Posted on 08/01/2005 9:42:05 AM PDT by TheOtherOne
DNA Evidence Frees Man After Nearly 18 Years in Prison in Pennsylvania
Published: Aug 1, 2005 PITTSBURGH (AP) - A man who spent nearly 18 years behind bars for a rape he didn't commit was released from prison Monday after new tests of DNA evidence cleared him.
Prosecutors joined defense attorneys on Monday in asking a judge to free Thomas Doswell, 44, after DNA in the case was retested by the nonprofit Innocence Project at the Benjamin N. Cardoza School of Law in New York.
"These tests confirmed what Mr. Doswell has been saying from the moment he was charged, that he was innocent and that this was a misidentification brought about by police officers who may have engaged in misconduct," said Colin Starger of the Innocence Project.
Doswell, of Homewood, was convicted in the 1986 rape of a 48-year-old woman at a hospital in Pittsburgh. He was 25 and the father of two young children when he was convicted.
He was sentenced to 13 to 26 years in prison and was denied parole four times because he refused to accept responsibility for the crime.
Prosecutors originally opposed DNA testing for Doswell, but a judge ordered it. When the tests came back last month showing that semen taken from the victim was not from Doswell, prosecutors filed motions to vacate his sentence and have him released.
The victim and another witness had picked out Doswell's photo among a group of eight shown to them by police.
At the time, Pittsburgh police identified mug shots of people charged with rape with the letter "R." Doswell insisted witnesses identified him as the rapist only because the letter "R" appeared under his mug shot.
His photo was marked because an ex-girlfriend had accused him of rape, but he was acquitted of that charge.
Police officials say they no longer mark photos of rape suspects with an "R."
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On the Net:
Innocence Project: http://www.innocenceproject.org/
AP-ES-08-01-05 1219EDT
Raped her, that is.
Lemme guess - you have trouble with that reasonable doubt thingy as well, don't you?
Or maybe if we knew what the prosecutor knew about the past CONVICTIONS of the suspects, we too might be eager to lock them up where they belong.
If you want past conviction information admitted at trial then make that the law. Pretty simple really.
What part of ASSUME don't you understand?
This DNA business is not sound science UNLESS they also test for chimerism.
There's also no law saying I have to weep without knowing the "innocent" man's past criminal history.
Which history these kinds of articles don't talk much about--if at all.
Once again, what part of reasonable doubt do you not understand? If one in 100,000,000 is a chimera, I'll stick with DNA as a means to determine reasonable doubt - unless you'd rather several hundred men stay in jail so that we might catch that one chimera.
I don't care, and I am sure he doesn't care, if you weep for him. Get over yourself. He was falsely accused and convicted of this crime.
IF
1) LAST TIME I CHECKED (a year or two ago), NO ONE KNOWS THE INCIDENCE.
THEY ASSUME IT'S RARE.
2) BUT EVEN IF they PROVED it rare in the GENERAL population of humans--
That would not be good enough.
They would need to prove that being a human chimera does not make one more prone to CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR (a reasonble suspicion, given how a chimera's DNA is all mess up)--
And that would make the frequency of chimerism among prisoners higher.
I can't find it online. I'm going to pop over to the PA board and see if anyone remembers it.
At the time, I think the only evidence the police had was (1) the suspects' confessions, which matched, and (2) either witnesses saw them breaking into cars or they were known car thieves or... I can't remember. But the DNA test showed the DNA did not match either suspect, and they were released even before a trial.
If I can find an old article, that should explain it better.
Uh, dude, given how rarely it has been seen, one can draw a logical conclusion that it is, in fact, rare.
But, given your next leap, I can see that logical conclusions ain't your strong suit:
2) BUT EVEN IF they PROVED it rare in the GENERAL population of humans-- That would not be good enough. They would need to prove that being a human chimera does not make one more prone to CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR (a reasonble suspicion, given how a chimera's DNA is all mess up)-- And that would make the frequency of chimerism among prisoners higher.
Ah, so you first go against the preponderance of the evidence to challenge a scientific assumption, and then pull something out of a dark nether region to create your own standard.
Later, gator. I prefer to debate with those who can maintain a coherent position.
You'd have to page down halfway to the paragraph that starts: "Sitting down over lunch..."
Thanks, Owl, for remembering Kimberly's name.
P.S. (Thanks, Moderator, for deleting that post!)
Thanks...I will read it.
Gutsy guy. What a terrible story.
One has to agree with all the posts about the incredible injustice and incompetence,
If one assumes all is as it appears, but
After the O.J. trial I have zero faith in Barry Scheck and his "Innocence Project" There is no doubt in my mind, that just like with OJ, he would have no qualms using lies and fraud to get a guilty person off.
I would be a lot more confident of the actual "innocence" in these cases, if I knew what precautions were used to make sure their was no possibility of trickery or sleight of hand or collusion with lab employees.
I have a very vague memory of a case in which their seemed to be substantial evidence of the perpetrators guilt, the innocence project got him released and he then committed a rape soon after he was released.
To be honest I have no real evidence to justify skepticism.
I just would not rule out the possibility that Barry Scheck has found a way to rig the tests.
That's what seems to have happened in that story I posted (see the link in #53 above) about the Philadelphia "Center City Jogger" who was raped and murdered, and DNA evidence released the guys, after they confessed.
This man, Thomas Doswell, is probably truly innocent. I just read that he has maintained his innocence from the beginning. And, because he insisted from the start that he was innocent, he was denied parole over and over again.
Still, I always wonder about the other cases, especially after the Center City Jogger case in Philly.
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