CA Justice Watch tracks prosecutorial injustice across all 58 California counties. Every fact sourced from public records.
WITNESS ACCOUNTABILITY

Top 500 Worst Witness Cases in California

Snitches. Paid informants. False IDs. Discredited "experts." These are the witnesses who sent innocent people to prison.

Search Witness Database (345+ Cases) View Interactive Network Map
200+ Cases Exposed on This Page
57+ OC Cases Overturned (Snitch Scandal)
106 Rampart Convictions Overturned (Officer Perjury)
70% DNA Exonerations Involving Bad Eyewitness ID

Sources: Innocence Project, National Registry of Exonerations, DOJ Reports, California court records.

🔒 Jailhouse Informants (Snitches)

The most dangerous witnesses in the criminal justice system. Inmates who trade lies for freedom.

Jailhouse informants — commonly called "snitches" — are incarcerated people who claim that a defendant confessed to them while in custody. In exchange for this testimony, prosecutors offer reduced sentences, dropped charges, transfers to better facilities, cash, or other benefits. The result is a system that financially incentivizes lying under oath.

According to the Innocence Project, informant testimony contributed to approximately 18% of the first 200 DNA exonerations in the United States. In capital cases, incentivized informants were the leading cause of wrongful convictions, according to the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University.

The Orange County Jailhouse Informant Scandal

The largest jailhouse informant scandal in California history — and one of the largest in United States history.

SYSTEMIC SCANDAL — 57+ CASES AFFECTED

Orange County District Attorney / Sheriff Informant Program (2007–2016)

Between 2007 and 2016, the Orange County Sheriff's Department (OCSD) and the Orange County District Attorney's Office systematically and illegally used jailhouse informants to extract statements from defendants who were already represented by attorneys — a direct violation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.

  • 57+ criminal cases unraveled, including 35 homicide cases, as a result of the illegal informant program.
  • How it worked: Deputies would move confidential informants into cells adjacent to targeted defendants. The informants would befriend the defendants, extract incriminating statements, write them down, and pass them to their handlers. Prosecutors then used this testimony at trial — without disclosing the informant's status, criminal history, or the deals they received.
  • Exculpatory evidence was routinely withheld from defense attorneys, including information about informant benefits, prior informant work, and criminal records.
DEATH PENALTY REMOVED

People v. Scott Dekraai — The Case That Exposed It All

Scott Dekraai committed the deadliest mass shooting in Orange County history in October 2011, killing eight people at a Seal Beach hair salon. The case should have been straightforward. Instead, it exposed a massive unconstitutional informant operation.

  • Fernando Perez, a confidential informant, was deliberately moved into the cell adjacent to Dekraai. Perez befriended Dekraai and extracted incriminating statements days after the arrest.
  • Defense attorney Scott Sanders uncovered the scheme and revealed that prosecutors made a "deliberate choice not to find out the criminal and informant history" of Perez.
  • The misconduct was so severe that the OCDA was disqualified from seeking the death penalty. Dekraai pleaded guilty and received eight consecutive life sentences.
  • The OCDA's own administrative investigation later concluded that prosecutors exhibited "prosecutorial misconduct and malpractice" in the case.
  • In October 2022, the U.S. Department of Justice issued findings confirming unconstitutional practices. A reform agreement with OCSD was signed in January 2025.

The Informants Who Made It Possible

PROLIFIC SNITCH — MULTIPLE CASES TAINTED

Informant: Fernando Perez — Mexican Mafia Leader Turned Snitch

Fernando Perez was a former Mexican Mafia leader and third-striker facing possible life in prison who became one of the most prolific informants in the OC scandal.

  • Perez was deliberately moved into the cell adjacent to Scott Dekraai after the Seal Beach massacre to extract incriminating statements.
  • He also elicited a confession from Isaac Palacios and extracted incriminating statements from Daniel Wozniak during dayroom interactions in Module L-20.
  • Perez worked as an informant starting in 2010, receiving reduced charges and favorable treatment in exchange for his cooperation.
  • Prosecutors made a "deliberate choice not to find out the criminal and informant history" of Perez before using his testimony.
PROLIFIC SNITCH — EVIDENCE WITHHELD IN ALL HIS CASES

Informant: Oscar Moriel — Serial Jailhouse Informant

Oscar Moriel was another prolific informant whose work was central to the scandal. Notes from Moriel to his government handlers revealed the orchestrated nature of the program.

  • Moriel secured a confession from Leonel Vega during a dayroom conversation in 2009.
  • He was also the key informant in the Randy Adame murder case involving Isaac Palacios.
  • OCSD Deputies Bill Grover and Ben Garcia met regularly with Moriel to coordinate informant operations.
  • When the scandal broke, prosecutors admitted they "had failed to properly disclose evidence about Moriel in all of the cases in which he participated."

The Deputies Who Ran the Snitch Tank

INVOKED 5TH AMENDMENT — FOUND TO HAVE LIED OR WITHHELD EVIDENCE

Deputy Seth Tunstall — Orange County Sheriff's Department

  • Judge Thomas Goethals singled out Deputy Tunstall for having "either intentionally lied or willfully withheld material evidence" from the court.
  • When called to testify, Tunstall invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, refusing to answer even basic questions.
  • Tunstall was one of the handlers who coordinated the placement of informants in cells adjacent to targeted defendants.
INVOKED 5TH AMENDMENT — FOUND TO HAVE LIED OR WITHHELD EVIDENCE

Deputy Ben Garcia — Orange County Sheriff's Department

  • Judge Goethals also found that Deputy Garcia had "either intentionally lied or willfully withheld material evidence."
  • Garcia met regularly with informant Oscar Moriel and coordinated informant operations in the jail.
  • Like Tunstall, Garcia invoked his Fifth Amendment right when called to testify, refusing to answer questions.
INVOKED 5TH AMENDMENT

Deputies William Grover & Bryan Larson — Orange County Sheriff's Department

  • Both deputies were called to testify about the jailhouse informant program at the Central Justice Center in Santa Ana.
  • Both invoked their Fifth Amendment rights and refused to answer questions about the program.
  • Deputy Grover met with informant Oscar Moriel and was involved in coordinating informant activities within the jail.

Individual Cases Destroyed by the OC Snitch Scandal

MURDER CONVICTION OVERTURNED — PLED TO MANSLAUGHTER

People v. Henry Rodriguez — Double Murder, Orange County

  • Rodriguez was convicted twice for aiding another man in the 1998 double murder of Jeanette Espeleta and her unborn child.
  • Prosecutors did not turn over records indicating that a key witness was a veteran jailhouse informant who had gathered evidence in multiple cases.
  • The informant was falsely presented as "a fellow inmate who just happened to overhear incriminating statements" rather than a planted operative.
  • Rodriguez's case was reopened after the scandal was exposed.
MURDER CHARGE VACATED — PLED TO VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER

People v. Leonel Vega — Gang Murder, Orange County

  • Vega was convicted in 2010 of first-degree murder for a gang shooting and sentenced to life in prison.
  • Oscar Moriel, a planted jailhouse informant, secured a confession from Vega during a dayroom conversation in 2009.
  • An ex-Santa Ana detective arranged for the informant to press Vega for information while Vega was represented by an attorney — a direct Sixth Amendment violation.
  • In February 2015, prosecutors agreed to vacate the murder conviction. Vega pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter for the 2004 killing of rival gang member Giovani Onofre and was sentenced to 15 years.
RELEASED — TIME SERVED AFTER PLEA DEAL

People v. Isaac Palacios — Gang Murder, Orange County

  • Palacios was targeted by informant Fernando Perez, who elicited a confession during dayroom interactions.
  • As part of a plea agreement after the scandal, Palacios admitted he shot and killed rival gang member Randy Adame.
  • He pled guilty to second-degree murder and was released from custody after receiving credit for time served.
41 YEARS IMPRISONED — MURDER CHARGE REDUCED

People v. Guy Scott — 1981 Murder, Orange County

One of the longest-serving victims of the OC snitch scandal.

  • Guy Scott was convicted of murder in the 1981 killing of Larry Miner. A co-defendant, Robert Neary, received immunity in exchange for testimony against Scott.
  • New evidence revealed that Neary lied to increase blame on Scott while downplaying his own role in the killing.
  • Critical evidence that would have impeached Neary's testimony was hidden from Scott's lawyers by prosecutors.
  • Defense attorney Scott Sanders argued Scott "would have been acquitted 41 years ago" if that evidence had been disclosed.
  • In 2025, at age 69, Scott's murder charge was reduced to manslaughter and he was released after 41 years in prison.
DEATH PENALTY CASE — INFORMANT USED

People v. Daniel Wozniak — Double Murder, Orange County

  • Wozniak was convicted of murdering Samuel E. Herr (whom he decapitated and dismembered) and Juri "Julie" Kibuishi as part of a cover-up plot.
  • Informant Fernando Perez was used to extract statements from Wozniak in jail.
  • Because Wozniak had already confessed to police, prosecutors argued the informant testimony was "redundant" — but the unconstitutional method of obtaining it remained unchanged.
MURDER CHARGE REDUCED — SENTENCED TO 6 YEARS

People v. Joel Avila — Murder, Orange County

  • Joel Avila was charged with murder but the case was tainted by the jailhouse informant program.
  • He ultimately pled guilty to manslaughter and served only six years in prison — a fraction of the life sentence he originally faced.
MANSLAUGHTER DISMISSED — PLED TO ROBBERY, SERVED 6 YEARS

People v. Heriberto Calvillo — Murder, Orange County

  • Calvillo was interrogated by two jailhouse informants while in custody.
  • He initially pled guilty to manslaughter and received 22 years in prison.
  • After the scandal was exposed, the manslaughter charge was dismissed entirely. Calvillo ultimately pled to robbery and served only 6 years — a fraction of his original sentence.
MURDER CHARGE — RECEIVED LIFE INSTEAD OF DEATH

People v. Jose Canul — Murder, Orange County

  • Canul pled guilty to murder but received life in prison rather than the death penalty enhancements that prosecutors had originally sought.
  • The jailhouse informant program's misconduct tainted the prosecution's case and weakened their ability to pursue maximum sentencing.
CHARGES DROPPED

People v. Joseph Martin Govey — Attempted Murder & Solicitation, Orange County

  • Govey faced charges of attempted murder and solicitation of murder.
  • Charges were dropped entirely because of issues raised about informant use in his case — the same pattern of constitutional violations seen across the scandal.
INFORMANT TESTIMONY USED — EVIDENCE WITHHELD

People v. Paul Smith — 1988 Cold Case Murder, Orange County

  • Paul Smith was convicted of murder in 2010 for the 1988 stabbing death of his childhood friend Robert Haugen.
  • Law enforcement illegally used jailhouse informants to bolster the case against Smith.
  • The use of informants and their relationship with law enforcement was hidden from the defense.
MURDER CONVICTION OVERTURNED 2021 — PROSECUTOR ACCUSED OF COVER-UP

People v. Paul Gentile Smith — Murder, Orange County, 2010

  • Smith was convicted of murder in 2010 in a decades-old case.
  • His murder conviction was thrown out in 2021 after evidence emerged that prosecutors concealed evidence and a lead investigator refused to testify.
  • The DA's office conceded the defendant should receive a new trial due to its prior team's failure to disclose discovery and agreed not to use evidence obtained through the jailhouse informant program.
  • Prosecutor Ebrahim Baytieh, now a judge, was accused in court filings of leading a "criminal conspiracy to cover up police misconduct and withhold evidence" when he was a high-ranking prosecutor.
57+ Criminal cases — including 35 homicides — unraveled by the Orange County snitch scandal alone. This is what happens when the system incentivizes lying.

More Jailhouse Informant Cases Across California

EXONERATED — 24 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Thomas Lee Goldstein — Los Angeles County, 1980

  • In November 1979, John McGinest was shot and killed in Long Beach. Six eyewitnesses were shown a photo lineup but none could identify the shooter.
  • After being shown Goldstein's photo a second time, one witness said it was only "possible" Goldstein was the shooter. Goldstein was white; initial witness descriptions said the shooter was Black or Hispanic.
  • The prosecution's case relied heavily on jailhouse informant Edward Fink, who testified Goldstein confessed to the murder in jail. Fink had received a favorable deal from prosecutors — which was not disclosed to the defense.
  • Goldstein was convicted and sentenced to 27 years to life.
  • In 2004, after 24 years in prison, Goldstein was exonerated. A federal court found the prosecution's failure to disclose the informant deal was a Giglio violation.
  • Goldstein sued for wrongful imprisonment. His case went to the U.S. Supreme Court (Van de Kamp v. Goldstein, 2009) on the question of prosecutorial immunity.
EXONERATED — 34 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Jack Sagin — Santa Clara County, 1986

  • Sagin was convicted of the murder of Paula Durocher, largely based on testimony from two jailhouse informants.
  • No physical evidence connected Sagin to the crime.
  • DNA evidence later showed Sagin's DNA was absent from under the victim's nails and other crime scene evidence.
  • After 34 years in prison, the Sixth District Court of Appeal overturned Sagin's conviction based on the DNA evidence and the unreliability of the informant testimony.
  • Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 21 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Maurice Caldwell — San Francisco County, 1990

  • Caldwell was convicted of a 1990 murder in San Francisco based on the testimony of a single eyewitness.
  • That witness originally told police the shooters "did not live in the area" and she "did not know their names or nicknames" — then two weeks later picked Caldwell out of a photo lineup.
  • Caldwell's conviction was overturned on March 28, 2010 by the Northern California Innocence Project.
  • The San Francisco DA dismissed the case and Caldwell was released in 2011 after 21 years in prison.
EXONERATED — 32 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Joaquin Ciria — San Francisco County, 1990

  • Ciria was convicted of a shooting death in San Francisco based on coerced witness testimony and police misconduct.
  • An 18-month investigation by SF DA Chesa Boudin's Innocence Commission found "a cascade of errors" in the case, including police coercion of the key witness, who was a teenager at the time.
  • New witnesses and evidence were located that undermined the original prosecution.
  • A judge overturned Ciria's conviction and the DA dismissed the case in April 2022, after 32 years of wrongful imprisonment.
EXONERATED — 30+ YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED — INFORMANT A "HABITUAL LIAR"

Bobby Joe Maxwell — Los Angeles County, 1984 (The "Skid Row Stabber")

  • Maxwell was convicted in 1984 of murders attributed to the "Skid Row Stabber" who killed 11 homeless men in downtown Los Angeles.
  • The trial hinged on testimony from jailhouse informant Sidney Storch, who claimed Maxwell confessed. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals later found Storch to be a "habitual liar" who used newspaper articles to learn case details and then fabricated confessions.
  • Prosecutors had made a secret deal with Storch for early release in exchange for testimony — which was never disclosed to the defense or the jury. Storch then testified falsely about the deal.
  • After 30+ years in prison, the 9th Circuit overturned Maxwell's conviction and ordered a new trial.
  • Maxwell suffered a massive heart attack in 2017 while awaiting retrial and fell into a coma. Prosecutors dropped all charges in 2018. He died without ever being retried.
EXONERATED — 41 YEARS — 32 ON DEATH ROW

Barry Williams — Los Angeles County, 1981

  • Barry Williams was arrested at age 19 and convicted of two murders. He was sentenced to death and spent 32 years on death row.
  • His conviction was based on an unreliable jailhouse snitch and false testimony from witnesses connected to the LAPD's infamous CRASH unit.
  • Prosecutors knowingly presented false testimony and withheld exculpatory evidence from the defense.
  • U.S. District Judge David Carter vacated the conviction in 2016, finding that prosecutors failed to disclose favorable evidence and allowed witnesses to testify falsely.
  • In January 2021, the LA County DA's Office finally dismissed the case. Williams had spent 41 years incarcerated.
EXONERATED — 23 YEARS — $24 MILLION SETTLEMENT

John Klene & Eduardo Dumbrique — Los Angeles County, 1997

  • Both were convicted as teenagers of a 1997 gang-related murder in Hawthorne and sentenced to life without parole.
  • Jailhouse snitch Santo "Payaso" Alvarez was arrested for weapons possession and offered information on the murder in exchange for his release. Alvarez later admitted he was "just trying to talk his way out of jail."
  • LASD investigators took Alvarez's word and allegedly fabricated witness statements about Klene and Dumbrique.
  • In 2012, a dying man named Landrum admitted under oath that he committed the murder and that Klene and Dumbrique had no involvement.
  • Both were exonerated in February 2021 after 23 years. LA County paid $24 million to settle their federal civil rights lawsuit.
EXONERATED — 30+ YEARS — WITNESS RECANTED

Humberto Duran — Los Angeles County, 1993

  • Duran was convicted in 1993 of an East Los Angeles murder based on a single eyewitness.
  • After more than 30 years behind bars, the witness recanted their testimony.
  • Duran was found factually innocent and received a formal apology for his wrongful conviction.
EXONERATED — 16 YEARS — WIFE'S TESTIMONY DISPROVEN BY DNA

Kevin Green — Orange County, 1980

  • In September 1979, Green returned home to find his pregnant wife Dianna unconscious with a severe head injury. Their daughter died in the womb.
  • The entire case rested on the testimony of his wife, who had suffered extensive brain damage and amnesia from the attack. There was a complete absence of corroborative evidence.
  • Green was convicted in 1980 and sentenced to prison.
  • In 1996, DNA database technology matched evidence from the crime scene to serial killer Gerald Parker (the "Bedroom Basher"), who confessed to the attack and five other murders.
  • Green was exonerated on June 20, 1996 after 16 years. He was awarded $620,000 in state compensation.
EXONERATED — EYEWITNESS TESTIMONY PROVEN FALSE BY CONFESSION

Jason Rivera — San Diego County

  • The case against Rivera rested on testimony from one eyewitness who said they heard Rivera yell "blast 'em" right before fatal shots were fired.
  • This testimony was critical to establishing a conspiracy to commit murder charge.
  • After conviction, another person named Richard admitted to uttering those words and confirmed Rivera had no knowledge a gun was present.
  • Rivera was exonerated with help from the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — CONFESSION EVIDENCE REVEALED TRUE PERPETRATOR

Guy Miles — Orange County, 1998

  • In June 1998, two men robbed a Fidelity Financial Institution in Fullerton. Miles was convicted based on witness identifications.
  • On January 19, 2017, the California Court of Appeal reversed Miles's conviction, finding that new, credible confession evidence would have resulted in a different outcome at trial.
  • Represented by the California Innocence Project.

💰 Incentivized Witnesses

When the prosecution buys testimony with freedom, charges become currency and truth becomes optional.

Beyond jailhouse informants, prosecutors routinely offer deals to witnesses in exchange for testimony: reduced charges, dropped cases, immigration assistance, monetary payments, and more. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that all such deals must be disclosed to the defense. When they are not, innocent people go to prison.

WITNESS PAID $30,000 BY POLICE

People v. Giovonte Douglas & Cartier Hunter — Oakland, 2011

Two men were convicted and sentenced to life in prison for the 2011 murder of Charles Hiawatha Butler in North Oakland, based primarily on the testimony of a single eyewitness.

  • Oakland Police Investigator Phong Tran allegedly made secret cash payments totaling approximately $30,000 to witness Aisha Weber before the trial.
  • Weber, who was homeless at the time, testified that she witnessed the shooting. In 2021, she recanted, telling defense attorneys: "I was not truthful" — and alleged that Tran pressured her to lie and coached her testimony.
  • Douglas spent 9 years in prison before being released in September 2022. Hunter was released in February 2023.
  • Investigator Phong Tran was charged with felony perjury, bribery, and witness intimidation by the Alameda County DA's office in April 2023. An internal affairs investigation revealed additional troubling practices at OPD.

How Incentivized Testimony Works

The Mechanics of Buying Testimony

  • Charge bargaining: A witness facing serious charges agrees to testify for the prosecution in exchange for reduced or dropped charges in their own case.
  • Sentence promises: Witnesses already convicted receive reduced sentences, early parole recommendations, or favorable prison transfers.
  • Informal benefits: Cash payments, commissary money, phone privileges, cell upgrades, protection — benefits that may never be formally documented.
  • Immigration leverage: Non-citizens facing deportation may be offered immigration assistance in exchange for cooperation.
  • The core problem: Research shows that quid pro quo dealing between informants and the government is "largely informal, unregulated, and highly secretive" (University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law), making it nearly impossible for defense attorneys to uncover the full scope of deals.

More California Cases: Incentivized Testimony

EXONERATED — 17 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Obie Anthony III — Los Angeles County, 1995

  • Anthony was 19 years old when convicted of murder and attempted robbery. No physical evidence connected him to the crime.
  • The prosecution's key witness was John Jones, a convicted killer and pimp who ran a house of prostitution near the crime scene.
  • Jones perjured himself when he testified he received no benefit for his cooperation. In fact, the DA had granted Jones favorable treatment on a pimping and pandering charge in exchange for his testimony.
  • Trial prosecutors failed to inform the court or the defense that Jones had presented perjured testimony — a direct Giglio violation.
  • After an 11-day evidentiary hearing, the court vacated Anthony's conviction on September 30, 2011. He was released on October 4, 2011 after 17 years in prison.
  • Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project and Loyola's Project for the Innocent.
EXONERATED — 20 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Horace Roberts — Riverside County, 1999

  • Roberts was convicted of the murder of Terry Cheek and sentenced to 15 years to life.
  • Riverside officers allegedly "abandoned their role as unbiased investigators, decided first that Plaintiff was the killer, and then manufactured a case against him" — fabricating police reports, witness testimony, and other false evidence.
  • The conviction rested on Roberts' watch being found near the victim, but DNA testing revealed the watch did not belong to Roberts.
  • Suppressed evidence pointed to the actual killers, Googie Harris Sr. and Joaquin Leal, who were later charged with the murder.
  • Roberts was declared factually innocent in October 2018 after 20 years. Riverside County paid $11 million to settle his federal lawsuit.
  • Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 36 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Michael Hanline — Ventura County, 1978

The longest wrongful imprisonment in California history.

  • Hanline was convicted of the 1978 murder of J.T. McGarry and sentenced to life in prison.
  • The prosecution's key witness was Hanline's then-girlfriend, Mary Bischoff, who was granted immunity in exchange for her testimony.
  • Bischoff testified that Hanline had threatened to "blow [McGarry's] brains out." She later recanted her trial testimony.
  • The California Innocence Project discovered that the entire case against Hanline was fabricated and based on Bischoff's testimony.
  • DNA testing on crime scene evidence revealed Hanline was not the perpetrator.
  • On November 24, 2014, Hanline walked free at age 69 after 36 years — the longest wrongful imprisonment in California history.
EXONERATED — 34 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Kash Register — Los Angeles County, 1979

  • Register was convicted of the 1979 murder of Jack Sasson in West Los Angeles. He was arrested at age 18.
  • Key witness Brenda Anderson testified she saw Register at the crime scene.
  • Two of Anderson's own sisters later stated that their sibling lied about seeing Register running away from the scene.
  • Register was exonerated in November 2013 through the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent.
  • After 34 years of wrongful imprisonment, the city of Los Angeles paid $16.7 million to settle his federal lawsuit.

Witnesses with Criminal Records

When the prosecution's "victim" has a longer rap sheet than the defendant.

One of the most glaring ironies of the criminal justice system: prosecutors routinely present witnesses and alleged victims whose own criminal histories are more extensive than the defendant's. Under California Evidence Code Section 788, a witness's prior felony convictions involving moral turpitude (fraud, perjury, theft) can be used to impeach their credibility — but only if the defense knows about them.

The Pattern: Prosecution "Victims" with Extensive Records

Across California, prosecution witnesses and alleged victims frequently have criminal histories that undermine their credibility:

  • Witnesses with pending charges in the same DA's office that is prosecuting the defendant have an obvious incentive to cooperate — whether or not a formal deal exists.
  • Alleged victims with fraud convictions testifying about property crimes, while their own convictions for dishonesty go undisclosed to the jury.
  • Cooperating witnesses with violent felony histories presented as credible by the same prosecutors who would normally argue those records show a propensity for dishonesty.
  • The double standard: Prosecutors aggressively use a defendant's criminal history against them while simultaneously asking juries to trust witnesses with equal or worse records.

Why This Matters

  • Juries rarely hear the full picture. If the defense does not know about a witness's criminal history — or if the judge limits impeachment — the jury evaluates credibility based on incomplete information.
  • Brady violations are common. Prosecutors are required to disclose witness criminal histories, but nondisclosure remains one of the most frequently litigated issues in California criminal appeals.
  • The fix: Automatic, mandatory disclosure of all prosecution witness criminal records to the defense, with sanctions for nondisclosure — not just case-by-case litigation after conviction.

👁 False Identifications

Eyewitness testimony is treated like gospel in courtrooms. The science says it is anything but.

Eyewitness misidentification is the single leading cause of wrongful convictions in the United States. According to the Innocence Project, mistaken eyewitness identifications contributed to approximately 70% of the 375+ wrongful convictions overturned by DNA testing nationwide.

Despite decades of scientific research proving its unreliability, eyewitness testimony remains one of the most powerful forms of evidence presented to juries. When a victim points at a defendant and says "that's the person who did it," juries believe them — even when they are wrong.

EXONERATED — 12 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Herman Atkins — Riverside County, 1988

  • In 1986, a woman was raped in a shoe store in Lake Elsinore, California. Herman Atkins had nothing to do with the crime.
  • The victim did not identify Atkins until she saw a wanted poster for him on unrelated charges. She was then shown a photo lineup and identified Atkins as her attacker. A witness from the store next door also identified Atkins after seeing the same wanted poster.
  • Atkins was convicted in 1988 of robbery, rape, and forcible oral copulation and sentenced to 45 years in prison.
  • The Innocence Project took his case in 1993. Six years later, a court finally granted access to evidence for DNA testing. Testing on three areas of the victim's sweater revealed a DNA profile that did not match Atkins.
  • Atkins was exonerated in 2000 after 12 years of wrongful imprisonment. He won a $2 million civil settlement against Riverside County.
  • Atkins became instrumental in persuading California legislators to raise the maximum compensation for the wrongfully convicted from $10,000 total to $140 per day of wrongful imprisonment.
EXONERATED — 38 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Maurice Hastings — Los Angeles County, 1988

  • Maurice Hastings was convicted of special-circumstance murder in Los Angeles. The DA's office sought the death penalty, but the jury deadlocked. A second jury convicted him in 1988 and he was sentenced to life without parole.
  • For decades, Hastings maintained his innocence and requested DNA testing.
  • In 2022, after submitting a claim to the LA County DA's Conviction Integrity Unit, DNA testing proved the semen found at the crime scene was not his. He was exonerated after 38 years — one of the longest wrongful imprisonments in California history. Full case page →
  • The City of Inglewood agreed to pay $25 million to settle his wrongful conviction lawsuit — believed to be the largest wrongful conviction settlement in California history.
EXONERATED — 20 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Francisco "Franky" Carrillo — Los Angeles County, 1992

  • On January 18, 1991, six teenage boys were standing on a curb in Lynwood, CA when a car drove by and shots were fired, killing Donald Sarpy. Carrillo, then 16, was arrested.
  • Police showed one eyewitness a photo of Carrillo, who was a suspect in an unrelated case. That witness identified Carrillo and then told the five other witnesses to identify Carrillo.
  • Carrillo was convicted of murder and six counts of attempted murder in 1992 and sentenced to two consecutive life terms.
  • In 2011, all of the eyewitnesses recanted their identifications at a hearing. A crime scene reenactment demonstrated it was physically impossible for the witnesses to have seen the perpetrator's face.
  • Two other men confessed to the shooting and confirmed Carrillo was not involved.
  • After 20 years of wrongful imprisonment, Carrillo was released. He was awarded $683,300 in state compensation and $10.1 million in a federal civil rights settlement with the City of Los Angeles.
  • Carrillo was featured in Netflix's The Innocence Files and later ran for a Congressional seat in Los Angeles County.

More California Cases: Eyewitness Misidentification

EXONERATED — 16 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Luis Vargas — Los Angeles County, 1999

  • In early 1998, three women were sexually assaulted in Los Angeles. Vargas was at work during each of the attacks.
  • The prosecution's entire case relied on wavering eyewitness identifications from three traumatized victims. Despite obvious problems with the IDs, the defense attorney failed to call an eyewitness identification expert.
  • Vargas was convicted and sentenced to 55 years to life.
  • DNA testing revealed Vargas did not commit the rapes — and linked the crimes to the "Teardrop Rapist," a serial predator attributed to at least 35 attacks.
  • Vargas was exonerated on November 23, 2015 after 16 years in prison. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 8 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Uriah Courtney — San Diego County, 2004

  • In 2004, a teenage girl was sexually assaulted in Lemon Grove. The victim noticed a man staring at her from a truck before the attack.
  • She assumed the man from the truck attacked her and described her attacker as a white male in his 20s. Based on this assumption, Uriah Courtney was identified.
  • The identification process was suggestive and unreliable, yet Courtney was convicted and sentenced to prison.
  • DNA testing proved Courtney's innocence and pointed to a third-party suspect.
  • In June 2013, all charges were dismissed and Courtney was released after more than 8 years. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 25 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Miguel Solorio — Northern California, 1998

  • Solorio was convicted of murder based on faulty eyewitness identification practices and false testimony by law enforcement.
  • After 25 years in prison, the Northern California Innocence Project secured a reversal of his conviction.
  • Solorio was found factually innocent and released in November 2023.
EXONERATED — 23 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Timothy Atkins — Los Angeles County, 1987

  • At age 17, Atkins was convicted of robbery and murder and sentenced to 32 years to life.
  • No physical evidence linked him to the crime. The conviction relied on testimony from witness Denise Powell.
  • A law student working for the California Innocence Project tracked Powell down years later. Powell admitted she made up the confession that put Atkins in prison.
  • Atkins was exonerated in 2007 after 23 years of wrongful imprisonment.
EXONERATED — 26 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Arturo Jimenez — Northern California, 1994

  • Jimenez was falsely convicted of murder in a 1994 shooting.
  • Eyewitness identification was unreliable and key evidence was not properly disclosed to the defense.
  • After 26 years in prison, his conviction was overturned with the help of the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 17 YEARS — $12 MILLION SETTLEMENT

Lionel Rubalcava — Santa Clara County, 2002

  • In April 2002, Raymond Rodriguez was shot in a drive-by in San Jose. In his first police interview, Rodriguez said he did not recognize the shooter and had never seen him before.
  • When Rubalcava's mugshot was placed in a photo array, it stood out because it had a different background than the fillers and was the only person resembling the description. Every witness selected Rubalcava based on this suggestive identification procedure.
  • The victim later recanted in 2005, saying he had always told police he was unsure and had only said Rubalcava "looked like" the shooter.
  • After 17 years in prison, Rubalcava's conviction was reversed in April 2019. San Jose paid a $12 million settlement. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 10 YEARS — DNA EXCLUDED HIM

Albert Johnson — Northern California

  • Johnson was accused and convicted of committing two sexual assaults based on eyewitness identification.
  • In October 2002, DNA test results revealed Johnson could not have been the perpetrator of at least one of the assaults.
  • After 10 years in prison, Johnson was exonerated. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 21 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Domingo Anaya Bustos — Northern California

  • Bustos spent 21 years in prison before being exonerated.
  • His case involved unreliable witness identification and evidence issues that were eventually demonstrated by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 12 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Juan Bautista — Northern California

  • Bautista was incorrectly identified as the shooter in an attempted murder case.
  • After 12 years in prison, his conviction was overturned. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
70% of DNA exonerations involved eyewitness misidentification — making it the #1 cause of wrongful convictions in America (Innocence Project).

🔄 Recanting Witnesses

When the witnesses who put you in prison admit they lied — and the system still fights to keep you locked up.

A witness recantation occurs when a person who testified at trial later admits their testimony was false. Approximately 23% of all identified exonerations involved a witness recantation. In cases with jailhouse informants, 24% of informants later recanted.

Despite recantations, courts are often skeptical. Judges frequently apply a presumption that the original testimony was truthful and the recantation is the lie — a legal catch-22 that keeps innocent people in prison even after witnesses admit they were wrong.

CONVICTION OVERTURNED — ALL WITNESSES RECANTED

Francisco "Franky" Carrillo — Los Angeles County

  • Convicted in 1992 based on the testimony of six eyewitnesses to a drive-by shooting in Lynwood, CA.
  • One eyewitness was shown a photo by police and told the other five who to identify. All six later recanted their identifications.
  • A crime scene reenactment demonstrated it was physically impossible for them to have seen the shooter's face at night from their positions.
  • Two other men confessed to the shooting. Carrillo was released in 2011 after 20 years. Awarded $10.1 million.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED — WITNESS ADMITTED POLICE PAID HER

Giovonte Douglas & Cartier Hunter — Oakland, Alameda County

  • Convicted and sentenced to life for a 2011 Oakland murder based on testimony from a single eyewitness, Aisha Weber.
  • In 2021, Weber recanted: "I was not truthful." She alleged Oakland police investigator Phong Tran secretly paid her approximately $30,000 and coached her testimony.
  • Douglas was released in September 2022 after 9 years. Hunter released in February 2023.
  • Officer Tran was charged with felony perjury, bribery, and witness intimidation.

More California Cases: Recanting Witnesses

EXONERATED — KEY WITNESS ADMITTED SHE FABRICATED HER STORY

Brian Banks — Los Angeles County, 2002

  • Brian Banks was a star high school football player with a scholarship to USC when, at age 16, classmate Wanetta Gibson accused him of rape and kidnapping.
  • Facing a possible 41 years to life, Banks accepted a plea deal: 5 years in prison, 5 years of probation, and registration as a sex offender.
  • In 2011, Gibson contacted Banks on Facebook and admitted she had fabricated the entire accusation. She was recorded on hidden camera admitting she lied.
  • Gibson had earlier received a $1.5 million settlement from the Long Beach Unified School District based on her false claims.
  • Banks was exonerated on May 24, 2012. He went on to play briefly in the NFL with the Atlanta Falcons.
EXONERATED — 20 YEARS — CHILDREN RECANTED

John Stoll — Kern County, 1985 (Bakersfield "Witch Hunt")

  • Stoll was convicted of child molestation in one of the infamous Kern County sex ring prosecutions of the mid-1980s.
  • He was convicted solely on testimony of six boys, ages seven to nine. There was no physical evidence. The prosecution never even had the children medically examined.
  • Police used highly suggestive questioning techniques on the children. Stoll's own son accused his father only after repeated coercive interviews.
  • Four of the boys, now adults, recanted their testimony at an evidentiary hearing. They admitted the stories were lies and that law enforcement, social workers, and prosecutors coerced them into making false allegations.
  • Stoll's conviction was overturned and he was freed after 20 years in prison. He was awarded $704,700 in state compensation and $5.5 million from Kern County.
EXONERATED — 9 YEARS — COERCED WITNESS CAME FORWARD

Rafael Madrigal — Los Angeles County, 2000

  • Madrigal was arrested in July 2000 for attempted murder in a gang-related drive-by shooting in East Los Angeles, despite an alibi witness placing him at work 30 miles away.
  • His defense attorney failed to introduce key evidence, including a recorded phone call in which the actual driver confessed and confirmed Madrigal's innocence.
  • After nearly a decade behind bars, a federal judge reversed his conviction.
EXONERATED — 12 YEARS — FALSE REPRESSED MEMORIES

Ricky Davis — El Dorado County, 2005

  • Davis was convicted of second-degree murder in the 1985 stabbing death of newspaper columnist Jane Hylton. The case went cold for 14 years.
  • Detectives eventually convinced Davis's housemate, Connie, that she had "repressed memories" of Ricky committing the crime. This testimony was used to convict him.
  • DNA evidence proved Davis was not the killer.
  • Davis was exonerated and freed after nearly 15 years in prison. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.

👮 LAPD Rampart Scandal: Officers as False Witnesses

When the witnesses who lied under oath were wearing badges. 106 convictions overturned. $125 million in settlements.

The LAPD Rampart scandal (1998–2000) exposed systemic corruption within the LAPD's Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums (CRASH) anti-gang unit at the Rampart Division. Officers didn't just fail to tell the truth — they manufactured evidence, planted drugs and guns, and perjured themselves on the witness stand to convict people they knew were innocent.

Officer Rafael Perez, the central figure, claimed that 90 percent of CRASH officers framed innocent people and perjured themselves to gain convictions. More than 70 officers were implicated. The result: 106 criminal convictions overturned, more than 140 civil lawsuits, and an estimated $125 million in settlements paid by the City of Los Angeles.

KEY FIGURE — ADMITTED HUNDREDS OF PERJURIES

Officer Rafael Perez — LAPD Rampart CRASH Unit

  • Perez became the central figure in exposing the scandal after being caught stealing cocaine from LAPD evidence lockers.
  • In exchange for a reduced sentence, Perez admitted to hundreds of instances of perjury, fabrication of evidence, and false arrests over his career.
  • He implicated 28 current and former Rampart officers in criminal activities and misconduct.
  • Perez admitted to shooting, framing, and testifying against Javier Ovando, an unarmed man left paralyzed by the shooting.
EXONERATED — SHOT AND PARALYZED BY OFFICERS WHO THEN FRAMED HIM

Javier Ovando — Los Angeles, 1996

The single most devastating case of officer perjury in LAPD history.

  • On October 12, 1996, officers Rafael Perez and Nino Durden entered 19-year-old Ovando's apartment and shot the unarmed man, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.
  • Perez and Durden then planted a gun on Ovando and reported he had fired on them first.
  • Both officers testified under oath that Ovando had attacked them. Based on this perjured testimony, Ovando was convicted and sentenced to 23 years in prison — the maximum allowed.
  • When Perez cooperated with investigators in 1999, he admitted the shooting was unprovoked and the testimony was entirely fabricated. Ovando was released on September 16, 1999.
  • Ovando received a $15 million settlement from the City of Los Angeles — the largest police misconduct settlement in LA history at the time.
EXONERATED — 5 DEFENDANTS CONVICTED ON FALSE TESTIMONY

People v. Adams, Davalos, J. Alvarez, G. Alvarez & Menendez — Los Angeles

  • Anthony Adams, Luis Davalos, Jesse Alvarez, Jorge Alvarez, and Ceaser Menendez were all convicted of manslaughter and each sentenced to 12 years in prison.
  • Their convictions were based in part on testimony from Sonya Flores, a former girlfriend of officer Rafael Perez, who provided false testimony at trial.
  • All five convictions were overturned after the Rampart scandal exposed the corrupt network of false witnesses connected to Perez.
EXONERATED — FRAMED ON DRUG CHARGE

Ruben Rojas — Los Angeles, Rampart Division

  • Rojas was among the first convicts released from prison after the Rampart scandal came to light.
  • Officer Rafael Perez framed Rojas on a drug charge, planting evidence and then testifying under oath about the fabricated drug possession.
  • Rojas's conviction was overturned after Perez admitted to the frame-up as part of his cooperation agreement.
EXONERATED — FALSE TESTIMONY BY 3 OFFICERS

Alex Umana — Los Angeles, Rampart Division

  • Umana was charged with possession of cocaine and went to trial.
  • Three officers — Michael Buchanan, Mark Richardson, and Daniel Lujanfalsely testified at his trial.
  • Umana was convicted and sentenced to five years in prison based on their perjured testimony.
  • His conviction was overturned after the Rampart investigation revealed the officers' pattern of false testimony.
GUN PLANTED — OFFICERS TRIED AND ACQUITTED

Allan Lobos — Los Angeles, 1996

  • Officers allegedly planted a gun on Lobos, a reputed gang member, in April 1996.
  • Criminal charges were brought against the involved officers (Harper, Buchanan, Liddy, and Ortiz) for the Lobos frame-up, but all were found not guilty at trial.
  • Lobos's conviction, however, was overturned.
FALSELY ARRESTED — CONSPIRACY BY OFFICERS

Cesar Natividad & Raul Munoz — Los Angeles, 1996

  • Officers Buchanan and Liddy were accused of a conspiracy to falsely arrest Natividad and Munoz in July 1996.
  • The officers fabricated an alleged assault by the two gang members as justification for the arrest.
  • Both convictions were overturned after the Rampart investigation.
OFFICER FIRED — BEAT HANDCUFFED SUSPECT UNTIL HE VOMITED BLOOD

Officer Brian Hewitt — LAPD Rampart CRASH Unit (Ismael Jimenez Case)

  • On February 26, 1998, officer Hewitt brought Ismael Jimenez, a member of the 18th Street Gang, into the Rampart station for questioning.
  • Hewitt beat the handcuffed Jimenez in the chest and stomach until he vomited blood.
  • Any statements or evidence obtained from Jimenez under these conditions would be tainted by the coercion.
  • Hewitt was eventually fired from the LAPD.
PLEADED GUILTY — 5 YEARS FOR SHOOTING AND FRAMING OVANDO

Officer Nino Durden — LAPD Rampart CRASH Unit

  • Durden was Rafael Perez's partner in the shooting and framing of Javier Ovando.
  • Together, they shot the unarmed 19-year-old, planted a gun on him, and both testified under oath that Ovando had fired on them.
  • Durden pled guilty to state and federal charges related to the Ovando shooting and was sentenced to only five years in prison.
SYSTEMATIC FALSE TESTIMONY — 106 CONVICTIONS OVERTURNED

Additional Rampart Exonerations — Dozens of Unnamed Defendants

Beyond the individual cases detailed above, the Rampart scandal led to the exoneration of scores of additional defendants whose names are documented in the National Registry of Exonerations:

  • Known exonerated defendants include: Juan Rojo, Carlos Romero, Blanca Sahagun, Sergio Salcido, Gene Serrano, Juan Suares, Daniel Tapia, James Thomas, Paul Thompson, Juan Torrecillas, Aristide Vanegas, Gregorio Vasquez, Edward Villanueva, Laura Villatora, Rene Vriones, Mohammed Wesley, Michael Williams, Miguel Yanez, and Rafael Zambrano — among many others.
  • Most were convicted of drug offenses, weapons charges, and assaults based on fabricated evidence and perjured officer testimony.
  • Rampart exonerations alone account for 25% of all documented California wrongful convictions.
106 Criminal convictions overturned because of falsified evidence and perjury by LAPD Rampart officers. More than 70 officers were implicated. The city paid $125 million in settlements.

🔬 Discredited Expert Witnesses

When "science" is not science at all — and people spend decades in prison because of it.

Expert witnesses carry enormous weight with juries. When someone in a white coat or with a string of credentials testifies that forensic evidence proves the defendant's guilt, juries believe them. But multiple forensic disciplines have been debunked as pseudoscience, and experts who once testified with absolute certainty have been forced to retract their claims — sometimes decades after their testimony sent people to prison.

EXONERATED — 15 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Zavion Johnson — Sacramento County, 2002

The case that exposed the collapse of "Shaken Baby Syndrome" science in California.

  • On November 24, 2001, 18-year-old Zavion Johnson was bathing his 4-month-old daughter Nadia when she accidentally slipped from his arms and hit her head on the bathtub. She initially appeared fine but later stopped breathing. Johnson called 911 and performed CPR.
  • Medical experts testified that Nadia's injuries — brain swelling, subdural bleeding, and retinal hemorrhages (the "triad") — could only have been caused by violent shaking. Johnson was convicted of murder and sentenced to 25 years to life.
  • By 2017, the science had changed. Two of the prosecution's own experts disavowed their trial testimony. Dr. Gregory Reiber, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, wrote that his opinion had changed and the injuries "are consistent with the accidental fall in the bathtub described by Zavion Johnson."
  • A judge granted habeas corpus relief and overturned the conviction. All charges were dropped in January 2018. Johnson had spent 15 years in prison for an accident.
  • The Northern California Innocence Project represented Johnson and his case became a landmark in challenging Shaken Baby Syndrome convictions.
EXONERATED — DECLARED FACTUALLY INNOCENT — 23 YEARS

William "Bill" Richards — San Bernardino County, 1993

The bite mark case that changed California law.

  • In August 1993, Pamela Richards was murdered in San Bernardino County. Her husband Bill became a suspect.
  • After two hung juries failed to convict, prosecutors introduced new evidence in a third trial: forensic dentist Dr. Norman "Skip" Sperber testified that a mark on Pamela's hand matched Bill Richards's teeth.
  • Richards was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
  • Eleven years later, Dr. Sperber recanted his testimony during an evidentiary hearing. He admitted he had used a distorted photo to make the bite mark overlay exhibit and "drew conclusions that he could no longer support."
  • DNA evidence found on the murder weapons and under Pamela's fingernails belonged to an unidentified male — the true perpetrator — not Bill Richards.
  • On May 26, 2016, the California Supreme Court unanimously reversed Richards's conviction. Prosecutors dismissed all charges in June 2016. He had spent 23 years in prison.
  • Richards was later declared factually innocent by the court.
  • Legislative impact: Richards's case led to the passage of SB 1058 (the "Bill Richards Bill"), which provides that expert testimony repudiated by the expert or undermined by advances in science is treated as false evidence for habeas corpus purposes.

Forensic Disciplines Under Fire

Bite Mark Analysis — Debunked as Pseudoscience

  • As of 2020, at least 34 convictions based on bite mark evidence have been overturned nationwide.
  • The President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) concluded that bite mark analysis lacks scientific validity and should not be admitted as evidence.
  • The National Academy of Sciences found that "there is no scientific basis for concluding that a particular bite mark can be associated with the dentition of a specific individual."
  • Despite being debunked, bite mark evidence has not been universally banned in California courts.

Shaken Baby Syndrome / Abusive Head Trauma — Science in Collapse

  • For decades, the presence of a "triad" of symptoms (subdural hematoma, brain swelling, retinal hemorrhages) was treated as definitive proof of violent shaking. Thousands were convicted on this basis.
  • Modern biomechanical research has shown that short falls, medical conditions, and birth trauma can produce identical symptoms.
  • Multiple experts who previously testified in support of SBS diagnoses have publicly disavowed their prior testimony.
  • As NBC News reported in 2025, "experts who once backed 'shaken baby' science now fight to free imprisoned caregivers."

More Discredited Forensic Disciplines

Microscopic Hair Comparison — FBI Admits 96% Error Rate

  • In 2015, the FBI admitted that microscopic hair comparison testimony contained errors in at least 90% of cases reviewed in an ongoing audit of thousands of cases.
  • In 268 cases where FBI examiners testified to inculpate a defendant, erroneous statements were made in 257 (96%) of them.
  • Defendants in at least 35 of these cases received the death penalty, and errors were identified in 33 (94%) of those capital cases. California was among the states with affected death penalty cases.
  • The FBI trained hundreds of state and local hair examiners who used the same scientifically flawed language in their own cases — multiplying the damage across the country.

Arson "Science" — Outdated Fire Investigation Methods

  • For decades, fire investigators relied on indicators now proven to be scientifically invalid to determine whether a fire was deliberately set.
  • "Pour patterns," "crazed glass," and "alligatoring" were treated as proof of arson. Modern fire science has shown these indicators are just as consistent with accidental fires or any fire reaching flashover conditions.
  • Chemical testing for accelerants (petroleum distillates) also produced false positives because many household products — including glues, adhesives, and floor coverings — contain the same compounds.
  • Multiple people were convicted of arson-murder based on fire investigation methods now known to be pseudoscience.

More California Cases: Discredited Expert Testimony

EXONERATED — 21 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Kenneth Marsh — San Diego County, 1983

One of California's first overturned Shaken Baby Syndrome convictions.

  • In January 1983, 33-month-old Phillip Buell died after falling off a couch and hitting his head on a brick hearth. A San Diego police investigation concluded the death was accidental.
  • Despite the police finding, prosecutors called several doctors from Children's Hospital who testified that a short fall could not have caused the fatal injuries and that Marsh must have beaten the child.
  • Marsh was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 15 years to life.
  • In 2002, the California Innocence Project filed a 180-page habeas petition with declarations from medical experts who concluded much of the medical evidence used to convict Marsh was inaccurate.
  • The San Diego DA's own expert re-examined the evidence and could not support the original analysis.
  • On August 10, 2004, a Superior Court judge set aside Marsh's conviction and he was released after 21 years. All charges were dropped. He was awarded $756,900 in state compensation.
EXONERATED — 15 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Clifton Jones — Northern California, SBS Case

  • Jones was wrongfully convicted in the death of his infant son based on medical evidence that has since been proven false.
  • The prosecution relied on the "triad" of symptoms — subdural hematoma, brain swelling, and retinal hemorrhages — as proof of violent shaking.
  • Modern biomechanical research showed these symptoms could result from short falls, medical conditions, and birth trauma.
  • Jones was freed after more than 15 years of wrongful incarceration. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 11 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Regi Tanubagijo — Solano County, SBS Case (full case →)

  • Tanubagijo was wrongfully incarcerated for 11 years for the death of his infant foster son.
  • The conviction was based on Shaken Baby Syndrome medical testimony that has since been undermined by advances in science.
  • A Solano County judge reversed and vacated his convictions on May 7, 2025, and Tanubagijo walked out of San Quentin Rehabilitation Center nine days later.
  • Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 16 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

George Souliotes — Stanislaus County, 1997

The California arson case that exposed the collapse of outdated fire investigation science.

  • In January 1997, a fire destroyed a rental property owned by Souliotes, killing three people.
  • Fire investigators determined the fire was arson based on indicators — such as "pour patterns" — that modern fire science has since discredited.
  • Forensic tests found a "medium petroleum distillate" (MPD) at the fire scene and on Souliotes' shoes. But MPDs are now known to exist in many household products including glues and adhesives used in floor coverings and footwear.
  • Souliotes' attorneys persuaded the judge of his "actual innocence," arguing his conviction was based on faulty fire science and that no reasonable juror today would convict.
  • The State of California conceded it could not prove the fire was deliberately set.
  • Souliotes was released on July 3, 2013 after 16 years in prison. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — FIRST CA HAIR COMPARISON REVERSAL

Glenn Payne — Santa Clara County, Microscopic Hair Case

The first microscopic hair comparison reversal and dismissal in California state court history.

  • Payne's conviction relied on testimony from a criminalist who used microscopic hair comparison analysis — a technique the FBI later admitted was scientifically flawed.
  • The criminalist who testified at Payne's trial repudiated his own testimony, admitting his analysis was invalid.
  • On January 26, 2018, the Santa Clara County Superior Court vacated Payne's conviction and the DA dismissed all charges.
  • Payne had spent 15 years in prison. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 28 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Bob Fenenbock — Los Angeles County, 1991

  • Fenenbock was convicted of murder based on the testimony of a 9-year-old boy.
  • Defense lawyers later established the child had been coached by a therapist and convinced by detectives that Fenenbock was part of a conspiracy to kill the victim.
  • After 28 years in prison, his conviction was overturned in 2019. Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 18 YEARS — JAILHOUSE INFORMANT IMPLICATED

Jeremy Puckett — Sacramento County, 2001

  • Puckett was jailed on murder and robbery charges in the death of Anthony Galati.
  • Sacramento County sheriff's officials relied on a jailhouse informant who was himself worried about being tied to the robbery and murder — giving him a powerful motive to deflect blame.
  • After nearly 20 years in prison, Puckett was exonerated and found innocent.
EXONERATED — 15 YEARS — FLAWED MEDICAL EVIDENCE

Larry Pohlschneider — Tehama County

  • Pohlschneider was convicted of child molestation based on flawed medical evidence.
  • The Tehama County Superior Court overturned his conviction after the Northern California Innocence Project demonstrated the medical testimony used at trial was unreliable.
  • After nearly 15 years of wrongful imprisonment, all charges were dismissed.
EXONERATED — 30 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Jimmie Dick — Northern California

  • Dick spent 30 years in prison before being exonerated with the help of the Northern California Innocence Project.
  • His case involved issues with the reliability of witness testimony and evidence presented at trial.
EXONERATED — 12 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Kenneth Foley — Northern California

  • Foley spent 12 years in prison before being exonerated by the Northern California Innocence Project.
  • His conviction was based on evidence and testimony that was later discredited.
EXONERATED — 13 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Kevin Harper — Northern California

  • Harper spent 13 years in prison before being freed by the Northern California Innocence Project.
  • His case was one of many where witness testimony or forensic evidence was later shown to be unreliable.
EXONERATED — 10 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Peter Rose — Northern California

  • Rose was wrongfully convicted and spent 10 years in prison.
  • The ACLU documented his case as involving significant issues with the evidence and testimony used to convict him.
  • Represented by the Northern California Innocence Project.
34+ Convictions overturned based on discredited bite mark "evidence" alone. An entire forensic discipline debunked — after decades of destroying lives.

📋 The Scope of the Problem

California leads the nation in exonerations. Every name on this page represents a life destroyed by unreliable testimony.

California has 345+ total exonerations listed in the National Registry of Exonerations — more than any other state. The leading contributing factors: perjury or false accusation (42%), official misconduct by police or prosecutors (39%), mistaken eyewitness identification (26%), and inadequate defense counsel (19%). Together, they demonstrate that wrongful convictions based on bad witnesses are not isolated incidents — they are a systemic failure.

345+ Total California exonerations in the National Registry. 42% involved perjury or false accusation. 39% involved official misconduct. These are not edge cases — they are the system.

California Innocence Project Exonerations

EXONERATED — 21 YEARS WRONGFULLY IMPRISONED

Suzanne Johnson — San Diego County, 1999

  • On June 24, 1997, Johnson called 911 after baby Jasmine, under her care, became limp and struggled to breathe. The infant had fallen from a high chair earlier that day, aggravating a prior head injury. Despite rescue efforts, Jasmine died.
  • Five expert witnesses testified that Jasmine's injuries were not accidental, relying on "Shaken Baby Syndrome" diagnosis that has since been debunked.
  • Despite a first trial ending in a hung jury, Johnson was convicted at a second trial of assault on a child causing death and sentenced to life in prison.
  • Years later, the science of forensic pediatric pathology changed dramatically: the "triad" of symptoms is no longer diagnostic of abuse, and short accidental falls can cause identical injuries.
  • On April 3, 2020, Johnson was released after 21 years in prison. Governor Newsom granted clemency. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 13 YEARS — NINE WITNESSES NEVER CALLED

Daniel Larsen — Los Angeles County, 1999

  • In 1999, two police officers testified they saw Larsen toss a knife under a car in a bar parking lot. Larsen was convicted of possession of a concealed weapon.
  • Under California's Three Strikes Law, the minor offense triggered a sentence of 27 years to life.
  • Larsen's now-disbarred trial attorney failed to discover nine eyewitnesses — including a former Chief of Police from North Carolina — who saw another man toss the knife. The defense called zero witnesses.
  • Federal Magistrate Judge Suzanne Segal found Larsen was "actually innocent" and ordered his release. The 9th Circuit upheld the ruling in 2013.
  • Larsen was freed after 13 years. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 29 YEARS — JUNK ARSON SCIENCE

JoAnn Parks — Los Angeles County, 1993

  • In April 1989, a fire destroyed Parks' home, killing her three children. JoAnn Parks was charged with murder based on an arson determination.
  • Fire investigators relied on indicators now proven scientifically invalid — "pour patterns" and "burn indicators" that modern fire science has shown are equally consistent with accidental fires.
  • Parks was convicted of three counts of first-degree murder and sentenced to life without parole.
  • Modern fire science experts reviewed the case and concluded the original arson determination was based on outdated and discredited methodology.
  • In 2020, Governor Newsom commuted Parks' sentence. She was released on January 12, 2021 after 29 years. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 16 YEARS — PERJURED TESTIMONY EXPOSED

Reggie Cole — Los Angeles County, 1994

  • In 1994, 18-year-old Reggie Cole was convicted of the murder of Felipe Gonzalez Angeles outside a South Los Angeles brothel. No physical evidence connected him to the crime.
  • The prosecution's key witness, John Jones (a convicted pimp), testified he saw Cole shoot the victim. Jones perjured himself by testifying he received no benefit for cooperating — in fact, the DA granted him favorable treatment on a pimping and pandering charge.
  • At a 2007 hearing, Jones admitted he had never actually seen the shooter and had relied on descriptions from his daughters.
  • Cole's conviction was vacated in April 2009. He was freed after 16 years. Los Angeles paid $5.2 million to settle his federal lawsuit. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 7 YEARS — POLICE TIMELINE FABRICATED

Kimberly Long — Riverside County, 2003

  • On October 6, 2003, Kimberly Long returned home to find her boyfriend Oswaldo "Ozzy" Conde murdered. She called 911.
  • Police built their case on a witness statement about drop-off time that created a gap in Long's timeline. Her first trial ended in a mistrial with most jurors believing she was innocent. She was convicted at a second trial and sentenced to 15 years to life.
  • Forensic pathology evidence proved Conde died long before the alleged drop-off time. Unknown male DNA was found at the crime scene. The victim had a restraining order against his ex-girlfriend who had threatened to "slash throats."
  • On April 22, 2021, the Riverside DA dismissed all charges, resulting in Long's full exoneration. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 17 YEARS — ALIBI AT SCHOOL IGNORED

Kiera Newsome — Los Angeles County, 2003

  • In April 2001, Christian Henton was murdered by a single shot. Kiera Newsome was only 17 years old when charged.
  • At the time of the murder, Newsome was at school, nearly 10 miles away. Her presence was documented by hourly attendance logs, in-class assignments, and testimony from her teacher. The defense presented all of this at trial.
  • Despite this airtight alibi, an eyewitness identified Newsome — even though the witness described the shooter as having a "lazy eye" that Newsome does not have, and another witness identified a completely different person.
  • Newsome was convicted and sentenced to 60 years to life. Governor Brown commuted her sentence in 2018. She was freed on April 7, 2020. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
EXONERATED — 28 YEARS — DNA PROVED INNOCENCE

Gerardo Cabanillas — Los Angeles County, 1995

  • In 1995, a couple was attacked while sitting in a parked car in South Gate. Police arrested Cabanillas based on a suggestive identification procedure.
  • Victims had serious doubts about their identifications but committed only after the detective told them Cabanillas had confessed. In reality, Cabanillas only "confessed" after the detective promised he would get probation and go home if he admitted guilt.
  • Police found no physical evidence connecting Cabanillas to the crime.
  • DNA testing on the rape kit proved two other people committed the assault.
  • On September 26, 2023, a judge found Cabanillas factually innocent and ordered his release after 28 years. Represented by the California Innocence Project.
RELEASED — 25 YEARS — HALF-BROTHER CONFESSED

Rodney Patrick McNeal — San Bernardino County, 1997

  • McNeal, a probation officer, was convicted of the 1997 murder of his pregnant wife Debra and sentenced to 30 years to life.
  • Phone records and eyewitness testimony proved McNeal was at his office until 12:15 p.m. and arrived home at 12:30 p.m. — just before he called 911. Police arrived at 12:32 p.m. It was physically impossible for him to have committed the crime in that timeframe.
  • McNeal's half-brother, Jeffery West, confessed to the murder to two separate witnesses: one described in detail how West beat Debra until unconscious and dragged her to the bathroom.
  • Despite the confession and impossibility of the timeline, McNeal spent 25 years in prison before release on October 28, 2022. Represented by the California Innocence Project.

Loyola Project for the Innocent Exonerations

EXONERATED — 20 YEARS — EYEWITNESS MISIDENTIFICATION

Marco Contreras — Los Angeles County, 1996

  • On September 10, 1996, Jose Garcia was shot at a gas station in Compton. A witness across the street heard the shot and saw the victim being chased. She identified the getaway truck's license plate.
  • The truck was registered to Marco Contreras. An eyewitness misidentified him as the shooter — despite the fact that Contreras was home sleeping after working a graveyard shift as a security guard.
  • Contreras was convicted of attempted murder and robbery and sentenced to life plus seven years.
  • The real shooter, Antonio Salgado, shared a "strikingly similar appearance" with Contreras. The DA's Conviction Review Unit found the misidentification. In 2017, Contreras was freed after 20 years.
  • Salgado and his accomplice were convicted of the attempted murder in 2019. Represented by the Loyola Project for the Innocent.
DECLARED FACTUALLY INNOCENT — 15 YEARS

Abraham Villalobos — Los Angeles County, 2000

  • Villalobos was convicted of a fatal shooting at an apartment complex in Downey, California in September 2000 and sentenced to prison.
  • The LA County DA's Conviction Integrity Unit received new evidence pointing to the actual shooter, who confessed his role to a family member.
  • The evidence also established that Villalobos was not even at the scene of the shooting.
  • After 15 years in custody, Villalobos was granted parole in 2015 but was deported to Mexico because of the conviction.
  • On March 6, 2024, Villalobos was declared factually innocent. Represented by the Loyola Project for the Innocent.
DECLARED FACTUALLY INNOCENT — 42 YEARS

Kelvin Fuller — Los Angeles County, 1982

  • Fuller was wrongfully convicted of rape, kidnapping, and robbery in Los Angeles and sentenced to prison.
  • One of the actual perpetrators confessed and his confession was corroborated by the other three perpetrators, who repeatedly refuted Fuller's involvement over the years.
  • On September 25, 2024, a joint habeas petition by the DA's Conviction Integrity Unit and the Loyola Project for the Innocent was granted. Fuller's convictions were vacated, charges dismissed, and he was declared factually innocent.
  • Fuller spent 42 years in prison. In February 2025, he was awarded $1,727,380 in compensation.
MURDER & KIDNAPPING VACATED — 40+ YEARS

Ernest Cox — Los Angeles County

  • Cox was wrongfully convicted of murder and kidnapping in Los Angeles County.
  • His convictions were vacated on October 4, 2024, thanks to advocacy by the Loyola Project for the Innocent.
  • Cox was released from prison after serving more than 40 years for a crime he did not commit.

Death Row Exonerations: Bad Witnesses Put People on Death Row

EXONERATED FROM DEATH ROW — 41 YEARS — 200TH DEATH ROW EXONEREE IN U.S.

Larry Roberts — California, 1983

  • In 1983, Roberts was convicted of the murder of a fellow prisoner and a prison guard at the California Medical Center in Vacaville. He was sentenced to death.
  • The only witnesses to the stabbings were fellow prisoners who testified against Roberts.
  • A federal court found that prosecutors "suppressed exculpatory evidence, suborned perjury, and presented evidence the prosecutor knew or should have known was false."
  • The California Supreme Court overturned one of the convictions. After 41 years, the California AG agreed not to retry him. Roberts became the 200th person exonerated from death row in the United States on July 1, 2024.
PARDONED — 39 YEARS — UNRELIABLE WITNESSES & DNA

Craig Coley — Ventura County, 1978

  • On November 11, 1978, Rhonda Wicht and her 4-year-old son Donald were found murdered in their Simi Valley apartment. Coley, Rhonda's ex-boyfriend, was convicted after two trials (the first ended in a hung jury).
  • The case relied on unreliable witnesses whose stories changed over time. A neighbor claimed she saw Coley leaving the apartment, but investigators later determined her window position made that physically impossible.
  • Three police officers later testified that the original detective had "mishandled the investigation or framed Mr. Coley" with "tunnel vision."
  • DNA testing found another man's sperm on the bedsheet where the victim was found — Coley's DNA was absent from all evidence.
  • Governor Brown pardoned Coley on November 22, 2017 after 39 years. Simi Valley paid $21 million to settle his lawsuit.

Recent California Exonerations (2023–2025)

EXONERATED — 17 YEARS — COERCED TEEN CONFESSION & FLAWED IDENTIFICATION

Charlotte Pleytez & Lombardo Palacios — Los Angeles County, 2009 (full case →)

  • In 2009, both were convicted of killing Hector Flores, who was shot in his car in East Hollywood. Palacios was 15 years old at the time of arrest.
  • Pleytez was identified from a mug shot book containing only two women. Two of three witness identifications used equivocal language like "stood out the most" and "resembles the suspect" — not definitive IDs.
  • Palacios confessed only after more than 100 denials as detectives lied about evidence. This coercive interrogation of a minor is now illegal under California law.
  • The DA's Conviction Integrity Unit found that Palacios and Pleytez were not at the scene and not involved in any way. New evidence pointed to different suspects.
  • Both were exonerated after 17 years. LA DA Nathan Hochman publicly apologized for their wrongful imprisonment.
EXONERATED — 35+ YEARS — IDENTITY STOLEN, THEN CONVICTED OF STEALING IT

William Woods — California, 2024

  • In one of the most bizarre wrongful conviction cases in California history, Woods had his identity stolen by a co-worker in 1988 — and then was convicted of identity theft and impersonation when he tried to reclaim it.
  • The real thief, Matthew David Keirans, lived under Woods' identity for over 30 years while Woods spent years homeless, unable to prove who he was.
  • In 2021, Woods was arrested and convicted of stealing his own identity based on testimony and records built up by Keirans over decades.
  • On April 11, 2024, after Keirans admitted the truth in federal court, Woods' conviction was vacated and all charges dismissed.

🔥 The Bakersfield Witch Hunt: Children as Weapons

36 convicted. 34 overturned. The children who testified were coached, coerced, and weaponized by prosecutors and social workers.

In the mid-1980s, Kern County prosecutors under District Attorney Edward R. Jagels launched a series of mass child sex abuse prosecutions. The cases alleged elaborate satanic ritual abuse "rings" involving dozens of children. At least 36 people were convicted and most spent years — some decades — in prison. 34 of those convictions were eventually overturned after it was revealed that children were subjected to coercive, suggestive, and leading interrogation techniques that produced false testimony.

The county paid nearly $10 million in settlements to the wrongfully convicted. The cases are documented in the 2008 documentary Witch Hunt, narrated by Sean Penn.

SYSTEMIC SCANDAL — 34 CONVICTIONS OVERTURNED

The Interrogation Techniques That Produced False Testimony

  • Police and social workers used highly suggestive questioning techniques on children, telling them that other children had already "told the truth" about abuse.
  • Therapists and law enforcement coached children to provide increasingly dramatic and detailed accusations that escalated into claims of satanic rituals.
  • "Correct" answers were rewarded while denials of abuse were treated as signs of further trauma, creating an interrogation environment where children learned what adults wanted to hear.
  • Children were interviewed repeatedly over weeks and months, with each session building on prior contaminated testimony.
  • Multiple child witnesses recanted as adults, admitting they had been coerced into making false allegations.
EXONERATED — 1,000+ YEAR COMBINED SENTENCES OVERTURNED

Scott & Brenda Kniffen and Alvin & Debbie McCuan — Kern County, 1984

  • The Kniffens and McCuans were the first defendants convicted in the Kern County sex ring prosecutions, charged with operating a child molestation ring.
  • They received a combined sentence of more than 1,000 years in prison.
  • The convictions were based entirely on testimony from children subjected to the coercive interview techniques described above. No physical evidence supported the allegations.
  • In 1996, after 12 years in prison, all four convictions were overturned. The couples were released.
EXONERATED — 15 YEARS — COACHING TAPE DISCOVERED

Jeffrey Modahl — Kern County, 1984

  • Modahl was convicted of participating in a "child sex abuse ring" along with his wife, Ruth Taylor, and members of the Cox family.
  • At the 1999 habeas hearing, Modahl's lawyer presented key evidence withheld by the DA's office: a medical exam revealing that one child had not been sodomized (contradicting the prosecution's claims) and a tape recording of a social worker inventing explicit descriptions of sexual abuse and pressuring a child to affirm them.
  • After serving 15 years in prison, Modahl was released in May 1999 and all charges were dropped.
EXONERATED — 373-YEAR SENTENCE OVERTURNED — CHILDREN RECANTED

Rick & Marcella Pitts — Kern County, 1985

  • The Pitts case charged seven adults with coordinated molestation of multiple victims. Marcella Pitts received a 373-year sentence.
  • Marcella told reporters that the charges stemmed from a custody dispute — her ex-husband's wife had fabricated allegations to prevent Marcella from regaining custody of her children.
  • Three child witnesses recanted their testimony as adults.
  • The California Supreme Court refused to reinstate the convictions, citing the recantations and the burden a retrial would place on the other alleged victims.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED

Jack & Jackie Cummings — Kern County, 1985

  • Husband and wife Jack and Jackie Cummings were convicted of child molestation as part of the Kern County sex ring prosecutions.
  • Like other defendants, their convictions relied on coerced testimony from children who were subjected to suggestive interrogation techniques.
  • Their convictions were overturned on appeal.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED

Marjorie Grafton — Kern County

  • Grafton was convicted as part of the mass Kern County child abuse prosecutions.
  • Her conviction was reversed on appeal after the coercive interview techniques used on child witnesses were exposed.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED

Timothy Palomo — Kern County

  • Palomo was convicted as part of the Kern County sex ring prosecutions.
  • His conviction was reversed on appeal. Like all defendants in these cases, the prosecution relied entirely on child testimony produced through coercive methods.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED — PART OF THE COX FAMILY "RING"

Members of the Cox Family & Ruth Taylor — Kern County, 1984

  • Multiple members of the Cox family and Ruth Taylor (Jeffrey Modahl's wife) were convicted alongside Modahl in the alleged sex abuse ring.
  • The hidden tape of a social worker coaching children to make false accusations was central to overturning these convictions.
  • Convictions were overturned after the concealed evidence came to light.
34 Kern County child abuse convictions overturned. The children who testified were not liars — they were victims of a system that coached them to say what adults wanted to hear.

👶 Coached Children: The McMartin Preschool Case

The most expensive criminal trial in American history — built entirely on testimony that interviewers manufactured.

7-YEAR PROSECUTION — ZERO CONVICTIONS — $15 MILLION COST

The McMartin Preschool Trial — Los Angeles County, 1983–1990

  • In 1983, a mother accused a teacher at the McMartin Preschool in Manhattan Beach of molesting her son. The accusation triggered a panic that eventually involved hundreds of alleged acts of sexual abuse against dozens of children.
  • Psychological examiners at Children's Institute International (CII) asked leading questions, told children that others had already disclosed abuse, and rewarded "correct" answers. Transcripts showed far more speech from adults than children.
  • Initially, children denied abuse. After repeated coercive interviews, allegations escalated to include satanic rituals, secret tunnels, and animal sacrifice — none of which were ever substantiated.
  • In 2005, one of the children retracted his allegations, admitting he lied because investigators kept pushing him to give the answers they wanted.
  • After 7 years of prosecution and $15 million in costs, Peggy McMartin Buckey was acquitted on all counts. Ray Buckey was cleared on 52 of 65 counts. The remaining counts resulted in a mistrial, and all charges were eventually dropped.
  • The McMartin trial remains the longest and most expensive criminal trial in American history, and a landmark example of how manufactured child testimony can destroy lives.

🔬 Crime Lab Scandals: When "Expert" Witnesses Are Frauds

Lab technicians who stole drugs, fabricated results, and destroyed the credibility of thousands of cases.

Forensic crime lab analysts are treated as expert witnesses whose testimony carries enormous weight. When those analysts commit fraud, steal evidence, or falsify results, every case they touched is potentially tainted. California has experienced multiple crime lab scandals that called thousands of convictions into question.

1,500+ CASES DISMISSED — LAB SHUT DOWN

The San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal — Deborah Madden (2010)

  • In December 2009, SFPD received a tip that crime lab technician Deborah Madden was stealing cocaine from evidence she was supposed to be testing. A vial of cocaine was found on her dresser by her sister.
  • Police Chief George Gascon shut down the entire crime lab on March 9, 2010. Drug testing was outsourced to other facilities.
  • Then-DA Kamala Harris's office had to dismiss approximately 1,500 drug cases potentially tainted by Madden's handling of evidence.
  • Every drug conviction that relied on Madden's lab work was potentially compromised. Defendants who had already pleaded guilty or been convicted had no way of knowing whether the evidence against them was legitimate.
  • The scandal exposed deeper systemic problems with evidence handling at the SFPD facility, including allegations of mixed-up DNA test tubes with records destroyed.
EVIDENCE DISAPPEARED — DOJ LAB COMPROMISED

California DOJ Ripon Crime Lab — Methamphetamine Disappearances

  • The California Department of Justice discovered that quantities of methamphetamine brought in for testing at its Ripon crime lab had disappeared.
  • Missing drug evidence undermines the chain of custody and raises questions about the integrity of every case processed at the facility.
  • When evidence goes missing, it becomes impossible to verify whether the substances tested were actually what prosecutors claimed at trial.
ANALYST FIRED — FINGERPRINT EVIDENCE MISIDENTIFIED

LAPD Crime Lab Fingerprint Scandal

  • Analysts at the Los Angeles Police Department crime lab misidentified fingerprints in at least two burglary cases.
  • An analyst was fired, two supervisors were replaced, and three other employees were suspended.
  • Fingerprint evidence is treated as near-conclusive by juries. When analysts misidentify prints, innocent people can be convicted based on evidence that appears irrefutable but is actually wrong.

👮 Police Officers as False Witnesses (Beyond Rampart)

The Rampart scandal was not an anomaly. Officers who lie under oath continue to destroy lives across California.

While the LAPD Rampart scandal is the most notorious example of officer perjury in California, it is far from the only one. Police officers across the state have been caught fabricating evidence, lying on the stand, and coercing witnesses — sending innocent people to prison based on manufactured testimony.

OFFICER CHARGED WITH FELONY PERJURY, BRIBERY & WITNESS INTIMIDATION

Oakland Police Investigator Phong Tran — Alameda County

  • Tran was the lead investigator in the 2011 murder of Charles Hiawatha Butler in North Oakland.
  • He allegedly made secret cash payments totaling approximately $30,000 to witness Aisha Weber. Weber, who was homeless, testified that she witnessed the shooting.
  • In 2021, Weber recanted: "I was not truthful." She alleged Tran pressured her to lie and coached her testimony.
  • Two men — Giovonte Douglas and Cartier Hunter — spent 9 and 11 years respectively in prison based on Weber's coached testimony.
  • In April 2023, the Alameda County DA charged Tran with felony perjury, bribery, and witness intimidation. An internal affairs investigation revealed additional troubling practices at OPD.

🚫 Victims Who Lied or Recanted

When the person who said you did it admits they made it all up — and the system still resists letting you go.

In some of the most gut-wrenching wrongful conviction cases, the alleged victim later admits the crime never happened or that they identified the wrong person. Yet even with a full recantation from the accuser, the legal system often fights to keep the conviction in place.

🔒 More Orange County Snitch Scandal Cases

The scandal affected 57+ cases, but the full scope may never be known. Here are more of the lives destroyed.

The OC jailhouse informant scandal was not limited to the handful of headline cases. Investigators found that two informants received over $335,000 in cash payments between 2011 and 2015 for providing information across multiple counties including Orange, Los Angeles, San Diego, Monterey, Riverside, and San Bernardino. In addition to cash, informants received favorable consideration in their own cases, special housing with couches, televisions, gaming consoles, microwaves, refrigerators, fast food, cigarettes, laptops, and permission to cover lights and cameras.

INFORMANTS PAID $335,000+ — MULTI-COUNTY OPERATION

The Scope: Informant Operations Across Six Counties

  • Two informants alone received over $335,000 in cash payments between 2011 and 2015.
  • They provided information for cases in Orange, Los Angeles, San Diego, Monterey, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties.
  • Informants received: favorable consideration in their own cases, special housing with a couch, TV, gaming console, microwave, and refrigerator, fast food, cigarettes, laptops, phone cards, and permission to cover lights and surveillance cameras.
  • The ACLU filed a lawsuit alleging the scandal tainted at least 140 cases — far more than the 57 initially identified.
PROSECUTOR ACCUSED OF CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY

Prosecutor Ebrahim Baytieh — Orange County (Now a Judge)

  • Baytieh, now a sitting judge, was accused in court filings of leading a "criminal conspiracy to cover up police misconduct and withhold evidence" when he was a high-ranking Orange County prosecutor.
  • He was identified as a key figure in the concealment of informant evidence in the Paul Gentile Smith murder case.
  • Smith's murder conviction was thrown out in 2021 after the DA's office conceded the defendant should receive a new trial.
  • The fact that Baytieh was promoted to judge despite these allegations exemplifies the lack of accountability for prosecutors who participate in informant abuses.
DOJ CONFIRMED UNCONSTITUTIONAL PRACTICES — 2022

U.S. Department of Justice Findings — Orange County, 2022

  • In October 2022, the U.S. Department of Justice issued findings confirming unconstitutional practices in the Orange County jail informant program.
  • The DOJ found that OCSD had systematically violated the constitutional rights of defendants by using informants to extract statements from represented defendants.
  • A reform agreement between the DOJ and OCSD was signed in January 2025.
  • The reform agreement came more than a decade after defense attorney Scott Sanders first exposed the program in the Dekraai case.

👮 More LAPD Rampart Scandal Defendants

106 convictions overturned. Here are more names from the largest police corruption scandal in LAPD history.

EXONERATED — CONVICTED ON FABRICATED DRUG CHARGES

Rampart Batch Exonerations: Drug Offense Victims

Dozens of defendants were convicted of drug offenses based on drugs planted by Rampart CRASH officers who then testified under oath that the drugs were found on the defendants. These include:

  • Juan Rojo — Convicted on fabricated drug charges. Exonerated after Rampart investigation.
  • Carlos Romero — Convicted on fabricated evidence. Exonerated.
  • Blanca Sahagun — One of the few women caught up in the Rampart scandal. Convicted on false officer testimony. Exonerated.
  • Sergio Salcido — Convicted on fabricated evidence. Exonerated.
  • Gene Serrano — Convicted on perjured officer testimony. Exonerated.
EXONERATED — CONVICTED ON FALSE WEAPONS & ASSAULT CHARGES

More Rampart Exonerations: Weapons & Assault Victims

  • Juan Suares — Convicted on charges supported by false officer testimony. Exonerated.
  • Daniel Tapia — Convicted based on fabricated evidence by CRASH officers. Exonerated.
  • James Thomas — Convicted on perjured testimony. Exonerated.
  • Paul Thompson — Convicted on fabricated charges. Exonerated.
  • Juan Torrecillas — Convicted on false testimony. Exonerated.
  • Aristide Vanegas — Convicted based on fabricated evidence. Exonerated.
EXONERATED — MORE RAMPART VICTIMS

Additional Rampart Exonerations

  • Gregorio Vasquez — Convicted on false evidence. Exonerated.
  • Edward Villanueva — Convicted on perjured officer testimony. Exonerated.
  • Laura Villatora — Convicted based on fabricated evidence. Exonerated.
  • Rene Vriones — Convicted on false testimony. Exonerated.
  • Mohammed Wesley — Convicted on perjured testimony. Exonerated.
  • Michael Williams — Convicted based on fabricated evidence by CRASH officers. Exonerated.
  • Miguel Yanez — Convicted on false testimony. Exonerated.
  • Rafael Zambrano — Convicted based on fabricated evidence. Exonerated.
200+ Cases now exposed on this page. Every single one represents a real person whose life was destroyed by unreliable testimony, junk science, coached witnesses, or outright perjury.

Know Your Rights: Confronting Bad Witnesses

The Constitution gives you powerful tools to challenge unreliable witnesses. Here is how to use them.

Your Right to Confront Witnesses (6th Amendment)

  • The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment guarantees your right to face your accusers in open court and cross-examine them.
  • Under Crawford v. Washington (2004), testimonial statements from witnesses who do not appear at trial are generally inadmissible unless the witness is unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine.
  • This means hearsay from informants cannot simply be read into the record — the informant must take the stand and face cross-examination.
  • Your attorney has the right to question witnesses about their bias, motive, criminal record, deals with prosecutors, prior inconsistent statements, and any other factor affecting credibility.

How to Impeach Prosecution Witnesses at Trial

  • Prior inconsistent statements (Evidence Code 770) — If a witness said something different before trial, your attorney can confront them with the contradiction.
  • Criminal record (Evidence Code 788) — Prior felony convictions, especially those involving dishonesty, can be used to attack credibility.
  • Bias or motive — Cross-examination can expose that the witness has a personal reason to lie: a deal with prosecutors, a grudge against the defendant, or a pending case.
  • Expert testimony on eyewitness reliability — Defense attorneys can call experts to educate the jury about the science of memory and identification.
  • Character for untruthfulness (Evidence Code 1100-1103) — Witnesses who know the testifying witness can testify about that person's reputation for dishonesty.

How to Investigate Prosecution Witnesses

  • Demand full discovery: Under Brady, Giglio, and California Penal Code 1054.1-1054.2, the prosecution must disclose all material favorable to the defense, including witness criminal records, deals, and prior statements.
  • Run background checks: Defense investigators can search public court records, social media, and other sources for witness criminal history and credibility issues.
  • Subpoena jail records: For jailhouse informant cases, subpoena housing records, commissary records, and visitor logs to show patterns of informant placement and benefits.
  • Interview witnesses independently: Defense attorneys and investigators have the right to contact and interview prosecution witnesses (with limited exceptions).
  • CPRA requests: Use the California Public Records Act to obtain law enforcement records about informant programs, witness payments, and officer disciplinary histories (Pitchess motions for personnel records).

Filing Complaints About False Testimony

  • Perjury — Penal Code 118: Any person who willfully makes a false statement under oath is guilty of perjury, punishable by 2-4 years in state prison. This applies to witnesses who lie at trial.
  • Subornation of perjury — PC 127: If a prosecutor or police officer knowingly induces a witness to give false testimony, they are guilty of subornation of perjury.
  • Preparing false evidence — PC 132, 134: It is a felony to offer evidence you know to be false or to prepare false evidence for use in a proceeding.
  • State Bar complaint: If a prosecutor knowingly used false testimony, file a complaint with the California State Bar.
  • Federal civil rights action: Under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983, you can sue government actors who violated your constitutional rights through the use of fabricated evidence or false testimony.

Top 500 Witness-Credibility Cases (auto-generated from database)

#1

People v. Daniel Saldana

Defendant: Daniel Saldana · Los Angeles County · 1990 · 33 years imprisoned · $19,100,000 settlement

90/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in 1989 drive-by shooting outside Baldwin Park high school football game that injured two students. Baldwin Park detective fabricated evidence and pressured witnesses. Co-defendant Raul Vidal told parole board in 2017 that Saldana was not present. LA DA Conviction Integrity Unit exonerated him in May 2023. $19.1M settlement from Baldwin Park.

  • Baldwin Park detective — officer
  • Raul Vidal (co-defendant) — incentivized
Source 1 · Source 2
#2

People v. Kash Delano Register

Defendant: Kash Delano Register · Los Angeles County · 1979 · 34 years imprisoned · $16,700,000 settlement

90/100 EXONERATED

Convicted at age 18 by all-white jury. Witness's sister (LAPD civilian employee) told detective sister was lying - detective told her to keep quiet. Exonerated 2013. $16.7M settlement.

  • Brenda Anderson — eyewitness
  • Sheila Vanderkam (Anderson's sister) — eyewitness
  • Detective Richard Zolkowski — officer
Source 1
#3

People v. Andrew Leander Wilson

Defendant: Andrew Leander Wilson · Los Angeles County · 1986 · 32 years imprisoned · $14,000,000 settlement

86/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of 1984 robbery and murder of Christopher Hanson. Key eyewitness Lila Bishop identified Wilson only after police pointed to his photo. Bishop had previously filed a false kidnapping/rape report and was deemed unreliable by police. A friend told prosecutors Bishop may have been the killer. None of this was disclosed to defense. Loyola Law School innocence project secured reversal in 2017. $14M settlement from City of Los Angeles.

  • Lila Bishop — eyewitness
Source 1 · Source 2
#4

People v. Klene & Dumbrique

Defendant: John Klene & Eduardo Dumbrique · Los Angeles County · 1997 · 23 years imprisoned · $24,000,000 settlement

95/100 EXONERATED

Both convicted as teenagers of 1997 gang murder in Hawthorne. Life without parole. Snitch Santo 'Payaso' Alvarez offered information to get out of jail - later admitted 'just trying to talk his way out.' LASD fabricated witness statements. Dying man confessed 2012. Exonerated 2021.

  • Santo 'Payaso' Alvarez — informant
  • LASD investigators — officer
#5

People v. Alexander Torres

Defendant: Alexander Torres · Los Angeles County · 2001 · 21 years imprisoned · $14,000,000 settlement

84/100 EXONERATED

Convicted at age 20 of 2000 murder of Martin Guitron in Paramount. No physical evidence. LASD detectives manufactured evidence including phony identification from surviving witness Valdovinos. Coerced witnesses to blame Torres. Getaway driver later admitted he and another man committed the crime. Found factually innocent April 2022 by CIU and California Innocence Project. $14M settlement from LA County.

  • Enrique Valdovinos — eyewitness
  • LASD detectives (3 officers) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#6

People v. Geronimo Pratt

Defendant: Geronimo Pratt · Los Angeles County · 1972 · 27 years imprisoned · $4,500,000 settlement

80/100 EXONERATED

Black Panther Party member convicted of murder. Evidence proved he was 400 miles away. FBI COINTELPRO targeted him. Cross-racial ID. Exonerated 1997.

  • Eyewitness (cross-racial identification) — eyewitness
Source 1
#7

People v. Humberto Duran

Defendant: Humberto Duran (case 2) · Los Angeles County · 1993 · 29 years imprisoned

62/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in 1993 for East Los Angeles murder based on single eyewitness testimony. Maintained innocence for decades. Witness recanted. Court declared Duran factually innocent in 2025 after nearly 30 years. Note: this is the factual innocence finding for the case already in database as INFORMANT-006.

  • Recanting eyewitness — recanting
Source 1
#8

People v. Francisco 'Franky' Carrillo Jr.

Defendant: Francisco 'Franky' Carrillo Jr. · Los Angeles County · 1992 · 20 years imprisoned · $10,783,300 settlement

80/100 EXONERATED

Convicted at age 16 of drive-by murder. Deputy steered witness IDs. All six eyewitnesses later recanted. Crime scene reenactment proved physically impossible to see shooter. Two other men confessed. Featured in Netflix's The Innocence Files.

  • Six eyewitnesses (all recanted) — eyewitness
  • Deputy Craig Ditsch — officer
Source 1
#9

People v. Quintin Morris

Defendant: Quintin Morris · Los Angeles County · 1994 · 27 years imprisoned

44/100 EXONERATED

Sentenced to three life sentences plus 12 years for three counts of attempted first-degree murder in 1991 shooting. Howard Holt was the actual shooter, convicted of similar shootings and drove the white Cadillac linked to the crime. Holt confessed to appellate attorney and to the judge. Judge reversed conviction. Governor Brown granted clemency. Released Jan 10, 2019 after 27 years.

  • Eyewitnesses (teenage shooting victims) — eyewitness
Source 1 · Source 2
#10

People v. Susan Mellen

Defendant: Susan Mellen · Los Angeles County · 1998 · 17 years imprisoned · $12,597,200 settlement

43/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of planning murder of ex-boyfriend Richard Daly based solely on testimony of June Patti, whom the judge later called a habitual liar. Patti had long history of giving false tips to law enforcement. Three gang members subsequently linked to crime, one convicted. Another took polygraph and said Mellen was not present. Exonerated October 2014, declared factually innocent November 2014. $12M settlement from City of LA plus $597,200 state compensation.

  • June Patti — false accuser
Source 1 · Source 2
#11

People v. Vicente Benavides

Defendant: Vicente Benavides · Kern County · 1993 · 25 years imprisoned

85/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of raping and killing 21-month-old girl and sentenced to death in 1993 based on false medical evidence and coercion of key witnesses by law enforcement. Medical experts who testified at trial later recanted. CA Supreme Court found false evidence was introduced. Freed April 2018 after 25 years on death row.

  • Medical expert witnesses — expert
  • Coerced witnesses — officer
Source 1
#12

People v. Kenji A. Howard

Defendant: Kenji A. Howard · Unknown County · 1997 · 24 years imprisoned · $1,244,600 settlement

40/100 EXONERATED

In 1997, convicted of one count of murder, three counts of attempted murder, one count of shooting at an occupied vehicle, and one count of possessing a concealed firearm. In 2021, all charges were vacated by habeas corpus and dismissed upon remand. In 2024, juvenile court granted relief after DA failed to present clear and convincing proof of guilt. CalVCB approved $1,244,600 on November 21, 2024 for 8,890 days imprisonment.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#13

People v. Bruce Lisker

Defendant: Bruce Lisker · Los Angeles County · 1985 · 24 years imprisoned

40/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder in 1985 at age 17, sentenced to 16 years to life. Jailhouse informant received reduced sentence and early release for testimony. Exonerated 2009 after federal judge found LAPD detective fabricated evidence.

  • Jailhouse informant — informant
  • LAPD detective — officer
Source 1
#14

People v. Alan Gimenez

Defendant: Alan Gimenez · San Diego County · 1992 · 24 years imprisoned

39/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder of 49-day-old daughter Priscilla based on discredited Shaken Baby Syndrome diagnosis. Prosecution experts said he shook her to death. Hospital slides proved bleeding behind eyes happened after hospitalization. Record showed brain bleeding and rib fracture likely occurred during difficult birth/emergency C-section. SBS triad findings have since been scientifically discredited. Released on parole 2015 after 24 years.

  • Medical Examiner — expert
Source 1 · Source 2
#15

People v. William 'Bill' Richards

Defendant: William Richards · San Bernardino County · 1993 · 23 years imprisoned

37/100 EXONERATED

The bite mark case that changed California law. After two hung juries, forensic dentist Dr. Sperber testified bite mark matched Richards. Sperber later recanted - used distorted photo. DNA found true perpetrator. CA Supreme Court unanimously reversed. Led to SB 1058 'Bill Richards Bill.'

  • Dr. Norman 'Skip' Sperber — expert
#16

People v. Ronald Velasquez Jr.

Defendant: Ronald Velasquez Jr. · Los Angeles County · 2001 · 23 years imprisoned

37/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of first-degree murder for 2000 shooting death of Michael Roybal in Downey. Sole eyewitness initially said she could not see who was at the door, but at trial decisively identified Velasquez as the shooter. New evidence established Sergio Torres (killed in 2001 drive-by) was the true perpetrator who acted alone. Exonerated March 2024 by CIU. Sentenced to 50 years to life.

  • Sole eyewitness — eyewitness
Source 1 · Source 2
#17

People v. Michael Anderson

Defendant: Michael Anderson · Unknown County · 2003 · 22 years imprisoned · $1,150,380 settlement

37/100 EXONERATED

In 2003, convicted of first-degree murder with special circumstances of using a firearm during commission and committing the crime for the benefit of a criminal street gang. Conviction vacated by habeas corpus in 2023. Prosecution refiled charges in 2024 but court found 'no excusable neglect' for delay and dismissed. Found factually innocent. CalVCB approved $1,150,380 on May 15, 2025 for 8,217 days imprisonment.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#18

People v. Mark Sodersten

Defendant: Mark Sodersten · Unknown County · 1986 · 22 years imprisoned

36/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder. Prosecution withheld audiotapes of key witness interviews containing exculpatory evidence. Died in prison months before appellate ruling reversing conviction.

  • Key witness (name not public) — eyewitness
Source 1
#19

People v. Thomas Mooney

Defendant: Thomas Mooney · San Francisco County · 1917 · 22 years imprisoned

36/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of the 1916 Preparedness Day Bombing in San Francisco and sentenced to death. Conviction based on perjured testimony and suppressed favorable evidence. Death sentence commuted to life in 1918. Pardoned 1939 after 22 years. Historic miscarriage of justice.

  • Prosecution witnesses — false accuser
Source 1
#20

People v. Warren Billings

Defendant: Warren K. Billings · San Francisco County · 1917 · 22 years imprisoned

36/100 EXONERATED

Co-defendant with Thomas Mooney in Preparedness Day Bombing case. Same perjured testimony and suppressed evidence. Pardoned 1939.

  • Prosecution witnesses — false accuser
Source 1
#21

People v. Carmen Mejia

Defendant: Carmen Mejia · Los Angeles County · 2004 · 22 years imprisoned

36/100 EXONERATED

Exonerated March 2026 after 22 years in prison for murder she did not commit. New evidence established her innocence. Per Davis Vanguard reporting.

  • Unknown — expert
Source 1
#22

People v. Caramad Conley

Defendant: Caramad Conley · San Francisco County · 1990 · 21 years imprisoned

83/100 EXONERATED

Convicted at age 18 of 1989 gang-related drive-by shooting in San Francisco that killed 2 and injured 11+. State's main witness David Polk testified Conley confessed to him. Dec 2010 conviction vacated due to prosecution failure to disclose evidence. Case dismissed Jan 2011.

  • David Polk — informant
Source 1
#23

People v. Jane Dorotik

Defendant: Jane Dorotik · San Diego County · 2001 · 20 years imprisoned · $499,000 settlement

34/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murdering husband Robert in 2000. Sheriff dept fabricated, mishandled, or withheld evidence. Criminalist who prepared bloodstain analysis was not competent. Crime lab was unaccredited. DNA under victim fingernails did not match Jane. Officers ignored exculpatory forensic reports, omitted or altered eyewitness testimony. Murder vacated 2022 when DA conceded evidence insufficient. $499,000 settlement Nov 2025.

  • San Diego Sheriff investigators — officer
  • Bloodstain pattern analyst — expert
Source 1 · Source 2
#24
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

Cox-Modahl-Taylor Ring

Defendant: Jeffrey Modahl, Ruth Ann Taylor, Richard Cox, Teresa Cox, Anthony Cox, George Cox, Jo Hanna Cox · Kern County · 1986 · 15 years imprisoned · $6,300,000 settlement

33/100 EXONERATED

Seven defendants including entire Cox family. Key evidence withheld: medical exam showing child was NOT sodomized; audio tape of social worker inventing abuse descriptions and pressuring child. Jo Hanna Cox died in prison before exoneration.

  • Carla Jo (last name withheld) — coached child
  • Social worker (unnamed) — officer
#25

People v. Jofama Coleman

Defendant: Jofama Coleman · Los Angeles County · 2007 · 20 years imprisoned

33/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder of 16-year-old Jose Robles in South LA in 2003. Coleman was 20 at arrest. No physical or forensic evidence connected him. Key witness recanted in 2023, saying he never saw Coleman driving the van. LA DA CIU investigation found officers suppressed alibi evidence and fabricated case. Found factually innocent Feb 2024.

  • Recanting eyewitness — recanting
  • LASD investigators — officer
Source 1
#26

People v. Abel Soto

Defendant: Abel Soto · Los Angeles County · 2007 · 20 years imprisoned

33/100 EXONERATED

Co-defendant with Coleman. Only 15 years old at arrest for 2003 South LA murder. Sentenced to 72 years to life. No physical evidence connected him. Same recanting witness and officer misconduct. Found factually innocent Jan 2024 by LA DA CIU.

  • Recanting eyewitness — recanting
Source 1
#27
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Javier Francisco Ovando

Defendant: Javier Francisco Ovando · Los Angeles County · 1996 · 3 years imprisoned · $15,000,000 settlement

99/100 EXONERATED

The most devastating case of officer perjury in LAPD history. Officers Perez and Durden shot unarmed 19-year-old, leaving him paralyzed. Planted gun on him. Both testified under oath he attacked them. Sentenced to 23 years. Exonerated 1999 when Perez confessed. $15M settlement.

  • Officer Rafael Perez — officer
  • Officer Nino Durden — officer
Source 1
#28

People v. Dwayne McKinney

Defendant: Dwayne McKinney · Los Angeles County · 1981 · 19 years imprisoned

31/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of Burger King murder. Four witnesses said he was 'the man' but he did not match physical description. Cross-racial identification. Lone juror who voted guilty later expressed guilt about being pressured.

  • Four restaurant workers — eyewitness
Source 1
#29

People v. Stephen Patterson

Defendant: Stephen Patterson · Los Angeles County · 2007 · 18 years imprisoned

29/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of first-degree murder in 2005 shooting of 15-year-old Yair Oliva in South LA. Sentenced to 50 years to life. Sole eyewitness ID made two months after crime from 200 yards away through closed blinds was unreliable. No physical evidence. DA CIU identified true perpetrators. 13th exoneration under Gascon. Exonerated March 2024.

  • Single eyewitness — eyewitness
Source 1
#30
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Adams, Davalos, J. Alvarez, G. Alvarez & Menendez

Defendant: Anthony Adams, Luis Davalos, Jesse Alvarez, Jorge Alvarez, Ceaser Menendez · Los Angeles County · 1996 · 12 years imprisoned

29/100 EXONERATED

Five men convicted of manslaughter, each sentenced to 12 years. Convictions based on testimony from Sonya Flores, coached by Officer Perez to make false identifications using gang book photos. All overturned.

  • Sonya Flores — officer
  • Officer Rafael Perez — officer
Source 1
#31

People v. Clarence Chance & Benny Powell

Defendant: Clarence Chance & Benny Powell · Los Angeles County · 1975 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of deputy sheriff murder. Based on police-manipulated witnesses and perjured informant who failed two polygraphs. Exonerated 1992 after PI uncovered 4 years of evidence showing police framing.

  • Jailhouse informant (unnamed) — informant
  • Multiple manipulated witnesses — eyewitness
Source 1
#32

People v. Greg Cooper

Defendant: Greg Cooper · Unknown County · 2007 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully convicted of arson and mayhem. Conviction was product of ineffective assistance of defense counsel, junk forensic science, and false accusation. Released May 22, 2024 from Avenal State Prison after more than 17 years.

  • Forensic expert — expert
  • Accuser — false accuser
Source 1
#33

People v. Karla Baday

Defendant: Karla Baday · Unknown County · 2001 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 17 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#34

People v. Ernest Willis

Defendant: Ernest Willis · Unknown County · 1987 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder via arson fire in 1987. Exonerated in 2004 when new evidence demonstrated the fire that killed the victims was accidental, not arson. Spent 17 years on death row.

  • Arson investigators — expert
Source 1
#35

People v. Charlotte Pleytez (Detail)

Defendant: Charlotte Pleytez · Los Angeles County · 2009 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in 2009 of an East Hollywood murder from 2007. Spent more than 17 years in prison. DA CIU determined she did not commit the crime. Evidence pointed to the true perpetrators. Exoneration hearings held in late 2024.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#36

People v. Lombardo Palacios (Detail)

Defendant: Lombardo Palacios · Los Angeles County · 2009 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Co-defendant with Charlotte Pleytez. Convicted in 2009 of an East Hollywood murder from 2007. Spent more than 17 years in prison. DA CIU determined he did not commit the crime.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#37

People v. Charlotte Pleytez & Lombardo Palacios

Defendant: Charlotte Pleytez & Lombardo Palacios · Los Angeles County · 2009 · 17 years imprisoned

28/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of first-degree murder in 2007 East Hollywood killing. Eyewitness identifications later determined inaccurate. Palacios was 15 at arrest, subjected to hours-long interrogation, claimed he fired shots into the air (later recanted). Pleytez was 20 and pregnant, gave birth in handcuffs, had newborn removed after one day. Each sentenced to 50 years to life. CIU established both were innocent and not at scene. Convictions vacated December 2024 by DA Hochman.

  • Eyewitnesses (multiple) — eyewitness
Source 1 · Source 2
#38

People v. Jamal Trulove

Defendant: Jamal Trulove · San Francisco County · 2010 · 6 years imprisoned · $13,100,000 settlement

27/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of 2007 murder of friend Seu Kuka. Single eyewitness sat in police interview room for 2-3 hours with Trulove mugshot on wall without identifying him. Her ID was tentative, became certain only after seeing him on TV. Appellate court found prosecutor Linda Allen lied to jury. Conviction reversed 2014, acquitted at retrial 2015. $13.1M settlement from San Francisco.

  • Sole eyewitness (name withheld) — eyewitness
  • Prosecutor Linda Allen — officer
Source 1
#39

People v. Ajay Dev

Defendant: Ajay Dev · Yolo County · 2009 · 16 years imprisoned

26/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

Convicted of 76 counts of sexual assault against adopted daughter, sentenced to 378 years. In May 2025, Judge Beronio overturned conviction after finding substantial evidence daughter fabricated allegations. Released May 23, 2025.

  • Adopted Daughter (sealed) — false accuser
Source 1 · Source 2
#40
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Ramon Alvarez

Defendant: Ramon Alvarez · Orange County · 1998 · 10 years imprisoned

26/100 OVERTURNED

Convicted 2012 based on informant Craig Gonzales. Detective secretly paid Gonzales $11,000 after testimony. Prosecutor told jury informant received nothing. Federal court overturned conviction 2022.

  • Craig Gonzales — informant
  • Detective David Rondou — officer
Source 1
#41

People v. Giovanni Hernandez

Defendant: Giovanni Hernandez · Los Angeles County · 2006 · 15 years imprisoned

25/100 EXONERATED

Arrested at age 14 for drive-by murder. Cell phone records proved he was at home. New witness statements from previously uninterviewed witnesses. Exonerated 2023.

  • Multiple eyewitnesses — eyewitness
Source 1
#42

People v. Martin Laiwa

Defendant: Martin Laiwa · Unknown County · 2000 · 15 years imprisoned

25/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 15 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#43
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

McCuan-Kniffen Ring

Defendant: Alvin McCuan, Debbie McCuan, Scott Kniffen, Brenda Kniffen · Kern County · 1984 · 12 years imprisoned · $450,000 settlement

24/100 EXONERATED

First case of the Kern County witch hunt. Combined 1,000+ year sentences. Children coached by step-grandmother with mental illness and social workers who attended satanic ritual abuse training seminars. All four exonerated 1996 after 12 years.

  • Becky McCuan — coached child
  • Dawn McCuan — coached child
  • Brandon Kniffen — coached child
#44

People v. Harold Hall

Defendant: Harold Hall · Unknown County · 1990 · 14 years imprisoned

24/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder in 1990 in California. Two jailhouse informants testified against him. One received $25 and cigarettes; the other was promised reduction of murder charge to manslaughter. Exonerated 2004.

  • Jailhouse informant #1 — informant
  • Jailhouse informant #2 — informant
Source 1
#45
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Eric Ortiz

Defendant: Eric Ortiz · Orange County · 2006 · 9 years imprisoned

24/100 OVERTURNED

Original murder conviction reversed. Informant Donald Geary claimed confession - defense argues fabricated. Four deputies invoked Fifth Amendment. At retrial without informant evidence, jury deadlocked 10-2 for acquittal.

  • Donald Geary — informant
Source 1
#46

People v. Johnny Williams

Defendant: Johnny Williams · Unknown County · 1999 · 14 years imprisoned

23/100 EXONERATED

NCIP exoneree wrongfully convicted after falsely confessing to sexually assaulting a 9-year-old girl walking home from school on Sept 28, 1998. Served 14 years. Exonerated 2013. Classic false confession case.

  • Johnny Williams (defendant) — false accuser
Source 1
#47

People v. Troy Lee Jones

Defendant: Troy Lee Jones · Los Angeles County · 1982 · 14 years imprisoned

23/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder and sentenced to death in 1982. Exonerated in 1996 when the real murderer, Marlow Jones, confessed to the killing. Troy Lee Jones spent 14 years on death row for a crime committed by another person.

  • Unknown witnesses — eyewitness
Source 1
#48
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Leonel Vega

Defendant: Leonel Santiago Vega · Orange County · 2004 · 8 years imprisoned

22/100 OVERTURNED

Convicted of first-degree murder for gang shooting. Informant Oscar Moriel secured confession during orchestrated dayroom conversation. Sixth Amendment violation. Murder vacated, pled to voluntary manslaughter.

  • Oscar Moriel — informant
Source 1
#49

People v. Jose Olivares

Defendant: Jose Olivares · Unknown County · 2003 · 13 years imprisoned

21/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 13 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#50
Kern County Child Abuse Hysteria

People v. Ricky Lynn Pitts & others (Kern County Batch 2)

Defendant: Ricky Lynn Pitts, Marcella Pitts (additional details) · Kern County · 1984 · 12 years imprisoned

20/100 EXONERATED

Additional Kern County sex abuse hysteria defendants. Part of the wave of 36 wrongful convictions driven by coached children, coercive interview techniques, and mass hysteria. 34 convictions ultimately overturned on appeal.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
Show remaining 249 case entries (51–299)
#51
Oakland PD Officer Phong Tran Scandal

People v. Giovonte Douglas & Cartier Hunter

Defendant: Giovonte Douglas & Cartier Hunter · Alameda County · 2011 · 11 years imprisoned

19/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of 2011 North Oakland murder of Charles Butler. Key witness Aisha Weber, a homeless woman, was paid $30,000 by Oakland Police Officer Phong Tran to testify about a slaying she never witnessed. Weber recanted years later. Tran arrested on charges of felony perjury, threatening a witness, and bribery. DA announced 125+ other Tran cases must be investigated. Both men freed.

  • Aisha Weber — incentivized
  • Officer Phong Tran — officer
Source 1
#52

People v. David Allen Jones

Defendant: David Allen Jones · Los Angeles County · 1995 · 11 years imprisoned · $794,600 settlement

19/100 EXONERATED

Intellectually disabled man convicted of three murders. Actual perpetrator was serial killer Chester Dwayne Turner. DNA evidence freed Jones in 2004.

  • Witnesses/investigators — eyewitness
Source 1
#53

People v. Regi Tanubagijo

Defendant: Regi Tanubagijo · Solano County · 2014 · 11 years imprisoned

18/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully convicted of murder of infant foster son based on discredited forensic evidence. Solano County judge reversed and vacated convictions on May 7, 2025 after NCIP demonstrated forensic science used at trial was unreliable. Served 11 years.

  • Medical experts (SBS testimony) — expert
Source 1
#54

People v. Patrick Croy

Defendant: Patrick Croy · Siskiyou County · 1979 · 11 years imprisoned

18/100 EXONERATED

Sentenced to death for killing police officer Jesse Hittson. Native American defendant. Retried and jury found he killed the victim in self-defense. Exonerated 2004 after 11 years on death row. Landmark self-defense case.

  • Prosecution witnesses — officer
Source 1
#55
Kern County Child Abuse Hysteria

People v. Gerardo Gonzales (Kern County)

Defendant: Gerardo Gonzales · Kern County · 1984 · 10 years imprisoned

17/100 EXONERATED

Falsely accused of child molestation in 1984 Kern County witch hunt. Charged with 150 different counts. Conviction overturned on appeal. Part of wave of mass hysteria prosecutions by DA Ed Jagels.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#56

People v. Darwin Crabtree

Defendant: Darwin Crabtree · Unknown County · 2005 · 10 years imprisoned

17/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 10 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#57
Rampart Scandal

People v. Roberto Andrade

Defendant: Roberto Andrade · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#58
Rampart Scandal

People v. Samuel Bailey

Defendant: Samuel Bailey · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#59
Rampart Scandal

People v. Diego Barrios

Defendant: Diego Barrios · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#60
Rampart Scandal

People v. Paul Bastidas

Defendant: Paul Bastidas · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#61
Rampart Scandal

People v. Esaw Booker

Defendant: Esaw Booker · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#62
Rampart Scandal

People v. James Bryant

Defendant: James Bryant · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#63
Rampart Scandal

People v. Roberto Candido

Defendant: Roberto Candido · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#64
Rampart Scandal

People v. Arthur Carmona

Defendant: Arthur Carmona · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#65
Rampart Scandal

People v. Delbert Carrillo

Defendant: Delbert Carrillo · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#66
Rampart Scandal

People v. Dennis Cerrano

Defendant: Dennis Cerrano · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#67
Rampart Scandal

People v. Richard Dalton

Defendant: Richard Dalton · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#68
Rampart Scandal

People v. Denise Day

Defendant: Denise Day · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#69
Rampart Scandal

People v. Ivan Garfield

Defendant: Ivan Garfield · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#70
Rampart Scandal

People v. David Gordon

Defendant: David Gordon · Unknown County · 1996 · 4 years imprisoned

16/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2000, likely Rampart scandal related per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#71

People v. Chol Soo Lee

Defendant: Chol Soo Lee · San Francisco County · 1973 · 9 years imprisoned

15/100 EXONERATED

Korean man convicted of shooting Chinatown gang leader based on cross-racial eyewitness identification. Retried and acquitted 1982.

  • Eyewitnesses — eyewitness
Source 1
#72

People v. Arvind Balu (Detail)

Defendant: Arvind Balu · Lake County · 1997 · 9 years imprisoned

15/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of rape and assault in Lake County in 1997. Exonerated in 2006 based on eyewitness error. Listed in NRE and forejustice.org wrongful conviction databases.

  • Victim — eyewitness
Source 1
#73

People v. Paul Kern Imbler

Defendant: Paul Kern Imbler · Unknown County · 1961 · 8 years imprisoned

13/100 EXONERATED

Sentenced to death in California 1961. Exonerated 1969 after 8 years on death row. His subsequent civil rights lawsuit Imbler v. Pachtman (1976) went to the U.S. Supreme Court and established prosecutorial immunity doctrine.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#74

People v. Ronnie Baylor (1986 rape)

Defendant: Ronnie Baylor · Unknown County · 1988 · 8 years imprisoned

13/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of 1986 rape in California. Exonerated 1996. DNA or other evidence proved innocence.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#75
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Emmanuel Chavez

Defendant: Emmanuel Chavez · Los Angeles County · 1998 · 2 years imprisoned · $100,000 settlement

13/100 EXONERATED

One of approximately 170 people wrongfully convicted due to LAPD Rampart division corruption. DA filed habeas petition on February 23, 2000; conviction vacated and charges dismissed same day. Settled lawsuit for $100,000.

  • LAPD Rampart officers — officer
Source 1
#76
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Luis Francisco Vega

Defendant: Luis Francisco Vega · Orange County · 2009 · 2 years imprisoned

12/100 EXONERATED

Arrested at age 14 for attempted murder. Two paid informants produced information showing Vega was INNOCENT. Exculpatory evidence withheld for nearly two years. All charges dismissed.

  • Two paid informants (names sealed - juvenile case) — informant
Source 1
#77

People v. Derrick Harris

Defendant: Derrick Harris · Los Angeles County · 2013 · 7 years imprisoned

12/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully convicted of armed robbery at Hawkins House of Hamburgers in Watts in 2013. California Innocence Project took case. Actual perpetrator confessed. Exonerated Oct 2020 through LA DA Conviction Review Unit.

  • Eyewitness — eyewitness
Source 1
#78

People v. Ronald Ross

Defendant: Ronald Ross · Unknown County · 2005 · 7 years imprisoned

12/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 7 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#79

People v. Larry Booker

Defendant: Larry Booker · Unknown County · 2010 · 7 years imprisoned

12/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2017 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#80

People v. Darrell Booth

Defendant: Darrell Booth · Orange County · 2011 · 6 years imprisoned

11/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of second-degree murder in 2011 for a 1992 shooting that wasn't prosecuted for 19 years. A key exonerating eyewitness, Ellis Bradford, who identified four assailants but specifically exonerated Booth, could not be found by time of trial. No DNA or forensic evidence tied Booth to the scene. Court of Appeal reversed conviction in 2016, calling the prosecution's case 'weak.' Charges dismissed March 24, 2017.

  • Ellis Bradford — eyewitness
  • Prosecution witnesses — eyewitness
Source 1 · Source 2
#81
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

Pitts-Dill-Forsythe Ring (The Pitts Seven)

Defendant: Ricky Lynn Pitts, Marcella Pitts, Colleen Dill Forsythe, Wayne Forsythe, Grace Dill, Wayne Dill Jr., Gina Miller · Kern County · 1985 · 5 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

Seven adults convicted. Hundreds of years in combined sentences. Appeals court found prosecutor Gindes 'in his blind quest to convict, forgot or ignored his constitutional and ethical duties.' All child witnesses recanted by 1994.

  • Brian and brothers (last names withheld) — coached child
  • Three female cousins — coached child
  • Christina Hayes — coached child
#82
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Cesar Natividad & Raul Munoz

Defendant: Cesar Natividad & Raul Munoz · Los Angeles County · 1996

10/100 EXONERATED

Officers fabricated story that defendants drove truck at them. Perez later confirmed: 'None of that actually occurred. That's what we decided to come up with after they were all taken into custody.'

  • Officer Michael Buchanan — officer
  • Officer Brian Liddy — officer
  • Officer Rafael Perez — officer
Source 1
#83

People v. Longino Acero

Defendant: Longino Acero · Unknown County · 2000 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2006 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#84

People v. Joel Albert Alcox

Defendant: Joel Albert Alcox · Unknown County · 2010 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2016 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#85

People v. Daniel Aldana

Defendant: Daniel Aldana · Unknown County · 2003 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2009 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#86

People v. Riolordo Appling

Defendant: Riolordo Appling · Unknown County · 2007 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2013 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#87

People v. Jose Arteaga

Defendant: Jose Arteaga · Unknown County · 2010 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2016 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#88

People v. Arvind Baku

Defendant: Arvind Baku · Unknown County · 2000 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2006 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#89

People v. Borzou Baniani

Defendant: Borzou Baniani · Unknown County · 2008 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2014 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#90

People v. Emmanuel Castillo-Lopez

Defendant: Emmanuel Castillo-Lopez · Unknown County · 2010 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2016 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#91

People v. Boping Chen

Defendant: Boping Chen · Unknown County · 2003 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2009 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#92

People v. Cuong Dang

Defendant: Cuong Dang · Unknown County · 2003 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2009 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#93

People v. Willie Dare

Defendant: Willie Dare · Unknown County · 2009 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2015 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#94

People v. Mark Davison

Defendant: Mark Davison · Unknown County · 2007 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2013 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#95

People v. Miguel Soriano

Defendant: Miguel Soriano · Unknown County · 2003 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2009 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#96

People v. Iva Toguri D'Aquino

Defendant: Iva Toguri D'Aquino · San Francisco County · 1949 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of treason in San Francisco federal court 1949 as 'Tokyo Rose.' Witnesses were coerced into giving false testimony. Pardoned by President Ford in 1977. Historic wrongful conviction based on wartime hysteria and coerced witnesses.

  • Coerced witnesses — false accuser
Source 1
#97

People v. Damon Auguste

Defendant: Damon Auguste · Santa Clara County · 1998 · 6 years imprisoned

10/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of rape and sodomy in Santa Clara County in 1998. Exonerated in 2004 based on eyewitness error. Wrongful conviction documented in NRE and forejustice.org databases.

  • Victim/eyewitness — eyewitness
Source 1
#98
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Rodolfo Arevalo

Defendant: Rodolfo Arevalo · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Conviction vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#99
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Roberto Alvarado (Rampart)

Defendant: Roberto Alvarado · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#100
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Amaya (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Amaya · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#101
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Gustavo Arechiga (Rampart)

Defendant: Gustavo Arechiga · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#102
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Henry Arrellin (Rampart)

Defendant: Henry Arrellin · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#103
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Daniel Avila (Rampart)

Defendant: Daniel Avila · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#104
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Fernando Avila (Rampart)

Defendant: Fernando Avila · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#105
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Gabriel Berumen (Rampart)

Defendant: Gabriel Berumen · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#106
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jose Camarena (Rampart)

Defendant: Jose Camarena · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#107
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Miguel Campos (Rampart)

Defendant: Miguel Campos · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#108
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jose Cardenas (Rampart)

Defendant: Jose Cardenas · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#109
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Hugo Castro (Rampart)

Defendant: Hugo Castro · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#110
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Julio Chavez (Rampart)

Defendant: Julio Chavez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#111
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Francisco Cifuentes (Rampart)

Defendant: Francisco Cifuentes · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#112
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Michael Coleman (Rampart)

Defendant: Michael Coleman · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#113
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Cordova (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Cordova · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#114
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jose Cortez (Rampart)

Defendant: Jose Cortez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#115
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Eduardo Cruz (Rampart)

Defendant: Eduardo Cruz · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#116
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jose De Jesus (Rampart)

Defendant: Jose De Jesus · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#117
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Thomas Diaz (Rampart)

Defendant: Thomas Diaz · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#118
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Eric Dominguez (Rampart)

Defendant: Eric Dominguez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#119
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Antonio Duenas (Rampart)

Defendant: Antonio Duenas · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#120
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Francisco Escobar (Rampart)

Defendant: Francisco Escobar · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#121
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jesus Espinoza (Rampart)

Defendant: Jesus Espinoza · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#122
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Felix (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Felix · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#123
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Fernando Figueroa (Rampart)

Defendant: Fernando Figueroa · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#124
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Javier Flores (Rampart)

Defendant: Javier Flores · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#125
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Eduardo Galindo (Rampart)

Defendant: Eduardo Galindo · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#126
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Martin Garcia (Rampart)

Defendant: Martin Garcia · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#127
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Oscar Garcia (Rampart)

Defendant: Oscar Garcia · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#128
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Roberto Gonzalez (Rampart)

Defendant: Roberto Gonzalez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#129
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Luis Guerra (Rampart)

Defendant: Luis Guerra · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#130
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Ricardo Guzman (Rampart)

Defendant: Ricardo Guzman · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#131
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Alberto Herrera (Rampart)

Defendant: Alberto Herrera · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#132
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Luis Ibarra (Rampart)

Defendant: Luis Ibarra · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#133
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Daniel Jaime (Rampart)

Defendant: Daniel Jaime · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#134
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Roberto Juarez (Rampart)

Defendant: Roberto Juarez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#135
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Francisco Leon (Rampart)

Defendant: Francisco Leon · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#136
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Lozano (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Lozano · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#137
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Gabriel Maldonado (Rampart)

Defendant: Gabriel Maldonado · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#138
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Eduardo Medina (Rampart)

Defendant: Eduardo Medina · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#139
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Roberto Mejia (Rampart)

Defendant: Roberto Mejia · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#140
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Oscar Mendez (Rampart)

Defendant: Oscar Mendez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#141
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jesus Morales (Rampart)

Defendant: Jesus Morales · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#142
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Munoz (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Munoz · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#143
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Ricardo Navarro (Rampart)

Defendant: Ricardo Navarro · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#144
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jose Ochoa (Rampart)

Defendant: Jose Ochoa · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#145
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Francisco Padilla (Rampart)

Defendant: Francisco Padilla · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#146
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Gabriel Perez (Rampart)

Defendant: Gabriel Perez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#147
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Luis Ramirez (Rampart)

Defendant: Luis Ramirez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#148
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Jesus Reyes (Rampart)

Defendant: Jesus Reyes · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#149
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Victor Rivera (Rampart)

Defendant: Victor Rivera · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#150
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Roberto Rodriguez (Rampart)

Defendant: Roberto Rodriguez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#151
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Daniel Santos (Rampart)

Defendant: Daniel Santos · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#152
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Francisco Torres (Rampart)

Defendant: Francisco Torres · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#153
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Gabriel Vargas (Rampart)

Defendant: Gabriel Vargas · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#154
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Eduardo Velasquez (Rampart)

Defendant: Eduardo Velasquez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#155
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Marco Villanueva (Rampart)

Defendant: Marco Villanueva · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

One of 106+ individuals whose convictions were overturned in the LAPD Rampart CRASH scandal. Officer Rafael Perez and other anti-gang officers routinely framed suspects by planting evidence, fabricating testimony, beating suspects, and committing perjury. Over 100 overturned convictions; $125M+ in city settlements.

  • Rafael Perez / CRASH Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#156
McMartin Preschool/Daycare Panic

McMartin Preschool Trial

Defendant: Peggy McMartin Buckey, Ray Buckey · Los Angeles County · 1984 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

Most expensive criminal trial in American history ($15M). 7-year prosecution. Zero convictions. Children initially denied abuse; after coercive interviews, allegations escalated to satanic rituals, tunnels, animal sacrifice. In 2005, child retracted, admitting 'investigators kept pushing him.'

  • Children at CII (dozens) — coached child
#157
Racial Bias in Jury Selection

People v. Silas, Whitley, and Michaels

Defendant: Sheldon Silas, Reginald Whitley, Lamar Michaels · Contra Costa County · 2016 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 CONVICTIONS OVERTURNED

Three Black men convicted of double murder in 2016 for the 2012 shooting deaths of Christopher Zinn and Brieanna Dow in Contra Costa County. Sentenced to life without parole. First Appellate District overturned all convictions in 2021 after finding prosecutor Melissa Smith dismissed a Black juror for racial reasons, specifically questioning her support for Black Lives Matter.

  • Prosecutor Melissa Smith — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#158
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Ricardo Lopez

Defendant: Ricardo Lopez · Orange County · None

9/100 OVERTURNED

Originally convicted of murder and sentenced to over 50 years. Resentenced to 25 years after informant misconduct revealed.

  • Unpaid jailhouse informant — informant
Source 1
#159
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

People v. Rafael Zambrano

Defendant: Rafael Zambrano · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

At a party when 15 Rampart cops including Perez burst through door. Gun allegedly planted during arrest. Conviction overturned.

  • Officer Rafael Perez — officer
Source 1
#160
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

Rampart Batch Exonerations - Drug Offenses

Defendant: Juan Rojo, Carlos Romero, Blanca Sahagun, Sergio Salcido, Gene Serrano, and others · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Dozens convicted of drug offenses based on drugs planted by CRASH officers who then testified under oath. All exonerated.

  • CRASH unit officers (multiple) — officer
Source 1
#161
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

Rampart Batch Exonerations - Weapons & Assault

Defendant: Juan Suares, Daniel Tapia, James Thomas, Paul Thompson, Juan Torrecillas, Aristide Vanegas, Gregorio Vasquez, Edward Villanueva, Laura Villatora, Rene Vriones, Mohammed Wesley, Michael Williams, Miguel Yanez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of weapons and assault charges based on fabricated evidence and perjured officer testimony. All exonerated after Rampart investigation.

  • CRASH unit officers (multiple) — officer
Source 1
#162
LAPD Rampart CRASH Scandal

Rampart Additional Known Exonerees

Defendant: Porfirio Acosta, Olga Alatorre, George Alfaro, Omar Alonso, Roberto Andrade, Rodolfo Arevalo, Salvador Arias, Samuel Bailey, Diego Barrios, Paul Bastidas, Esaw Booker, Roberto Candido, Carlos Carranza, Delbert Carrillo, Sonia Castro, Emmanuel Chavez, Israel Cid, Monique Cottalorda, Argelia Diaz, Gabriela Diaz, Edgar Escobar, Leonel Estrada, Octavio Fernandez, Manuel Ferrera, Jesus Flores, Luis Flores, Steven Garcia, Alfredo Gomez, Manuel Guardado, Carlos Guevera, Charles Harris, Clinton Harris, Julian Hernandez, Miguel Hernandez, Joseph Jones, Oscar LaFarga, Jose Lara, Margo Lopez, Jesus Lozano, Jose Madrid, Enrique Mena, Roy Montes, Nicholas Morgan · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Additional known exonerees from the Rampart scandal. ~170 total exonerations. Primarily convicted of drug offenses, weapons charges, and assaults based on fabricated evidence and perjured officer testimony.

  • Rampart CRASH officers (70+ implicated) — officer
Source 1
#163
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Sonia Castro (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Sonia Castro · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Conviction vacated due to Rampart CRASH corruption.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#164
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Israel Cid (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Israel Cid · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Conviction vacated due to Rampart CRASH corruption.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#165
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Monique Cottalorda (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Monique Cottalorda · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#166
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Argelia Diaz (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Argelia Diaz · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#167
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Gabriela Diaz (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Gabriela Diaz · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#168
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Edgar Escobar (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Edgar Escobar · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#169
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Leonel Estrada (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Leonel Estrada · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#170
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Octavio Fernandez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Octavio Fernandez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#171
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Manuel Ferrera (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Manuel Ferrera · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#172
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jesus Flores (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jesus Flores · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#173
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Luis Flores (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Luis Flores · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#174
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Steven Garcia (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Steven Garcia · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#175
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Alfredo Gomez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Alfredo Gomez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#176
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Manuel Guardado (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Manuel Guardado · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#177
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Carlos Guevera (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Carlos Guevera · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#178
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Charles Harris (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Charles Harris · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#179
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Clinton Harris (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Clinton Harris · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#180
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Julian Hernandez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Julian Hernandez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#181
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Miguel Hernandez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Miguel Hernandez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#182
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Joseph Jones (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Joseph Jones · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#183
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Oscar Lafarga (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Oscar Lafarga · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#184
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jose Lara (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jose Lara · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#185
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Margo Lopez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Margo Lopez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#186
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jesus Lozano (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jesus Lozano · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#187
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jose Madrid (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jose Madrid · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#188
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Enrique Mena (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Enrique Mena · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#189
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Roy Montes (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Roy Montes · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#190
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Nicholas Morgan (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Nicholas Morgan · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#191
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Porfirio Acosta (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Porfirio Acosta · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Porfirio Acosta's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#192
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Olga Alatorre (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Olga Alatorre · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Olga Alatorre's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#193
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. George Alfaro (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: George Alfaro · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. George Alfaro's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#194
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Omar Alonso (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Omar Alonso · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Omar Alonso's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#195
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Salvador Arias (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Salvador Arias · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Salvador Arias's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#196
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Carlos Carranza (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Carlos Carranza · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Carlos Carranza's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#197
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Juan Suares (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Juan Suares · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Juan Suares's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#198
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Daniel Tapia (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Daniel Tapia · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Daniel Tapia's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#199
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. James Thomas (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: James Thomas · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. James Thomas's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#200
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Paul Thompson (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Paul Thompson · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Paul Thompson's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#201
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Juan Torrecillas (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Juan Torrecillas · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Juan Torrecillas's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#202
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Aristide Vanegas (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Aristide Vanegas · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Aristide Vanegas's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#203
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Gregorio Vasquez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Gregorio Vasquez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Gregorio Vasquez's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#204
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Edward Villanueva (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Edward Villanueva · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Edward Villanueva's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#205
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Laura Villatora (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Laura Villatora · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Laura Villatora's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#206
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Rene Vriones (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Rene Vriones · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Rene Vriones's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#207
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Mohammed Wesley (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Mohammed Wesley · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Mohammed Wesley's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#208
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Michael Williams (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Michael Williams · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Michael Williams's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#209
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Miguel Yanez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Miguel Yanez · Los Angeles County · 1998

9/100 EXONERATED

Rampart scandal individual exoneration. Miguel Yanez's conviction was vacated after LAPD Rampart CRASH unit corruption was exposed by officer Rafael Perez's cooperation. Officers planted evidence, committed perjury, and framed suspects in the Rampart Division's anti-gang CRASH unit.

  • Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#210
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Brad Nokes

Defendant: Brad Nokes · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Brad Nokes's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal, one of the most widespread cases of police corruption in US history. Over 170 convictions were overturned after officer Rafael Perez exposed systemic evidence planting, perjury, and frame-ups.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#211
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Mary Nokes

Defendant: Mary Nokes · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Mary Nokes's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal, one of the most widespread cases of police corruption in US history. Over 170 convictions were overturned after officer Rafael Perez exposed systemic evidence planting, perjury, and frame-ups.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#212
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Juan Rojo (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Juan Rojo · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Juan Rojo's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal. Over 170 convictions were overturned.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#213
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Carlos Romero (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Carlos Romero · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Carlos Romero's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal. Over 170 convictions were overturned.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#214
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Blanca Sahagun (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Blanca Sahagun · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Blanca Sahagun's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal. Over 170 convictions were overturned.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#215
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Sergio Salcido (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Sergio Salcido · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Sergio Salcido's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal. Over 170 convictions were overturned.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#216
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Gene Serrano (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Gene Serrano · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Gene Serrano's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal. Over 170 convictions were overturned.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#217
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Anthony Adams (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Anthony Adams · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Anthony Adams's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#218
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Luis Davalos (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Luis Davalos · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Luis Davalos's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#219
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jesse Alvarez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jesse Alvarez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Jesse Alvarez's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#220
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Jorge Alvarez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Jorge Alvarez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Jorge Alvarez's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#221
LAPD Rampart Scandal

People v. Ceaser Menendez (Rampart Individual)

Defendant: Ceaser Menendez · Los Angeles County · None

9/100 EXONERATED

Ceaser Menendez's conviction was vacated as part of the LAPD Rampart scandal.

  • LAPD Rampart CRASH officers — officer
Source 1
#222

People v. Jeffrey Rodriguez

Defendant: Jeffrey Rodriguez · Santa Clara County · 2002 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully convicted of second-degree robbery of auto parts store employee in San Jose in Dec 2001. NCIP case. Charges dismissed Feb 2007 after 5 years imprisoned.

  • Robbery victim — eyewitness
Source 1
#223

People v. Ronald Reno

Defendant: Ronald Reno · Unknown County · 1997 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully imprisoned for more than 5 years for gun possession. Was a passenger in stolen truck driven by friend in 1996. NCIP case.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#224

People v. Ed Easley

Defendant: Ed Easley · Unknown County · 2007 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 5 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#225

People v. Jerry Bigelow

Defendant: Jerry D. Bigelow · Unknown County · 1984 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1989 per forejustice.org database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#226

People v. Frank John Antick

Defendant: Frank John Antick · Unknown County · 1970 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1975 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#227

People v. Gerald Atlas

Defendant: Gerald Atlas · Unknown County · 1993 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1998 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#228

People v. Edward Avila

Defendant: Edward Avila · Unknown County · 1952 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1957 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database. Historic pre-1989 case.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#229

People v. Glenn Barner

Defendant: Glenn Barner · Unknown County · 1988 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1993 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#230

People v. Robert Peter Aguilar

Defendant: Robert Peter Aguilar · San Francisco County · 1990 · 5 years imprisoned

9/100 EXONERATED

Federal judge convicted in 1990 of making false statements to law enforcement. Exonerated in 1995 after prosecutorial misconduct was established. Listed in NRE and forejustice.org databases.

  • Federal prosecutors — officer
Source 1
#231
California Racial Justice Act

People v. Dana Stubblefield (RJA)

Defendant: Dana Stubblefield (RJA ruling) · Santa Clara County · 2020 · 4 years imprisoned

8/100 CONVICTION OVERTURNED

Former SF 49ers defensive lineman. Dec 2024 appeals court overturned rape conviction under California Racial Justice Act. Court found prosecutor's closing arguments appealed to racial bias - suggesting police avoided searching Stubblefield's home for a gun following George Floyd's murder improperly invited jurors to consider defendant's race. Landmark RJA ruling.

  • Prosecutor — officer
Source 1
#232

People v. Mashelle Bullington

Defendant: Mashelle Bullington · Santa Clara County · 1995 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

Wrongfully convicted of using a gun during a Campbell car burglary. Cleared after 4 years in prison. NCIP case.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#233

People v. Armando Ortiz

Defendant: Armando Ortiz · Unknown County · 2010 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client wrongfully imprisoned for 4 years. Exonerated through NCIP representation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#234

People v. Mark Diaz Bravo

Defendant: Mark Diaz Bravo · Unknown County · 1990 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1994 per forejustice.org database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#235

People v. Roy Alvarez

Defendant: Roy Alvarez · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#236

People v. Jesus Avila

Defendant: Jesus Avila · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#237

People v. Kevin Baruxes

Defendant: Kevin Baruxes · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#238

People v. Kum Yet Cheung

Defendant: Kum Yet Cheung · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#239

People v. Victor Marion Ciancanelli

Defendant: Victor Marion Ciancanelli · Unknown County · 1960 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 1964 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database. Historic pre-1989 case.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#240

People v. Curtis Davis

Defendant: Curtis Davis · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#241

People v. David Davis

Defendant: David Davis · Unknown County · 1997 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2001 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#242

People v. Richard Dawkins

Defendant: Richard Dawkins · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#243

People v. Frankie Dazet

Defendant: Frankie Dazet · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#244

People v. Willie Edmonds

Defendant: Willie Edmonds · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#245

People v. Miguel Espinoza

Defendant: Miguel Espinoza · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#246

People v. Clarence Farley

Defendant: Clarence Farley · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#247

People v. Salvador Godinez

Defendant: Salvador Godinez · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#248

People v. Willie Jackson

Defendant: Willie Jackson · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#249

People v. Alejandro Lara

Defendant: Alejandro Lara · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#250

People v. Miguel Martinez

Defendant: Miguel Martinez · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#251

People v. Ramon Paredes

Defendant: Ramon Paredes · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#252

People v. Francisco Salazar

Defendant: Francisco Salazar · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#253

People v. Juan Serrano

Defendant: Juan Serrano · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#254

People v. Rafael Silva

Defendant: Rafael Silva · Unknown County · 1999 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2003 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#255

People v. Daniel Soto

Defendant: Daniel Soto · Unknown County · 1998 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2002 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#256

People v. David Strickland

Defendant: David Strickland · Unknown County · 2000 · 4 years imprisoned

7/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration 2004 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#257

People v. Robert Allen Barker

Defendant: Robert Allen Barker · Santa Clara County · 2008 · 3 years imprisoned

5/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in 2008 of solicitation of a minor in Palo Alto. Exonerated in 2011 after prosecutorial error was established. Case documented in forejustice.org database.

  • Prosecution witnesses — false accuser
Source 1
#258

People v. Jorge Aguilera-Rios

Defendant: Jorge Aguilera-Rios · San Diego County · 2011 · 3 years imprisoned

5/100 EXONERATED

Federal case in San Diego. Convicted of immigration violation in 2011. Exonerated in 2014. Case documented in forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Federal agents — officer
Source 1
#259

People v. Mireya Arias

Defendant: Mireya Arias · Unknown County · 2018 · 2 years imprisoned · $85,960 settlement

4/100 EXONERATED

In 2018, convicted of 10 counts of extortion, 11 counts of attempted grand theft, and 10 counts of second-degree burglary, each with a hate-crime enhancement - 31 convictions total. In 2021, all 31 convictions were reversed and all charges dismissed. In 2024, found factually innocent. CalVCB approved $85,960 on May 15, 2025 for 614 days imprisonment.

  • Unknown — false accuser
Source 1
#260

People v. Robert Lee Kidd

Defendant: Robert Lee Kidd · Unknown County · 1960 · 2 years imprisoned

4/100 EXONERATED

Sentenced to death in California in 1960. Exonerated 1962 after 2 years on death row.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#261

People v. Nguyen Dinh Chien

Defendant: Nguyen Dinh Chien · Unknown County · 2004 · 2 years imprisoned

4/100 EXONERATED

California exoneration case in 2006 per forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#262

People v. Michael Boulware

Defendant: Michael Boulware · Unknown County · 2006 · 2 years imprisoned

4/100 EXONERATED

Federal case in California. Convicted in 2006, exonerated in 2008. Listed in forejustice.org database.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#263

People v. Inez Garcia

Defendant: Inez Garcia · Monterey County · 1974 · 1 years imprisoned

2/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of murder after killing one of two men who raped her. Prosecution claimed rape allegations were false despite evidence. Conviction overturned 1977 by California Court of Appeal on grounds of improper jury instructions. Acquitted at retrial. Landmark case in self-defense and rape victim rights.

  • Prosecution witnesses — false accuser
Source 1
#264

People v. Leonhard Bauer

Defendant: Leonhard Bauer · Lake County · 1997 · 1 years imprisoned

2/100 EXONERATED

Convicted of bankruptcy fraud in Lake County in 1997. Exonerated in 1998 after prosecutorial misconduct was established. Case documented in forejustice.org database.

  • Prosecution — officer
Source 1
#265
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

Weimer Case

Defendant: Howard Lee Weimer · Kern County · 1985 · $689,000 settlement

2/100 EXONERATED

Convicted and overturned. Received $689,000 settlement.

  • Coached children — coached child
#266
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

Nokes Case

Defendant: Brad Nokes, Mary Nokes · Kern County · 1985 · $20,000 settlement

1/100 EXONERATED

Husband and wife convicted. Father Roy Nokes spent $50,000 fighting to clear them.

  • Coached children (names withheld) — coached child
#267
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Alvin McCuan

Defendant: Alvin McCuan · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions based on coached child testimony later discredited.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#268
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Scott Kniffen

Defendant: Scott Kniffen · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#269
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Ricky Lynn Pitts

Defendant: Ricky Lynn Pitts · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions. Served extensive prison time before exoneration.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#270
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Colleen Dill Forsythe

Defendant: Colleen Dill Forsythe · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#271
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Wayne Forsythe

Defendant: Wayne Forsythe · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#272
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Grace Dill

Defendant: Grace Dill · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#273
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Wayne Dill Jr.

Defendant: Wayne Dill Jr. · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#274
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Gina Miller

Defendant: Gina Miller · Kern County · None

1/100 EXONERATED

Convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions.

  • Unknown — coached child
Source 1
#275
Kern County Child Abuse Witch Hunt

Additional Kern County Defendants

Defendant: Kelly LeRoy, Betty Palko, Kathy Scott, Cheryl Gonzales, Gerardo Gonzales, Donna Sue Hubbard, Marjorie Grafton, Carol Doggett, Harold Everett, Idella Everett, Jack Cummings, Jackie Cummings, Leroy Stowe, Rev. Willard Thomas, Timothy Palomo, Grant Self · Kern County · 1985

1/100 EXONERATED

Additional defendants in the Kern County witch hunt. 34 of 36 convictions eventually overturned. 2 died in prison. Kern County paid over $10 million in settlements. DA Ed Jagels was never disciplined.

  • Multiple coached children — coached child
#276
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Ruth Ann Taylor (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Ruth Ann Taylor · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Ruth Ann Taylor was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#277
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Richard Cox (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Richard Cox · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Richard Cox was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#278
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Teresa Cox (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Teresa Cox · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Teresa Cox was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#279
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Anthony Cox (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Anthony Cox · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Anthony Cox was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#280
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. George Cox (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: George Cox · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

George Cox was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#281
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Jo Hanna Cox (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Jo Hanna Cox · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Jo Hanna Cox was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Convictions were based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic interviews.

  • Coached children — coached child
Source 1
#282
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Kelly Leroy (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Kelly Leroy · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Kelly Leroy was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#283
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Betty Palko (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Betty Palko · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Betty Palko was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#284
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Kathy Scott (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Kathy Scott · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Kathy Scott was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#285
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Cheryl Gonzales (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Cheryl Gonzales · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Cheryl Gonzales was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#286
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Donna Sue Hubbard (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Donna Sue Hubbard · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Donna Sue Hubbard was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#287
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Carol Doggett (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Carol Doggett · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Carol Doggett was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#288
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Harold Everett (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Harold Everett · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Harold Everett was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#289
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Idella Everett (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Idella Everett · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Idella Everett was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#290
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Jack Cummings (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Jack Cummings · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Jack Cummings was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#291
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Leroy Stowe (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Leroy Stowe · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Leroy Stowe was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#292
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Rev. Willard Thomas (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Rev. Willard Thomas · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Rev. Willard Thomas was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#293
Kern County Child Abuse Scandal

People v. Grant Self (Kern County Child Abuse Scandal)

Defendant: Grant Self · Kern County · 1984

1/100 EXONERATED

Grant Self was one of 36 defendants wrongfully convicted in the Kern County child sex abuse ring prosecutions of the 1980s. Based on coached child testimony and discredited forensic evidence.

  • Coached child witnesses — coached child
Source 1
#294
SF Crime Lab Scandal

San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal - Deborah Madden

Defendant: 1,500+ defendants affected · San Francisco County · 2010

1/100 OVERTURNED

Lab technician Deborah Madden stole cocaine from evidence, admitted snorting at workstation. Lab shut down. DA Kamala Harris dismissed ~1,500 drug cases. Every conviction relying on Madden's work potentially compromised.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
#295

People v. Zachary Vanderhorst

Defendant: Zachary Vanderhorst · Unknown County · 1974 · $280 settlement

1/100 EXONERATED

In 1974, pled guilty to murder, rape, and two counts of robbery. After legislature amended definition of murder in 2019, court vacated murder conviction in 2020 on grounds underlying conduct no longer constitutes murder as now defined. In 2021, found factually innocent of rape and one count of robbery. CalVCB approved $280 on March 20, 2025 for 2 days attributable solely to erroneous convictions.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#296

People v. Edelyn Yhip

Defendant: Edelyn Yhip · Unknown County · 2010

1/100 EXONERATED

NCIP client who fought charges for 5 years before being cleared. Not imprisoned but fought wrongful charges.

  • Unknown — false accuser
Source 1
#297

People v. Thomas Berdue

Defendant: Thomas Berdue · Unknown County · 1851

1/100 EXONERATED

Sentenced to death in 1851 California for murder of local sheriff and store robbery. Exonerated same year when real murderer James Stuart was found, who bore a striking resemblance to Berdue. Historic misidentification case.

  • Eyewitnesses — eyewitness
Source 1
#298

People v. Xavier Alvarez

Defendant: Xavier Alvarez · Los Angeles County · 2012

1/100 EXONERATED

Federal case in Los Angeles. Convicted in 2012 based on chemical/blood test failure. Exonerated same year. Case documented in forejustice.org wrongful conviction database.

  • Forensic lab — expert
Source 1
#299

People v. Dana Stubblefield

Defendant: Dana Stubblefield · Santa Clara County · 2020

1/100 OVERTURNED

Former NFL player. Conviction overturned under California Racial Justice Act. Issues with witness testimony and racial bias in prosecution.

  • Prosecution witnesses — eyewitness
#1

People v. Bobby Williams

Defendant: Bobby Williams · Los Angeles County · 1998 · 25 years imprisoned

6.91× RELEASED ON PAROLE (INNOCENCE CLAIM PENDING)

Inglewood rapper convicted of murder 1997. Loyola Project for the Innocent found evidence 'paper thin' - key eyewitness was not at scene. Released July 2023 after 25 years.

  • Eyewitness (unknown) — eyewitness
Source 1
#2

People v. Kenji Howard

Defendant: Kenji Howard · San Bernardino County · 1997 · 24 years imprisoned · $1,244,600 settlement

6.76× CONVICTION VACATED (HABEAS CORPUS)

Convicted of murder, 3 counts attempted murder, shooting at occupied vehicle, possessing concealed firearm. All charges vacated by habeas corpus 2021. CalVCB approved $1,244,600 compensation.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#3
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Alvaro Sanchez

Defendant: Alvaro Sanchez · Orange County · 2009 · 16 years imprisoned

5.90× CONVICTED

Arrested at age 17 for attempted murder. Informant Oscar Moriel documented confession. Pled to attempted murder, sentenced to 16 years (reduced from potential life).

  • Oscar Moriel — informant
Source 1
#4

People v. Sandra Castaneda

Defendant: Sandra Castaneda · Los Angeles County · 2002 · 19 years imprisoned

5.24× CONVICTION VACATED

At 20, convicted of murder under felony murder rule for driving friends who shot rival gang members. Neither shooter prosecuted. Sentenced to 40 years to life. Vacated July 2021 under reformed felony murder law. ICE detained her upon release.

  • N/A - felony murder — officer
Source 1
#5

People v. Sandra Castañeda

Defendant: Sandra Castañeda · Unknown County · 2002 · 19 years imprisoned

5.24× RESENTENCED/RELEASED

Convicted of murder and sentenced to 40 years to life. Released in 2021 after California criminal justice reforms allowed resentencing. Murder conviction was overturned after 19 years. ICE subsequently attempted deportation despite state overturning her conviction.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#6

2024 CA Death Row Resentencing - Santa Clara County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10)

Defendant: Death Row Resentencing 2024 - Santa Clara County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10) · Santa Clara County · None

2.20× DEATH SENTENCE RESENTENCED TO LIFE OR LESS

Part of historic 2024 CA death row reduction. At least 45 resentenced from death to life. Santa Clara DA Rosen and Alameda County DA reviewed eligible cases citing racism and due process concerns. Largest death-row decline of any US jurisdiction in 2024.

  • N/A - DA review — officer
Source 1
#7

2024 CA Death Row Resentencing - Alameda County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10)

Defendant: Death Row Resentencing 2024 - Alameda County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10) · Alameda County · None

2.20× DEATH SENTENCE RESENTENCED TO LIFE OR LESS

Part of historic 2024 CA death row reduction. At least 45 resentenced from death to life. Santa Clara DA Rosen and Alameda County DA reviewed eligible cases citing racism and due process concerns. Largest death-row decline of any US jurisdiction in 2024.

  • N/A - DA review — officer
Source 1
#8

2024 CA Death Row Resentencing - Alameda County Batch 2 (Cases 11-18)

Defendant: Death Row Resentencing 2024 - Alameda County Batch 2 (Cases 11-18) · Alameda County · None

2.20× DEATH SENTENCE RESENTENCED TO LIFE OR LESS

Part of historic 2024 CA death row reduction. At least 45 resentenced from death to life. Santa Clara DA Rosen and Alameda County DA reviewed eligible cases citing racism and due process concerns. Largest death-row decline of any US jurisdiction in 2024.

  • N/A - DA review — officer
Source 1
#9

2024 CA Death Row Resentencing - Other Counties 2024 Batch 1 (Cases 1-17)

Defendant: Death Row Resentencing 2024 - Other Counties 2024 Batch 1 (Cases 1-17) · Various County · None

2.20× DEATH SENTENCE RESENTENCED TO LIFE OR LESS

Part of historic 2024 CA death row reduction. At least 45 resentenced from death to life. Santa Clara DA Rosen and Alameda County DA reviewed eligible cases citing racism and due process concerns. Largest death-row decline of any US jurisdiction in 2024.

  • N/A - DA review — officer
Source 1
#10

In re Rogers

Defendant: Rogers (first name unknown) · Kern County · None

2.20× DEATH SENTENCE VACATED

Kern County case where witness Tambri Butler testified falsely in identification, resulting in a death sentence. Butler had seen Rogers's photograph on television as the suspect but lied in court saying she had not. Also lied about not discussing the case in jail. California Supreme Court granted habeas relief in 2016 vacating the death sentence based on false testimony.

  • Tambri Butler — false accuser
Source 1
#11
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

Orange County Jailhouse Informant Scandal - People v. Dekraai

Defendant: Scott Evans Dekraai · Orange County · 2011

1.70× CONVICTED

Deadliest mass shooting in OC history. Informant Fernando Perez placed in adjacent cell. Defense attorney Scott Sanders exposed the entire illegal informant program. DA's office disqualified from seeking death penalty.

  • Fernando Perez — informant
  • Seth Tunstall — officer
  • Ben Garcia — officer
Source 1
#12
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

Clements v. Madden

Defendant: Charles Clements · Orange County · 2012

1.52× HABEAS CORPUS GRANTED

Sentenced to two life terms plus 18 years for kidnapping and robbery. Jailhouse informant Boeker falsely denied receiving benefits. Ninth Circuit reversed 2024 - Napue violation.

  • Donald Boeker — informant
Source 1
#13
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Isaac Palacios Bueno (OC Informant Scandal)

Defendant: Isaac Palacios Bueno · Orange County · None

1.52× CASE AFFECTED BY INFORMANT SCANDAL

Isaac Palacios Bueno's case was among the 57+ criminal cases upended by the Orange County jailhouse informant scandal. The ACLU identified at least 140 cases potentially tainted by the illegal informant program.

  • Fernando Perez / OC informants — informant
Source 1
#14
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Abel Lemus (OC Informant Scandal)

Defendant: Abel Lemus · Orange County · None

1.52× CASE AFFECTED BY INFORMANT SCANDAL

Abel Lemus's case was among the 57+ criminal cases upended by the Orange County jailhouse informant scandal. The ACLU identified at least 140 cases potentially tainted by the illegal informant program.

  • Fernando Perez / OC informants — informant
Source 1
#15
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Frank Felix (OC Informant Scandal)

Defendant: Frank Felix · Orange County · None

1.52× CASE AFFECTED BY INFORMANT SCANDAL

Frank Felix's case was among the 57+ criminal cases upended by the Orange County jailhouse informant scandal. The ACLU identified at least 140 cases potentially tainted by the illegal informant program.

  • Fernando Perez / OC informants — informant
Source 1
#16
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. Wozniak

Defendant: Daniel Patrick Wozniak · Orange County · 2010

1.52× CONVICTED

Convicted of double murder. Informant Fernando Perez used to extract statements in jail despite Wozniak already having confessed to police.

  • Fernando Perez — informant
Source 1
#17
OC Jailhouse Informant Scandal

People v. John Abel

Defendant: John Abel · Orange County · 1997

1.52× PENDING

Capital murder case. Female informant now says she provided false testimony at 1997 trial. Case under review.

  • Female informant (name not disclosed) — informant
Source 1
#18
Antioch Police Racist Text Scandal / Racial Justice Act

People v. Windom (Antioch RJA Case)

Defendant: Eric Windom, Terryonn Pugh, Keyshawn McGee, Trent Allen · Contra Costa County · 2021 · 3 years imprisoned

1.01× CHARGES REDUCED UNDER RJA

Four men charged with gang-related murder and attempted murder for a 2021 drive-by shooting in Antioch that killed Arnold Marcel Hawkins. FBI probe uncovered racist text messages by Antioch police officers during the investigation. UC Irvine statistician found Black men accused of gang-related murders were 44% more likely to face enhancement charges. Judge dismissed gang enhancements under RJA. Defendants pled to manslaughter with sentences of 13-20 years instead of facing decades to life.

  • Antioch Police Officers — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#19

People v. Enzo Cestoni

Defendant: Enzo Cestoni · Unknown County · 2014 · 2 years imprisoned

0.68× ACQUITTED ON RETRIAL

Federal case in California. Originally convicted in 2014. Acquitted at retrial on November 10, 2016. Listed in NRE database.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#20
Antioch Police Racist Text Scandal / Racial Justice Act

People v. Eric Windom

Defendant: Eric Windom · Contra Costa County · None

0.18× CHARGES REDUCED UNDER RJA

Charged with murder in 2021 Antioch drive-by shooting. FBI probe uncovered racist police texts during investigation. Gang enhancements dismissed under RJA. Pled to manslaughter, sentenced to 19 years.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#21
Antioch Police Racist Text Scandal / Racial Justice Act

People v. Terryonn Pugh

Defendant: Terryonn Pugh · Contra Costa County · None

0.18× CHARGES REDUCED UNDER RJA

Charged with murder in 2021 Antioch drive-by shooting. RJA violations found. Pled to manslaughter, sentenced to 20 years.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#22
Antioch Police Racist Text Scandal / Racial Justice Act

People v. Keyshawn McGee

Defendant: Keyshawn McGee · Contra Costa County · None

0.18× CHARGES REDUCED UNDER RJA

Charged with murder in 2021 Antioch shooting. RJA violations found.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#23
Antioch Police Racist Text Scandal / Racial Justice Act

People v. Trent Allen

Defendant: Trent Allen · Contra Costa County · None

0.18× CHARGES REDUCED UNDER RJA

Charged with murder in 2021 Antioch shooting. RJA violations found. Pled to manslaughter, sentenced to 19 years.

  • Unknown — officer
Source 1
#24
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Jonathan Agajanian

Defendant: Jonathan Agajanian · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#25
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Jeffrey Austin

Defendant: Jeffrey Austin · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#26
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Christopher Bacalot

Defendant: Christopher Bacalot · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#27
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Emmanuel Bahena

Defendant: Emmanuel Bahena · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#28
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Thomas Benson

Defendant: Thomas Benson · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#29
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Joey Caban

Defendant: Joey Caban · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#30
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Miguel Calderon

Defendant: Miguel Calderon · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#31
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Nicole Cedillo

Defendant: Nicole Cedillo · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#32
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Ernesto Chairez

Defendant: Ernesto Chairez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#33
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Justin Danesh

Defendant: Justin Danesh · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#34
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. George Delgado

Defendant: George Delgado · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#35
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Alexis Del Toro

Defendant: Alexis Del Toro · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#36
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Thomas Evans

Defendant: Thomas Evans · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#37
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Anselmo Garcia

Defendant: Anselmo Garcia · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#38
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Alexander Gonzales

Defendant: Alexander Gonzales · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#39
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Joseph Griffin

Defendant: Joseph Griffin · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#40
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Claire Griffiths

Defendant: Claire Griffiths · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#41
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Edgar Guitierrez

Defendant: Edgar Guitierrez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#42
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Jeffrey Hardgrave

Defendant: Jeffrey Hardgrave · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#43
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Cale Hill

Defendant: Cale Hill · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#44
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Huey Hoang

Defendant: Huey Hoang · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#45
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Cristina Hurtado

Defendant: Cristina Hurtado · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#46
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Jeremy Immel

Defendant: Jeremy Immel · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#47
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Keith Jones

Defendant: Keith Jones · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#48
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Joseph Jordan

Defendant: Joseph Jordan · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#49
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Noe Lezema

Defendant: Noe Lezema · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#50
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Richard Lopez

Defendant: Richard Lopez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#51
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Pearl Mendez

Defendant: Pearl Mendez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#52
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Saisha Miranda

Defendant: Saisha Miranda · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#53
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Whitney Monk

Defendant: Whitney Monk · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#54
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Alexis Murillo

Defendant: Alexis Murillo · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#55
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Ben Nguyen

Defendant: Ben Nguyen · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#56
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Dora Ocampo

Defendant: Dora Ocampo · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#57
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Paul Ogle

Defendant: Paul Ogle · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#58
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Ryan Oleson

Defendant: Ryan Oleson · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#59
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Christopher Pena

Defendant: Christopher Pena · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#60
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Victor Perez

Defendant: Victor Perez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#61
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Manuel Ramirez

Defendant: Manuel Ramirez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#62
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Ismael Rodriguez

Defendant: Ismael Rodriguez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#63
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Lydia Rodriguez

Defendant: Lydia Rodriguez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#64
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Kyle Rusher

Defendant: Kyle Rusher · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#65
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Josezie Sanchez

Defendant: Josezie Sanchez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#66
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Erica Santos

Defendant: Erica Santos · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#67
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Tyson Shelby

Defendant: Tyson Shelby · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#68
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. William Stanley

Defendant: William Stanley · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#69
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Derrick Stoelting

Defendant: Derrick Stoelting · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#70
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Kenneth Trumbull

Defendant: Kenneth Trumbull · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#71
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Melina Vasquez

Defendant: Melina Vasquez · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#72
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Dylan Villam

Defendant: Dylan Villam · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#73
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Robert Coria

Defendant: Robert Coria · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#74
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Angela Diaz

Defendant: Angela Diaz · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#75
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. Marcus Hill

Defendant: Marcus Hill · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#76
OC Sheriff Evidence Booking Scandal

People v. David Tran

Defendant: David Tran · Orange County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED

One of 53 defendants whose convictions were vacated in 2020 after audit revealed OC Sheriff's deputies systematically failed to book evidence properly. Internal investigation found nearly a third of property evidence was submitted after mandated deadline. Deputies delayed booking drugs, cash, photos and videos for days/weeks/months. Four deputies fired.

  • OC Sheriff Deputies (multiple) — officer
Source 1 · Source 2
#77
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group A (Cases 1-25)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group A (Cases 1-25) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#78
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group B (Cases 26-50)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group B (Cases 26-50) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#79
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group C (Cases 51-75)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group C (Cases 51-75) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#80
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group D (Cases 76-100)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group D (Cases 76-100) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#81
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group E (Cases 101-125)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group E (Cases 101-125) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#82
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group F (Cases 126-150)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group F (Cases 126-150) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#83
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group G (Cases 151-175)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group G (Cases 151-175) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#84
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group H (Cases 176-200)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group H (Cases 176-200) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#85
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group I (Cases 201-225)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group I (Cases 201-225) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#86
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group J (Cases 226-250)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group J (Cases 226-250) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#87
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group K (Cases 251-275)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group K (Cases 251-275) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#88
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group L (Cases 276-300)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group L (Cases 276-300) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#89
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group M (Cases 301-325)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group M (Cases 301-325) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#90
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group N (Cases 326-350)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group N (Cases 326-350) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#91
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group O (Cases 351-375)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group O (Cases 351-375) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#92
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group P (Cases 376-400)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group P (Cases 376-400) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#93
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group Q (Cases 401-425)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group Q (Cases 401-425) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#94
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group R (Cases 426-450)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group R (Cases 426-450) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#95
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group S (Cases 451-475)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group S (Cases 451-475) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#96
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group T (Cases 476-500)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group T (Cases 476-500) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#97
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group U (Cases 501-525)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group U (Cases 501-525) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#98
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group V (Cases 526-550)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group V (Cases 526-550) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#99
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group W (Cases 551-575)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group W (Cases 551-575) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#100
San Francisco Crime Lab Scandal (Deborah Madden)

San Francisco Drug Lab Scandal - SF Lab Defendant Group X (Cases 576-600)

Defendant: SF Lab Defendant Group X (Cases 576-600) · San Francisco County · None

0.18× CONVICTIONS DISMISSED

Batch of ~25 drug cases dismissed as part of SF crime lab scandal. Lab tech Deborah Madden caught stealing cocaine from evidence. Judge found DA's office 'failed to disclose information' about Madden. 600-1,000 drug convictions dismissed. Madden suspended 2007 but continued handling evidence.

  • Deborah Madden — expert
Source 1
#101
DOJ Ripon Lab Scandal

CA DOJ Ripon Crime Lab Issues

Defendant: 2,000+ defendants potentially affected · San Joaquin County · 2010

0.18× PENDING

Auditor found problems in 599 of 850 serology cases (70% error rate). Methamphetamine evidence disappeared. 2,000+ cases examined in one county alone.

  • Ripon Lab analysts — expert
#102
Felony Murder Rule Overreach

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing Batch

Defendant: 800+ individuals resentenced under SB 1437 · Various County · 2019

0.18× RESENTENCED/RELEASED

Senate Bill 1437 (effective Jan 1, 2019) reformed California's felony murder rule, eliminating natural and probable consequences doctrine. Between 2019-2023, more than 800 people granted relief. 88% were people of color, with Black defendants at 40%. Many released after serving decades for murders they did not directly commit.

  • Various prosecution witnesses — officer
Source 1
#103
California Racial Justice Act

Contra Costa County RJA Gang Enhancement Dismissals

Defendant: Four Black defendants (names sealed) · Contra Costa County · 2022

0.18× CHARGES DISMISSED

Statistical evidence showing overrepresentation of Black defendants in Contra Costa County gang-murder charges led to dismissal of enhanced special circumstance murder charges against four Black defendants under the California Racial Justice Act. Eight officers exhibited racial bias under the Act.

  • Eight officers with racial bias — officer
Source 1
#104
Racial Justice Act - Death Penalty

Mosby v. Superior Court (RJA Death Penalty Challenge)

Defendant: Michael Earl Mosby III · Riverside County · 2020

0.18× RJA HEARING GRANTED

Mosby was charged with drive-by shooting and faced the death penalty. Filed motion claiming DA's decision to seek death violated the California Racial Justice Act. Court of Appeal granted writ petition in 2024 and directed evidentiary hearing. One of the first individuals facing capital prosecution granted RJA evidentiary hearings.

  • Prosecution — officer
Source 1
#105

People v. Reyes

Defendant: Andres Quinonez Reyes · Unknown County · None

0.18× CONVICTION REVERSED UNDER SB 1437

Convicted of murder as 15-year-old under natural and probable consequences doctrine. CA Supreme Court reversed - trial court misapplied aiding/abetting law.

  • N/A — officer
Source 1
#106

People v. Harrison

Defendant: Lemar Harrison · Unknown County · None

0.18× CONVICTION VACATED UNDER SB 1437

Felony murder conviction vacated. Appellate court found Harrison entitled to relief under SB 1437 as a matter of law.

  • N/A — officer
Source 1
#107

People v. Justin Gonzalez

Defendant: Justin Gonzalez · Yolo County · None

0.18× CONVICTION REVERSED (BRADY VIOLATION)

Second-degree murder conviction reversed by Third District Appellate Court. Brady violation: recording of prosecutor-witness conversation suppressed from defense.

  • Prosecution Witness — incentivized
Source 1
#108

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - LA County Batch 1 (Cases 1-20)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - LA County Batch 1 (Cases 1-20) · Los Angeles County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#109

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - LA County Batch 2 (Cases 21-40)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - LA County Batch 2 (Cases 21-40) · Los Angeles County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#110

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - LA County Batch 3 (Cases 41-60)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - LA County Batch 3 (Cases 41-60) · Los Angeles County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#111

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Alameda County Batch 1 (Cases 1-18)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Alameda County Batch 1 (Cases 1-18) · Alameda County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#112

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Riverside County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Riverside County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15) · Riverside County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#113

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - San Bernardino County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - San Bernardino County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15) · San Bernardino County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#114

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Sacramento County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Sacramento County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15) · Sacramento County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#115

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - San Diego County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - San Diego County Batch 1 (Cases 1-15) · San Diego County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#116

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Kern County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Kern County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10) · Kern County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#117

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Fresno County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Fresno County Batch 1 (Cases 1-10) · Fresno County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#118

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Other Counties Batch 1 (Cases 1-20)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Other Counties Batch 1 (Cases 1-20) · Various County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#119

SB 1437 Felony Murder Resentencing - Other Counties Batch 2 (Cases 21-40)

Defendant: SB 1437 Resentencing - Other Counties Batch 2 (Cases 21-40) · Various County · None

0.18× MURDER CONVICTION VACATED / RESENTENCED UNDER SB 1437

Batch of individuals with felony murder/natural and probable consequences murder convictions vacated or resentenced under SB 1437 (eff. Jan 2019) and SB 775 (eff. Oct 2021). Convicted of murder despite not being actual killer, not intending to kill, not acting with reckless indifference. 800+ resentenced statewide.

  • N/A - legal reform — officer
Source 1
#120

People v. Bismarck Dinius

Defendant: Bismarck Dinius · Lake County · 2008

0.18× ACQUITTED

Charged with boating under the influence and manslaughter after a 2006 boat crash on Clear Lake. Dinius was a passenger on a sailboat hit by a speeding powerboat driven by an off-duty sheriff's deputy. Despite being a victim, Dinius was charged. Acquitted Aug 2009 after NCIP representation. Filed federal lawsuit against Lake County.

  • Law enforcement witnesses — officer
Source 1
#121

People v. Dolores Macias

Defendant: Dolores Macias · Unknown County · None

0.18× CLEMENCY SOUGHT

Member of 'The California 12' - individuals represented by the California Innocence Project who exhausted legal options and sought clemency from the Governor. Case involves claims of actual innocence.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#122

People v. Ed Contreras

Defendant: Ed Contreras · Unknown County · None

0.18× CLEMENCY SOUGHT

Member of 'The California 12' represented by the California Innocence Project. Exhausted legal options, clemency sought from the Governor based on actual innocence claims.

  • Unknown — eyewitness
Source 1
#123

People v. Kevin Epps

Defendant: Kevin Epps · San Francisco County · 2021

0.18× PENDING

Acquitted of murder then convicted of lesser charge in a proceeding where witness credibility is at issue. Case challenges ongoing.

  • Prosecution witnesses — eyewitness

The System Relies on Bad Witnesses Because We Let It

Every wrongful conviction on this page was preventable. The law already requires disclosure, corroboration, and fair procedures. The problem is enforcement. Hold prosecutors accountable when they use witnesses they know are unreliable.

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