Dubious convictions - The case of Abdul Raheem Proves a Commission with Real Power is Necessary
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 05:39PM
TheSpook
A SUFFOLK COUNTY jury may or may not
have gotten it right in 2002 when it convicted Abdul Raheem of
murdering his mother, Mary Chatman. But as David S. Bernstein reported
in the Phoenix last week, Raheem’s trial was marred by serious errors
of omission and commission on the part of police and prosecutors (see
"Did He Murder His Mother?", News and Features, April 1). At best,
Raheem was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial; at worst,
there was a grave miscarriage of justice. Given the ongoing crisis in
prosecuting homicides in Suffolk County, the Raheem case is one more
indication of how badly the system is broken. Substantial reforms are
needed. The Phoenix found that the investigation into Chatman’s 2000
murder was marred by poorly conducted evidence collection, botched and
disregarded witness interviews, and the dubious interpretation of
forensics. Among other things, crime-lab reports and photographs
revealed DNA, fingerprints, shoe prints, and clothing at the crime
scene that did not match or belong to Raheem. Moreover, the officer who
headed up the investigation — Sergeant Detective Daniel Coleman —is
now, remarkably, the deputy superintendent in charge of the Boston
Police Department’s homicide unit. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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