Odell Barnes Jr.

L'association Lutte Pour la Justice (LPJ) a été créée en 1999 pour soutenir Odell Barnes Jr., jeune afro-américain condamné à mort en 1991 à Huntsville (Texas) pour un crime qu'il n'avait pas commis et exécuté le 1er mars 2000 à l'aube de ses 32 ans. En sa mémoire et à sa demande, l'association se consacre à la lutte pour l'abolition de la peine de mort aux Etats-Unis et en particulier au Texas. (voir article "Livre "La machine à tuer" de Colette Berthès en libre accès" ) : https://www.lagbd.org/images/5/50/MATlivre.pdf

jeudi 7 mai 2020

Charles Flores: “Texas court denies death row inmate’s hypnosis appeal”



https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2020/05/06/texas-court-denies-death-row-inmates-hypnosis-appeal/?fbclid=IwAR2v5PzXlAScqbzQjYAEtpncR7u35DEOq-nZvqiyo_9fyy1RJyD-aBZ_RJc 


“Texas court denies death row inmate’s hypnosis appeal”

By Dave Boucher; Lauren McGaughy DALLAS MORNING NEWS MAY 6, 2020
A Texas court has denied the death row appeal of inmate Charles Don Flores, who argued he was improperly convicted in part due to evidence gleaned through hypnosis. In an order issued Wednesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals did not weigh the merits of investigative hypnosis, the controversial tactic used for decades by law enforcement in the Lone Star State. Instead, the court agreed with a lower court’s ruling that Flores could not challenge the use of hypnosis in his case under the state’s “junk science law," which allows people to contest their convictions if new scientific findings contradict evidence presented in their case. 

Opponents saw the case as a chance to ban the longtime practice of presenting at trial evidence gleaned through a hypnosis session. Top Texas courts have not broached the topic since 2004 and the state’s investigative hypnosis guidelines, first laid out in a 1989 ruling, have never been changed by a court. An attorney representing Flores could not be reached immediately for a response. A spokeswoman for Dallas District Attorney John Creuzot declined to comment. Flores was convicted of killing Elizabeth “Betty” Black during a home invasion in Farmers Branch in 1998. During the investigation, police interviewed a neighbor who saw two men exiting a car and entering Black’s home on the morning of her murder. Investigators put this neighbor through a hypnosis session in an attempt to learn more details about the men. More than a year later, the neighbor identified Flores in court as the passenger in that car. While Flores had ties to Steven Lynn Childs, the man ultimately convicted of Black’s murder, this neighbor was the only witness to put Flores at the scene of the crime. No physical evidence linked Flores to the murder. He maintains his innocence in Black’s murder. Flores was convicted under the “law of parties,” a Texas statute that lets accomplices be tried for the same crime as the perpetrator. He was sentenced to death. Childs, who pleaded guilty to killing Black, was sentenced to 35 years and was released on parole in 2016, two months before Flores was set to be executed. The high court blocked Flores’ execution in 2016 to allow the trial court to determine whether modern science illustrated the flaws in the use of hypnosis to elicit memories and whether the witness’ identification was vital to Flores’ conviction. “Take her out of the equation and there wouldn’t have been a conviction,” defense attorney Gretchen Sween contended during an appellate hearing in 2017, according to Dallas Morning News archives. It’s unclear whether Flores has any other way to block his execution, although it will likely be delayed as the state puts all lethal injections on hold during the coronavirus pandemic. While investigative hypnosis has come under increasing scrutiny nationally as states crack down on perceived junk sciences, no regulatory body in Texas oversees the practice. The Texas Forensic Science Commission, one of the most proactive agencies in the country tasked with examining faulty investigative tools, reviewed the use of bite mark and blood spatter analysis in recent years. But the commission says it cannot evaluate hypnosis because state law only allows it to examine forensic methods that analyze physical evidence. Some lawmakers, including the Texas senator who created the commission, have tried but failed to ban the prosecutors from using evidence gleaned from a hypnosis session. This allows Texas police to use investigative hypnosis free from state oversight. A recent News investigation showed how frequently Texas law enforcement uses hypnosis, despite a near consensus in the scientific community that it does not lead to accurate recall of memories and may implant false details in the mind of a witness or victim. The analysis shows prosecutors in Texas sent at least 54 people to prison in cases that involved a hypnosis session since the mid-1970s. Courts reversed the convictions of five of these men based at least in part on the use of hypnosis in their cases. Four remain on death row and 11 were executed. At least 21 states ban evidence in court that was gleaned solely through hypnosis. Yet The News’ investigation found Texas law enforcement has used the dubious method nearly 1,800 times over 40 years, sending dozens of people to prison — and some to their deaths. After one week of training, any Texas law enforcement officer who passes an exam can attempt to use hypnosis in a criminal investigation. Hundreds of peace officers have been certified to practice it in Texas since 1988.


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