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Testing DNA's Truth

By Kelly Hearn, AlterNet. Posted July 1, 2005.


Paul House was convicted of a murder in 1984 on circumstantial evidence and sentenced to death. New DNA evidence suggests he's innocent; but with his health deteriorating, it may be too late.

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Score one more for DNA.

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court voted to hear the case of Paul House, a Tennessee death row inmate whose guilt has been questioned by DNA tests that didn't exist at the time he was convicted. The Supreme Court decision, whenever it comes, will clarify how prisoners can use advanced scientific methods to reverse convictions.

House, now in his 40s, suffers from multiple sclerosis. The MS makes communication almost impossible for him and he needs help with daily activities such as bathing and walking.

But his real problems started in 1984 with the contentious marriage of Carolyn and Hubert Muncey Jr., a dirt-poor union etched in tobacco fields and consummated in an Appalachian shack in eastern Tennessee.

The Munceys had no electricity or running water in their home. But they did have plenty of space to accommodate Hubert's violent liquor-fueled rants. When on July 14, 1984 Carol was found beaten to death near her home, suspicions rested on her husband. But police instead arrested 23-year-old House, a neighbor with a previous sex crime conviction. The evidence, all circumstantial, piled up fast.

The day after the murder, a witness said he saw House near the crime scene carrying a black shirt, causing police to theorize House had raped and killed Muncey then backtracked to retrieve his forgotten shirt.

House said he had been at his girlfriend's trailer the previous night, but that woman contradicted his story, saying House went walking the night of the murder. Soon tests came back showing the semen on Carolyn's clothes matched House's blood type and that a speck of her blood was found on House's jeans. Furthermore, Hubert had been at a dance at a local community center, he said, and hadn't seen his wife. In the end, with rape as an aggravating factor, House was convicted of murder and sentenced to death.

Fifteen years later, with House growing sicker and sicker on death row, problems arose for the prosecution's case.

DNA testing showed the semen on Carolyn Muncey's clothes belonged to Hubert Muncey. A top forensic expert testified that the blood on House's jeans appeared to have been the result of a laboratory mishandling. Two new witnesses came forward claiming that Hubert had confessed to killing his wife, while another witness said he even asked for help in establishing his alibi.

The prosecution tweaked its assertions, saying that House attempted to rape Muncey (also a felony) before killing her. The state of Tennessee has said it will not investigate or charge Hubert Muncey with his wife's murder. (In a television interview in 2004, Mr. Muncey admitted to hitting Carol but claimed he did not kill her.)

House's lawyers kept it up.

In 2002, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati cited problems with the evidence against House and asked the Supreme Court of Tennessee to decide if he should receive a new trial. The Tennessee judges refused and last October the 6th Circuit narrowly denied House's petition for a writ of habeas corpus by a politically divided vote of 8 to 7.


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Kelly Hearn is a former UPI staff writer who lives in Washington DC and Latin America. His work has appeared in the Christian Science Monitor, American Prospect, and other publications.

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View:
Multiple methods for killing Americans, this is just one of them.
Posted by: Pepper on Jun 30, 2005 6:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Its time to fight back for real!!!!!!!!!! This is totally outrageous. I can't even believe this is true. (Yes, I know it is, but I still can't reconcile that with the American Justice System that I thought I knew.

Well, that is murder and I say, lets make a citizens arrest of the justices that voted to continue killing this innocent man knowing full well he is innocent. The DNA proves it. Then put those justices on trial for attempted murder and if he dies, then retry them for murder and give them the death penalty. We have to start thinking outside the box. P

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Pay Attention Tenesee Governor
Posted by: metahope on Jul 2, 2005 3:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please pardon this innocent man and convict the guilty man. Show yourself to be ethical and morally righteous. Rise above being a politician.

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Execute a dying man?
Posted by: aida1200 on Jul 5, 2005 8:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At the very worst, leave the poor man in peace to die of natural causes!

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Waht about Bush?
Posted by: sheherezade on Jul 5, 2005 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can they check his DNA to find out if he's human?

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What system?
Posted by: ghoster on Jul 5, 2005 2:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Just Us system works all juries are supposed to convict and given that most of these egregious cases come from "Red " States then what would Jebus do?

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check
Posted by: sarah on Jul 5, 2005 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am grateful that DNA testing exists as a kind of "check" to the current system's tendency to condemn without hard evidence...... the death penalty as an institution is a throw back from medevil ignorance... it's also a means for perpetuating racism and social elitism. If you look at the disproportionate number of condemned minorities and those impoverished, it's clear that the system as it stands does not work. If, as some people argue, the reason why minorities and the poor are given death sentences is that they can't afford the quality of lawyers to defend them execution, then that fact itself is an inherent flaw. As our system is set up, if a rich guy kills, he lives...if a poor guy is accused of being a killer, he dies.

DNA or no DNA, to maintain social and racial parity, i think all death penalties should be abolished. it's a barbaric practice and not an effective deterrent anyways... look at TEXAS... that state practically executes on a weekly basis--and crime continues... (er.. otherwise, they woudn't have soo many executions, now would they? hmm? if all the bad guys in Texas were dead and all those tempted to commit crime were deterred... texas wouldn't have anybody to execute, now would they? hmmmm?)

(see, again, i'm half-way to hypocrisy. Sometimes, i think that stalkers should be sentenced to execution--not bothersome people, but the real type stalker... the ones who hassle me at work, or at my bank, or find out where i live, esp. the bimbos with boob jobs and tons of kids.... BUT SEE, THERE WOULD BE A POINT TO THAT... see, they would stop.... eh? kaput.) BUT at least i know i'm being insane with that as a deterrent. There is no similar sanity in the present justice system as long as the death penatly exists.

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fears re DNA.
Posted by: sarah on Jul 5, 2005 8:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
another thing, and this has nothing to do with the case discussed in the article... but I worry about DNA's unquestioned importance in courtcases. even though it is an ally for those with little other defense when accused of a DNA admissible crime. i fear, that like all things, DNA will be misused as a tool for those in power--even strengthening cases, if DNA evidence is manipulated.

I've worked in medical in the past....i see potential for problems etc..... from the hand of the doctor to the phlebotimist, to the medical records keeper to computer input, paperwork can get switched around... accidentally or intentionally. After the blood letting, DNA records are just paperwork & data entry. with one erred keystroke, someone's life could be destroyed.

i know the capacity of those with ulterior motives to pass corruption foward as truth. Get this... for all the whining i do about the "bimbos" who bother me, one of them works in a medical setting, at a clinic, with absolute access to my records. She had actually called people on my phone list for "social reasons."
i was told by the clinic owner that the woman wasn't medical personnel, but rather, a "contractor,"& so no punitive steps toward protecting my privacies were taken. (but ah, to my relief, my doctor, moved out of that storefront clinic butt-fast, right quick.... so she upgraded my belief in the hippocratic oath) :)

do you think, for a minute, a "contractor" such as the woman who went into my medical records, would hesitate to manipulate records or data etc. if she thought she would gain personally, for whatever reasons? with money, she'd destroy a life... in fact, it wouldn't even take bribery if a person who portrays himself in power gave orders.
What if someone could prove they were somewhere with witnesses and etc..... yet, somehow the DNA data (paperwork) from a murder case 2 cities away implicated an innocent in a crime? It could happen... & all because of paperwork fumbles & foibles. right now, i know DNA is helpful in resolving & absolving cases, but i become cautious... looking at possible holes in the system... looking at possible scams or means for those in power to be corrupt & gain their power back.
(uhm. characteristic non-sequitar: if a blond chick wearing ER green & waving my liver panels shows up, it's not me...too tall, i'm only 5'4 and 3/4... )

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