WPD has no policy for keeping evidence

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Destroying evidence in Ronnie Rhodes‘ case might have been against Wichita Police Department policy — if it had one.

“We have no policy in our very thick policy and procedural manual that states how long evidence will be kept,” said Tom Stolz, deputy chief of the WPD investigations division. “We go into great detail about how to collect it and where it goes and how to preserve it. But we have no policy that talks about how long you have to keep it.”

The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s office, meanwhile, has a detailed written policy for retaining evidence, based on a state law requiring a court order.

Such discrepancies between agencies illustrate why 33 states have passed laws mandating how long evidence should be kept.

Kansas isn’t one of them.

“Preservation laws seek to provide uniform guidance to all agencies charged with the retention of biological evidence, said Rebecca Brown, senior policy advocate for state affairs at The Innocence Project in New York.

Stolz said Wichita police follow “unwritten rules” on how long to keep evidience, which may have changed over time.

Rhodes went to prison in 1981 for Wichita murder he maintains he didn’t commit. His case came to light again after he asked for DNA testing of evidence, and it couldn’t be located. DNA testing wasn’t available during his original trial.

Students at the Washburn School of Law have since questioned the strength of the evidence that convicted Rhodes, the adequacy of his legal representation and the reasoning behind appeal and parole decisions that have kept him incarcerated.

While working with the law class, the Eagle learned most — if not all — of the physical evidence in the stabbing death of Cleother Burrell had been destroyed, despite the apparent absence of a required court order

No one currently at the WPD worked on the Rhodes case, and Stolz said the department has kept evidence from even older convictions.

“We’ve got homicide stuff from the ‘50s,’ Stolz said. “We’ve kept that essentially forever.”

While Stolz doesn’t know what the practice was in the 1980s, he said evidence in some cases was destroyed after the prosecution had been completed and the appeals exhausted.

“We had no clue at that time that DNA was going to become as viable as it has for evidence,” Stolz said. “So now … maybe we should keep stuff longer, because you never know in 20 years what the science is going to be. And once you destroy it, it’s gone forever.”

In 1989, two U.S. men were exonerated by DNA evidence. By 1992, the genetic testing of old biological material had shown 10 men were innocent of the crimes that sent them to prison.

“In the early 1990s, … people in prison, 20, 25, 30 years, we’re resurrecting DNA evidence and their appeal becomes viable. So now, we keep everything.”

Stolz said he’s assigned Lt. Ken Landwehr, head of the homicide unit, to study what other cities do and to come up with a policy for how long to retain evidence. Stoltz said the department is considering keeping biological evidence in murder cases for the life of the defendant.

More than 250 people have been found not guilty through DNA evidence, after being locked up, on average more than a dozen years. Criminologists say they have no way of knowing how many others remain in prison for crimes they didn’t commit, because evidence no longer exists.

Brandon Garrett, a University of Virginia law professor who has studied the reasons behind wrongful convictions says its not uncommon to see policies differ between law enforcement agencies.

The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s office has “a considerable written policy” on keeping and destroying evidence, said Capt. Terry Parham.

“We don’t destroy evidence unless we have a valid court order that has been reviewed by both the county attorney’s office and the district attorneys office,” said Parham, commander of the sheriff’s support services division.

That does not include evidence in homicide cases, which Parham said is never destroyed.

Ann Swegle, deputy district attorney for Sedgwick County, said that office supports keeping evidence in serious cases, such as rapes and murders, for “as long as they have evidentiary value, even after appeals are exhausted.”

Swegle said most of the time, she’s found Wichita police practices effective.

“They almost always keep evidence until they have a proper court order to destroy it,” she said.

No court orders have turned up in concerning purging of evidence in the Rhodes case.

Stolz said he doesn’t know why Rhodes’ evidence was destroyed.

“Why would you ever in a homicide case destroy anything? It’s a good question,” he said.

“We surely don’t want to convict wrong people,” Stolz added. “Nobody is in the business of doing that.”

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DNA not essential in proving innocence

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It doesn’t always take DNA to show a flawed conviction.

Thomas Cress is proof of that. Last month, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm commuted Cress’ conviction for the 1983 murder of a Battle Creek teen.

Doubts about Cress’ case surfaced through reports by the Detroit Free Press. They included a 1992 confession to the murder of the 17-year-old girl by a serial killer arrested in Arkansas.

There apparently had once been DNA linked to the crime. But as Free Press reported, the prosecutor at the time ordered it destroyed — after learning of the other man’s confession.

Across the country, judges and governors are striking down convictions, upon learning of new evidence, false witness testimony and corrupt policing.

Cress’ case also spurred the development of the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which takes cases where there is no DNA or biological evidence. The clinic succeeded in getting the convictions of two others reversed last year.

Of the 29 inmates exonerated in the U.S. and Canada last year, 17 had their convictions reversed without DNA.

Read the report from the Innocence Network:

2010 Innocence Network Exonerations

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Exonerated death row inmate to visit WSU

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Updated: Inclement weather cancelled the appearance by Juan Melendez

Wichita will be able to hear another story of a man who has been wrongly convicted.

Juan Melendez, who spent more than 17 years awaiting a death sentence for a crime he didn’t commit, will speak next week at Wichita State University. He’s scheduled to speak twice: 7 p.m. Feb. 1 in the Campus Activity Center (CAC) Theater at Rhatigan Student Center. and at 2 p.m. Feb. 2 at the Rhatigan Fireside Lounge.

Now 59, Melendez was sentenced to death in Florida in 1984, after being convicted of killing a beauty salon owner. The case against Melendez largely hinged on the word of a police informant. Among the evidence left out of Melendez’s trial: another man confessed to the crime. Melendez was released from death row in 2002 and has traveled the country speaking about his experiences.

The Wichita State Criminal Justice Student Association is sponsoring the event.

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Efforts target wrongful convictions in Missouri, Florida

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Dale Helmig spent 17 years proclaiming his innocence from a Missouri prison. This month, a judge agreed with him and overturned his conviction in the murder of his mother.

This week, a panel appointed by the Florida Supreme Court began studying cases of men in that state who have been proven innocent through DNA testing.

The Florida Innocence Commission, consisting of judges, lawyers and police, seek to learn lessons from old cases that will prevent wrongful convictions in the future.

There have been 261 convicts exonerated in the U.S. after DNA testing of evidence showed someone else committed the crimes.

But not all cases involve DNA.

Helmig’s court victory resulted from evidence uncovered by students studying law and journalism at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the University of Missouri, law professor Sean O’Brien and the Midwest Innocence Project.

Despite the judge’s ruling, Helmig remains in prison, because prosecutors are appealing the judge’s ruling.

Kansas does not have an innocence project or an innocence commission dedicated to reviewing old cases.

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