On June 12, the Supreme Court of Florida (6 – 1) over­turned the con­vic­tions and death sen­tence of Carl Dausch because the state pre­sent­ed insuf­fi­cient evi­dence of his guilt at tri­al. The Court direct­ed that he be acquit­ted of all offens­es, stat­ing, “[T]he record lacks suf­fi­cient evi­dence of the per­pe­tra­tor’s iden­ti­ty.” Dausch was con­vict­ed pri­mar­i­ly on fin­ger­prints and DNA from a cig­a­rette butt that were found in the vic­tim’s car. DNA evi­dence tak­en from the vic­tim was less defin­i­tive. Dausch said he had hitch­hiked while return­ing home from a fam­i­ly vaca­tion, and the per­son who picked him up was like­ly the actu­al killer. Because the evi­dence against Dausch was cir­cum­stan­tial, the court applied a spe­cial stan­dard of review,” which required that the cir­cum­stances lead to a rea­son­able and moral cer­tain­ty that the accused and no one else com­mit­ted the offense charged. It is not suf­fi­cient that the facts cre­ate a strong prob­a­bil­i­ty of, and be con­sis­tent with, guilt. They must be incon­sis­tent with inno­cence.” The Court said the evi­dence only linked Dausch to the vic­tim’s car, not to the murder itself.

The Court con­clud­ed, At best, the evi­dence pre­sent­ed by the State cre­ates a sus­pi­cion of guilt. Therefore, because we con­clude that there is a lack of com­pe­tent sub­stan­tial evi­dence to sup­port Dausch’s con­vic­tions, we reverse and vacate both of Dausch’s con­vic­tions and sen­tences. We remand this case to the tri­al court with instruc­tions that a judg­ment of acquit­tal be entered.” The lone dis­senter would have reversed Dausch’s con­vic­tions but remand­ed for a new tri­al. Dausch is serv­ing a 60-year sen­tence in Indiana on an unre­lat­ed rape conviction.

(B. Farrington, Supreme Court throws out con­vic­tion in 87 killing,” Associated Press, June 12, 2014; see Dausch v. Florida, No. SC12-1161 (June 12, 2014), per curi­am). The state is chal­leng­ing the Florida deci­sion, but if upheld, Dausch could be added to DPIC’s List of Exonerations, con­tain­ing 144 cas­es since 1973. Florida has had the most exon­er­a­tions of any state (24). See Innocence; lis­ten to DPIC’s pod­cast on Innocence.

Citation Guide