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Crazy Cat Lady

I wanna be sedated
Bold Member!
I'm really disappointed by this. Henry Lee has always been one of my forensic heroes. I wasn't sure if I should put this here or in Past Crimes, but the news about Lee is very recent.

The state attorney general’s office said Wednesday it would appeal a ruling by a federal court judge that could leave the state facing as much as a $60 million payout to two men who spent decades in prison for a 1985 New Milford murder before their convictions were thrown out.

Attorney General William Tong’s office also defended its handling of the case after acknowledging in a court filing they had “unintentionally neglected” to file a critical legal motion involving Dr. Henry Lee, the former head of the State Police Forensics Laboratory.

Lee also issued a statement Wednesday trying to salvage his reputation after U.S. District Court Judge Victor Bolden ruled that Lee is personally liable for fabricating evidence in the case.

The 84-page decision released Friday by Bolden denied most of the state’s motions to dismiss the lawsuit by Shawn Henning and Ralph Birch, who were teenagers when they were convicted in 1989 for the brutal murder of Everett Carr in his New Milford home four years earlier.

Henning and Birch had served nearly 60 years in prison combined when, in 2019, the state Supreme Court threw out their convictions and ordered a new trial. The state eventually dropped the murder charges, and the two men filed the federal lawsuit against Lee, the state, several state police detectives and New Milford police officers.

Bolden has ordered the case to go to trial this October. The ruling makes Lee liable for his role in the murder investigation, meaning Lee could personally face a multimillion-dollar verdict separate from the state.

n a statement released Wednesday morning, Lee also said he was disappointed in Bolden’s ruling. He then defended himself against the biggest issue in the case — whether there was blood on a towel found in a second floor bathroom of Carr’s house and whether Lee knew there wasn’t any blood but testified at both trials that there was.

Carr’s throat was slashed, and he was stabbed 27 times. His body was found on the first floor of his home.

Detectives investigated the murder as a burglary gone bad, which led them to Henning and Birch, two teenagers well-known to police for doing small-time burglaries and thefts across Litchfield County. But when they were originally interviewed by police, neither had any blood on them, and none was found in the car they lived in.

Lee, who at the time was head of the State Police Forensic Laboratory and not yet the world-wide celebrity he became after testifying on O.J. Simpson’s behalf a few years later at his murder trial, was called to the scene to collect blood evidence.

Lee testified at both trials that he found the stained towel in an upstairs bathroom and that his repeated tests revealed dark spots to blood. The prosecutor used Lee’s testimony to argue to the juries that the two teenagers used the towel to clean off blood after the murder.

It wasn’t until 2008 that the towel was actually tested using modern technology, and it was determined there was no blood on the towel.

Lee has continued to insist — even in his statements released Wednesday — that he did test the towels and that the result was positive for blood. At one point during depositions, he claimed he had personal photographs stored at home that confirm his claims about the testing.

 

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