Current:Home > ContactSupreme Court refuses to hear bite mark case -AssetVision
Supreme Court refuses to hear bite mark case
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:43:44
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court declined Tuesday to review the case of an Alabama man who has spent decades in prison for a murder conviction supported by recanted and discredited testimony about bite marks.
Charles M. McCrory was convicted of murder for the 1985 killing of his wife, Julie Bonds, who was found beaten to death in her home. Key evidence against him was the testimony of a forensic odontologist who said that two small marks on the victim’s left shoulder matched McCrory’s teeth. The odontologist later said he “fully” recants that 1985 testimony. He wrote in an affidavit that modern science has exposed the limitations of bite mark evidence and that there is no way to positively link the marks to any one person.
Lawyers with the Innocence Project and the Southern Center for Human Rights, which are representing McCrory, had asked the Supreme Court to review an Alabama court’s decision denying his request for a new trial. Justices turned down the petition mostly without comment.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a statement that the case raises “difficult questions about the adequacy of current postconviction remedies to correct a conviction secured by what we now know was faulty science.”
“One in four people exonerated since 1989 were wrongfully convicted based on false or misleading forensic evidence introduced at their trials. Hundreds if not thousands of innocent people may currently be incarcerated despite a modern consensus that the central piece of evidence at their trials lacked any scientific basis,” Sotomayor wrote.
Sotomayor wrote that she voted against reviewing the case because the constitutional question raised by McCrory has not “percolated sufficiently in the lower courts.” But she urged state and federal lawmakers to establish paths for inmates to challenge “wrongful convictions that rest on repudiated forensic testimony.”
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, in rejecting his bid for a new trial, ruled that McCrory had failed to show that result of his 1985 trial “probably would have been different” if the new forensic guidelines regarding bite marks had been used.
The Innocence Project says that least 36 people have been wrongfully convicted through the use of bite mark evidence. A Florida man was freed in 2020 after spending 37 years in a Florida prison for a 1983 rape and murder he did not commit. The conviction was based partly on faulty bite mark analysis.
Bonds was found beaten to death May 31, 1985, in the home she shared with her toddler son. The couple were divorcing and lived separately at the time. McCrory has maintained his innocence. He told police that he had been at the home the night before to do laundry and say goodnight to his son. His attorneys argued that there was no physical evidence linking McCrory to the crime and that hair found clutched in the decedent’s hand did not belong to McCrory.
Bonds’ family, who believed McCrory was responsible, hired private prosecutors for the case against McCrory. They hired Florida forensic dentist Dr. Richard Souviron, who gained fame as an expert after testifying in the trial of serial killer Ted Bundy. McCrory was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
Souviron later recanted his testimony. McCrory’s attorneys said two other forensic experts disputed that the marks were bite marks at all.
McCrory’s attorneys wrote in their petition that that the current district attorney had offered to resentence Mr. McCrory to time served, which would allow him to immediately leave prison, in exchange for a guilty plea.
“Mr. McCrory declined, unwilling to admit to a crime he did not commit,” his attorneys wrote.
McCrory was denied parole in 2023. He will be eligible again in 2028.
veryGood! (85)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Canadian mining company starts arbitration in case of closed copper mine in Panama
- A new solar system has been found in the Milky Way. All 6 planets are perfectly in-sync, astronomers say.
- New California mental health court sees more than 100 petitions in first two months
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- CBS News Philadelphia's Aziza Shuler shares her alopecia journey: So much fear and anxiety about revealing this secret
- Alec Baldwin did not have to pay to resolve $25M lawsuit filed by slain Marine's family
- Lifetime's 'Ladies of the '80s: A Divas Christmas' has decadence, drama, an epic food fight
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Ruby Franke’s Husband Files for Divorce Amid Her Child Abuse Allegations
Ranking
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- LeBron James says he will skip Lakers game when son, Bronny, makes college basketball debut
- Putin orders the Russian military to add 170,000 troops for a total of 1.32 million
- Illinois appeals court affirms actor Jussie Smollett’s convictions and jail sentence
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Traumatized by war, fleeing to US: Jewish day schools take in hundreds of Israeli students
- What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing and reading
- California cities and farms will get 10% of requested state water supplies when 2024 begins
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
The resumption of the Israel-Hamas war casts long shadow over Dubai’s COP28 climate talks
How Off the Beaten Path Bookstore in Colorado fosters community, support of banned books
The director of Russia’s Mariinsky Theatre, Valery Gergiev, is also put in charge of the Bolshoi
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Tougher penalties for rioting, power station attacks among new North Carolina laws starting Friday
GOP businessman Sandy Pensler joins crowded field of Senate candidates in Michigan
India-US ties could face their biggest test in years after a foiled assassination attempt on a Sikh