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pantheon
Sun 18 Nov, 2007

FBI's Forensic Test Full of Holes
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FBI's Forensic Test Full of Holes<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Lee Wayne Hunt is one of hundreds of defendants whose convictions are in question now that FBI forensic evidence has been discredited.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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By John Solomon<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Washington Post Staff Writer<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Sunday,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> November 18,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> 2007;<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Page A01<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Hundreds of defendants sitting in prisons nationwide have been convicted with the help of an FBI forensic tool that was discarded more than two years ago.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> But the FBI lab has yet to take steps to alert the affected defendants or courts,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> even as the window for appealing convictions is closing,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> a joint investigation by The Washington Post and <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"60 Minutes"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> has found.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The science,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> known as comparative bullet-lead analysis,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> was first used after President John F.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Kennedy's assassination in 1963.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The technique used chemistry to link crime-scene bullets to ones possessed by suspects on the theory that each batch of lead had a unique elemental makeup.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Wayne Lee Hunt,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> 48,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> convicted of a double murder 22 years ago in a case now being challenged because of faulty bullet lead analysis.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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In 2004,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> however,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the nation's most prestigious scientific body concluded that variations in the manufacturing process rendered the FBI's testimony about the science <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"unreliable and potentially misleading.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Specifically,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the National Academy of Sciences said that decades of FBI statements to jurors linking a particular bullet to those found in a suspect's gun or cartridge box were so overstated that such testimony should be considered <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"misleading under federal rules of evidence.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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A year later,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the bureau abandoned the analysis.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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But the FBI lab has never gone back to determine how many times its scientists misled jurors.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Internal memos show that the bureau's managers were aware by 2004 that testimony had been overstated in a large number of trials.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> In a smaller number of cases,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the experts had made false matches based on a faulty statistical analysis of the elements contained in different lead samples,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> documents show.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"We cannot afford to be misleading to a jury,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the lab director wrote to FBI Director Robert S.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Mueller III in late summer 2005 in a memo outlining why the bureau was abandoning the science.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"We plan to discourage prosecutors from using our previous results in future prosecutions.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Despite those private concerns,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the bureau told defense lawyers in a general letter dated Sept.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> 1,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> 2005,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> that although it was ending the technique,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> it <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"still firmly supports the scientific foundation of bullet lead analysis.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> And in at least two cases,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the bureau has tried to help state prosecutors defend past convictions by using court filings that experts say are still misleading.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The government has fought releasing the list of the estimated 2,500 cases over three decades in which it performed the analysis.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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For the majority of affected prisoners,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the typical two-to-four-year window to appeal their convictions based on new scientific evidence is closing.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Dwight E.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Adams,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the now-retired FBI lab director who ended the technique,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> said the government has an obligation to release all the case files,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> to independently review the expert testimony and to alert courts to any errors that could have affected a conviction.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"It troubles me that anyone would be in prison for any reason that wasn't justified.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> And that's why these reviews should be done in order to determine whether or not our testimony led to the conviction of a wrongly accused individual,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Adams said in an interview.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"I don't believe there's anything that we should be hiding.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The Post and <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"60 Minutes"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> identified at least 250 cases nationwide in which bullet-lead analysis was introduced,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> including more than a dozen in which courts have either reversed convictions or now face questions about whether innocent people were sent to prison.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The cases include a North Carolina drug dealer who has developed significant new evidence to bolster his claim of innocence and a Maryland man who was recently granted a new murder trial.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Documents show that the FBI's concerns about the science dated to 1991 and came to light only because a former FBI lab scientist began challenging it.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
