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1Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Empty Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Sun Aug 02, 2009 6:17 pm

rosco 357

rosco 357
Veteran
my words, i dont believe anything pisses me off worst than this. i cant even watch movies where innocent ppl are put in prison, 26 years of this mans life, is such a tragedy. im glad today we have better forensics. no telling how many innocent ppl are in prison for poor law enforcement or lazy law enforcement, in years past, i cant imagine the feeling one would have being in prison knowing ur innocent.

Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison CNN posted:(July 31) --
http://news.aol.com/article/fake-scent-tracking-dog-sent-man-to/597931?icid=main|htmlws-main|dl1|link3|http://news.aol.com/article/fake-scent-tracking-dog-sent-man-to/597931

A Florida man who was convicted of murder in part because of the work of an allegedly infallible scent-tracking dog is free now, after the dog and its owner were exposed as frauds. But Bill Dillon he had to spend 26 years in prison before the error in his case was rectified.
Dillon was 22 when he was sentenced to life in prison in 1981 for killing a man in Canova Beach on the eastern coast of the state.
During the trial, Dillon was adamant that he had not committed the crime. But a man named John Preston testified in court that he and his scent-tracking German shepherd connected Dillon to the killer's bloody T-shirt. Preston said his dog, Harass 2, even tracked Dillon’s scent repeatedly in later tests.

Dillon expected to remain in prison for the rest of his life -- all because of Harrass 2 and Preston, who billed himself around the country as a scent-tracking expert.
But nearly three decades later, in 2007, DNA testing proved that Dillon's DNA did not match the DNA on the killer's shirt. The dog was wrong. Eight months ago, after 26 years behind bars, Bill Dillon walked out of prison a free man.
"Supposedly the dog got my scent three times," Dillon told CNN, "and I never saw freedom again." Dillon also said he remembers the dog's "huge" head from the trial and that he looked like a "bear."
In 1981, DNA testing wasn’t used in criminal investigations so authorities relied simply on the presumed legendary nose of Preston's German shepherd. Preston testified that his dog had tracked Dillon's scent to a piece of paper he had touched, and even to a room he was in at the courthouse.
Preston and his dog had a track record -- he had convinced juries more than 100 times of his dog’s talents. In Dillon's case, Preston even told the court his dog had the ability to track a scent under water. CNN consulted tracking dog experts in Florida about this. They told us that was impossible.
In 1984, before Preston was exposed as a fraud, he told ABC News that he believed he was never wrong. Tim McGuire, a dog-tracking expert with Florida's Volusia County Sheriff’s Department, said it was implausible that a dog could have picked up Dillon's scent back in 1981 eight days after the murder, just after a massive hurricane had blown through the area.
McGuire viewed videotapes of Preston's dog, Harrass 2, at work. In the tapes, there are multiple times when the dog urinates on evidence. McGuire said he did not consider what the dog was doing as work.

`Preston was discredited in 1984, after a Florida judge who had become suspicious of Preston set up his own test for Harrass 2. The dog failed terribly.
Documents obtained by CNN show he could not even follow a scent for 100 feet. The judge determined the dog could track successfully only when his handler had advance knowledge of the case.
Dillon thinks Preston and his scent-tracking dog were part of a larger conspiracy.
"Preston could lead the dog to the suspect or the evidence," alleges Dillon, but "any cases that were weak, not good enough to go to the jury, they [the prosecution] fed Preston information, paid him good money to come and lie."
Florida’s Attorney General told CNN it is not aware of any evidence of a conspiracy involving John Preston and his dog.
Though Preston was discredited, Florida never reviewed cases on which he’d testified . And nobody ever told Dillon -- who sat in prison another 20 years before he found out. It wasn't until 2006 that he heard Preston was a fake.
Florida's Innocence Project believes dozens of inmates around the country may have been wrongly convicted as a result of John Preston and his dog. It is calling for an investigation of those cases. Meanwhile, Preston, the dog's handler, died last year. He was never charged with a crime.

2Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Empty Re: Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Sun Aug 02, 2009 7:55 pm

gypsy

gypsy
Moderator
Hi Rosco~ welcome back~

I agree on the innocent being put in prison for nothing~wonder how many have been excuted.

3Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Empty Re: Fake Tracking Dog Sent Man to Prison Sun Aug 02, 2009 11:34 pm

rosco 357

rosco 357
Veteran
i never years ago questioned the jury system . i figured all ppl were guilty, but when dna came out and they had to let the ppl they said were guilty of rape out because it was not their DNA in the woman. as they keep all the evidence, and let many pll out after seveal years as it was not their dna , i started to second guess some police methods, although i know they do the best they can in most cases, and now with the media, they tow the line even more i feel, but if i were on a jury, i would be more fair now than many years ago, they dont take me,i say thing they dont like as to not be chose, lol,, but i did do a civil trial,

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