Floor Statement on
Lessons to Be Learned from
the Wrongful Conviction of Earl Washington
February 14, 2001
Mr. President, I want to discuss the case of Earl Washington .
Mr. Washington was released from custody Monday after more than 17
years in prison. In fact, of the 17 years in prison, 10 years of
that were on death row. Virginia Governor James Gilmore pardoned
Earl Washington on October 2, 2000, after some new DNA tests
confirmed what earlier DNA tests had already shown--he was the wrong
guy. They had the wrong person in prison on death row.
I mention this case as probably the most recent that we have seen
in the press, but we have seen a shocking number of cases in the
past 2 years in which inmates have been exonerated after long stays
in prison, including more than 90 cases involving people who had
been sentenced to death. Let me repeat that: more than 90 cases
where people had been sentenced to death and they then found they
had the wrong person.
Since Earl Washington was pardoned 4 months ago, six more
condemned prisoners in four different States have had their
convictions vacated through exonerating evidence: William Nieves,
sentenced to death in Pennsylvania in 1994; Michael Graham and
Albert Burrell, sentenced to death in Louisiana in 1987; Peter
Limone and Joseph Salvati, sentenced to death in Massachusetts in
1968; and Frank Lee Smith, sentenced to death in Florida in
1986.
There have also been other recent exonerations of inmates who
were not sentenced to death, but were serving long terms of
imprisonment. Just last month, the State of Texas released Chris
Ochoa from prison at the request of the local prosecutors. The
prosecutors themselves asked that he be released. In 1989, Ochoa
pled guilty to a rape-murder he did not commit. Somebody may ask:
Why would you plead guilty to a rape and murder that you did not
commit? Because the authorities said they were going to make sure he
got a death sentence if he did not plead guilty to the crime.
DNA tests that were not available when he was arrested cleared
Ochoa and his codefendant and implicated another man, who had
previously confessed to the crime on several occasions.
Here is how bad this case was. Chris Ochoa was arrested. He knew
he did not commit the crime, this rape-murder. But the police
basically told him: We are going to have you executed if we go to
trial. We are going to prove it. We will have you executed. Of
course, you can plead guilty and we will spare you the death
penalty. He did. But then, even though they had the man who actually
committed this heinous crime, who kept confessing to it, they did
not pay any attention to him because it was easier to just keep the
wrong guy locked up.
Of course, when the DNA evidence came out--it was there in front
of everybody--they said: Look, we have the wrong guy. This other
person, the person who had confessed to it, is the right guy after
all. Whoops, sorry about that. Well, we have only had you locked up
for over a decade for a crime you did not commit.
We must identify the cracks in the system that allowed these
injustices to occur. DNA is a central tool in this pursuit. It has
already led to the exoneration of more than 80 people in this
country, including Earl Washington and others who had been sentenced
to death.
DNA testing has opened a window to give us a disturbing view of
the defects of our criminal justice system. When DNA evidence
exonerates a person such as Earl Washington , there is a unique
opportunity to evaluate how the system failed that person, and
perhaps even more importantly, to identify broader patterns of error
and abuse.
If a plane falls from the sky and crashes, we investigate the
causes. We try to learn from the tragedy so we can avoid similar
tragedies in the future. We should do no less when a wrongfully
convicted person walks off death row.
The justice system did not just fail Earl Washington ; it crashed
and burned. We have a lot to learn from this case. It highlights
many of the problems we see over and over again in cases of wrongful
conviction.
These are the basic facts of the Earl Washington case. In June of
1982, a young woman named Rebecca Williams was raped and murdered in
Culpeper, VA. Nearly a year later, Earl Washington was arrested on
an unrelated charge. Earlier that day, Washington had broken into
the home of an elderly woman named Helen Weeks. But she surprised
him. He hit her over the head with a chair and fled. At the time he
was arrested, he was drunk and running wild through the woods.
Earl Washington suffers from mental retardation. He has an IQ of
69, which puts him in the bottom 2 percent of the population. Like a
child, he tends to answer questions in whatever way he thinks will
please his questioners. After his arrest, he "confessed" to pretty
much every unsolved crime the police asked him about.
A police sergeant named Alan Cubbage later described the scene to
the Washington Post. He got a call that day from the officers who
were interrogating Earl Washington . He told the Post: "It was
almost like a big party. 'Come on down,'" they said, "This guy is
confessing to everything."
He was confessing to crimes he could not possibly have committed.
But whatever it was, when they asked him if he committed the crime,
he said: "Yes, sir."
First, he confessed to the crime he had actually
committed--breaking into Helen Weeks' home and hitting her over the
head with a chair. That he did do. Then he confessed to raping her.
Without any reason to suspect that Weeks had been raped, the
officers interrogating Washington asked if he had raped her, and he
gave the standard response, "Yes, sir."
On that basis alone, they charged him with rape. Well, then Helen
Weeks came forward and said, "Nobody raped me. I never told the
police I had been raped. Nobody tried to rape me." And they kind of
tiptoed into court and dropped the rape charge.
During that same interrogation session, Earl Washington went on
to confess to four other unrelated crimes. Investigators later
concluded that he could not have committed three of the crimes in
other words, that his confessions were wholly unreliable. Yet with
virtually no evidence other than the remaining confession, he was
charged and brought to trial for the fourth crime the rape and
murder of Rebecca Williams.
Earl Washington almost immediately retracted his confession to
the Williams murder, and there were no fingerprints or blood linking
him to the crime scene. But he was convicted, and the jury
recommended execution. He was sentenced to death, his appeals were
rejected, and he came within a few days of being electrocuted. The
whole justice system failed him. But science eventually came to his
rescue.
Mr. President, everybody who has been in law enforcement knows
you get some people like Earl Washington , who are ready to confess
to everything. When I was prosecuting cases, we had a man--he is no
longer alive--who would read something in the paper, a horrendous
crime, and he would immediately confess. Especially if it was cold
weather, he would come to a warm police station and he would confess
to everything. We could make up cases and he would confess.
Obviously, that is one level. But with Earl Washington it was
entirely different. He had committed a crime. He had broken into a
woman's house, and he had hit her with a chair. But he did not rape
her. Nobody did. She said so herself. He certainly did not murder
and rape the woman he was charged with murdering and raping.
Somebody else did. But with no evidence at all, except for his
confession, he was found guilty.
When Earl Washington was convicted in 1984, DNA testing was not
available. By the early 1990s, DNA testing was available, although
the technology has since improved, and tests done in 1993 and
1993--seven years ago--showed that Earl Washington did not rape
Rebecca Williams.
Despite these test results, the state officials still thought he
might be guilty. Maybe there was somebody else involved. Maybe there
were two people--notwithstanding the fact that the woman who was
murdered, who had lived for a period of time after she was attacked,
said very clearly that there was only one person.
So Earl Washington remained in prison. There was so much
doubt--at least they did not execute him--they commuted his sentence
to life in January of 1994. But he was not pardoned. He was given
life in prison, but still for a crime that he did not commit and
more and more of the authorities in the State knew he did not commit
and DNA tests proved he did not commit.
One would think the courts would be interested in scientific
evidence, especially of a prisoner's innocence. Normally you do not
have to prove your innocence, but this was a case where he could
prove his innocence. One might ask, couldn't he go to court with the
new DNA evidence and ask for a new trial? The answer is no; Virginia
has the shortest deadline in the country for going back to court
with new evidence. It has to be submitted within 21 days of
conviction. After that, the defendant is out of luck.
Earl Washington could not submit the evidence within 21 days of
conviction for a very simple reason: The technology for DNA testing,
at the time of his conviction, was not available. And of course by
the time it became available a few years later, he was in a
catch-22: I've got DNA evidence that proves I'm innocent. Sorry, 21
days went by a long time ago. But they didn't have DNA evidence
within 21 days of my conviction. I know, it is a crying shame. Stay
on death row.
Last year, a new and more precise DNA test reconfirmed what the
earlier tests had shown: Earl Washington did not commit the crime
for which he was sentenced to death. The tests pointed to another
person who was already in prison for rape. So, 7 years after the
initial DNA tests and more than 16 years after he was sentenced to
be executed, Earl Washington was granted an absolute pardon for the
rape and murder of Rebecca Williams, a rape and murder he never
committed. After science had twice proven his innocence, the
Commonwealth of Virginia finally acknowledged the truth.
That is not the end of the story. He then spent another 4 months
in prison for his attack on Hazel Weeks. That is at least a crime he
committed. He hit her with a chair in 1983. So now, 17 years later,
he is finishing that sentence. People sentenced for similar crimes
in Virginia are generally paroled after 7 to 10 years in prison.
They made Earl Washington serve twice the time that others would
serve the maximum possible time in prison. Having unjustly condemned
him, the Commonwealth of Virginia compounded the injustice by
keeping him in prison until two days ago, when he became entitled to
mandatory parole. It is almost as if they were saying: How dare you
be innocent of the other crime we convicted you of? How dare you
prove us wrong? We will make you pay for it.
I had hoped to meet with Earl Washington after his release from
prison. Congressman Bobby Scott of Virginia wrote to the Virginia
correctional authorities 2 weeks ago and sought permission for Earl
Washington to travel to Capitol Hill Monday under the care and
supervision of his attorneys. We thought it was important for the
American people to hear firsthand an account of this injustice. A
good justice system learns from its mistakes.
The last 17 years of Earl Washington's life have been one of the
system's worst mistakes. We felt we owed it to Earl Washington and
future Earl Washingtons to listen. The officials of the Commonwealth
did not. They had a different view. They did not want Earl
Washington to come here. They did not want him to come here even for
a few hours, come that great distance from Virginia, which is 2
miles away. They didn't want him to come those extra 2 miles and
tell the story.
This case reveals the dark side of a system that is not known for
admitting its mistakes. I am not speaking only of the Commonwealth
of Virginia. A whole lot of other States have been just as bad at
admitting their mistakes.
In the Earl Washington case, state officials insisted on pursuing
a death penalty charge despite having wholly unreliable evidence.
They kept him in prison for years despite knowing he was falsely
convicted. They kept him locked up, knowing he was falsely
convicted. And then they would not even let him come here to
Washington to tell the American people what happened.
We need to hear from such people like Earl Washington , not hide
them from public view. The American justice system is about the
search for the truth: the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth. As a former prosecutor, I understand the importance of
finality in criminal cases, but even more important than that is the
commitment to the truth; that has to come first.
This case tells us we cannot sit back and assume prosecutors and
courts will do the right thing when it comes to DNA evidence. It
took Earl Washington years to convince prosecutors to do the very
simple tests that would prove his innocence, and more time still to
win his freedom.
Some States continue to stonewall on requests for DNA testing.
They continue to hide behind time limits and procedural default
rules to deny prisoners the opportunity to present DNA test results
in court. They continue to destroy DNA evidence that could set
innocent people free.
These practices must stop. I have long supported and I continue
to support funding to ensure that law enforcement has access to DNA
testing and all the other tools it needs to investigate and
prosecute crime in our society. But if we as a society are committed
to getting it right, and not just to getting a conviction, we need
to make sure that DNA testing, and the ability to present DNA
evidence to the courts, is also available to the defense. We should
not pass up the promise of truth and justice for both sides of our
adversarial system, and that promise is there in DNA evidence.
We must also understand this case shows why we should not allow
the execution of the mentally retarded. As I noted in a floor
statement last December, people with mental retardation are more
prone to make false confessions simply to please their
interrogators, and they are often unable to assist their lawyers in
their own defense. Earl Washington confessed to no less than four
serious felonies which he did not commit and could not have
committed. We should join the overwhelming number of nations that do
not allow the execution of the mentally retarded.
There are good things that may come out of this case. I know the
Supreme Court of Virginia has proposed eliminating the 21-day rule,
which prevented Earl Washington from getting a new trial based on
the initial DNA tests in the early 1990s. That would be a good thing
if it happens. But it would be just a start.
I urge us to go forward and pass the Innocence Protection Act,
supported by both Republicans and Democrats in this body and in the
other body. This legislation addresses several serious problems in
the administration of capital punishment. Most urgently, the bill
would afford greater access to DNA testing for convicted offenders
and help states improve the quality of legal representation in their
capital cases. It also proposes that the United States Congress
speak as the conscience of the Nation in condemning the execution of
the mentally retarded.
People of good conscience can and will disagree on the morality
of the death penalty; but people of good conscience all share the
same goal of preventing the execution of the innocent. People of
good conscience should not disagree that the way the case of Earl
Washington was handled over the past 17 years was unjust. It was
completely unacceptable. We ought to find ways to make sure these
kinds of things do not happen again.