San Diego Union-Tribune

CALIF. INNOCENCE PROJECT CLIENT RELEASED ON PAROLE

- BY ALEX RIGGINS alex.riggins@sduniontri­bune.com (619) 293-1710 Twitter @Alex_Riggins

JoAnn Parks suffered the ultimate injustice nearly three decades ago when, based on faulty science, she was convicted of murdering her three children who perished in a house fire that she escaped.

On Tuesday, Parks, 54, walked out of prison on parole, free for the first time in 29 years thanks to the work of the attorneys from the California Innocence Project, located at downtown San Diego’s California Western School of Law.

At the time of her conviction in Los Angeles County, prosecutor­s alleged Parks started the fire that killed her children. She was convicted on three counts of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole.

But in 2011, an arson review panel reviewed the evidence in Park’s case and concluded the fire was most likely an accident, according to the California Innocence Project.

“Ultimately, the Panel concluded that, by modern standards, none of the allegedly incriminat­ing evidence against JoAnn would withstand scrutiny today,” the Innocence Project attorneys said. “The investigat­ors and jury were misled by bad science, or no science at all.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom granted Parks clemency last year, and the state parole board agreed to her release. Her attorneys said they will keep working to exonerate her.

“I will continue to fight to get her conviction overturned,” Raquel Cohen, the primary Innocence Project attorney on the case, said in a statement. “But now I will get to do it while she is enjoying her freedom.”

Justin Brooks, director of the California Innocence Project, said he was “thrilled” Parks is free.

“Nothing could be worse than losing your children and then being wrongfully convicted of their murder,” Brooks said in a statement. “As we learn more about the science of fires, hopefully these kinds of wrongful conviction­s will no longer occur.”

Parks was one of a dozen incarcerat­ed individual­s the California Innocence Project dubbed the “California 12,” noting their particular­ly strong claims of innocence. Ten of the 12 have been exonerated, paroled, had their sentence commuted or verdict reversed.

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