
Eye Witness Id's Wrong Man, Spends Two Months In Jail
Before Cleared
Wrong Man Arrested For Pittsburgh Bank Robbery
Karen Welles, Target 11 Investigator
February 14, 2008
PITTSBURGH -- Michael Disimo spent two months in jail after he was
accused of bank robbery.
On September 30th, 2005 a man walked into a National City Bank in
Bethel Park and robbed a teller.
Not long after the robbery a police officer pulled Disimo over along
route 88.
The officer thought he matched the description of the robber.
The bank teller was brought to the place where police stopped Disimo to
identify him.
Police positioned the teller 100-feet away from Disimo. From this
distance she couldn't make a positive identification, so they moved her
50-feet closer to Disimo--still no positive id.
Finally police positioned her just 15-feet from Disimo.
At that point police said the woman said she was 100-percent sure it
was him.
Disimo said,” He placed handcuffs on me and I asked him, am I being
placed under arrest and they said yes. I was like in shock and I
panicked ya know."
He was questioned by police and the FBI.
Disimo said, "They had given me the polygraph test and they said that I
failed it and at that point, ya know, I was really like confused,
shocked, scared, definitely scared because I had never been arrested
before."
Disimo was taken to the Allegheny County Jail and held on $50,000 bond.
Money he didn't have.
"I flipped out and basically had a breakdown. They had put me on a
suicide watch." Disimo said.
While Disimo sat in jail for two months he missed his son's birthday
and lost his job
Finally, at his preliminary hearing the teller took back her positive
id.
It turned out the real bank robber was Thomas Charlier of Castle
Shannon.
Charlier confessed to 16 bank robberies in all.
Do
they look alike?

Thomas Charlier
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Michael Disimo
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Disimo sued the bank and the teller, but his case was dismissed.
Noted civil rights attorney Timothy O’Brien did not represent Disimo.
He said "Under state law there is no claim as it presently stands for
simply negligent conduct. There are many states that do have a cause of
action claim that a citizen can make for the negligent prosecution or
arrest. But that is not the case in Pennsylvania."
Attorney John Rago of the Duquesne University Law School is chairman of
Pennsylvania's new advisory committee on wrongful convictions.
Rago said, "In the U.S. right now there are 213 post conviction DNA
exonerations and in more than three quarters of those cases eyewitness
failure appears to have been a significant contributing factor to that
wrongful conviction."
Disimo said, "You better hope to god you can prove you're innocent."
A spokesperson for National City said the teller performed in
accordance with the bank's procedures.
She declined to answer questions.
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