Tag Archives: Wrongful Conviction

IS AMANDA KNOX REALLY INNOCENT OF MURDERING MEREDITH KERCHER?

The Amanda Knox story captured worldwide attention during the years she passed through the Italian legal system and was convicted—twice—of complicity in murdering her college roommate, Meredith Kercher. Ultimately, Knox was exonerated of the murder charges but convicted of criminal slander based on coerced statements she made while under initial and unlawful police interrogation. Now, the international spotlight is again upon Knox with a retrial underway after her slander charge was overthrown by Italy’s highest court. All this circles back to many still questioning if Amanda Knox really is innocent of murdering Meredith Kercher.

There’s a lot of internet information on the Amanda Knox murder case. Some of it’s factual. Much is sensational tabloid junk about “Foxy Knoxy”—the “Ice Lady”—disseminated by socially dysfunctional trolls operating from surplus metal sea-cans converted into dwellings via an extension cord hooked to one bare light bulb. To find out the truth, it’s necessary to first look at the overall facts and then examine how the Italian legal system handled the case through a dragged-out, eight-year-long process.

Meredith Kercher

In 2007, Amanda Knox was a 20-year-old student from Seattle, Washington. She moved to Perugia in central Italy (slightly north of Rome) to further her journalism studies as Perugia was well-known for outstanding universities and educational opportunities—a popular place for foreign students. Here, Knox met a British exchange student, 21-year-old Meredith Kercher, and they shared a ground-floor, four-bedroom apartment with two other young ladies.

Quickly, Knox became romantically involved with a young Italian man, Raffaele Sollecito, and Kercher did the same with Giacomo Silenzi. At the time, Knox also worked part-time in a nightclub run by Patrick Lumumba. It was this pentagon of five that the Italian prosecutors would present as a sex game gone wrong that resulted in Meredith Kercher’s death.

On the evening of November 1, 2007, Knox, Sollecito, Silenzi, and Kercher socialized with others at Sollecito’s apartment near to where the ladies roomed. Present was a man named Rudy Guede who was invited by one of the group members but who was unknown to Knox and Kercher. Around 9 pm, Kercher excused herself from the gathering and walked back to her residence alone. Bit by bit, the gathering broke up leaving Knox and Sollecito to overnight there together.

At midday on November 2, Knox repeatedly tried to phone Meredith Kercher. She got no answer and became concerned, so Knox and Sollecito went to the co-habitation and found Kercher’s bedroom door locked. Knox tapped on the door and called out, but Kercher didn’t answer. Then Knox and Sollecito noticed some bloodstains, including a bloody footprint, in the bathroom.

Being alarmed, Knox called her mother in America who directed Knox to call the Italian police. She did so. However, there was a significant delay which was advanced as part of the prosecution’s later case against Knox and was supported by a timeline presented through cell phone records.

The first attending police officers were not homicide detectives. They were an Italian version of postal inspectors crossed with communication fraud investigators. There hadn’t been a murder in Perugia in over twenty years, so it was a considerable time before “competent” scene processors and trained murder cops arrived. Naturally, the scene was contaminated, and the ensuing DNA evidence used in convicting Amanda Knox of murdering Meredith Kercher was compromised.

What the scene processing showed was Kercher had been attacked, raped, and had her throat cut in her bedroom. Her official cause of death was exsanguination (bleeding out) after being injured with a sharp-edged weapon. Kercher’s bedroom window was open, and the investigators deduced that to mean that a break-in had been staged with the real killer setting the crime up to appear that a stranger was involved.

Police initially treated Amanda Knox as a witness. She was questioned on different occasions, but the homicide investigators slowly formulated a theory that Knox was lying to protect the actual murderer. They also developed a motive theory that Kercher was killed because she refused to take part in a multi-person sexual trist. An orgy.

On November 6, the Italian homicide detectives again brought Knox in for questioning. This time it turned into a full-on, hard-core interrogation that lasted hours. This is a complex and controversial part of the Amanda Knox story and precise details—at least as precise as possible because the authorities did not audio or video record it (rather they elicited a written confession from Knox)—can be read on the website amandaknoxcase.com under The Interrogation of Amanda Knox.

In Amanda Knox’s written confession, she states to have been present while her nightclub boss, Patrick Lumbumba, raped and murdered Meredith Kercher. Knox did not supply any motive or any details which only an involved person would know. Lumbuba was arrested on the strength of Knox’s statement and it was shortly proven, beyond all doubt, that Lumbumba had an air-tight alibi and he was flat-out innocent. (This “accusation’ against Lumbumba is what led to her criminal slander conviction which is once again, in 2024, before the Italian courts. A verdict in set for June 5th.)

Rudy Guede

Amanda Knox was held in custody while the prosecution put an indictable case together. Meanwhile, the scene forensic evidence identified a DNA profile from semen on Kercher’s body. They conclusively linked it to Rudy Guede who had been at the social gathering on the evening when Kercher was last seen alive. Guede was arrested in Germany where he confessed and indicated that Amanda Knox had nothing to do with Kercher’s murder.

By now, the Italian legal system had a freight train rolling along the justice track. Instead of applying the brakes, the police, prosecutors, and judges threw more coal on the fire and kept on persecuting Amanda Knox. This was due to the archaic inquisitional system Italy was trying to gentrify into a western adversarial legal framework.

The common US-style evidence rules didn’t apply in the Italian arena. Despite Amanda Knox being hardline interrogated for hours without legal representation, being informed of her rights, denied food, water, and toilet facilities, slapped around, and breaking down in the middle of the night, the Italian court accepted Knox’s coerced confession as solid evidence that had to be admitted under their law structure. It didn’t matter that the prosecution’s perceived motive—some kinky sex game—had no factual basis, and it didn’t matter that Knox’s boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, provided Knox with her air-tight alibi. No, the Italian legal machine went right on persecuting Amanda Knox.

Knox stood trial through the summer and fall of 2009. Her case received massive public attention and the British tabloids sensationalized it like nothing ever seen. This was now the day of the emerging internet where chatrooms and social media made a spectacle of the trial and a massive mess of Amanda Knox’s life.

Amanda Knox was convicted of Meredith Kercher’s murder on December 4, 2009. She was sentenced to 26 years in jail. She appealed and had her murder conviction overturned on October 3, 2011, now having served nearly two years in an Italian prison.

In March of 2013, Italy’s Court of Cassation ordered a new trial and on January 30, 2014, she was once again convicted for killing Meredith Kercher. By now, Amanda Knox was back in America and was not returned to Italy during her new appeal. On March 27, 2015, Italy’s highest court again overturned her conviction, and her legal persecution was over.

Any rational person asks, “How could this miscarriage of justice possibly happen?” The answer is as complicated as the Amanda Knox story, if that’s possible to fully tell. It’s a murky mix of systematic incompetence and utter lack of regard for the truth. In the high court’s final ruling, the judge cited “sensational failures”, “glaring errors”, “investigative amnesia”, “guilty and culpable omissions”, “ignorance of expert forensic testimony that demonstrated contamination of evidence”, “outright falsification of forensic evidence”, and “a case without any foundation”.

The horrific Amanda Knox wrongful conviction story is best told by Amanda, herself. In a past interview with The Atlantic titled Who Owns Amanda Knox? , Amanda says:

Does my name belong to me? Does my face? What about my life? My story? Why is my name used to refer to events I had no hand in? I return to these questions again and again because others continue to profit off my identity, and my trauma, without my consent. Most recently, there is the film Stillwater, directed by Tom McCarthy and starring Matt Damon and Abigail Breslin, which was, in McCarthy’s words, “directly inspired by the Amanda Knox saga.” How did we get here?

In the fall of 2007, a British student named Meredith Kercher was studying abroad in Perugia, Italy. She moved into a little cottage with three roommates—two Italian law interns, and an American girl. Less than two months into her stay, a young man named Rudy Guede, an immigrant from the Ivory Coast, broke into the apartment and found Meredith alone. Guede had a history of breaking and entering. A week prior, he had been arrested in Milan while burglarizing a nursery school, and was found carrying a 16-inch knife. He was released.

A week later, he raped Meredith and stabbed her in the throat, killing her. In the process, he left his DNA in Meredith’s body and throughout the crime scene. He left his fingerprints and footprints in her blood. He fled to Germany immediately afterward, and later admitted to being at the scene.

I am the American girl in that story, and if the Italian authorities had been more competent, I would have been nothing more than a footnote in a tragic story. But as in many wrongful convictions, the authorities formed a theory before the forensic evidence came in, and when that evidence indicated a sole perpetrator, Guede, ego and reputation led them to contort their theory to maintain that I was still somehow involved. Guede was quietly convicted for participating in the murder in a separate fast-track trial, and then I became the main event for eight long years.

While I was on trial for the murder of Meredith Kercher, from 2007 to 2015, the prosecution and the media crafted a story, and a doppelgänger version of me, onto which people could affix all their uncertainties, fears, and moral judgments. People liked that story: the psychotic man-eater, the dirty ice queen, Foxy Knoxy. A jury convicted my doppelgänger and sentenced her to 26 years in prison.

But the guards couldn’t handcuff that invented person. They couldn’t escort that fiction into a cell. That was me, the real me, who returned to that windowless prison van, to those high cement walls topped with barbed wire, to those cold, echoing hallways and barred windows, to that all-consuming loneliness.

Ten years ago, at the age of 24, I was acquitted, and I tumbled into a kind of purgatory. I left one cell and immediately entered another: the quiet of my childhood bedroom. Outside, the telephoto lenses were fixed on my closed blinds. Prison had given me an appreciation for all the freedoms I’d taken for granted. Freedom showed me how many I still lacked.

As I walked back into the free world, I knew that my doppelgänger was there alongside me. I knew that everyone I would ever meet from then on would have already met, and judged, her. I had been acquitted in a court of law, but sentenced to life by the court of public opinion as, if not a killer, then at least a slut, or a nutcase, or a tabloid celebrity. Why doesn’t she just go away already? Her 15 minutes are over.

In freedom, I had become a pariah. Looking for work, going back to school, buying tampons at the pharmacy, everywhere I went I met people who already thought they knew who I was, what I’d done or not done, and what I deserved. I was threatened with abduction and torture in broad daylight; I was threatened with having Meredith’s name carved into my body. Strangers sent me lingerie and bizarre love letters.

All over the world, people believed they knew me, a warped assumption that turned me into a monster to some and a saint to others. I felt like I was always standing behind that cardboard cutout, Foxy Knoxy, saying, Hey, back here, the real me! Even most of the strangers who offered kindness and support didn’t truly see me. They loved her.

It’s hard to make friends, to date, to be a regular person when everyone you meet has a preconceived notion of who you really are, whether positive or negative. I could have chosen to hide out, to change my name, to dye my hair, and hope no one recognized me ever again. Instead, I decided to embrace the world that had dehumanized me, and all those who turned me into a product.

From the moment I was arrested, my name and face and trauma became a source of profit for news organizations, filmmakers, and other artists, scrupulous and unscrupulous. The most intimate details of my life, from my sexual history to my thoughts of death and suicide in prison, were taken from my private diary and leaked to journalists. Those journalists turned my darkest fears into fodder for hundreds of articles, thousands of blog posts, and millions of hot takes.

People speculated about my mental state and sexuality, they diagnosed me from afar, they used my predicament as a metaphor, they made TV movies about me, based characters in legal shows on me, and the worst of them took every opportunity they could, while I was in prison and while I’ve been out, to shame me for something I didn’t do, to shame me for living while Meredith is dead, to shame me for being in the very headlines they write, for being in the photographs they take without my consent.

The hypocrisy and the cruelty are maddening. And yet, being under that microscope has given me insight into how wrong a media narrative can be, how easy it is for all of us to consume other people’s lives as if they were mere content to fill up our Twitter feeds.

This focus on me led many to complain that Meredith Kercher had been forgotten. But whom did they blame for that? Not the Italian authorities. Not the press. Somehow it was my fault that the police and media focused on me at Meredith’s expense. The result of this is that 14 years later, my name is the name associated with this tragic series of events I had no control over.

Meredith’s name is often left out, as is Rudy Guede’s. When he was released from prison in late 2020, the New York Post headline read: “Man Who Killed Amanda Knox’s Roommate Freed on Community Service.” My name is the only name that shouldn’t be in that headline.

I never asked to become a public person. The Italian authorities and global media made that choice for me. And when I was acquitted and freed, the media and the public wouldn’t allow me to become a private citizen again.

I have not been allowed to return to the relative anonymity I had before Perugia. I have no choice but to accept the fact that I live in a world where my life, and my reputation, are freely available for distortion by a voracious content mill.

———

There is no doubt—no doubt whatsoever—that Amanda Knox really is innocent of murdering Meredith Kercher. She’s a true victim. A victim of a horrific crime. A victim of an abominable justice system. A victim of disgusting tabloids. And a victim of soulless trolls.

Footnote: Today, Amanda Knox is 36 years old and a mother of two. She hosts a successful podcast titled Labyrinths: Getting Lost with Amanda Knox with the themes of injustice and wrongful conviction. Amanda is a professional journalist, author, and activist. She recently signed with Hulu for a 12-part series based on her life story. One of the film’s co-producers is Monica Lewinsky.

NETFLIX MAKING A MURDERER — BRENDAN DASSEY’S CONFESSION

Several years ago, Netflix released a highly popular series called Making a Murderer. It covered the case where Steven Avery and his nephew, 16-year-old Brendan Dassey, were convicted in the first-degree murder of Teresa Halbach that occurred in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin on October 31, 2005. Both were sentenced to life imprisonment—Avery with no possibility of parole and Dassey eligible to apply in 2048. While the evidence against Avery is strong, the facts supporting Dassey’s guilt hinge solely on his police confession to which there’s a high likelihood of being false and obtained under significant coercion with psychological manipulation.

I recently published a piece titled Netflix Making a Murderer. Did Police Really Frame Steven Avery? It covers the evidence that convicted Avery and concludes Avery was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. I ended the post by saying I had severe doubts about the validity of Brendan Dassey’s confession.

For the past three weeks, I’ve closely looked at Brendan Dassey’s side of the Teresa Halbach murder file. This was a complex and time-consuming task as there’s a lot of material available, and that’s an understatement. At the heart of the issue is determining if Dassey truly was involved as a murder accomplice with Avery as he inconsistently claimed in his recorded confession. Or, the question also asks, “Did Brendan Dassey falsely confess and therefore was wrongly convicted?” which would be a horrific miscarriage of justice.

As I remarked, this is a highly complex subject that I’ve spent hours examining, and it’s impossible to cover all the details in a blog post. I’ve reached a conclusion, based on the balance of probabilities and from my personal experience with investigating homicides and obtaining murder confessions. First, let’s review the case facts, look at who Brendan Dassey is, and then discuss the issues in play that led to Dassey’s conviction.

If you haven’t already done so, it’s worthwhile to read the prequel post Netflix Making a Murderer. Did Police Really Frame Steven Avery?

Teresa Halbach was a 24-year-old photographer who attended Avery’s auto salvage business to photo a vehicle Avery wanted to list on Autotrader. She was reported missing two days later. On November 6, 2005, her incinerated body was found in a burn pile behind Avery’s shop. Other items belonging to Halbach were also located—her vehicle, camera, phone, and an ignition key found in Avery’s bedroom. Forensic evidence indisputably linked Avery to the crime, and a bullet also linked her shot body to Steven Avery’s rifle.

In February 2006, Brendan Dassey surfaced as an accomplice suspect. Following a chain of police interviews—interrogations if you like—Dassey made progressive statements where he went from knowing nothing to claiming to have raped Halbach, slit her throat, and helped Avery burn her body. He was convicted based on his statements alone, and there was absolutely no corroborating physical or other evidence to support that his confession was truthful Subsequently, Dassey’s conviction has been upheld, and his appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States has been denied. Dassey remains in jail under a strong probability of being completely innocent.

Brendan Dassey and His Legal Path

Brendan Ray Dassey was born on October 19, 1989, in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin to parents Barbara and Peter Dassey. He was raised along with four brothers in a mobile home located on the Avery property and, in the fall of 2005, attended Mishicot High School. Dassey struggled with education and communication. His IQ was rated at 65 which classified as cognitively disabled and borderline for mentally handicapped. Some of his classes were in the special education category, and he was failing at three of those.

Brendan Dassey was described as quiet and introverted with an interest in WWE wrestling, animals, and video games. He appeared slow to comprehend and slow to respond. This is clearly evident in his recorded police engagements. Before this case, Dassy had no contact with the criminal justice system and was not a troublemaker.

Dassey’s first police interview in the Halbach murder was on November 6, 2005. He was returning to the Avery property and riding in Steven Avery’s car driven by Dassey’s older brother. The police were onsite investigating Halbach’s disappearance, and they had a warrant to search that vehicle.

Brendan Dassey was isolated in the back of a police car and spoken to by officers who wanted to know if Dassey had seen Halbach on the property. Dassey stated he had not and had no information to offer that would assist in locating Halbach and determining what happened to her. This interview was audio recorded, but Dassey was not under arrest and did not have his rights read to him.

The police continued the Halbach investigation during November and December of 2005. During this period, they focussed solely on Steven Avery and assumed he’d acted alone. There was no evidence to suspect otherwise, and Brendan Dassey wasn’t on their radar.

This changed in January 2006, when Kayla Avery (Brendan Dassey’s cousin) confided to a school counselor that she suspected Dassey knew something about the Halbach murder. Kayla stated Dassey was “acting weird”—not sleeping and had lost a lot of weight—and becoming very emotional over trivial matters. This went unreported to authorities until it became a tip to the police on February 20, 2006.

On that afternoon, Detectives O’Neill and Baldwin (the same pair who spoke to Dassey on November 6, 2005) attended Dassey’s high school. They interviewed him in a private room and asked him general questions about the case. Dassey said he knew nothing but seemed evasive about seeing Teresa Halbach on the property.

O’Neill and Baldwin conferred with detectives Mark Weigert and Tom Fassbender who would handle Brendan Dassey from then on. Weigert and Fassbender went to Dassey’s high school on February 27, 2006, and spoke with him privately for an hour and forty-five minutes. He was not read his rights (the Miranda warning) and had no lawyer or adult present to represent him, however the interview was recorded, and all conversation remains on the record. Towards the end, Dassey, under pressure from the detectives, indicated he had seen Teresa Halbach on the property talking with Steven Avery on the afternoon of October 31, 2005.

The detectives switched tactics from a ‘soft” interview style to what many criticize as a controversial “hard” interrogation process known in law enforcement as the Reid Technique. Employing the Reid Technique to induce a confession is a core issue with today’s online critics assessing whether Brendan Dassey falsely confessed, and we’ll go much further into that arena in a bit. As well, we’ll examine the effect the Miranda Warning had on Brendan Dassey, the lack of legal representation during subsequent police contact, and whether his mental capacity was suitable to truly understand the incriminating statements he was about to make.

At 3:21 pm on February 27, 2006, Detectives Weigert and Fassbender began a firmer interrogation on Brendan Dassey. They’d taken him from school to the police station where they contained him in an audio/video room specifically designed for interrogations. The recording shows that the officers read Dassey his Miranda rights but were specific that he was not under arrest and was free to go at any time. Dassey waived his rights, and no lawyer or supportive adult was present.

The interrogation lasted forty-three minutes and ended when Dassey stated that Avery had told him what happened—Avery stabbed Halbach and transported her body to the firepit on a snowmobile sled. Further, Dassey alleged that Avery told him he hid the knife under Halbach’s vehicle seat.

Now the detectives took an unusual step. They contacted Dassey’s mother and had her and Brendan taken to a hotel and kept overnight under police guard. It’s assumed the detectives returned to the Avery property for a search, and it’s recorded that Weigert and Fassbender went to the hotel late in the evening and had an unrecorded conversation with Brendan Dassey.

On the morning of March 1, 2006, Weigert and Fassbender had a four-hour and nineteen-minute recorded session with Dassey. This time, they used a soft interview setting, and this video became the central piece of incriminating evidence used to convict Dassey. It’s meandering to view and considerably complex to understand exactly what Dassey says.

To paraphrase rambling, he eventually states he was with Steven Avery while Avery had Teresa Halbach tied naked to a bed while they both raped her. Then, according to Dassey’s confession, Avery stabbed and shot Halbach and both took her body to the burn pit. In one fleeting moment, Brendan Dassey says he cut Teresa Halbach’s throat, and this is the statement portion that secured his first-degree murder conviction.

Watch the Brendan Dassey confession video.

Brendan Dassey was charged with Halbach’s murder and remained in custody through his lengthy legal process. He was convicted in a jury trial on April 27, 2007, and was sentenced (at 17 years old) to life imprisonment. His first appeal was denied and Dassey entered the mainstream penitentiary system.

In 2010, Dassey entered a motion for a retrial based on the grounds of rights infringement leading to a false confession. It was denied by the trial court and reaffirmed denial by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals in January 2013. The Wisconsin Supreme Court declined to review that denial, and it wasn’t until the first Netflix series Making a Murder aired in 2015 that Dassey’s case took on a new life. There was so much public outcry that Dasey’s new lawyer, Laura Nirider, successfully won a writ of habeas corpus in a federal court that ordered a judicial review on the grounds that Dassey’s juvenile confession had been coerced and therefore was involuntary and unconstitutional.

In August 2016, United States magistrate judge William E. Duffin agreed with the false confession position. He called the case a “horrific miscarriage of justice”. Subsequently, the Wisconsin Justice Department appealed Duffin’s decision to the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh District which agreed to review matters but denied Dassey’s release from custody.

In June 2017, a three-panel of appellate judges upheld the magistrate’s decision to overturn Dassey’s conviction, but the justice department immediately filed an en banc rehearing where the entire appellate panel must rule, not three judges but all seven. On December 8, 2017, the panel voted 4-3 to reinstate Dassey’s conviction. Brendan Dassey lost his final legal battle on June 25, 2018, when the United States Supreme Court refused to hear the matter—no reasons given. He now remains in prison until at least 2048.

So, that’s the timeline and the case facts of how Brendan Dassey’s legal path played out. Let’s look at whether there was any fact in the confession that caused this path, and this starts with examining if his confession or statement to the police was legal.

Admissibility of Statements Given to Persons in Authority

The core legal argument around Dassey’s conviction is that his confession—a statement, in legal terms—should not have been admitted or allowed to be entered as evidence at his jury trial. After all, there was absolutely no physical or other incriminating evidence to independently support or corroborate that Dassey was being truthful in his March 1, 2006, statement during his interrogation with Detectives Weingert and Fassbender. Without Dassey’s confession, the state had no evidence against him, and the charges would have to have been dismissed.

Note that of all the interview/interrogation sessions Dassey encountered with the police (who are considered persons in authority)—seven in total as there were two more after his March 1, 2006, statement—only one was brought before the court and ruled on about admissibility. The process of ruling on a statement’s admissibility is called voir dire which is a trial within a trial and held away from the jury’s presence. If the voir dire finds the statement to meet the admissibility threshold, then the jury is allowed to see and hear the evidence. If the voir dire finds the statement is ruled inadmissible, then the evidence cannot be presented.

There are two main tests for the admissibility of statements given to persons in authority. One is that the statement must be voluntary. The other is that it must be given from a clear and operating mind. Voluntariness is subjective. The statement cannot be coerced or induced by threat or promise of favor. Free and operating mind is objective. The statement maker must know what they are doing and what the ramifications are for making their statement. In other words, they knew what they were getting into.

As strange as it might sound, there’s no legal requirement that the statement be true. If a confession is false—as in the person lying or making up the confession—that has no bearing on its admissibility. If the judge, as the trier of law, determines the accused provided the statement voluntarily through a free and operating mind, then they are required to allow the jury to access it. It’s the jurors, as the triers of fact, who determine how reliable or truthful the evidence from the statement or confession is.

The fundamental question is, “Do the jurors believe the accused person is telling the truth when they confess to a crime?” It’s of no concern to the jurors as to how the confession was obtained. It’s just a matter of credibility, and the jurors in Brendan Dassey’s trial must have believed his confession as it was the only evidence of Dassey’s put before them and they convicted him of first-degree murder (planned and deliberate) based upon his statement evidence.

Miranda and an Accused Person’s Rights

There’s a long-standing US Supreme Court ruling called Miranda where a person dealing with the police, as a suspect or an accused, must be read their rights by the officers involved with the proceedings. This dates to 1966 in Miranda v Arizona where Ernesto Arturo Miranda was charged with robbery, kidnapping, and rape. The ruling affirmed that Miranda’s 5th and 6th Amendment rights were violated upon his arrest and interrogation, so the evidence gleaned from not telling Miranda about his right to remain silent and his right to a lawyer was not admissible. The operating words in Miranda are arrest, custody, and interrogation.

There is no standard Miranda rights wording. The requirement lies in the authorities telling a suspect or detainee:

  • They have the right to remain silent.
  • Anything the suspect does say can and may be used against them in a court of law.
  • They have the right to have an attorney present before and during the questioning.
  • They have the right, if they cannot afford the services of an attorney, to have one appointed, at public expense and without cost to them, to represent them before and during the questioning.

Over the years, Miranda warnings (cautionings) have evolved into pretty much this:

You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can be used against you in court. You have the right to talk to a lawyer for advice before we ask you any questions. You have the right to have a lawyer with you during questioning. If you cannot afford a lawyer, one will be appointed for you before any questioning if you wish. If you decide to answer questions now without a lawyer present, you have the right to stop answering at any time.

Officer Arresting Young Man

A key issue explored at a criminal trial is not that a Miranda warning was issued. It must, but it’s whether the accused person understood the concept and whether they exercised or waived their rights when incriminating themselves. This loops to a freely operating mind and voluntariness which, in turn, loops to the influence of threats, promises, inducements, and coercion. And, although not required, veracity of the information—is it true? And can the truth be independently corroborated by facts, preferably key facts which are only known to the perpetrator of the crime and the inner investigation circle?

Threats, Promises, Inducements, Coercion, and the Reid Interrogation Technique

All criminal investigation conversations involve discourse between civilians and persons in authority. Interviews, generally, are non-confrontational, fact-finding, information-gathering sessions. Interrogations, on the other hand, are adversarial, guilt-finding confrontations. Interviews don’t require Miranda warnings. Interrogations do.

Brendan Dassey’s first two contacts with persons in authority were fact-finding interviews. The second raised police suspicions that Dassey knew more than he was telling and, possibly, was Steven Avery’s accomplice. This moved the fence in his third police contact on February 27, 2006, when the detectives elicited from Dassey that he saw Teresa Halbach with Steven Avery and they suspected Dassey probably knew a lot more of what happened, as in aiding and abetting Avery to kill Halbach.

In reviewing the transcripts from the February 27 schoolhouse interview to the same-day police station interrogation, I can clearly see Detectives Weigert and Fassbender moving their strategy from interview to interrogation There’s no question, in my opinion, that Weigert and Fassbender knew exactly what they were doing. Like me, they were schooled in the Reid Interrogation Technique and had previously practiced it.

Properly employed, Reid works. But I have to say, at this point in this post, that all Reid confessions MUST be backed up by independent corroborative facts that verify truthfulness in confessions, and that they were not induced by threats, promises, and coercion that can elicit false confessions. Reid has many critics, in the legal world and the online world, and they all point to the potential of false confessions resulting from the psychological manipulation power practiced in Reid. Here’s a previous blog post I wrote about the Reid Interrogation Technique. Let’s quickly review what Reid is and later see if the technique contributed to Brendan Dassey’s confession as many learned and armchair critics claim as fact.

The Reid Technique was developed in the 1960s by an American polygraphist named John Reid. It’s a blueprint for psychologically manipulating criminals into confessing to their crimes. It’s standard training for investigators and has been used thousands and thousands of times to elicit confessions. A textbook Reid Technique interrogation involves nine progressive steps:

1. Confrontation — The interrogator presents the facts and asks for response.

2. Theme Development — The interrogator develops a story of why the crime happened.

3. Stopping Denials — Any denials by the suspect are shot down.

4. Overcoming Objections — The interrogator focuses on the truth.

5. Getting Suspect’s Attention — Keep the suspect listening to the narrative.

6. Suspect Loses Resolve — Denials are stopped and objections are overcome.

7. Alternatives — The interrogator offers a way out and that is to confess.

8. Bringing Suspect Into Conversation — Getting the suspect to talk.

9. The Confession — The suspect is psychologically broken and confesses.

Note that I said a “textbook” Reid confession. In these nine steps, an interrogator must play within the Miranda and admissibility rules for the confession to be used as evidence of guilt. If the rules are violated, then regardless of how skillfully a Reid Technique was applied, the evidentiary value is worthless. The same goes for truthfulness and that’s were independent corroboration comes in. Let’s now examine Brendan Dassey’s confession that earned him life behind bars.

Brendan Dassey’s Confession

On March 1, 2006, Detectives Weigert and Fassbender interrogated Brendan Dassey in a video/audio recorded and controlled environment. I’ve watched and dissected the four-hour and nineteen-minute session, and I can confidently say this is not the “dangerous” classic or textbook Reid procedure that so many internet critics and legal analysts claim produces false confessions. The detectives didn’t have to use a full Reid. They’d already aligned with Brendan Dassey from 1 to 7. They only used Step 8—Bringing Suspect Into Conversation. The overall Reid Technique’s progressive psychological breakdown had nothing to do with causing Brendan Dassey to say he helped rape and murder Teresa Halbach.

What Detectives Weigert and Fassbender did was simply pry words from Dassey’s mouth, bit-by-bit over a long, long time. They used a constant theme of telling the truth, and by telling the truth, things would “go much easier on him in the long run”. However, this is an outstanding violation of the admissibility test where an inducement is offered by promise of favor. This wasn’t a one-time infraction. The entire converse is loaded with coaxing. There is no way Brendan Dassey would have said the incriminating and damaging statements he made if the detectives hadn’t continually induced him.  It was wrenched out of a low functioning kid. There was nothing voluntary about this.

Watch the Brendan Dassey confession video.

In fairness to Detectives Weigert and Fassbender, at no time were they rude, threatening, or in any way aggressive to Dassey. They were somewhat deceitful, which is a court-accepted tactic, but I believe they were acting in what they thought was good faith for the interest of Teresa Halbach’s murder case. Their flaw, however, was having a preconceived picture of where Dassey might have fit with Steven Avery’s actions. The entire shape of the interrogation was to have Dassey admit to some version of their theory. For this reason alone, to preserve fairness in the process, the confession should not have been admitted into evidence and therefore Brendan Dassey should not have been convicted because of his confession—his statement to the police.

A second reason to have the confession legally set aside is the issue of a free and operating mind. From the opening minutes of the interrogation video, it’s apparent Brendan Dassey is cognitively impaired. He’s a vulnerable youth—a naïve and unsophisticated sixteen-year-old boy with the mental capacity of a child facing two seasoned homicide detectives. And he’s unrepresented by a lawyer. Not even his mother was there.

Now, nonrepresentation isn’t a Miranda violation, but Dassey’s ability to knowingly and intelligently waive his rights, and appreciate the seriousness of the situation that was about to affect the rest of his life, simply was not there.

This brings me to assess the reliability of what Brendan Dassey says in his confession. He’s all over the place when it comes to detail. Most of his inconsistent, yet incriminating, moments come when he agrees to suggestions put forward by his interrogators. There was nothing Dassey says that can be verified as truthful through independent corroboration which is critically necessary to support such a damaging thing as an induced murder confession, especially from a juvenile.

As Brendan Dassey said when he testified at his trial, “What I said was false. They got into my head. I told them what they wanted to hear. I guessed at answers, just like I do with my homework.”

In my opinion, Dassey’s statement to Detectives Weigert and Fassbender made on March 1, 2006, should never have been allowed before a jury. Having the confession legally rejected at voir dire would have negated his conviction. There was nothing else to prove his guilt. Also, in my opinion, there’s a high likelihood Brendan Dassey falsely confessed due to psychological manipulation, and he was wrongfully convicted by an admissible false confession.

If that’s the truth, it’s a horrific miscarriage of justice, indeed.

LINDY CHAMBERLAIN — DID A DINGO REALLY GET HER BABY?

Azaria Chamberlain—a nine-week-old infant—disappeared from her family’s campsite at Ayers Rock (now called Uluru) in the central desert of Australia’s Northern Territory on August 17, 1980. Despite a thorough search and massive investigation, Azaria’s body was never found and the question of whether she was taken from the tent by a dingo (wild dog) or whether she was killed by her mother, Lindy (Lynne) Chamberlain, lingered on.

Lindy Chamberlain was charged with Azaria’s first-degree murder and convicted of her daughter’s slaying. After thirty-two years, eight legal proceedings, and tens of millions spent in the investigation, Lindy was finally exonerated by a coroner’s inquest that declared Azaria’s death was an accident—the result of a wild animal attack, to wit—a dingo.

The case, which caught world-wide attention, was entirely circumstantial and supported by seemingly incriminating points of forensic evidence that convinced a jury to find Lindy Chamberlain guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. But how credible were these “forensic facts”? Where did the case go wrong? And did a dingo really get her baby?

Lindy Chamberlain (34), her husband Michael (38), son Aidan (6), son Reagan (4), and infant Azaria were on a family vacation and pitched their tent in the Ayers Rock public campground at the famous World Heritage site. At 8:00 p.m., and well after dark, Lindy finished breast-feeding Azaria and took her to the tent—thirty feet from the picnic table—where she placed the baby in a bassinet and covered her with blankets. She’d taken Aidan with her to the tent where Reagan was already asleep inside.

Lindy went to their car that was parked beside the tent and got a can of baked beans to give Aidan as a bed-time snack, then returned with Aidan to Michael at the picnic table. At 8:15 p.m. , Azaria cried out. Concerned, Lindy walked toward the darkness of the tent-site and claimed she saw a dingo at the opening of the unzipped tent door. It appeared to have something in its mouth and was violently shaking its head.

Lindy hopped a short parking barricade which made the animal flee into the night. She checked inside the tent.  Azaria was gone, and there were fresh blood stains on the floor, bedding, and other articles. Lindy rushed out, yelling to Michael and the other campers, “Help! A dingo’s got my baby!”

The adjacent campers formed a search party which was re-enforced by authorities and local residents, eventually totaling over three hundred volunteers including Aborigine expert trackers with their dogs. Searchers noted dingo paw prints in the sand outside the tent, and they followed a trail which showed marks indicating a dingo was partly dragging an object, periodically setting it down to possibly rest or readjust its grip. (Azaria weighed just under ten pounds.) The trail indicated its destination was toward known dingo dens at the southwest base of Ayers Rock.

By daylight, they found no sign of the infant, and the search was called off. The Chamberlain family cooperated in a preliminary investigation conducted by police from the nearest town of Alice Springs, then they returned home to Mount Isa.

Initially, no one doubted the Chamberlains’ story. Several campers had seen a dingo in the campground before dark. Others heard a dog growl minutes prior to the baby’s cry. They also heard Lindy’s scream, “A dingo got my baby!” Further, the park ranger had warned that the dingo population was increasing, hungry, and becoming very aggressive. And young Aidan backed up his mother’s story of going to the tent and the car, being with Lindy throughout.

The police investigation stopped. But, seven days later, a hiker found some of the garments Azaria was dressed in, nearly three miles away by the dingo dens. The clothes were a snap-buttoned jumpsuit, a singlet, and pieces of plastic diaper, or “nappy” as they say in Australia. Still missing was a “matinee” coat that Azaria wore overtop.

Examiners found bloodstains on the upper part of the jumpsuit which showed a jagged perforation in the left sleeve and a “V”-shaped slice in the right collar. The singlet was inside-out, and the diaper fragments were shredded. The police officer who retrieved the garments failed to photograph their original position as had the original police officers attending the incident failed to photograph the scene. They also failed to properly examine and photo the tent’s interior which others reported was pooled and spotted with blood.

By now, the Dingo’s Got My Baby case was getting international attention and the speculative rumor mill was alive in the media. “Dingos don’t behave like that!” self-appointed experts were saying. “It’s unheard of for a dingo to do this!” “Dingos can’t run with something in their mouths!”

Bigotry was emerging because the Chamberlains were Seventh Day Adventists with Michael being a professional pastor. “They’re a cult!” “They believe in child sacrifice!” “They were at Ayers Rock for a ritual!” “They always dressed the baby in black!” “The name ‘Azaria’ means ‘Sacrifice in the Wilderness’!”

When the first inquest was held in February 1981, the media was in a frenzy and the police were covering their butts. The coroner ruled Azaria’s death was due to a dingo attack, despite there being no physical body to examine. Further, the coroner criticized a shoddy police investigation and certain government officials of the Northern Territory who failed to provide the police with proper resources to investigate.

This threw fuel on the media fire and caused the authorities to start damage control.

A task force was formed to re-open the case, fittingly named Operation Ochre after the red sands of Ayers. It was headed by an ambitious police Superintendent with an aggressive field detective and overseen by a politically protective prosecutor. Collectively, they ran the investigation with the mindset that the dingo attack was implausible, and that Lindy fabricated the story because she’d killed her own kid.

On September 19 1981, Operation Ochre did a massive round-up of the original witnesses for re-interviews and raided the Chamberlains’ home. They seized boxes of items in a search for forensic evidence and impounded their car.

The investigation theory held that Lindy took Azaria from the tent to the car where she slit her baby’s throat, then stuffed her infant’s body in a camera bag. With husband Michael’s help, and after the searchers went home, they took their daughter’s body far away to the dingo dens, buried their little girl, then planted her clothing as a decoy.

There wasn’t the slightest suggestion of motive or any consideration of how the Chamberlains were stellar in reputation.

The vehicle was forensically grid-searched over a three-day period by a laboratory technician with a biology background. Suspected bloodstains were found on the console, the floor, and under the dashboard which were described, at trial, as an “arterial spray” pattern.

Blood was also found on various items taken from the Chamberlains’ home that were known to be present in the tent at the time Azaria disappeared. The lab-tech confirmed the blood on Azaria’s jumpsuit was not only human—it was composed of 25 % fetal hemoglobin which was consistent with an infant’s blood.

This was the flawed forensic cornerstone of the prosecution’s circumstantial case.

A second inquest was held in February 1982. It was run as a prosecution—an indictment with the focus on proving a theory, rather than discovering facts. The Chamberlains were not privy to the “evidence” beforehand and had no ability to defend themselves. “Information” was presented by the lab-tech that blood from the car was consistent with fetal hemoglobin and, therefore, the baby must have bled out in the car.

Another forensic expert testified the cuts and bloodstain pattern on the jumpsuit were caused by a sharp-edged weapon, probably a pair of scissors, and were in no way caused by canine teeth.

Despite all the civilian witnesses testifying consistently as before, and corroborating the Chamberlains claims, the inquest deferred judgment and referred the case to the criminal courts.

Lindy was tried for Azaria’s murder in September 1982, and her husband was accused of being an accessory-after-the-fact. Over a hundred and fifty witnesses testified, many of those being forensic experts—some of considerable note. The Chamberlains were forced to defend themselves, funded by their church and donations by believers in their innocence. They had no access to disclosure of evidence by the prosecution and were kept on the ropes by surprise after surprise of technical evidence which they had no time nor ability to prepare a defense.

This trial was not just sensational in Australia. It was carried by all forms of world news—TV, radio, print, and tabloids. As big as the O.J. Simpson trial would become in America, the Australian public were split on the question of Lindy’s guilt or innocence.

The jury bought the prosecution’s case that science was far more reliable that eye and ear witness testimony and the Chamberlains were convicted. Lindy was sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labor and Michael was given a three-year suspended sentence. A pregnant Lindy went directly to jail where their newest baby—a daughter—was born. Two appeals to Australian high courts fell on deaf ears. They found no fault in the application of law.

The Dingo Got My Baby case never faded from public interest. Many groups petitioned, calling for changes in the law and for a new, fair trial to be held. Pressure mounted on the Australian Northern Territory officials.

On February 02, 1986, a British rock climber fell to his death at Ayers Rock. During the search for his body, Azaria’s missing matinee jacket was found—partially buried in the sand outside a previously unknown dingo den. The examination found matching perforations in the coat consistent with the jumpsuit cuts.

News of this find caused a massive public outcry against the Northern Territory government, and they reluctantly released Lindy from jail pending a re-investigation. A third inquest was a “paper” review that recommended the matter be sent back to the criminal  courts.

A Royal Commission of Inquiry into Lindy Chamberlain’s conviction was held from April 1986 to June 1987. It focused on the validity of the scientific evidence, rather than on legalities of court procedure.

The jewel of the forensic crown—the fetal hemoglobin in the family car bloodstains turned out not to be blood at all. The drops were spilled chocolate milkshake and some copper ore dust while the “arterial spray” was overspray from injected sound deadener applied at the car’s factory.

The clothing cuts became an Achilles’ Heel and toppled the case because the expert witness was, by now, discredited in other cases resulting in wrongful convictions. New forensic witnesses, with more advanced technological expertise, testified the cuts were entirely consistent with being mauled by a dog.

In September 1988, the Australian High Court quashed the Chamberlains’ convictions and awarded them $1.3 million in damages—far less than their legal bills, let alone compensating their pain and suffering. The High Court never said Lindy was innocent, though. It rightfully set aside her conviction but made no amends in publicly proclaiming innocence.

It wasn’t until 2012, that Lindy’s perseverance forced the fourth inquest. The presiding coroner classified Azaria Chamberlain’s death as accidental—being taken and killed by a dingo. Coroner Elizabeth Morris had the decency to publicly apologize to Lindy on behalf of all Australian authorities for a horrific, systematic miscarriage of justice.

Coroner Morris also had the class not to single out individuals. Without her saying, it was evident the police, prosecution, and forensic people instinctively reacted as they’d been trained to react—and that was to individually find evidence to support their case interest and not to follow what didn’t fit.

And Coroner Morris was careful not to burn the media. Lindy’s situation was a media dream, having all the elements of a thrilling novel—mystery, instinctive fears, motherhood, femininity, family, religion, politics, and an exotic location combined with courtroom and forensic drama.

And it came at the expense of an innocent and instinctively-protective human mother whose baby girl got taken by a wild animal—probably a mother dingo instinctively trying to feed and protect her own babies.

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Here are links to more information on the Chamberlain travesty:

Report of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Azaria Chamberlain’s Death

Lindy Chamberlain–Creighton’s Website