Florida man exonerated of rape and murder after 37 years sues authorities

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by circumventthesystem
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A Florida man exonerated of a 1983 rape and murder after 37 years in prison is suing over his wrongful conviction, and initial sentence to death, in which a disproven bite mark was crucial evidence.

Robert DuBoise, 56, was freed in August last year after long-shelved untested DNA evidence from a rape kit proved he was innocent of the rape and murder of 19-year-old Barbara Grams in Tampa.

Grams was attacked and beaten to death while walking home from her job at a restaurant on 19 August 1983. No one else has been arrested for her murder.

In the federal lawsuit filed this week, DuBoise’s attorneys name as defendants the city of Tampa, four police investigators and a forensic dentist who testified a bite mark on Grams’ cheek was from DuBoise – based on a faulty beeswax mold.

“The only physical evidence implicating Mr DuBoise was fabricated ‘bitemark’ evidence that supposedly matched Mr DuBoise to an injury on the victim’s body. In fact, the victim’s injury was not a human bitemark at all,” Daniel Marshall, an attorney for the Human Rights Defense Center, wrote in the lawsuit.

The dentist, Dr Richard Souviron, gained notoriety as an expert after testifying in the murder trial of serial killer Ted Bundy that one of his Florida victims had a bite mark that matched his teeth.

Souviron, whose practice is in Coral Gables, Florida, did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment on the DuBoise case on Saturday.

DuBoise’s lawsuit quotes a speech to a police chiefs in which Souviron said: “If you tell me that is the guy that did it, I will go into court and say that is the guy that did it.“

The lawsuit claims beeswax was not an accepted method of identifying teeth marks in murder cases and was used “only because another officer in the Tampa police department operated a honey business on the side”.

In addition, the lawsuit contends that investigators conspired with jailhouse informants to falsely implicate DuBoise and were guilty of misconduct. DuBoise never confessed and maintained his innocence throughout, his lawyers said.

The lawsuit, first reported by the Tampa Bay Times, seeks unspecified damages.

Supporters of DuBoise have requested $1.85m in compensation from the state legislature, but that bill has gone nowhere.

DuBoise was just 18 when he arrested. According to the lawsuit, investigators initially focused on him after an attendant at a gas station across the street from where Grams was found told police three “boys” named Robert, Bo and Ray had been “causing trouble”. That was six months before Grams was killed.

Convicted of murder and sentenced to death, his sentence was reduced in 1988 to life in prison until his exoneration and release last year. His innocence was proven after a review of the case by the Hillsborough county state attorney’s office and the Innocence Project, which works nationwide.

“A free man for the first time since he was a teenager, Mr DuBoise must now put his life back together after almost 40 years in prison,” the lawsuit says. “Mr DuBoise has been deprived of all the basic pleasures of human experience, which all free people enjoy as a matter of right.”

TheFeshy on October 9th, 2021 at 23:17 UTC »

This is horrible, but it will get even more horrible when he learns how badly Florida restricts the ability of people convicted (even wrongly) of crimes to sue.

For one, there is a low cap on winnings per year incarcerated. For another thing, they can deduct the cost of your incarceration from your winnings. Yes, even wrongly incarcerating you, they can charge you for it. Lastly, if you've ever been charged with any other crime. you can get nothing.

Our laws on this are really atrocious in this state.

But if this case gets enough media attention, the state legislature can pass a law to raise the cap for just this case - something they have done in the past.

suppersready90 on October 9th, 2021 at 23:05 UTC »

Outrageous that Florida law makes him ineligible for compensation because of a questionable prior burglary conviction. The state robbed this man of 37 years of his life. His prior conviction is utterly irrelevant to the crime the state perpetrated on him. That he has a prior conviction should not entitle the state to their own "get out of jail free" card.

https://www.tampabay.com/news/florida/2020/09/13/an-exonerated-man-adjusts-to-life-in-tampa-after-37-years-away/

Celebrindor on October 9th, 2021 at 20:10 UTC »

Robert DuBoise, 56, was freed in August last year after long-shelved untested DNA evidence from a rape kit proved he was innocent of the rape and murder of 19-year-old Barbara Grams in Tampa.

Grams was attacked and beaten to death while walking home from her job at a restaurant on 19 August 1983. No one else has been arrested for her murder.

They had the evidence all along, and just ignored it for 37 years, letting the real criminal walk away free and destroying this man's life.

DuBoise’s lawsuit quotes a speech to a police chiefs in which Souviron said: “If you tell me that is the guy that did it, I will go into court and say that is the guy that did it.“

The lawsuit claims beeswax was not an accepted method of identifying teeth marks in murder cases and was used “only because another officer in the Tampa police department operated a honey business on the side”.

And yet, somehow it gets worse.

Convicted of murder and sentenced to death, his sentence was reduced in 1988 to life in prison until his exoneration and release last year.

Oh, we should be happy they didn't murder him for it!

What the fuck. I don't even know what else to say. Just what the fuck.