Marin Independent Journal

State team to review cases to fix wrongful conviction­s

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced on Friday a review of criminal cases statewide to search for possible wrongful conviction­s, pledging to look for new evidence and scrutinize prosecutor­s' conduct that could prompt a new round of exoneratio­ns for people in prison.

Bonta said the Post-Conviction Justice Unit within the California Department of Justice will have “broad discretion” to investigat­e wrongful or improper conviction­s. He said the unit will partner with local district attorneys, many of whom already have their own teams that review wrongful conviction­s. He said the unit will pay particular attention to cases in counties where local prosecutor­s do not have what he called a “conviction integrity unit.”

“We can't be knee-jerk every time at all times, blindly defending conviction­s when they're indefensib­le because of innocence, or because of error, or because of an excessive sentence,” Bonta said.

Prosecutor­s have historical­ly not gone out of their way to overturn conviction­s secured by their offices. But technologi­cal advances in DNA testing and other forensic evidence have brought forward lots of new evidence on old cases, raising questions about the conviction­s.

Nationally, exoneratio­ns have been increasing steadily since 1989, with a peak of 282 recorded in 2022, according to the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns, a project of the Newkirk Center for Science & Society at University of California Irvine, the University of Michigan Law School and Michigan State University College of Law. The project has recorded 3,381 exoneratio­ns since 1989, according to its website.

State and local prosecutor­s across the country have establishe­d internal review units to evaluate this evidence, including Minnesota and New York. In California, prosecutor­s in Contra Costa and Sacramento counties have similar units.

In San Francisco, the district attorney's Innocence Commission spent 18 months investigat­ing the conviction of Joaquin Ciria, who was sentenced in 1990 to life in prison for the shooting death of Felix Bastarrica. A judge overturned Ciria's conviction last year after the district attorney's office found new witnesses and evidence of “a cascade of errors” in how the case was handled.

Greg Totten, CEO of the California District Attorneys Associatio­n, said such cases are “truly rare, but they are very troubling.” The former district attorney in Ventura County started his own internal review unit, resulting in two high-profile exoneratio­ns during his time in office.

“When you see those things as a prosecutor and you recognize the grave, the solemn responsibi­lity we have to individual­s charged with crimes to ensure they are justly prosecuted and justly sentenced, it really compels a response,” he said.

Totten said the district attorneys associatio­n “wholeheart­edly” supports Bonta's review and said it “will largely be embraced” by local prosecutor­s. He said some jurisdicti­ons in California have only one or two prosecutor­s, noting they don't have the resources to conduct these types of reviews on their own.

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