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False evidence

False evidence, fabricated evidence, forged evidence, fake evidence or tainted evidence is information created or obtained illegally in order to sway the verdict in a court case. Falsified evidence could be created by either side in a case (including the police/prosecution in a criminal case), or by someone sympathetic to either side. Misleading by suppressing evidence can also be considered a form of false evidence (by omission); however, in some cases, suppressed evidence is excluded because it cannot be proved the accused was aware of the items found or of their location. The analysis of evidence (forensic evidence) may also be forged if the person doing the forensic work finds it easier to fabricate evidence and test results than to perform the actual work involved. Parallel construction is a form of false evidence in which the evidence is truthful but its origins are untruthfully described, at times in order to avoid evidence being excluded as inadmissible due to unlawful means of procurement such as an unlawful search.

Apart from the desire for one side or another to succeed or fail in its case, the exact rationale for falsifying evidence can vary. Falsifying evidence to procure the conviction of those honestly believed guilty is considered a form of police corruption even though it is intended to (and may) result in the conviction of the guilty; however it may also reflect the incorrect prejudices of the falsifier, and it also tends to encourage corrupt police behavior generally. In the United Kingdom, this is sometimes called 'Noble Cause Corruption.' A "throw down," i.e. the planting of a weapon at a crime scene might be used by the police to justify shooting the victim in self-defense, and avoid possible prosecution for manslaughter.[1] However, the accused might have falsified some evidence, especially if not arrested immediately, or by having other access to a crime scene and related areas.

Types edit

  • Forged evidence - an item or information manufactured, or altered, to support some agenda, is not admissible in many courts, including U.S. criminal courts.
  • Planted evidence - an item or information which has been moved, or planted at a scene, to seem related to the accused party, is not admissible in many courts, including U.S. criminal courts.
  • Tainted evidence - information which has been obtained by illegal means or has been revealed (or traced) using evidence acquired by illegal search, and/or seizure, is called the "fruit of the poisonous tree" and is not admissible in many courts, including U.S. criminal courts.
  • Parallel construction - tainted evidence, where the origin of the evidence is untruthfully represented, preventing discussion of whether it was legally obtained or not.
  • Suppressed evidence - an item or information which a court judge has ruled as "inadmissible" is forbidden to be presented in a court case. Suppressed evidence might be excluded because it was found hidden or locked away in areas the accused could not be proven to know.

In some criminal cases, a person will be identified as a "person of interest" for a few days before arrest, allowing time to reveal suspicious actions (such as in recorded phone calls), or to attempt to falsify evidence before their arrest, e.g. to prove that the accused was not at the scene of the crime when it was being committed.

Cases edit

The Crewe murders edit

In June 1970 a Pukekawa, Lower Waikato, couple were killed and their bodies dumped in the Waikato River. Arthur Allan Thomas, a local farmer, was twice convicted of their murders but following massive publicity was later given a royal pardon.

Two bullet cases presented by senior detectives Bruce Hutton and Lenrick Johnston were crucial evidence for the conviction. In 1980, after Thomas's pardon a Royal commission into the convictions concluded "Mr Hutton and Mr Johnston planted the shellcase, exhibit 350 in the Crewe garden, and that they did so to manufacture evidence that Mr Thomas's rifle had been used for the killings."[2]

Killing of Bernard Whitehurst edit

In 1975, after the shooting death of Bernard Whitehurst by a Montgomery, Alabama police officer who incorrectly identified Whitehurst as the suspect in the robbery of a neighborhood grocery store, there was a police cover-up that included police officers planting a gun on him from the police evidence room. The coroner relied on police reports that Whitehurst was killed by a bullet fired through the chest.[3] After an investigation by the local newspaper and local attorney Donald Watkins raised questions about the facts of the case, six months later, the District Attorney James Evans ordered the body to be exhumed and an autopsy to be performed.[3] The results of the autopsy showed that Whitehurst had been shot in the back.[3] The attempted cover-up led to the resignation of eight police officers, the city’s mayor, James Robinson and the Director of Public Safety, Ed Wright.[4][5] No police officer was convicted of a crime.[6] Forty years later, the Montgomery City Council passed a resolution that formally expressed regret for the shooting and cover-up.[4]

Murder of Holly Staker edit

In 1992, 11-year-old Holly Staker was raped and murdered while babysitting in Waukegan, Illinois. A local man named Juan Rivera was convicted of the murder solely on the basis of a confession, one that he claimed was coerced. No physical evidence linked him to the crime scene and many details of his confession contradicted known evidence from the crime scene. DNA testing done in 2004 on semen taken from the crime scene ruled out Rivera as the source, however, the prosecution argued that the semen sample came from previous consensual sex with another man. Rivera was convicted again. His conviction was overturned by the appellate court who took the unusual step of barring prosecutors from retrying Rivera and he was released.[7]

After his release, Rivera's attorneys asked the courts to order genetic testing on a piece of evidence the prosecution had tried to use at his trial in 1993. Rivera's shoes had blood on them, which the prosecution argued belonged to Holly. The prosecution withdrew them prior to his first trial when it was discovered that the shoes were not available for sale anywhere in the United States until after the murder. In 2015, Juan's attorney sought further forensic testing on the shoes. DNA analysis indicated that the blood indeed belonged to Holly, but also contained another genetic sample; one that matched the semen sample. Rivera's defense team insists that this is proof not only that the blood was planted, but that the real killer's DNA was inadvertently planted as well. The DNA has yet to be matched to an individual, but has been linked to DNA from another home invasion and murder. The man convicted of that crime also claims to be wrongfully convicted.[8][9]

Following his exoneration, he was awarded $20 million USD, the largest wrongful conviction settlement in US history.[10][11]

New York State Police Troop C scandal edit

In the New York State Police Troop C scandal of 1993, Craig D. Harvey, a New York State Police trooper, was charged with fabricating evidence. Harvey admitted he and another trooper lifted fingerprints from items the suspect, John Spencer, touched while in Troop C headquarters during booking. He attached the fingerprints to evidence cards and later claimed that he had pulled the fingerprints from the scene of the murder. The forged evidence was used during trial and John Spencer was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison.[12]

After the truth came out, it was discovered that they had been falsifying evidence in cases for many years. At least three officers were convicted. Every case the department had been involved in had to be reinvestigated.

FBI scandal edit

In the 1990s, the fingerprint, DNA, and explosive units of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory had written reports confirming local police department theories without actually performing the work. [citation needed]

Such laws and regulatory procedures stipulating the conditions under which evidence can be handled and manipulated fall under a body of due process statutes called chain of custody rules. It is crucial for law enforcement agencies to scrupulously collect, handle and transfer evidence in order to avoid its falsification. In most jurisdictions, chain of evidence rules require that the transfer of criminal evidence be handled by as few persons as possible. To prevent error or improper tampering, chain of evidence rules also stipulate that those authorized to experiment with collected evidence document the nature, time, date and duration of their handling.

303 Creative LLC v. Elenis edit

The 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis case was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 30, 2023.[13] In this case, the defendants filed false evidence with their appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The false evidence was claimed by the defendant to have been a request for a gay wedding site that was submitted to the defendant's web site.[14] The web site request was claimed to have been submitted on the afternoon of Sept. 21, 2016; this was after 10th Circuit found in favor of the State of Colorado (July 26, 2021), but before the defendant filed an appeal to the US Supreme Court (September 24, 2021).[15] In an article by The New Republic, reporter Melissa Gira Grant found that the contact information in the false evidence was a real person, but they had never submitted a request to 303 Creative, and in fact, they were already married, and not gay.[16] The lawyers for Colorado said the evidence was irrelevant to the case, and neither the majority opinion nor the dissent of the Supreme Court ruling mentioned the false evidence. Although the defendant submitted the request as evidence, they claim to have no knowledge of whether the request was real, using the claim of a web site submission as plausible deniability. Further, the defendant claimed fear that responding to the request to see if it was valid might result in the state of Colorado suing her.[14]

Biden v. Nebraska edit

The Biden v. Nebraska case was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 30, 2023.[17] The case was related to the forgiveness of federal student loans by the Biden administration that was challenged by multiple states. Much of this case hinged on a claim that the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA) would be financially harmed by the student loan forgiveness. However, internal documents from the MOHELA show that it did not file the suit, made no claim of financial harm, and had nothing to do with the case. The evidence submitted by the Missouri Attorney General was a fabrication that MOHELA did not participate in.[18] Despite the reporting that the evidence of financial harm to MOHELA was false, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the Biden administration.[19][17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "689 F. 2d 1220 - Webster v. City of Houston". openjurist.org. F2d (689). paragraph 29. October 28, 1982. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  2. ^ Taylor, Robert Linsay; John Bowie Gorden; Allen Howard Johnston (1980). (PDF). Book. NZ Government Printer. p. 125. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 9, 2011. Retrieved June 11, 2009.
  3. ^ a b c MacPherson, Myra (April 3, 1977). "Alabama's 'Watergate'". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  4. ^ a b "Montgomery erects second marker honoring Bernard Whitehurst". The Montgomery Advertiser. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  5. ^ "TOP POLICE OFFICER IN MONTGOMERY QUITS". The New York Times. February 6, 1977. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  6. ^ "City of Montgomery unveils marker recognizing police cover-up in 1975 shooting death of Bernard Whitehurst; family still wants apology (photos)". AL.com. Retrieved November 20, 2016.
  7. ^ "People V. Rivera". Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District. December 9, 2011.
  8. ^ Mills, Steve (December 10, 2014). "Attorneys: Police planted blood on Juan Rivera's shoes in Waukegan slaying". Chicago Tribune.
  9. ^ Hinkel, Dan; Mills, Steve (January 30, 2015). "Judge orders tests for alleged evidence tampering in Juan Rivera case". Chicago Tribune.
  10. ^ Meincke, Paul (March 20, 2015). "JUAN RIVERA WINS LARGEST WRONGFUL CONVICTION SETTLEMENT IN U.S. HISTORY". ABC 7.
  11. ^ Moran, Dan (May 5, 2015). "Man freed after 20 years in prison for murder gets $7.5 million from Waukegan". The Chicago Tribune.
  12. ^ "Police Investigation Supervisor Admits Faking Fingerprints". The New York Times. July 30, 1993. Retrieved June 21, 2007. In a widening scandal that has rocked the New York State Police, a lieutenant who supervised criminal investigations in seven upstate counties admitted yesterday that he had faked fingerprint evidence in three cases. The lieutenant, Craig D. Harvey, also said in court in Delhi, N.Y., that he had been assisted in fabricating evidence by another lieutenant, Patrick O'Hara, who works out of state police headquarters in Albany supervising drug and organized-crime investigations.
  13. ^ "Docket for 21-476". supremecourt.gov. U.S. Supreme Court. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  14. ^ a b Liptak, Adam (3 July 2023). "What to Know About a Seemingly Fake Document in a Gay Rights Case". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  15. ^ "303 Creative LLC v. Elenis". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  16. ^ Gira Grant, Melissa (29 June 2023). "The Mysterious Case of the Fake Gay Marriage Website, the Real Straight Man, and the Supreme Court". The New Republic. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  17. ^ a b "Docket for 22-506". supremecourt.gov. U.S. Supreme Court. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
  18. ^ Dayen, David (19 June 2023). "The Student Loan Case's Unwilling Participant". The American Prospect. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
  19. ^ "22-506 Biden v. Nebraska" (PDF). U.S. Supreme Court. 30 June 2023. Retrieved 7 July 2023.

Further reading edit

  • National Law Journal; October 9, 1995; "Faked Evidence Becomes Real Problem-From Fingerprints to Photos to Computer Data, Lawyers are Learning to be Vigilant"
  • New York Times; November 22, 1992, Sunday; "Ripples of a Pathologist's Misconduct In Graves and Courts of West Texas. The prairie graveyards of West Texas are giving mute testimony to the misdeeds of a circuit-riding pathologist who left a trail of faked autopsies, botched blood samples and missing organs from the Panhandle to the Rio Grande. According to defense lawyers' estimates, as many as 20 capital murder cases ..."
  • John F. Kelly and Phillip K. Wearne; Tainting Evidence: Inside The Scandals At The FBI Crime Lab

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Suppressed evidence redirects here For the fallacy see Cherry picking This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources False evidence news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message False evidence fabricated evidence forged evidence fake evidence or tainted evidence is information created or obtained illegally in order to sway the verdict in a court case Falsified evidence could be created by either side in a case including the police prosecution in a criminal case or by someone sympathetic to either side Misleading by suppressing evidence can also be considered a form of false evidence by omission however in some cases suppressed evidence is excluded because it cannot be proved the accused was aware of the items found or of their location The analysis of evidence forensic evidence may also be forged if the person doing the forensic work finds it easier to fabricate evidence and test results than to perform the actual work involved Parallel construction is a form of false evidence in which the evidence is truthful but its origins are untruthfully described at times in order to avoid evidence being excluded as inadmissible due to unlawful means of procurement such as an unlawful search Apart from the desire for one side or another to succeed or fail in its case the exact rationale for falsifying evidence can vary Falsifying evidence to procure the conviction of those honestly believed guilty is considered a form of police corruption even though it is intended to and may result in the conviction of the guilty however it may also reflect the incorrect prejudices of the falsifier and it also tends to encourage corrupt police behavior generally In the United Kingdom this is sometimes called Noble Cause Corruption A throw down i e the planting of a weapon at a crime scene might be used by the police to justify shooting the victim in self defense and avoid possible prosecution for manslaughter 1 However the accused might have falsified some evidence especially if not arrested immediately or by having other access to a crime scene and related areas Contents 1 Types 2 Cases 2 1 The Crewe murders 2 2 Killing of Bernard Whitehurst 2 3 Murder of Holly Staker 2 4 New York State Police Troop C scandal 2 5 FBI scandal 2 6 303 Creative LLC v Elenis 2 7 Biden v Nebraska 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingTypes editForged evidence an item or information manufactured or altered to support some agenda is not admissible in many courts including U S criminal courts Planted evidence an item or information which has been moved or planted at a scene to seem related to the accused party is not admissible in many courts including U S criminal courts Tainted evidence information which has been obtained by illegal means or has been revealed or traced using evidence acquired by illegal search and or seizure is called the fruit of the poisonous tree and is not admissible in many courts including U S criminal courts Parallel construction tainted evidence where the origin of the evidence is untruthfully represented preventing discussion of whether it was legally obtained or not Suppressed evidence an item or information which a court judge has ruled as inadmissible is forbidden to be presented in a court case Suppressed evidence might be excluded because it was found hidden or locked away in areas the accused could not be proven to know In some criminal cases a person will be identified as a person of interest for a few days before arrest allowing time to reveal suspicious actions such as in recorded phone calls or to attempt to falsify evidence before their arrest e g to prove that the accused was not at the scene of the crime when it was being committed Cases editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2011 The Crewe murders edit Main article Murder of Harvey and Jeannette Crewe In June 1970 a Pukekawa Lower Waikato couple were killed and their bodies dumped in the Waikato River Arthur Allan Thomas a local farmer was twice convicted of their murders but following massive publicity was later given a royal pardon Two bullet cases presented by senior detectives Bruce Hutton and Lenrick Johnston were crucial evidence for the conviction In 1980 after Thomas s pardon a Royal commission into the convictions concluded Mr Hutton and Mr Johnston planted the shellcase exhibit 350 in the Crewe garden and that they did so to manufacture evidence that Mr Thomas s rifle had been used for the killings 2 Killing of Bernard Whitehurst edit Main article Killing of Bernard Whitehurst In 1975 after the shooting death of Bernard Whitehurst by a Montgomery Alabama police officer who incorrectly identified Whitehurst as the suspect in the robbery of a neighborhood grocery store there was a police cover up that included police officers planting a gun on him from the police evidence room The coroner relied on police reports that Whitehurst was killed by a bullet fired through the chest 3 After an investigation by the local newspaper and local attorney Donald Watkins raised questions about the facts of the case six months later the District Attorney James Evans ordered the body to be exhumed and an autopsy to be performed 3 The results of the autopsy showed that Whitehurst had been shot in the back 3 The attempted cover up led to the resignation of eight police officers the city s mayor James Robinson and the Director of Public Safety Ed Wright 4 5 No police officer was convicted of a crime 6 Forty years later the Montgomery City Council passed a resolution that formally expressed regret for the shooting and cover up 4 Murder of Holly Staker edit Main article Juan Rivera wrongful conviction In 1992 11 year old Holly Staker was raped and murdered while babysitting in Waukegan Illinois A local man named Juan Rivera was convicted of the murder solely on the basis of a confession one that he claimed was coerced No physical evidence linked him to the crime scene and many details of his confession contradicted known evidence from the crime scene DNA testing done in 2004 on semen taken from the crime scene ruled out Rivera as the source however the prosecution argued that the semen sample came from previous consensual sex with another man Rivera was convicted again His conviction was overturned by the appellate court who took the unusual step of barring prosecutors from retrying Rivera and he was released 7 After his release Rivera s attorneys asked the courts to order genetic testing on a piece of evidence the prosecution had tried to use at his trial in 1993 Rivera s shoes had blood on them which the prosecution argued belonged to Holly The prosecution withdrew them prior to his first trial when it was discovered that the shoes were not available for sale anywhere in the United States until after the murder In 2015 Juan s attorney sought further forensic testing on the shoes DNA analysis indicated that the blood indeed belonged to Holly but also contained another genetic sample one that matched the semen sample Rivera s defense team insists that this is proof not only that the blood was planted but that the real killer s DNA was inadvertently planted as well The DNA has yet to be matched to an individual but has been linked to DNA from another home invasion and murder The man convicted of that crime also claims to be wrongfully convicted 8 9 Following his exoneration he was awarded 20 million USD the largest wrongful conviction settlement in US history 10 11 New York State Police Troop C scandal edit In the New York State Police Troop C scandal of 1993 Craig D Harvey a New York State Police trooper was charged with fabricating evidence Harvey admitted he and another trooper lifted fingerprints from items the suspect John Spencer touched while in Troop C headquarters during booking He attached the fingerprints to evidence cards and later claimed that he had pulled the fingerprints from the scene of the murder The forged evidence was used during trial and John Spencer was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison 12 After the truth came out it was discovered that they had been falsifying evidence in cases for many years At least three officers were convicted Every case the department had been involved in had to be reinvestigated FBI scandal edit In the 1990s the fingerprint DNA and explosive units of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory had written reports confirming local police department theories without actually performing the work citation needed Such laws and regulatory procedures stipulating the conditions under which evidence can be handled and manipulated fall under a body of due process statutes called chain of custody rules It is crucial for law enforcement agencies to scrupulously collect handle and transfer evidence in order to avoid its falsification In most jurisdictions chain of evidence rules require that the transfer of criminal evidence be handled by as few persons as possible To prevent error or improper tampering chain of evidence rules also stipulate that those authorized to experiment with collected evidence document the nature time date and duration of their handling 303 Creative LLC v Elenis edit The 303 Creative LLC v Elenis case was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 30 2023 13 In this case the defendants filed false evidence with their appeal to the U S Supreme Court The false evidence was claimed by the defendant to have been a request for a gay wedding site that was submitted to the defendant s web site 14 The web site request was claimed to have been submitted on the afternoon of Sept 21 2016 this was after 10th Circuit found in favor of the State of Colorado July 26 2021 but before the defendant filed an appeal to the US Supreme Court September 24 2021 15 In an article by The New Republic reporter Melissa Gira Grant found that the contact information in the false evidence was a real person but they had never submitted a request to 303 Creative and in fact they were already married and not gay 16 The lawyers for Colorado said the evidence was irrelevant to the case and neither the majority opinion nor the dissent of the Supreme Court ruling mentioned the false evidence Although the defendant submitted the request as evidence they claim to have no knowledge of whether the request was real using the claim of a web site submission as plausible deniability Further the defendant claimed fear that responding to the request to see if it was valid might result in the state of Colorado suing her 14 Biden v Nebraska edit The Biden v Nebraska case was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 30 2023 17 The case was related to the forgiveness of federal student loans by the Biden administration that was challenged by multiple states Much of this case hinged on a claim that the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority MOHELA would be financially harmed by the student loan forgiveness However internal documents from the MOHELA show that it did not file the suit made no claim of financial harm and had nothing to do with the case The evidence submitted by the Missouri Attorney General was a fabrication that MOHELA did not participate in 18 Despite the reporting that the evidence of financial harm to MOHELA was false the U S Supreme Court ruled against the Biden administration 19 17 See also editFalse accusations False arrest Fingerprint Intimidation Kompromat History Miscarriage of justice Parallel construction Surveillance abuse 2015 Ninoy Aquino International Airport bullet planting scandal Baris Pehlivan Howland will forgery trial List of wrongful convictions in the United States M62 Coach BombingReferences edit 689 F 2d 1220 Webster v City of Houston openjurist org F2d 689 paragraph 29 October 28 1982 Retrieved April 17 2015 Taylor Robert Linsay John Bowie Gorden Allen Howard Johnston 1980 Report of the Royal Commission to inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette sic Lenore Crewe PDF Book NZ Government Printer p 125 Archived from the original PDF on June 9 2011 Retrieved June 11 2009 a b c MacPherson Myra April 3 1977 Alabama s Watergate The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 21 2016 a b Montgomery erects second marker honoring Bernard Whitehurst The Montgomery Advertiser Retrieved November 21 2016 TOP POLICE OFFICER IN MONTGOMERY QUITS The New York Times February 6 1977 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 21 2016 City of Montgomery unveils marker recognizing police cover up in 1975 shooting death of Bernard Whitehurst family still wants apology photos AL com Retrieved November 20 2016 People V Rivera Appellate Court of Illinois Second District December 9 2011 Mills Steve December 10 2014 Attorneys Police planted blood on Juan Rivera s shoes in Waukegan slaying Chicago Tribune Hinkel Dan Mills Steve January 30 2015 Judge orders tests for alleged evidence tampering in Juan Rivera case Chicago Tribune Meincke Paul March 20 2015 JUAN RIVERA WINS LARGEST WRONGFUL CONVICTION SETTLEMENT IN U S HISTORY ABC 7 Moran Dan May 5 2015 Man freed after 20 years in prison for murder gets 7 5 million from Waukegan The Chicago Tribune Police Investigation Supervisor Admits Faking Fingerprints The New York Times July 30 1993 Retrieved June 21 2007 In a widening scandal that has rocked the New York State Police a lieutenant who supervised criminal investigations in seven upstate counties admitted yesterday that he had faked fingerprint evidence in three cases The lieutenant Craig D Harvey also said in court in Delhi N Y that he had been assisted in fabricating evidence by another lieutenant Patrick O Hara who works out of state police headquarters in Albany supervising drug and organized crime investigations Docket for 21 476 supremecourt gov U S Supreme Court Retrieved 6 July 2023 a b Liptak Adam 3 July 2023 What to Know About a Seemingly Fake Document in a Gay Rights Case The New York Times Retrieved 6 July 2023 303 Creative LLC v Elenis Ballotpedia Retrieved 6 July 2023 Gira Grant Melissa 29 June 2023 The Mysterious Case of the Fake Gay Marriage Website the Real Straight Man and the Supreme Court The New Republic Retrieved 6 July 2023 a b Docket for 22 506 supremecourt gov U S Supreme Court Retrieved 7 July 2023 Dayen David 19 June 2023 The Student Loan Case s Unwilling Participant The American Prospect Retrieved 7 July 2023 22 506 Biden v Nebraska PDF U S Supreme Court 30 June 2023 Retrieved 7 July 2023 Further reading editNational Law Journal October 9 1995 Faked Evidence Becomes Real Problem From Fingerprints to Photos to Computer Data Lawyers are Learning to be Vigilant New York Times November 22 1992 Sunday Ripples of a Pathologist s Misconduct In Graves and Courts of West Texas The prairie graveyards of West Texas are giving mute testimony to the misdeeds of a circuit riding pathologist who left a trail of faked autopsies botched blood samples and missing organs from the Panhandle to the Rio Grande According to defense lawyers estimates as many as 20 capital murder cases John F Kelly and Phillip K Wearne Tainting Evidence Inside The Scandals At The FBI Crime Lab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title False evidence amp oldid 1214649886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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