KENNEDY BREWER

(NOXUBEE COUNTY, MS; February 15, 2008) - Two men who were wrongfully
convicted of separate child murders in Noxubee County, Mississippi, were
cleared in the crimes at a hearing this morning based on evidence
proving their innocence. Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks, who are
represented by the Innocence Project, have maintained their innocence
for 15 years and were joined by more than 100 of their relatives at this
morning's hearing.
New evidence, which includes DNA testing and a confession, has
identified the actual perpetrator in both cases, who was arrested last
week. At today's hearing, the case against Brewer was dismissed - making
him the first person in Mississippi exonerated through post-conviction
DNA testing. Brewer served time on death row. Brooks' conviction was
vacated and he was released from custody; Brooks will be fully
exonerated when the indictment against him is dismissed, which the
Innocence Project expects in the next few weeks.
"It has taken 15 long years, but Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks are
finally free. The evidence clearly shows that they are innocent - what's
troubling is that their innocence has been clear for years, but they
remained incarcerated while the true perpetrator was at large,"
Innocence Project Co-Director Peter Neufeld said. "The system wasn't
just broken in these cases - different elements within the system
actually conspired to convict two innocent men of heinous crimes, while
the actual perpetrator remained at large. These cases should haunt
Mississippi and the nation, and they should lead to a top-to-bottom
review of how the state is investigating and prosecuting cases."
The same sheriff's officer investigated both crimes, the same District
Attorney prosecuted both crimes, and the same discredited forensic
dentist and same controversial pathologist conducted the post mortems
and misled juries in both cases with false testimony implicating Brooks
and Brewer. Because of concerns about whether Brewer and Brooks' cases
would be handled appropriately once new evidence emerged, the Innocence
Project persuaded the Mississippi Attorney General to intervene in the
reinvestigation of the cases. This is the first time in the nation that
a case has ended in exoneration after a state Attorney General has
intervened and removed it from a local prosecutor, according to the
Innocence Project.
In 1992, Brooks was convicted of the 1990 rape and murder of his
ex-girlfriend's three-year-old daughter. The child was taken from her
home in the middle of the night, and her body was later found in a pond
near her home. Her skin had slippage and other marks consistent with a
child who had been killed and then dumped in a pond - but the local
forensic analysts falsely claimed that the marks on her wrists were
"bite marks" from Brooks. In 1995, Brewer was convicted of an identical
crime that happened just 18 months after the one for which Brooks was
convicted. Brewer's girlfriend also had a three-year-old daughter who
was taken from her home in the middle of the night, raped and murdered.
Her body was found in a creek near her home, with cuts that the same
prosecution witness said were "bite marks" from Brewer but were actually
caused by insects and animals in the creek.
In 2001, while Brewer was on death row, DNA tests excluded him as the
source of the semen recovered from the girl's body. His conviction was
vacated, but the District Attorney (who had prosecuted the case at
trial) said he was going to re-try Brewer for the crime, and again seek
the death penalty. For a full five years, the prosecutor did not move
the case to trial - so Brewer waited for five years in the county jail.
Finally, last summer, the Innocence Project helped Andre de Gruy of the
Office of Capital Defense Counsel in Mississippi secure Brewer's release
from jail and geared up to represent him at a new trial. Meanwhile,
seeing the similarities between the two cases, the Innocence Project
took Brooks' case - but quickly learned that the biological evidence
from the crime was too degraded to yield results from DNA testing.
The Innocence Project was concerned that conflicts of interest in
Noxubee County would hamper efforts to secure justice for Brewer, so the
Innocence Project asked the Mississippi Attorney General to intervene.
Ben Creekmore, the District Attorney of Oxford, was appointed Special
Prosecutor of the Brewer case.
Meanwhile the Innocence Project continued its own investigation of both
cases - which led to Justin Albert Johnson, a 51-year-old Noxubee County
man who was an initial suspect in both cases. At the time of the Brooks
case, Johnson frequently stayed in a house very close to the victim's
home; at the time of the Brewer case, he lived with his parents just a
couple of houses down from that victim's home. Although Johnson was the
only suspect with a history of committing sexual assaults against women
and young girls, local law enforcement investigating both crimes ignored
him after they prematurely locked onto Brooks and Brewer as prime
suspects. In recent months, the Innocence Project secured DNA testing on
evidence from the Brewer case which matched Johnson's DNA profile.
Just as it had in Brewer's case, the Innocence Project feared that local
conflicts and regional concerns could compromise Brooks' quest for
justice. Neufeld appealed to the Attorney General to intervene and take
over the arrest, interviewing and prosecution of Johnson. The Attorney
General assigned its elite Integrity Unit to work on the continuing
investigation of the case.
Last week, based on the DNA match, the almost identical modus operandi
and his proximity to both crimes, investigators from the Attorney
General's office arrested Johnson and questioned him about both cases -
and he confessed to both. He also assured the investigators that he
acted alone. The confession was recorded. The Innocence Project expects
that he will be prosecuted for both crimes.
"If local law enforcement had properly investigated these crimes, they
would have stayed focused on Albert Johnson from the beginning. In fact,
if Albert Johnson had been apprehended for the first crime, the second
one would never have happened - and the three-year-old victim would be
approaching her 18th birthday," said Innocence Project Staff Attorney
Vanessa Potkin.
The forensic analysis and testimony in both trials was deeply flawed and
further illustrates the corruption that led to the two wrongful
convictions, the Innocence Project said. Dr. Michael West, a Mississippi
dentist who has testified for the prosecution in cases in nine states,
claimed that cuts on the victims' bodies were human bite marks caused by
only the two top teeth; in each case, he testified with certainty that
Brewer and Brooks were the sources of the alleged bite marks. By the
time of Brewer's trial, West had already been widely discredited; he was
the first member ever suspended by the American Board of Forensic
Odontology. Regardless, prosecutors continued to use West as an expert
for years and courts allowed his testimony.
West has routinely collaborated with Steven Hayne, a medical examiner
for hire who conducts nearly every autopsy for prosecutors in
Mississippi - even though he flunked his board certification. He nets
nearly $1 million a year from conducting autopsies across the state, and
West helped set up the system that allows Hayne to handle so many
autopsies (each year, Hayne conducts six times more autopsies than the
recommended standard). Hayne conducted the autopsies on the victims in
the Brewer and Brooks cases - and called West in for both autopsies.
"It's well known across Mississippi that Steven Hayne works closely with
police and prosecutors to make determinations in autopsies that suit
their criminal investigations and prosecutions. It's also well known
that Michael West will dispense with professionalism and objectivity to
provide favorable testimony for prosecutors, even if his
misrepresentations and fabrications could lead to the execution of
innocent people. Their hubris and misconduct sent the innocent Brewer to
death row and the innocent Levon Brooks to languish in prison for the
rest of his life," Neufeld said. "These cases are an urgent call for a
thorough review of how crime scene evidence gets analyzed and makes it
into Mississippi courtrooms and how we can make sure only the most
credible, objective, reliable science is used in criminal cases."
Meanwhile, the officer who investigated both cases, Earnest Eichelberger,
told Neufeld and Potkin last summer that his practice in such cases is
simply to arrest everyone who had been in the house for the preceding 72
hours, then let the case sort itself out. Eichelberger worked in the
Noxubee County Sheriff's office at the time of the crimes and now works
for the Mississippi State Police, where he is tasked with helping solve
crimes in rural communities. Last summer, Eichelberger said that he
saves all of his old case files in his home, but he has since claimed
that files in the Brewer and Brooks cases don't exist.
Brewer and Brooks are African-American men in rural Mississippi. They
received inadequate, under-financed defenses, not that different from
what many other poor black defendants received and continue to receive
in Mississippi.
