… At the hospital, the survivor, who is white, described her attacker as a Black male between 5’ 7” and 6′ 2” with a front partial gold tooth. The survivor couldn’t determine his hair length or body size because he was wearing a cap and a jacket, and, by her own admission, she was “not a good character judge” of physical build and was “a poor judge” of height.

Following the attack on Nov. 4, while filming a Crime Stoppers reenactment video about the crime near the survivor’s home, Detectives Mike Baskin and Jeff Crosby noticed “a Black guy parked on 15th Street.” Detective Crosby approached the car, spoke with the man — who was later identified as Mr. Lott — and noted he had a gold tooth. When questioned about his whereabouts during the crime, Mr. Lott explained that he had been with his fiancée the night before, from 3:30 p.m. until 6:30 a.m. the next morning when he left for work. His fiancée confirmed his story. She also made clear that Mr. Lott, who did not have a phone at his own residence, did not make any calls on the day of the crime.

The next day, Mr. Lott agreed to join detectives at the Ada police station for further questioning and was placed in a lineup. None of the other men in the lineup had gold teeth but were given gold foil from a local flower shop to cover their teeth as a means of simulating the partial gold tooth described by the survivor. As a result, Mr. Lott was the only one in the lineup who could fully open his mouth because he did not have gold foil on his teeth. After about thirty minutes, the survivor identified Mr. Lott as her attacker, and police arrested him. Intentionally suggestive witness identifications like this one occur twice as frequently in the cases of Black and Latinx exonerees as they do in the cases of white exonerees, according to the National Registry of Exonerations (NRE).

In 2014, the survivor would tell an investigator that she was scared to pick the wrong man in the lineup and nothing specific made her choose Mr. Lott as the attacker.

Eyewitness misidentification is the leading contributing factor of wrongful convictions and has contributed to 64% of the Innocence Project’s 245 exonerations and releases. And cross racial identification, as in this case, is particularly challenging. The NRE’s report on Race and Wrongful Convictions in the United States 2022 found that 60% of sexual assault exonerees are Black, but less than a quarter of people in prison for sexual assault are Black. This suggests that Black people are almost 8 times more likely than white people to be falsely identified and convicted of sexual assault.

At trial, the State’s case rested entirely on the survivor’s identification of Mr. Lott as the perpetrator, despite a number of inconsistencies. The survivor described the perpetrator as clean-shaven, but Mr. Lott had a mustache. Police also acknowledged that he was the only person in the line-up without gold foil on his teeth. Regardless of Mr. Lott’s alibi, after one day, the jury convicted him of first-degree rape, second-degree burglary, and other related charges. He was sentenced to a term of 100 years. Mr. Lott unsuccessfully appealed his conviction.

During the post-conviction investigation, the Innocence Project ordered DNA testing of the rape kit. In 2014, Mr. Lott was excluded as the source of male genetic material found on the survivor’s vaginal swab. Despite the new scientific evidence proving Mr. Lott’s innocence, former DA Smith refused to vacate Mr. Lott’s conviction.

In 2018, two days before Mr. Lott’s hearing, where this new evidence of innocence would have been presented, former DA Smith offered Mr. Lott a sentence modification that would guarantee his immediate release from prison, but the conviction would remain on his record. After DA Smith made this offer, and before Mr. Lott accepted it, Detective Crosby, the State’s main witness at the hearing, died by suicide – a fact DA Smith never disclosed to Mr. Lott, who then accepted the offer in order to be released from prison. …

Seems to me, everything that went wrong here goes back to a cop trying to look cool on camera:

…while filming a Crime Stoppers reenactment video about the crime near the survivor’s home, Detectives Mike Baskin and Jeff Crosby noticed “a Black guy parked on 15th Street.”

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Any DA who won’t vacate a sentence after DNA proves they’ve got the wrong person is committing a crime and should be punished. Just letting someone out of prison while having the charges stay is evil and petty.

    • just_change_it@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      100%. Kept a criminal conviction on a guy who did no wrong. Violating ethics should be punished far harsher than it is.