Japan Iwao Hakamata was convicted of murder largely because of a forced confession coerced through threats and violence, spending 57 years behind bars and becoming the world's longest-serving death row inmate. He was acquitted when DNA evidence showed that he could not have been the killer. In 2007, thirteen men and women, ranging in age from their early 50s to mid-70s, were arrested and indicted in Japan for buying votes in an election. Six confessed to buying votes with liquor, cash and catered parties. All were acquitted in 2007 in a local district court, which found that the confessions had been entirely fabricated. The presiding judge said the defendants had "made confessions in despair while going through marathon questioning."
New Zealand •
Mauha Fawcett •
Teina Pora Sweden Sture Bergwall (1990) Sture Bergwall, also known as Thomas Quick, confessed to more than 30 murders in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Finland while incarcerated in a mental institution for personality disorders. He had been committed after being convicted of less serious crimes. Between 1994 and 2001, Bergwall was convicted of eight murders, based on his confessions. All of these convictions have now been overturned on appeal as he was found to have made false confessions and been incompetent to stand trial.
United Kingdom Robert Hubert (1666) In 1666, Robert Hubert confessed to starting the
Great Fire of London by throwing a
fire bomb through a bakery window. It was proven during his trial that he had not been in the country until two days after the start of the fire, he was never at any point near the bakery in question, the bakery did not have windows, and he was crippled and unable to throw a bomb. But, as a foreigner (a Frenchman), and a Catholic, Hubert was a perfect scapegoat. Ever-maintaining his guilt, Hubert was brought to trial, found guilty, and duly executed by hanging.
Rillington Place (1949) Timothy Evans was accused of murdering his wife, Beryl and their infant daughter, Geraldine. Three years after the conviction and execution of Evans for the murder, it was discovered that their neighbour, John Reginald Christie, known as
Reg Christie had murdered at least six other women whose bodies were found at 10 Rillington Place, the building which he had shared with the Evans family and other tenants. In November 1949, Beryl Evans, finding she was pregnant and fearful of their ability to cope, began seeking ways to end her pregnancy. Christie, a former police special constable, falsely purported to be able to perform athen illegalabortion. It was arranged that he would carry out a termination procedure on Beryl at their home while Evans was at work. When Evans returned home later that day, Christie advised him that Beryl had died as result of the attempted termination. Because of the death and their possible legal jeopardy, Christie recommended that Evans absent himself, while Christie was purportedly to arrange for removal of Beryl's body and for care of their daughter while Evans was away. Evans left London for Wales; while staying with relatives there, however, overcome with distress, he alerted police to his wife's death. He told them where they would find the body, according to information he had been given by Christie. Unaware of the true circumstances of Beryl's death, or that his baby daughter had been killed, Evans gave statements that were inconsistent. He left Christie's name out of his account, so as to avoid implicating him in the abortion and fabricated his own involvement in the procedure as an explanation of what caused Beryl's death. When the Notting Hill police in London investigated, they found Beryl's body not where Evans had indicated, and with a ligature around her neck with little to indicate that a termination of pregnancy had been attempted. They also discovered the baby, Geraldine, had been killed. While Evans initially made no mention of Christie's involvement in the attempted abortion, he changed his account later. These inconsistencies placed him under further suspicion for the killings. When confronted with the condition of the victims and their manner of death, and for the first time understanding his daughter had been killed, Evans replied "Yes" when the chief inspector stated that police believed him to be responsible. His later, formal confession was found to have been dictated to Evans by investigators, a conclusion based on Evans' verbal ability, lower mental age and education level. Evans withdrew that confession soon after he had access to legal advice. Workmen who had renovated and cleaned out the wash-house where the bodies of Beryl and Geraldine were later found, were witness to the wash-house being empty after the time Evans had left for Wales. Their evidence was known to police. There was little forensic evidence. Despite this, Evans was tried for the murder of his daughter. Reg Christie and his wife were the principal prosecution witnesses at the trial. Evans was convicted and hanged. The safety of the conviction was thrown into doubt when the bodies of other murder victims, including Christie's wife Ethel, were uncovered at Rillington Place. The poorly concealed remains, which included a femur being used as a prop in the small garden, out in the open at the time Beryl and Geraldine's bodies were discovered, and a skull disinterred on the property by a pet dog at around the same time, suggest there was no systematic approach to the examination of the scene of crime. Most of the newly discovered victims had been strangled using a ligature. Two had been murdered after the murders of the Evanses. Christie confessed to the murders, including Beryl's, but not to Geraldine's. Evans was pardoned posthumously in 1966. The case has been cited as an important part of the impetus for abolishing capital punishment in the United Kingdom.
Stephen Downing (1974) Stephen Downing was convicted and spent 27 years in prison. The main evidence against him was a confession he signed. He had agreed to this after an 8-hour interrogation which left him confused, and his poor literacy skills meant he did not fully understand what he was signing. He was released from prison in 2001 pending appeal. His conviction was quashed in 2002 on the basis of the unreliability of Downing's confessions. A 2003 report of an independently supervised police reinvestigation – as agreed by Downing's family and legal advisors – found that Downing remained the only suspect unable to be eliminated. Police have stated that in the absence of fresh leads, the murder case will remain closed.
Stefan Kiszko (1976) Stefan Kiszko was convicted of murder in 1976, in what was later described as "one of Britain's most notorious miscarriages of justice". Kiszko had no previous legal problems and was described by neighbours as gentle and softly spoken. Although he was in stable employment as a tax office clerk, he had a life-long medical condition and an intellectual disability, and was assessed as having a social-emotional age equivalent to that of a 12-year-old. The principal evidence against Kiszko was his confession, made after three days of police questioning, without access to legal advice or, as he repeatedly requested, to his mother, his sole remaining family member. When asked
why he had confessed to a crime he did not commit, Kiszko replied, "I started to tell these lies and they seemed to please them and the pressure was off as far as I was concerned. I thought if I admitted what I did to the police they would check out what I had said, find it untrue and would then let me go". During his imprisonment, Kiszko's mother and aunt, convinced of his innocence, conducted a campaign to have his case reviewed. In 1987, solicitor Campbell Malone became involved. He, along with other legal professionals, prepared submissions to the Home Office, which was convinced in 1991 to order a reinvestigation. New police investigators soon found that the first inquiry had made serious errors. It was also found that tests ordered by the initial investigating officers had clearly demonstrated Kiszko's innocence: A sample of semen obtained from Kiszko while in custody was compared with semen stains on Lesley Molseed's clothing. From this comparison, performed before the trial, police became aware that Kiszko's medical condition rendered him sterile, thus incapable of producing any sperm; the semen stains on the victim's garments was shown to have sperm present. Two police investigators and a forensic scientist on the case were charged in 1994 with suppressing evidence. Kiszko was fully exonerated in 1992. In 1999 retained samples collected from the clothing of Molseed was found to incidentally contain sperm cell heads. Forensic scientists were able to extract a genetic profile of the offender. In 2006, a complete match to the profile was obtained when the DNA of Ronald Castree was obtained in connection to another matter. He was prosecuted for the murder of Lesley Molseed, convicted and sentenced to life with a 30-year minimum.
United States Peter Reilly (1973) In 1973, 18-year-old
Peter Reilly of
Litchfield County, Connecticut, was convicted of first-degree manslaughter in the death of his mother, Barbara Gibbons. Reilly discovered the body of his mother, who had been stabbed, and immediately reported the crime. Police suspected him on the basis of his demeanour, deeming it to be unemotional. Reilly was detained and interrogated for over twenty hours with little sleep. During this interrogation, with no lawyer present, he agreed to undergo a
polygraph, which he was falsely told he had failed, and was persuaded that only he could have committed the crime. He signed a detailed confession, which was admitted into evidence at trial. He was convicted and sentenced to six to sixteen years for manslaughter. Reilly was freed on appeal in 1976 and granted another trial with newly presented evidence. Fingerprint evidence placed an outside party at the residence, connecting brothers Timothy and Michael Parmalee, who had been in dispute with Gibbons, to the scene. A married couple, one of whom was a state trooper, witnessed Reilly driving at the time of the murder, in accord with Reilly's own account. This evidence was known to the prosecution at the time of the first trial but was not disclosed to the defense. All charges were subsequently dropped. Connecticut's superior court ruled in June 1977 that Reilly had been subjected to improper police and prosecutorial conduct.
Pizza Hut murder (1988) In 1988, Nancy DePriest was raped and murdered at the
Pizza Hut where she worked in
Austin, Texas. A coworker, Chris Ochoa, pleaded guilty to the murder. His friend and coworker, Richard Danziger, was convicted of the rape. Ochoa confessed to the murder, as well as implicating Danziger in the rape. The only forensic
evidence linking Danziger to the crime scene was a single pubic hair found in the restaurant, which was said to be consistent with his pubic hair type. Although
semen evidence had been collected, a
DNA analysis of only one gene was performed at the time; even though Ochoa had this gene, it was known also to be present in 10–16% of individuals. Both men received life sentences with no possibility of parole. In 1996, Achim Josef Marino, a prisoner serving three-life sentences for a string of robberies and rapes, began writing letters from prison claiming he was the actual murderer in the Pizza Hut case and that Ochoa and Danziger were innocent. He continued writing letters until the two men were freed from prison. Marino stated his confession letters were prompted by his conversion to Christianity; he wanted to tell the truth to free the innocent men.
DNA from the crime scene had been retained and was retested in 2001–2002, using more modern methods. The DNA matched that of Marino, while that of Ochoa and Danziger was able to be excluded. Ochoa later said that he was coerced by the police, who denied him access to a lawyer during an hours-long interrogation, to confess or he would receive a death sentence, and to implicate his friend in the rape and murder. In 2001, Ochoa and Danziger were released from prison after 12 years of incarceration. While in prison, Danziger had been severely beaten by other inmates in 1991 and suffered permanent brain damage. He required all day medical care for the rest of his life. The two were fully exonerated, Marino was later convicted of the murder in 2002 and was given an additional life sentence. Due to the length of time since the crime had occurred, the
statute of limitations meant he could not be charged with the rape. Richard Danziger died in 2021.
Jeffrey Mark Deskovic (1990) Jeffrey Mark Deskovic was convicted in 1990, at the age of 16, of raping, beating and strangling a high school classmate. He had confessed to the crime after hours of interrogation by police without being given an opportunity to seek legal counsel. Court testimony noted that the DNA evidence in the case did not point to him. He was incarcerated for 16 years before DNA testing in 2006 implicated a man named Steven Cunningham; Cunningham would ultimately confess to the murder, and Deskovic was released in September 2006.
Laverne Pavlinac (1990) Laverne Pavlinac confessed that she and her boyfriend murdered a woman in
Oregon in 1990. They were convicted and sentenced to prison. Five years later,
Keith Hunter Jesperson confessed to a series of murders, including that of the woman. Pavlinac had become obsessed with details of the crime during interrogation by police. She later said she confessed to get out of the abusive relationship with the boyfriend. Her boyfriend pleaded "
no contest" to the charge in order to avoid the death penalty.
Juan Rivera (1992) Juan Rivera, from
Waukegan, Illinois, was wrongfully convicted of the 1992 rape and murder of 11-year-old Holly Staker. Although his DNA was excluded from that tested in the
rape kit, and the report from the electronic ankle monitor he was wearing at the time (while awaiting trial for a non-violent burglary) established that he was not in the vicinity of the murder, he confessed to the crimes. Rivera had been interrogated for several days by police using the
Reid technique. His conviction was overturned in 2011, and the appellate court took the unusual step of barring prosecutors from retrying him.
Gary Gauger (1993) Gary Gauger was sentenced to death for the murders of his parents, Morris, 74, and Ruth, 70, at their
McHenry County, Illinois farm in April 1993. He was interrogated for more than 21 hours. He gave the police a
hypothetical statement, which they took as a confession. His conviction was overturned in 1996, and Gauger was freed. He was pardoned by the Illinois governor in 2002. Two motorcycle gang members were later convicted of Morris and Ruth Gauger's murders.
West Memphis Three (1993) The
West Memphis Three (Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley) were convicted for the 1993 murders of three 8-year-old boys. At the time of the alleged crime, they were 16, 17, and 18 years old. One month after the murders, police interrogated Misskelley, who has an IQ of 72, for five hours. He confessed to the murders and implicated both Echols and Baldwin. Misskelley immediately recanted and said he was coerced to confess. Although his confession contained massive internal inconsistencies and differed significantly from the facts of the physical evidence revealed, the prosecution continued. Misskelley and Baldwin were convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole; Echols was convicted and sentenced to death. For the next 17 years, the three men maintained their innocence. In August 2011, testing of
DNA evidence was found to be inconclusive; it included DNA from an unknown contributor. Prosecutors offered the three men a deal if they pleaded guilty: to release them for time served. They accepted the
Alford plea but said that they would continue to work to clear their names and find the real murderer(s). They were released after eighteen years in prison.
Norfolk Four (1997) Danial Williams, Joseph J. Dick Jr., Derek Tice, and Eric C. Wilson are four of five men convicted in the 1997 rape and murder of Michelle Moore-Bosko in
Norfolk, Virginia. The convictions of the four were based largely on their confessions, which they have since maintained were coerced after hours of interrogation, during which the men were played off against each other over time. The Mid-Atlantic
Innocence Project considers this a miscarriage of justice. Moore-Bosko's parents continue to believe that all those convicted were participants in the crime. Williams and Dick pleaded guilty to murder, as they had been threatened by the potential of being sentenced to death at a jury trial. They were sentenced to one or more life sentences in prison without the possibility of parole. Tice was convicted of rape and murder and sentenced to death. Wilson was convicted of rape and sentenced to 8½ years in prison. Three other men, Geoffrey A. Farris, John E. Danser and Richard D. Pauley Jr., were also initially indicted with the crime through accusations by others, but their charges were later dropped before trial as Tice would not testify against them. The supporters of the Norfolk Four have offered evidence that purports to prove that the four men are innocent, with no known involvement or connections to the incident. No physical evidence supported their cases. Tice's conviction was overturned, and Williams and Dick received governmental pardons, clearing their names. The four received a settlement from the city of Norfolk and state in 2018. The fifth man, Omar Ballard, was indicted in 2005 after his DNA was found to match that at the crime scene. He had informally confessed in 1997 but withdrew his statement after being pressured to implicate the four other men. He pleaded guilty to the crime in 2009 in order to avoid the death penalty. A serial rapist and murderer, he was apprehended and sentenced to prison after he pleaded guilty to other crimes of violence against women, and confessed to acting alone. He was sentenced to 100 years in prison, 59 of which were suspended. He is the only man whose
DNA matched that found at the scene. He confessed to committing the crime by himself, and said none of the other men indicted and tried were involved. Forensic evidence is consistent with his story that there were no other participants.
Michael Crowe (1998) Michael Crowe confessed to the
murder of his younger sister Stephanie Crowe in 1998. Michael, 14 at the time, was targeted by the police when he seemed "distant and preoccupied" after Stephanie's body was discovered, and the rest of the family grieved. After two days of intense questioning, Michael admitted to killing Stephanie. His confession was vague and lacked detail; he said he could not remember committing the crime but believed he must have done so based on what the police were telling him. The confession was videotaped by police and showed Michael making statements to the effect of, "I'm only saying this because it's what you want to hear". His admission has been cited as a classic example of a coerced false confession during police interrogation. Joshua Treadway, a friend of Michael's, was questioned and gave a detailed confession after many hours of interrogation. Aaron Houser, a mutual friend of the boys, was questioned and did not confess but presented a "hypothetical" and incriminating account of the crime under prompting by police interrogators using the
Reid technique. All three boys subsequently recanted their statements, claiming coercion. Crowe's confession and Houser's statements to police were later thrown out as coerced by a judge; part of Treadway's confession was also ruled inadmissible. Even with the confessions ruled out in whole or in part in 1998, prosecutors commenced the trial of the three boys in 1999. During the jury selection process, evidence implicating an unrelated party with the crime belatedly emerged. At the insistence of a public defender in the case, a sweatshirt that had been confiscated within a day of the murder from a neighborhood transient, Richard Tuite, was submitted for retesting to an independent laboratory. Although initial testing by an Escondido Police lab technician had found no blood, the specialist lab found three drops of blood with DNA matching Stephanie's. In later investigations, traces of Stephanie's blood were found on the undershirt Tuite wore while in custody on the night of the killing. (Tuite had been briefly held and questioned on the night; before the murder, two separate calls by worried neighbours reported seeing Tuite looking through windows and attempting to enter homes in the vicinity, but he was not located by officers attending those calls.) The charges against the three boys were dismissed
without prejudice. Although this would have allowed the charges to be reinstated at a later date should better evidence be gathered, and despite the DNA linkage to another party, the case languished for two years after the abandoned trial. In 2001, with no charges having been brought by the Escondido police or
San Diego County District Attorney, the District Attorney and the
San Diego County Sheriff's Department asked that the case be taken over by the
California Department of Justice. Prosecutors charged Richard Tuite with the murder. During his trial, his defense team argued that the three boys who were first charged had been responsible for the crime. Tuite was convicted of the killing as involuntary manslaughter in 2004, but a federal court of appeal overturned the conviction in 2011, ruling that because the trial judge limited cross-examination of a prosecution witness, the trial was unfair. At the second trial in 2013, the jury found him not guilty. The murder of Stephanie Crowe remains unsolved. In 2012, Superior Court Judge Kenneth So made the rare ruling that Michael Crowe, Treadway, and Houser were factually innocent of the charges, permanently dismissing the
City of Escondido case against them. A
TV movie was made about the case called
The Interrogation of Michael Crowe (2002).
Corethian Bell (2000) In 2000, Corethian Bell, who has a diagnosis of intellectual disability, was accused of murdering his mother, Netta Bell, after he had found her body and called police in
Cook County, Illinois. Police questioned him for more than 50 hours. He said he eventually confessed to the murder of his mother because police hit him so hard he was knocked off his chair, and because he thought that if he confessed, the interrogations would stop. He believed that he would be able to explain himself to a judge and be set free. His confession was videotaped, but his interrogation was not. At the time Cook County prosecutors were required to videotape murder confessions, but not the preceding interrogations. With his confession on tape, Bell was tried, convicted, and sentenced to jail. When the
DNA at the crime scene was finally tested a year later, it matched that of a serial rapist named DeShawn Boyd. He was already in prison after having been convicted of three other violent sexual assaults, all in the same neighborhood as the Netta Bell murder. Bell filed a civil lawsuit with the help of
Herschella Conyers and her
University of Chicago Law School students, which was settled by the city in 2006 for $1 million.
Tyler Edmonds (2003) In 2003, 13-year-old Tyler Edmonds was pressured by his half-sister, Kristi Fulgham, into confessing to the murder of her husband, Joey Fulgham. Kristi Fulgham, who had committed the murder herself, told Edmonds to take the blame in order to protect her from getting the
death penalty, claiming that he would face no punishment due to his age. Edmonds listened to Fulgham, and told detectives that the two of them had murdered Joey Fulgham together. Four days later, Edmonds retracted his confession and gave a second interview, saying he did not know that Joey Fulgham was dead at the time he had left his half-sister's house. However, 14 month later, he would be convicted of Joey Fulgham's murder and sentenced to
life in prison, with a requirement to serve 40 years before being eligible for parole. Paradoxically, at Kristi Fulgham's trial in 2006, prosecutors described Edmonds as having been manipulated by his half-sister, something that had not been allowed for in Edmonds' own trial. In 2007, the Mississippi Supreme Court overturned Edmonds' conviction on the basis that his confession had been obtained under questionable means; at a new trial in 2008, a jury would find him innocent. In 2009, Tyler Edmonds would receive a payment of $200,000 by the state for
wrongful conviction; he would later receive a
settlement of $135,000 in 2017.
Kevin Fox (2004) Kevin Fox was interrogated for 14 hours by
Will County, Illinois, police before he confessed to the 2004 murder of his 3-year-old daughter, Riley. He was convicted and sentenced to jail. His confession was later ruled to have been coerced. Because of DNA testing, police later identified Scott Eby as the killer. He was a neighbor living a few miles from the Fox family at the time of Riley's murder. Police identified him as the killer while he was serving a 14-year sentence for
sex crimes. After questioning and confrontation with the DNA results, Eby confessed and later pleaded guilty. Kevin Fox was released after serving eight months in jail. The Fox family eventually won an $8 million civil judgment against the county government.
Thomas Perez Jr. (2018) Thomas Perez Jr. confessed to the murder of his father under duress after 17 hours of interrogation, during which police claimed they had found his father's body, that they would euthanize his dog as a stray, and other claims. His father, Thomas Perez Sr., was later found alive and on a visit to Perez Jr.'s sister. Perez Jr. received a $900,000 settlement in 2024. ==See also==