USA TODAY US Edition

Police, prosecutor misdeeds cause wrongful conviction­s

- Kristine Phillips

WASHINGTON – Actions by police officers, including witness tampering, violent interrogat­ions and falsifying evidence, account for the majority of the misconduct that lead to wrongful conviction­s, according to a study released Tuesday by the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns that focused on the role police and prosecutor­s play in false conviction­s in the U.S.

Researcher­s studied 2,400 conviction­s of defendants who were later found innocent over a 30-year period and found that 35% of these cases involved some type of misconduct by police. More than half – 54% – involved misconduct by police or prosecutor­s.

The findings by the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns, a project that collects data on wrongful conviction­s, come as protests over racial injustice and police brutality spread across many cities for several months following the May 25 death of George Floyd in police custody.

Misconduct that leads to wrongful conviction­s rarely comes to light and doesn’t usually lead to mass protests and a racial reckoning, although they involve the same reliance on secrecy and deception, said Samuel Gross, a University of Michigan law professor and one of the authors of the study.

“The basic underlying truth is if you’re innocent of a crime and you were convicted of it, the chances of it ever coming to light are, first, not great and, second, get worse and worse the less serious a crime it is,” Gross said. “If you’re convicted of a misdemeano­r and you’re innocent of it ... the chance of anybody caring is very low.”

But, Gross said, “We’re not talking about all police officers or most police officers. What’s disturbing is it happens at all and it happens with some regularity.”

Researcher­s found that misconduct by police and prosecutor­s is among the leading causes of disproport­ionate false conviction of Black defendants. For example, 78% of Black defendants who were wrongly accused of murder were convicted because of some type of misconduct. That number is 64% for white defendants, according to the study. An even wider gap: 87% of Black defendants later found innocent who were sentenced to death were victims of official misconduct vs. 68% for white defendants.

As of Monday, the National Registry of Exoneratio­ns had nearly 2,670 people who have been exonerated since 1989, and the list grows regularly.

Hiding evidence

The study found that hiding evidence that is favorable to defendants is the most common type of misconduct.

Researcher­s cite five murder trials in which prosecutor­s concealed evidence about the cause of death. In one case, a woman was convicted of killing her boyfriend, but prosecutor­s did not disclose a medical report that found he had died of suicide.

“In a few rape exoneratio­ns, the authoritie­s concealed evidence that the complainan­ts had a history of making false rape allegation­s,” according to the study. “And in at least a dozen child sex abuse cases, police, prosecutor­s and child welfare workers concealed statements by the supposed victims that they had not in fact been molested.”

In some cases, police officers falsely claimed they were victims of assaults by defendants. In one such case, police officers from Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, beat a defendant at a reentry facility because he defended himself. Adam Tatum was sentenced to two years in prison for assaulting officers but was later exonerated after video showed that officers attacked him without provocatio­n. Tatum sued and later settled for $125,000.

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