West Memphis Police Fail To Respond To FOIA Request For Evidence In West Memphis 3 Case: Evidence Reportedly Destroyed or Missing

July 16, 2021

FORMER DEATH ROW INMATE DAMIEN ECHOLS FILES MOTION IN CRITTENDEN COUNTY COURT FOR ANSWERS

What Happened to the Evidence in Murder of Three Children in 1993?

(Little Rock, Arkansas – July 16, 2021) Damien Echols, who served 18 years on death row in Arkansas, for a crime neither he nor his co-defendants, Jason Baldwin or Jesse Misskelley, committed, learned that evidence supposedly preserved by the West Memphis, Arkansas Police Department has either been destroyed, is missing, or both.

In an effort to find out what happened to the body of evidence that could potentially contain exculpatory forensics exonerating the three and leading to the real killer(s), Little Rock attorney Patrick Benca, of McDaniel Wolff and & Benca, submitted a FOIA request seeking all records relating to the missing evidence in the WM3 case. That FOIA request has gone unanswered in violation of Arkansas state law.

As a result, Echols’ attorneys have filed a Motion for Declaratory and Injunctive relief in the Circuit Court of Crittenden County First Division

“Having recently learned of the West Memphis Police Department’s (“WMPD”) spoliation of evidence in his case, apparently both before and after his Alford plea, Damien Echols moves this Court to exercise its continuing supervisory jurisdiction over this case…”

Echols asks this Court to:

            (a) declare that the WMPD has, by its own admissions, violated the Arkansas DNA statute’s evidence preservation obligations in the WM3 case;

            (b) enjoin the WMPD from any further failures to preserve any of the remaining evidence in the WM3 case;

            (c) direct the WMPD to immediately provide a full and complete response to Echols’ pending FOIA request seeking further information about the “lost,” “misplaced,” and/or “destroyed” case evidence;

            (d) provide a reasonable opportunity for Echols to take discovery to further develop the factual record of what has transpired with respect to the WM3 case evidence;

            (e) establish a post-discovery briefing schedule to address the potential remedies the Court might impose as a result of the misconduct at issue herein; and

            (f) award such further relief as the Court might deem just and proper. 

Background

In May 2020, Echols and his attorney Stephen Braga contacted then Crittenden County Prosecuting Attorney Scott Ellington who agreed to release evidence in the case for further DNA testing. In a series of email correspondence, Ellington contacted Kermit Channel at the Arkansas Crime Lab who informed Ellington that the trial evidence was located at the West Memphis police department. Ellington then contacted WM Police Assistant Chief Langston and Major Stacey Allen who also agreed to provide the evidence for DNA testing.

This was a very positive development, as filmmaker Bob Ruff, who had recently completed a docuseries on the West Memphis 3 case, had recommended using the new M-Vac DNA system on the existing evidence to hopefully reveal a stronger DNA connection to the real perpetrator (s) in the killing of the three children. Testing had previously revealed that the DNA linked to Terry Hobbs, stepfather of one of the murdered children, was found in the ligatures on the sneaker of one of the boys. Ruff hoped to confirm that, as well as identify other DNA links to the killers. A recent FBI study found that the amount of DNA recovered with the M-Vac system was several‐fold greater—the vacuum system yielded an average of 12 times more nDNA and 17x greater mtDNA- than traditional methods.

According to the motion filed today, “Braga subsequently reached out to Ellington, who said he had no problem with having the evidence so tested. Over the course of the next eight months, Braga and Ellington engaged in a series of communications designed to facilitate the transmission of specified items of evidence from the WMPD to the laboratory chosen to do the MVac DNA testing.  The specified items of evidence were the victims’ shoes, socks, Boy Scout cap, shirts, pants, and underwear, as well as the sticks used to hold the clothing underwater and the shoelaces used as ligatures to bind the victims.  The chosen laboratory was “Pure Gold Forensics, Inc.,” a California-accredited private forensic DNA laboratory specializing in the new MVac technology.”

“Damien Echols said, “We have been literally begging the state of Arkansas to allow us to do further DNA testing to clear our names for over a year. We were lied to repeatedly, and now we learn that much of the evidence has been destroyed or lost. This motion asks the court to get involved and find out what if any evidence still exist, what caused the destruction of the evidence, and who is responsible. We are innocent now; nearly 30 years ago when we were convicted, ; and ten years ago when we accepted an Alford plea.”

West Memphis PD Never Turned Over Evidence and Stopped Responding to Inquiries

Over the past year, Echols and his attorneys have tried on numerous occasions to contact the West Memphis Police Department as well as Prosecutor, now judge, Scott Ellington to make arrangements to transfer the forensic evidence to a special laboratory for M-Vac testing.

Recently, Echols attorney in Arkansas, Patrick Benca, reached out to Crittenden County acting Prosecuting Attorney Keith Chrestman seeking to review the evidence when he learned from him that after the plea, in 2011, some of the evidence ended up lost and missing, and some of the evidence ended up in a building that burned down. He agreed at first to review the remaining evidence with Benca, but now, according to news reports, Chrestman is now saying “he told Echols’ attorneys that if they wanted that evidence tested they would have to seek a court order.”

Attorney Stephen Braga Said, “The West Memphis PD agreed to facilitate the testing of some of the evidence, but then the West Memphis police as well as Prosecutor Ellington stopped communicating with us over the past year. We have now have learned that much of the evidence has been lost, destroyed or both. We are deeply concerned about the sequence of events. Was the evidence lost after we requested advanced DNA testing? What evidence is left? Where does that evidence reside now? Bottom line is that we want to submit the remaining evidence for advanced DNA testing to hopefully obtain new DNA results that can help fully exonerate the three men.”

https://www.westmemphis3.org/wp-content/uploads/2021-07-06-FOIA-to-West-Memphis-PD.pdf