{"id":13869,"date":"2023-08-06T19:14:41","date_gmt":"2023-08-07T00:14:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/norwoodlegal.com\/?p=13869"},"modified":"2023-09-04T12:36:32","modified_gmt":"2023-09-04T17:36:32","slug":"on-tv-police-impress-with-ironclad-forensics-in-reality-police-rely-on-defective-witnesses","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/norwoodlegal.com\/on-tv-police-impress-with-ironclad-forensics-in-reality-police-rely-on-defective-witnesses\/","title":{"rendered":"On TV, police impress with ironclad forensics. In reality, police rely on defective witnesses."},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
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Glynn Simmons (top) and co-defendant Don Roberts<\/em><\/p>

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\u201cEverybody realizes that eyewitness testimony is inherently unreliable.\u201d<\/p>

That\u2019s what Tulsa County District Judge Sharon Holmes said in July of 2019 when she announced that Norwood.Law client Corey Dion Atchison was being exonerated of a Tulsa murder that took place in 1990. Atchison spent 28 years in prison for a crime that Judge Holmes finally, officially said Tulsa police and prosecutors got wrong.<\/p>

In a typical TV portrayal of police investigations, forensic evidence conveniently appears to detectives with little effort. Footprints, tire-track marks, fingerprints, blood spatter, DNA, and surveillance footage all seem to fall easily into the hands of authorities. Then the evidence is analyzed at a glistening laboratory by an attractive scientist who deftly identifies a suspect.<\/p>

But the truth is that investigators have commonly relied on flawed human eyewitnesses with no physical or forensic evidence at all to corroborate their claims. In doing so, they\u2019ve sent the wrong people to prison for years, decades, life, or death row.<\/p>

In announcing her decision to free our client, Judge Holmes pointed out that there was never any physical evidence presented against Corey Atchison in court. Instead, the Tulsa Police Department and the Tulsa County District Attorney\u2019s Office relied entirely on eyewitnesses.<\/p>

While on the witness stand, two of them recanted their statements to police that they saw Corey Atchison shoot and kill James Warren Lane in Tulsa\u2019s Kendall-Whittier neighborhood east of downtown. By the time of the trial, the prosecuting Tulsa attorney, Tim Harris, had just one eyewitness left who was willing to say underoath that Atchison was the killer.<\/p>

One eyewitness and no physical evidence turned out to be enough for a conviction that landed Corey Atchison in prison for nearly three decades. Continuing reading below to learn about the trouble with eyewitness testimony.<\/p>

Are you caught up in a legal dispute with the government, a corporation, or an individual? You\u2019ll need relentless advocates to tell your side of the story. It\u2019s not just criminal law we practice. Norwood.Law will bring the same commitment and skill to your corner that we did to the case of Corey Atchison. When the time arrives that you need our help, contact Norwood.Law for a free consultation at 918-582-6464.<\/p>

\u2018Extreme care\u2019<\/strong><\/h2>

That lone, remaining eyewitness at Corey Atchison\u2019s trial who held the case together also eventually recanted his testimony<\/a> \u2013 26 years later. The change of heart caused the state\u2019s case to collapse. Judge Holmes concluded that all three witnesses in the case were teenagers at the time of the murder investigation and had been \u201ccoerced\u201d by Tulsa authorities into calling Atchison a murderer:<\/p>

\u201cA common theme throughout this case was that those children were taken from school, taken to the detective division, and interrogated. At no time were parents advised that this was happening. \u2026 I actually had the transcripts from some of the interviews and, frankly, I have to tell you, I was appalled at how those interviews went.\u201d<\/p>

To argue her point that eyewitness testimony is inherently unreliable, Holmes cited what are known as the Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions<\/a>. They specify, among other things, what judges are expected to tell jurors before trials commence about the fallibility of eyewitnesses.<\/p>

According to the instructions:<\/p>

\u201cEyewitness identifications are to be scrutinized with extreme care. Testimony as to identity is a statement of a belief by a witness. The possibility of human error or mistake and the probable likeness or similarity of objects and persons are circumstances that you must consider in weighing identification testimony.\u201d<\/p>

The instructions go on to list questions a juror should consider about witness identifications:<\/p>