HPD Crime Lab 06-22-07
HPD Crime Lab 06-22-07
HPD Crime Lab 06-22-07
Two years ago the “crime lab” for the Houston Police Department
was a national scandal. Its shoddy analysis and unprofessional investigation
protocol had apparently resulted in the conviction of scores of innocent
criminal defendants. Mayor Bob White vowed to clean up the disgraceful
mess and restore law enforcement integrity to the crime laboratory. Michael
Bromwich, a former U.S. Justice Department inspector, was assigned the
task of investigating the crime lab, its procedures, and issue
recommendations. Bromwich fulfilled his commission on June 13, 2007
when he issued a 400-page report whose recommendations were not readily
embraced by the very city officials who pushed for Bromwich’s
investigation in 2005.
Mayor White, Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt, and Harris County
District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal collectively, and quite emphatically,
rejected the call for the appointment of a “special master.”
"I guess you probably can't get much more official than the mayor, the
police chief, the chairman of the Public Safety Committee, and the district
attorney responding to a particular report," White said concerning the
rejection of the special master recommendation.
"We have special masters," the district attorney said. "They're called
judges in our building."
Bromwich disagreed with these city officials, pointing out that he and
his colleagues who assisted in preparing the report were "extremely mindful
of the limits of our responsibility."
Since the 2002 audit, the crime lab’s budget has doubled and just last
year the American Society of Crime Lab Directors accredited the lab.
Bromwich acknowledged these positive efforts by city officials, saying: "It's
very important to note . . . that the crime lab has made enormous positive
strides over the last three and a half years. It bears little resemblance to the
substantially dysfunctional institution of the past."
But David Dow, director of the Texas Innocence Network was not
impressed: "I don't want to have to rely on the district attorney's office to
assess the importance of (untested) physical evidence in these cases."
Then there is the crucial issue of the costs associated with responding
to the report’s recommendations. Mayor White addressed this financial issue
of evidence retesting in as many as 850 cases:
"It (would) come from (the) public safety (budget). But if it is done
under court supervision, and it's something that the district attorney's office
and HPD believe is important to serve the ends of justice, then that kind of
thing can be supported."
These costs will be in addition to the $5.3 million already spent on the
Bromwich investigation as well as the substantial crime lab budget increased
over the last four years.
Prosecutors, police, and crime lab technicians have learned over the
past decade that the costs of convicting the wrong person – either by a
knowing suppression of favorable evidence by the prosecution, or by a
fabrication of evidence by the police, or by the criminal negligence of crime
lab technicians – are staggering.
"It looks like to me that they're trying to sweep some of their final
problems under the rug," he said.
No.