
Justice Dept. to Review Bush Policy on DNA Test
Waivers
By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has ordered a review of a
little-known Bush administration policy requiring some defendants to
waive their right to DNA testing even though that right is guaranteed
in a landmark federal law, officials said.
The practice of using DNA waivers began several years ago as a response
to the Innocence Protection Act of 2004, which allowed federal inmates
to seek post-conviction DNA tests to prove their innocence. More than
240 wrongly convicted people have been exonerated by such tests,
including 17 on death row.
The waivers are filed only in guilty pleas and bar defendants from ever
requesting DNA testing, even if new evidence emerges. Prosecutors who
use them, including some of the nation's most prominent U.S. attorneys,
say people who have admitted guilt should not be able to file frivolous
petitions for testing. They say the wave of DNA exonerations has little
impact in federal court because all those found to be innocent were
state prisoners, and the waivers apply only to federal charges. DNA
evidence is used far more frequently in state courts.
But DNA experts say that's about to change because more sophisticated
testing will soon bring biological evidence into federal courtrooms for
a wider variety of crimes. Defense lawyers who have worked on DNA
appeals strongly oppose the waivers, saying that innocent people
sometimes plead guilty -- mainly to get lighter sentences -- and that
denying them the ability to prove their innocence violates a
fundamental right. One quarter of the 243 people exonerated by DNA had
falsely confessed to crimes they didn't commit, and 16 of them pleaded
guilty.
"It's a mean-spirited policy. Truth, ascertained by science, should
trump the finality of a conviction," said Peter Neufeld, co-director of
the New York-based Innocence Project. He said the waivers are
effectively "gutting the impact" of the 2004 law because 97 percent of
federal convictions result from guilty pleas.
Interviews and documents show that language allowing for DNA waivers
was inserted into the law at the behest of Republican senators and that
the Bush Justice Department lobbied against the measure even with the
waiver provision. Soon after the law passed with bipartisan support,
the department sent a secret memo to the nation's 94 U.S. attorney's
offices urging them to use the waivers, several federal officials
familiar with the memo said.
Holder, a former U.S. attorney in the District, has called for expanded
DNA testing in federal courts. After inquiries by The Washington Post,
his spokesman, Matthew Miller, said Holder "has ordered that the
department review its DNA waiver policy."
"The attorney general believes that DNA testing is a crucial law
enforcement tool both in solving crimes and exonerating the innocent,"
Miller said, adding that if new evidence arises after conviction,
"prosecutors have an obligation to act."
The waivers run counter to the national movement toward post-conviction
DNA testingas the forensic tool has revolutionized criminal justice.
Nearly all 50 states have passed laws giving inmates the right to seek
testing in state courts, and most allow for petitions after guilty
pleas.
Oregon prosecutor Joshua Marquis, who sits on the executive committee
of the National District Attorneys Association, said he's never heard
of DNA waivers in state court and that the organization opposes the
concept. "I think it's important to always leave the door open for
actual proof of innocence," he said.
In federal court, the waivers are part of the standard plea agreement
filed by prosecutors in the District, Alexandria and Manhattan, which
are among the nation's highest-profile U.S. attorney's offices. Waivers
are used in some or all pleas by at least 16 other offices, including
such large ones as Chicago and Los Angeles and such smaller ones as
Arkansas and West Virginia. Prosecutors in Maryland rarely use the
waivers.
"It saves us a lot of spurious litigation down the pike," said G.F.
Peterman III, acting U.S. attorney in the Middle District of Georgia.
"All they have to do is say I'm not guilty, go to trial and they've
waived nothing. It's their decision."
Defense attorneys disagree, saying prosecutors give defendants the
choice of signing the waiver or not getting the benefits of a plea
agreement, which usually include a lighter sentence.
"It's a horrendous provision, and I can never get them to take it out,"
said Christopher Amolsch, a lawyer whose client recently waived DNA
testing rights in a cigarette smuggling case in U.S. District Court in
Alexandria. Other lawyers said they don't usually fight the waivers,
considering it a losing battle.
The U.S. attorney's office in Alexandria declined to comment.
At least 24 U.S. attorneys don't use the waivers. It could not be
determined how many inmates have been affected by the policy, because
the remaining 50 U.S. attorney's offices did not respond to inquiries
or declined to comment. It is also unclear how many federal prisoners
have filed petitions seeking post-conviction DNA testing since 2004.
Justice Department officials said the number is small but have also
said they expect more petitions over time.
At the heart of the debate is the question of how often the innocent
plead guilty. Michael Volkov, a former federal prosecutor who as
counsel to Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) pushed to insert waiver
language into the 2004 law, said he thinks it is "extremely rare."
But experts who have studied DNA exonerations say it is more common.
"The idea that people who plead guilty are always guilty is false,"
said Brandon Garrett, a University of Virginia law professor. He said
the waivers "send a terrible message: that federal prosecutors take a
dim view of truth telling."
Arthur Lee Whitfield, for example, was convicted in 1982 of raping a
woman in Norfolk and was about to go on trial in a second rape. Facing
a possible life term, he pleaded guilty for a lighter sentence. He was
exonerated of both crimes by DNA in 2004 after more than 22 years in
prison.
"I figured I can put my life on the line and take a chance, or I can
take the plea and have a shot at coming home to my family," Whitfield
said in a recent interview. "You never know what you'd do until you're
put in that situation."
Justice Department officials who favor DNA waivers say the 2004 federal
law wouldn't have affected such defendants because their cases were in
state courts. Violent crimes in which suspects are more likely to leave
their DNA have traditionally been prosecuted locally.
But federal prosecutors have been tackling more violent crimes in
recent years, especially involving gangs or drugs. And experts say the
arrival in the next few years of more sophisticated DNA testing will
allow DNA to be used in more federal cases both to convict and to
exonerate.
For example, DNA tests can't discern whether DNA came from blood, semen
or other tissues; they show only that a DNA profile is present. When
that changes, said Dan Krane, a biological sciences professor at Wright
State University, defendants might be able to show that they never
touched key pieces of evidence in drug, gun, forgery and other cases.
These types of scientific advances were among the reasons that Sen.
Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) originally proposed the Innocence Protection
Act in 2000. The waiver provision emerged from intensive negotiations
with Republican senators, who insisted on it as one price for their
support, congressional sources said.
The language inserted into the final bill says federal judges can order
post-conviction DNA testing if the inmate did not "knowingly and
voluntarily waive the right to request DNA testing of that evidence in
a court proceeding." The law also says the government can destroy
biological evidence if there is a DNA waiver.
With the waiver provision in the law, the Justice Department in April
2004 sent a 22-page letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee that said
allowing any defendant who pleaded guilty to seek DNA testing would
amount to "an unjustified attack on the integrity of guilty pleas which
. . . are the means by which most cases are resolved."
"The purpose [of post-conviction DNA testing] is not to enable killers,
rapists and other criminals to re-open old wounds of crime victims and
their survivors years and decades after the normal conclusion of
criminal proceedings," the letter said.
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