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(US) Army slow to act as crime-lab worker falsified, botched tests

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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-20-11 05:58 AM
Original message
(US) Army slow to act as crime-lab worker falsified, botched tests
Army slow to act as crime-lab worker falsified, botched tests
Posted on Sunday, March 20, 2011
By Marisa Taylor and Michael Doyle | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — For nearly three years, the military held the key to Roger House's exoneration and didn't tell him: A forensics examiner had botched a crucial lab test used in the Navy lieutenant's court-martial.

In fact, the military had begun second-guessing a decade's worth of tests conducted by its one-time star lab analyst, Phillip Mills.

Investigators discovered that Mills had cut corners and even falsified reports in one case. He found DNA where it didn't exist, and failed to find it where it did. His mistakes may have let the guilty go free while the innocent, such as House, were convicted.

"It cost him his family and it cost him his Navy career," House's attorney, John Wells, said in an interview. "It's certainly outrageous and unconscionable; it's the kind of action that makes you want to scream."

But the problem was bigger than just a lone analyst.
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Angry Dragon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-20-11 06:15 AM
Response to Original message
1. Too many lies
The justice throughout this country is a joke ....... and no one is laughing except the people in charge
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hobbit709 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-20-11 06:20 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. “In the halls of justice, the only justice is in the halls”
Lenny had it right.
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midnight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-20-11 07:13 AM
Response to Original message
3. Independent investigations are being prevented and that's why this problem persists.
Wisconsin AG says crime lab miscues didn't have impact
By The Associated Press
Friday, October 31, 2008

Cases of employee misconduct at the state crime laboratories did not undermine the reliability of forensic testing performed there, Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen said Friday.
In September, an attorney for convicted killer Steven Avery alleged that incidents of misconduct at the labs in Madison and Milwaukee raised the specter that DNA testing, fingerprint identification and other lab work was tainted.

The misconduct included a lab employee who showed up drunk to work and analysts who made mistakes testing fingerprints. All the behavior in question came between 2002 and 2006.

Van Hollen said all six cases cited by attorney Jerome Buting had already been investigated and resulted in discipline against the employees. Nonetheless, he ordered his department to take another look at the cases to guarantee public confidence in the labs.

His office released a 13-page summary describing the investigation late Friday afternoon. It concluded that no faulty forensic test results were presented in court against criminal defendants and found no evidence of systemic problems at the labs.

"In fact, the opposite was found to be true, in that the State Crime Laboratory has a system of checks and balances designed for the specific purpose of identifying human oversights," special agent Richard Luell of the Division of Criminal Investigation wrote in the report.

The employee who was drunk at work at the Madison lab in 2006 did not work on the Avery case as Buting had suggested, the report found. He apparently showed up to work sober but then got drunk in his car, it found.

None of the mistakes involving fingerprint analysts resulted in false identifications, the report found.

One fingerprint analyst who claimed to perform tests that he did not was convicted of misconduct in office, the report said. His case resulted in a review of 1,500 cases the analyst had handled that found no incorrect identifications but that he missed prints that could have been tested.

The analyst "took shortcuts in processing evidence," the report found.

Buting did not immediately return a phone message Friday afternoon.

His client, Avery, was convicted of killing 25-year-old Teresa Halbach in 2005 and DNA evidence played a major role in the case. A DNA analyst at the crime lab testified at his trial she found Halbach's DNA on a bullet found in Avery's garage and Halbach's car key was found in his bedroom with traces of his DNA.

Buting disputed the results of those tests and pointed out an analyst acknowledged during the trial she had contaminated a single evidence sample. DNA evidence, ironically, had freed Avery from prison in 2003 after he spent 18 years behind bars for a rape he did not commit.http://truthinjustice.org/crimelab-clear.htm
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burnsei sensei Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-20-11 09:44 AM
Response to Original message
4. If the incompetent performance when this far,
then the institution is at fault.
Part of the reason we have institutions is to oversee and correct the mistakes of people who may not know their job or may be unfit for it.
Well managed, institutions can retain talent and redirect incompetence out of the professions. That's their function in terms of staff.
Have we forgotten this much about basic social science?

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