In a recent op-ed in the Baltimore Sun, for­mer FBI Director William Sessions (pic­tured) under­scored the impor­tance of reli­able FBI foren­sic analy­sis in con­vict­ing the guilty and exon­er­at­ing the inno­cent. Sessions pro­vid­ed the exam­ple of Willie Jerome Manning, who received a last-minute stay of exe­cu­tion in Mississippi in order to allow time to con­duct test­ing on DNA evi­dence that could exon­er­ate him. Manning was con­vict­ed in 1994 based on FBI tes­ti­mo­ny that has since been inval­i­dat­ed by the U.S. Department of Justice. Sessions also urged state pros­e­cu­tors and judges to work with defense coun­sel in cas­es where the FBI pro­vid­ed poten­tial­ly unre­li­able evi­dence. Sessions con­clud­ed, When evi­dence used to con­vict an indi­vid­ual is dis­cov­ered to be unre­li­able, jus­tice requires that we review that case, no mat­ter how long ago the con­vic­tion occurred.” Read full op-ed below.

DNA: a test for justice

In two courts, half a coun­try apart, judges last month grap­pled with the reli­a­bil­i­ty of tes­ti­mo­ny and foren­sic hair evi­dence analy­sis that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents pro­vid­ed in crim­i­nal tri­als decades ago. John Norman Huffington, impris­oned near­ly 32 years in Maryland, had his con­vic­tion over­turned by a judge after DNA test­ing revealed that the hair that was pre­sent­ed as key evi­dence against Mr. Huffington did not belong to him. Willie Jerome Manning, mere hours from death, won a stay of exe­cu­tion from the Mississippi Supreme Court to give his lawyers time to con­duct DNA test­ing, which they believe could exon­er­ate him. FBI tes­ti­mo­ny in both cas­es pro­vid­ed key evi­dence that led to their convictions.

Most of us are aware of the need for accu­rate and sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly reli­able evi­dence to ensure that those guilty of crimes are con­vict­ed and prop­er­ly sen­tenced, and that those wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed are exon­er­at­ed. In Mr. Huffington’s tri­al for the 1981 mur­ders of two peo­ple in Harford County, at a time when DNA test­ing was not yet avail­able, an FBI agent tes­ti­fied that the micro­scop­ic hair analy­sis was 99.98 per­cent accu­rate in deter­min­ing that hair found in the bed where one vic­tim was killed belonged to Mr. Huffington. This April, DNA test­ing revealed that the hair sam­ples were in fact not his. In over­turn­ing his con­vic­tion and order­ing a new tri­al, the judge not­ed that due to the sub­stan­tial weight giv­en to the micro­scop­ic hair analy­sis by the jury … as well as the results of the DNA test [direct­ly con­tra­dict­ing the FBI agen­t’s tes­ti­mo­ny] … there is a sig­nif­i­cant pos­si­bil­i­ty that the out­come of [Mr. Huffington’s] case may have been different.”

In Mr. Manning’s tri­al for the 1992 mur­ders of two col­lege stu­dents, an FBI agent tes­ti­fied that micro­scop­ic hair analy­sis could iden­ti­fy a hair sam­ple as belong­ing to Mr. Manning, to the exclu­sion of all oth­ers. Mr. Manning was con­vict­ed in 1994, in part based on the FBI agen­t’s tes­ti­mo­ny. But such tes­ti­mo­ny, as a U.S. Department of Justice review found, exceed­ed the lim­its of the sci­ence,” and there­fore the tes­ti­mo­ny was erro­neous and invalid.” Had DNA test­ing (rel­a­tive­ly new at the time) been per­formed on the hair sam­ple, we would have had far greater cer­tain­ty about the out­come in Mr. Manning’s trial.

These are two exam­ples among the poten­tial­ly thou­sands of cas­es in which the reli­a­bil­i­ty of FBI foren­sic analy­sis and tes­ti­mo­ny, par­tic­u­lar­ly micro­scop­ic hair analy­sis, has been called into seri­ous doubt. In June 2012, after the DOJ made pub­lic a decade-old task force report iden­ti­fy­ing seri­ous flaws in foren­sic evi­dence, it announced the review of thou­sands of cas­es in which defen­dants may have been wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed. The FBI was right in its concern.

Thanks to its ever-increas­ing sophis­ti­ca­tion, DNA test­ing allows the jus­tice sys­tem to accu­rate­ly incul­pate and excul­pate crim­i­nal sus­pects. When I became FBI direc­tor in 1987, the bureau estab­lished a DNA lab­o­ra­to­ry we hoped to use to estab­lish that a sus­pect had indeed com­mit­ted a crime. During my years as a U.S. attor­ney and fed­er­al judge in Texas, rapists and mur­der­ers some­times walked free for lack of bio­log­i­cal evi­dence. I had these cas­es in mind when we estab­lished the laboratory.

The results of the first 100 test cas­es in 1988 aston­ished me. In 30 of them, the DNA did not match that of the per­son charged with the crime.

If FBI foren­sic ana­lysts and agents know­ing­ly relied on flawed foren­sic evi­dence for decades, it is alarm­ing. If men and women such as Messrs. Huffington and Manning still remain in prison, and in some cas­es on death row, it is intol­er­a­ble. I com­mend the FBI for tak­ing the nec­es­sary steps to inform defen­dants and pros­e­cu­tors in every case where unre­li­able hair analy­sis was used. Moreover, I urge state pros­e­cu­tors and judges who are aware that the FBI pro­vid­ed poten­tial­ly unre­li­able evi­dence or tes­ti­mo­ny to work with defense coun­sel in those cas­es to ensure the accu­ra­cy of the ver­dicts, includ­ing allow­ing for addi­tion­al foren­sic test­ing of evi­dence, espe­cial­ly DNA test­ing, and the pur­suit of wrong­ful con­vic­tion claims. When evi­dence used to con­vict an indi­vid­ual is dis­cov­ered to be unre­li­able, jus­tice requires that we review that case, no mat­ter how long ago the conviction occurred.

For John Huffington, unre­li­able foren­sic evi­dence led to 32 lost years; for Willie Manning, it may lead to far more griev­ous harm. The DOJ has tak­en steps to rem­e­dy reliance on repu­di­at­ed hair analy­sis tech­niques. Unfortunately, there are many indi­vid­u­als still in jail, pos­si­bly con­vict­ed wrong­ful­ly due to faulty, and high­ly influ­en­tial, FBI tes­ti­mo­ny. These indi­vid­u­als, like Messrs. Manning and Huffington, must be afford­ed the oppor­tu­ni­ty to prove their innocence.

William S. Sessions served three U.S. pres­i­dents as direc­tor of the FBI and was pre­vi­ous­ly chief judge for the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, and a United States attor­ney. He is a mem­ber of The Constitution Project’s board of direc­tors. His email is wsessions@​constitutionproject.​org.

(W. Sessions, DNA: a test for jus­tice,” Baltimore Sun, June 10, 2013). See Innocence. Read Editorials on the death penalty.

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