Arrest, conviction and incarceration On September 25, 1986, Morton was arrested and charged with the murder of his wife. His conviction "partly was based on the now-debunked assertion that the time of a person’s death can be determined solely by studying stomach contents." He was convicted in February 1987 and sentenced to
life imprisonment. including an interview with three-year-old Eric Morton who explained he was at the scene and saw another man ("a monster") commit the crime and that Michael was not home. After initially being held in the Williamson County Jail, Morton was held at several
Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) prisons: the Diagnostic Unit in
Huntsville,
Wynne Unit in Huntsville,
Post-trial investigation, appeal work and exoneration Civil attorney
John Raley of
Houston,
Texas, was working
pro bono with Nina Morrison of the New York-based
Innocence Project. Raley filed Morton's motion in February 2005 for
DNA testing of a bloody bandana found near the crime scene DNA tests linked another man, Mark Alan Norwood, to Christine Morton's murder. The Innocence Project had filed a motion to remove Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley from further court proceedings, but it stopped pursuing the motion. "Bradley was so convinced by new findings and evidence that he helped Morton's lawyers obtain the ruling that released Morton from prison", In September 2016, he was convicted in a separate case: the January 1988 murder of Debra Masters Baker in her Austin home. Both women were beaten to death in their beds under similar circumstances. The same day as Morton's formal acquittal, Morton's attorneys (including Raley, Morrison,
Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project, and
Gerald Goldstein and Cynthia Orr of San Antonio) asked Judge Harle to order a
court of inquiry into the actions of Anderson, who was then a district judge in Williamson County. A court of inquiry is a special court that investigates allegations of misconduct by elected officials in Texas. A "a relatively rare and unique Texas procedure", it can have significant financial cost, with total costs borne by the county at almost $500,000. Morton had accused Anderson of failing to provide defense lawyers with
exculpatory evidence indicating that another man might have killed Morton's wife, including information that his 3-year-old son witnessed the murder Other exculpatory evidence included: Morton's attorneys discovered this evidence while preparing a final appeal, using an
open records request. On February 20, 2012, Judge Harle asked the
Texas Supreme Court to convene a court of inquiry, finding that there was evidence to support Morton's contention that Anderson had tampered with evidence and should have been held in
contempt of court for not complying with the trial judge's order to let him review all possible exculpatory evidence. The court of inquiry was held in February 2013. Anderson responded by claiming immunity from any prosecution under the expiry of applicable
statutes of limitation. On September 23, 2013, Anderson resigned from his position as district court judge. On November 8, 2013, Anderson was found to be in contempt of court by 9th Judicial District Judge Kelly Moore. Anderson pleaded
no contest to the charges as part of a
plea bargain. After the plea agreement was announced, it was publicly revealed that Williamson County District Attorney Jana Duty agreed to authorize an independent review of every case that Anderson ever prosecuted, along with every case in which Bradley successfully opposed DNA testing. Anderson was sentenced to 10 days in county jail, to begin no later than December 2, 2013;. He received credit for one day he spent in jail in April 2013 (when he was arrested following the court of inquiry) and ultimately only served five days. He was fined $500 and ordered to perform 500 hours of community service. In exchange for having the charges of evidence tampering dropped, he agreed to relinquish his license to practice law. On November 15, 2013, Anderson was released from jail after having served five days of his 10-day sentence, released early after receiving credit for good behavior. == Later life ==