California Innocence Project Frees Fifth Innocent Man

Los Angeles judge reverses 20-year-old murder conviction Innocence Project Attorneys in Court with Timothy Atkins

CLICK HERE to read the story about Atkins’ release in the Los Angeles Times

SAN DIEGO, Feb. 22, 2007– After serving more than 20 years in prison for a murder he did not commit, Timothy Atkins’ conviction was overturned by Los Angeles Judge Michael Tynan who declared that “the State has no interest in upholding a conviction obtained by false testimony.” Attorneys with the California Innocence Project presented new evidence in a Los Angeles courtroom, including a witness who recanted her trial testimony, proving Atkins’ innocence. He was released from the L.A. County Jail Friday, Feb. 9, 2007.

“This is the pinnacle of our existence,” Professor Justin Brooks, California Innocence Project director, told the Los Angeles Times after Atkins’ walked out of prison. “This is the whole goal: freeing the innocent.”

“Although it has taken way too long and Tim can never get the years back, we are thrilled that the court has recognized that Timothy Atkins’ conviction cannot stand,” said California Western Professor Jan Stiglitz, co-director of the California Innocence Project. “We really appreciate that Judge Tynan was willing to give Atkins a hearing. Sadly, in many cases we cannot even get that far.”

Atkins was convicted of one count of murder and two counts of robbery on July 28, 1987, after being identified by a frightened woman who witnessed her husband being shot in the chest during an attempted carjacking. The police were led to Atkins when a woman named Denise Powell told police that Atkins had confessed to being an accomplice in the killing.In the hearing last fall, Denise Powell testified that she fabricated the story of Atkins’ confession. Powell recanted the testimony that helped convict Atkins, saying that she made the confession up and was afraid of changing her story after lying to police.

In his decision Tynan stated that Powell’s recantation, together with the “unreliable and changing [eye-witness] identification causes this court to find that absent Powell’s testimony, no reasonable judge or jury would have convicted Atkins.”

To get Powell’s recantation Wendy Koen, then a second-year law student at California Western, worked tirelessly to track her down and get a signed declaration. Koen is now a California Western graduate and LL.M. student – she represented Atkins in court and celebrated his release with his entire family on friday.

“Tim’s case has been quite an education. It is a blueprint for what is wrong with the American criminal justice system,” said Koen. “Though we celebrate at this moment, I know that tomorrow we will be fighting battles – most of them losing battles – for other inmates who are actually innocent and deserve justice.”

Of more than 300 documented cases of wrongful conviction in the U.S., nearly two-thirds are the result of erroneous identification. Brooks calls the witness identification in Atkins’ case a “highly suggestive, cross-racial identification, in a situation where the person saw the attacker for less than a minute on a dark street. Studies over the past 20 years have shown that these types of identifications are not valid.”Atkins is the fifth inmate that has been released by the work of the California Innocence Project. For more information please visit the project Web site at www.CaliforniaInnocenceProject.org.

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ABOUT THE CALIFORNIA INNOCENCE PROJECT – California Western School of Law is home to the California and Hawaii Innocence Projects. Students at California Western work to free wrongfully convicted inmates by reviewing more than 1,000 claims of innocence each year, and focusing on cases where there is evidence of actual innocence. Innocence Project attorneys and students then investigate cases by tracking down and re-interviewing witnesses, examining new evidence, filling motions, securing expert witnesses, and advocating for their clients during evidentiary hearings and trials. Four California Innocence Project clients have been released since the project’s inception in 2000.

ABOUT CALIFORNIA WESTERN SCHOOL OF LAW – California Western School of Law is the independent, ABA/AALS-accredited San Diego law school that advances multi-dimensional lawyering by educating lawyers-to-be as creative problem solvers and principled advocates who frame the practice of law as a helping, collaborative profession. California Western is home to several innovative centers and institutes including the California Innocence Project, the Center for Creative Problem Solving, the Institute of Health Law Studies, and the Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy. In addition to a J.D. program, the law school offers several dual degree programs in conjunction with local universities; an LL.M. in Federal Criminal Law; and an M.C.L./LL.M. for foreign law graduates.

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9 Comments on “California Innocence Project Frees Fifth Innocent Man”

  1. Emma Says:

    God bless you and your good works.I plan to have my friend Blannon DuBose who is also innocent, contact you shortly. Emma Henderson

  2. Cynthia Says:

    My heart goes out to this man. Why can’t we help before this happens? My brother was just charged in a 20 year old murder case. My heart and my gut feeling tells me that something is wrong on the DNA side. They say to follow our gut feeling. My brother, his wife and children lived next door to the victim. They were hurt behind this crime. They were afraid to go back to their home. My brother had a cast on and the doctor conveyed that he could not have committed this crime.

    I am shocked that the media can print false evidence. Times have changed! You are now convicted in the media before actually going to trial. On the poor victims picture it is now stamped SOLVED. I am in disbelief. My brother is in good spirit because he knows he did not commit this horrible crime. We are afraid because we are not trusting the detectives and D.A. Something is not right. I can feel it. They questioned his wife 4 years ago and his daughter a year ago. He was suing the San Jose police department at the time
    Of the murder. He was very nervous at the time of his arrest last week. Once he found out what it was for he felt at ease and better. He had no idea that he would be charged hours later. To this day he advises us not to worry. But, we have every reason to worry. Santa Clara police was just sued for tampering with DNA evidence.

    All I can think of is this poor girls family. They need closure. There is a murderer out here who can now stop looking over his shoulder. He can sigh in relief.

    Not right…!

  3. Cynthia Says:

    I forgot to add add as well, God Bless your hearts! People like you make this world a better place. Keep doing what you are doing. I am so sad for what this world is coming to.

  4. alma Says:

    hello,
    Well i know of a similar case. one of the people i know was convicted through a false confession of a murder that he did not commit. He was accussed of a drive by shooting in South Central Los Angeles. He was only 15 years when the police took him for interrogation. There was no DNA proves and no other proofs that showed that it was him who committed the shooting. In the shooting there was a woman who was hit by a bullet and died. This man has been incarcerated for then years already and the case was close with any further investigation. As I mentioned before there is no evidence agaist him and there is only the false confession that he did under pressure. Even the description that he gave does not match with the shooting details. We are told that we cannot do anything and we have been trying to get a new lawyer but the cost is very high and we are from a low-income famiy. We also wrote to the Innocent Projects before but the lawyer that was assigned to us close the case because of the Audio confession. We are again lost! and it brakes my heart that there are innocent people behind bars that under false promises and pressure by the dectectives they are to pay for crimes that they did not commint. Cynthia good luck with your brother’s case and if any one who reads my message has helpful information please let me know, it will be one more step to free a man who was taken away from his freedom and youth.

    thank you.

    alma

  5. jatoya citizen Says:

    hi my name is jatoya i am trying to help my daughters father out he needs some one to help him over turn his conviction he was sentence on a crime he did commit he was sentece to life has already served 14 years he just recently recieved some paper work from a homicide detective stating that the person who really committed the crime is still on the streets he has no money to hire an attorney so if you know anybody that could help him out or who can tell me how i can help him thank you

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