Our Lyin' Eyes
What to do about eyewitnesses
who get it wrong.
By Steve Chapman, Chicago
Tribune, May 15, 2002
On the evening of June 30, 1985, Virdeen Willis Jr., an off-duty official
at a state prison, was drinking with two women in a bar on Chicago's South
Side. As he and his companions left, someone approached and shot him fatally
in the neck. Four days later, police arrested Steven Smith, a convicted
killer who had served time in the facility where Willis worked. Smith denied
any involvement, the police couldn't produce the murder weapon, and no
physical evidence tied him to the crime. About all the prosecution had
to offer was a witness, Debrah Caraway, who said she saw Smith shoot Willis.
The prosecution's case was far from ideal, and Caraway was one of its big
liabilities. The day of the murder, she had been smoking crack. She was
across the street when Willis was shot. Her boyfriend had been considered
as a suspect before Smith was arrested. The evidence suggesting Smith wasn't
the culprit was also strong. The two women who were standing next to Willis
when he was shot couldn't identify Smith as the gunman. Several witnesses
said Smith had left the bar with two friends before Willis walked out--not
alone and afterward, as Caraway claimed. But its one witness apparently
was all the state needed. Two different juries found Smith guilty, and
both times he was sentenced to death. Today, however, Smith is not only
alive but free: In 1999, the Illinois Supreme Court vacated his conviction
for lack of evidence, barred a retrial, and ordered him released.
Since restoring capital punishment in 1977, Illinois has executed 12 inmates.
During that period, 13 other death-row inmates have been exonerated. This
amazing record of fallibility was what prompted Republican Gov. George
Ryan to impose a moratorium on executions two years ago. He also appointed
a commission to examine the Illinois system of capital puishment and to
offer proposals for its reform. Among the recommendations made by the commission
in a report released last month were a handful aimed at a problem that
has contributed to several innocent men being sentenced to death: false
identifications by real or alleged eyewitnesses. But as the commission
took pains to note, this is a problem that plagues the entire criminal-justice
system, not just death penalty cases.
False eyewitness identifications are certainly most conspicuous in erroneous
capital convictions. The Center on Wrongful Convictions at the Northwestern
University School of Law looked at 86 death-row inmates who were cleared
and found that faulty eyewitness identifications played a role in more
than half of them--making them "by far the most ubiquitous factor." More
troubling, in 38 percent of these cases, eyewitness testimony was the sole
evidence against the accused.
But this type of evidence is commonplace in all sorts of cases. The spread
of DNA analysis has exonerated many convicted rapists who had been
wrongly identified by victims. Of 108 post-conviction exonerations by DNA
identified by the Innocence Project at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of
Law, some 97 involved sexual-assault and rape charges, and most of these
convictions hinged on faulty eyewitness testimony. Iowa State University
psychology professor Gary Wells, who has written extensively on the subject,
says unfounded eyewitness identifications are the greatest single cause
of wrongful convictions.
What makes eyewitness identifications especially mischievous is that they
are not only often inaccurate, but usually they can be quite convincing
to juries, regardless of their veracity. One of the most powerful forms
of evidence a prosecutor can deploy is a person who was at the scene of
the crime, who will point to the defendant in court and say, "That's the
man who did it." Juries often believe such witnesses even when loud alarm
bells are warning them away. After a woman was raped in her New Jersey
apartment in 1992, the victim couldn't find her assailant in police photos.
But eight months later, she saw McKinley Cromedy on the street and implicated
him--even though she had passed him over in the original photo lineup.
Fingerprints from her apartment didn't match his; neither did hairs or
blood samples recovered by police. He was convicted anyway and sentenced
to 60 years in prison, five of which he served before a DNA analysis cleared
him.
Wrongful death sentences have come to light mainly because capital cases
attract special scrutiny, and false rape convictions have emerged only
because DNA analysis can irrefutably clear a defendant. But it's anyone's
guess how many inmates are behind bars on robbery or assault charges because
the victim or an eyewitness identified someone who wasn't actually
there. Wells says that every year 77,000 people become criminal defendants
after being identified by a crime victim in a police lineup.
Why are eyewitnesses so prone to errors? They may not get a very good look
at the criminal, or they may have been focused on the gun or knife he was
carrying rather than on his face. Cross-racial identifications are particularly
unreliable because people are known to be less adept at distinguishing
among members of other racial groups. Human memory is a malleable commodity,
capable of being unconsciously reshaped to fit the needs of the moment.
And crime witnesses are sometimes so eager to see the culprit punished
that they may pin the tail on any available donkey.
In speaking
on the subject, Gary Wells sometimes shows a videotape of a man on a roof,
his face visible, apparently putting something in an air shaft. Wells informs
his listeners that the man planted a bomb, shows them mug shots of six
different men, then asks how many people in the audience think each of
them was the guilty party. "When I'm done going through the list, virtually
everyone in the room has raised their hand," he says. "Then I say: 'You're
all wrong. It was none of them.' "
Witnesses, according
to Wells, are usually accurate in picking out the perpetrator if he is
present in the lineup. "But if he's not there, they tend to pick somebody
anyway," he says. In that situation, they'll tend to pick whomever looks
most like the culprit.
Other errors
are not entirely the identifiers' fault. One man who had seen a Chicago
murder picked James Newsome out of a lineup only after two police detectives
asked the witness to consider suspect No. 3. (Newsome was convicted and
then, after he had served 15 years of a life sentence, cleared.) Even if
police are not trying to rig the results, they may inadvertently give signals
that nudge the witness toward the person they've arrested. And if the witness
picks the "right" person, a cop or prosecutor may buttress his confidence
by praising the choice. A witness who is tentative at the lineup stage
may be absolutely certain by the time she takes the stand.
It would be too much to ask courts to do without relying at all on a type
of evidence that can be very useful. Fortunately, the criminal justice
system doesn't have to choose between abandoning eyewitness testimony and
falsely convicting lots of innocent people. The Illinois death-penalty
commission made several recommendations that would reduce the risk of mistakes.
Police lineups, it said, should be administered by someone who doesn't
know which member of the lineup is the "true" suspect, to avoid tip-offs.
Witnesses should be shown each member one at a time, rather than all together,
which studies indicate lowers the rate of false identifications without
reducing the number of correct identifications. And before viewing the
lineup, the witness should be informed that the actual criminal may not
be in it.
These are not new ideas. The National Institute of Justice, an agency of
the Justice Department, recommended changes along these same lines in a
law-enforcement manual it published in 1999. The reforms are simple, requiring
little in the way of money or trouble. But few police departments have
adopted them even though mistaken identifications only ultimately help
guilty people go free. New Jersey mandated these sorts of changes last
year, but thus far it's the only state to have done so. Another antidote
is admitting trial testimony from experts who can explain to juries why
eyewitnesses can't always be believed. The federal courts generally allow
the defense to call such experts, but few state courts have followed suit.
In most courts, whether or not to allow such testimony is strictly at the
whim of the judge.
The case against traditional eyewitness identification practices may sound
like it was concocted by Groucho Marx, who once said: "Who are you going
to believe? Me or your own eyes?" But it's time the criminal justice system
recognized that, in some instances, the very last thing you can believe
is what you saw. |