Timothy Cole - a Texas Tech student falsely convicted of rape who died in prison in 1999 but was exonerated by DNA evidence this summer. They were joined by the rape victim in the case, Michele Mallin (along with her husband), who had misidentified him first in a photo array and then in court.
Their presentations were tearful and moving, particularly watching Cole’s 71-year old mother break down and cry as she told Mallin in front of the group that she forgave her, that they were all victims of injustice in her son’s case. She blamed the Lubbock DA’s office and two detectives in the case, she said, but not Mallin. I’ve gotta admit I teared up hearing her story, and I think probably everyone in the room did. Cole’s youngest brother, Corey Sessions, vowed to take his brother’s story to the statehouse in Austin to back innocence-related legislative reforms.
Hearing Mallin relive the episode was equally brutal. She insisted both in her comments Friday evening and in private conversation that she’d never wanted anyone but the guilty man punished - that should go unsaid, one would hope, but clearly she felt terrible about what had happened and felt the need to explain herself. You couldn’t help but feel sorry for her, to rush to tell her “Nobody thinks that!,” but it’s easy to understand why she would feel that way.
The police had another suspect in Mallin’s case who turned out, based on recent DNA testing, to be the real rapist. In fact his name, Jerry Johnson, was even mentioned several times during Cole’s trial by the defense as an alternative suspect, though only when Mallin, who was a witness, was out of earshot. Johnson began writing first the DA’s office to say he’d actually committed Mallin’s rape when the statute of limitations ran out, but nobody told Mallin or Cole’s family until Johnson contacted Cole’s mother earlier this year.
Mallin said she’d never been told there was another suspect and always assumed the police had other evidence Cole had committed the crime beyond her identification. They did not. She was 20 years old at the time and justly proud of herself for testifying in the trial and doing the right thing. She said she’d now been “victimized twice” and it’s hard to deny it.
It’s hard to imagine two cases making a more persuasive and compelling case for enacting eyewitness ID reforms in Texas.
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