Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_Camm> ?p ?o }
- David_Camm abstract "David Ray Camm (born March 23, 1964) is a former state trooper who was acquitted and released in 2013 after his third trial on charges of murdering his wife, Kimberly, and children, Brad, 7, and Jill, 5, at their Georgetown, Indiana home on September 28, 2000. He had been found guilty in two earlier trials, but these verdicts were overturned on appeal. Camm now works as a case coordinator for a non-profit wrongful conviction advocacy organization called Investigating Innocence that provides criminal defense investigations for inmates.Camm became a suspect because of an interpretation of bloodstain patterns on his clothing as well as a number of leads and pieces of evidence that were later found to be unreliable or outright false. He was tried and found guilty of the murders. In 2004 the conviction was overturned on the grounds that testimony about his marital infidelity had been prejudicial.In 2005, forensic evidence identified a career criminal named Charles Boney as having been at the crime scene. Boney's modus operandi in previous crimes showed similarities to aspects of the murders. Boney had a history of stalking and attacking women, often stealing their shoes; Kim's shoes had been removed and placed neatly on the vehicle and she had a series of bruises and abrasions to her feet. The prosecution was widely criticized for the failure to find Boney prior to the first trial. They told the defense team in 2001 that the DNA had been run through CODIS and returned no matches. It was later discovered that Boney's DNA was entered into the system prior to the murders and would have returned a match if it had been run.Boney gave a number of conflicting confessions, but eventually accused Camm of the murders, claiming he witnessed Camm shoot his family while he was at the home selling Camm a handgun. Camm was charged along with Boney as a co-conspirator, Boney was tried first and separately. Boney was convicted of the murders and sentenced to 225 years in prison. In 2006, Camm was found guilty on the murder charges at his retrial. Camm appealed, and the verdict was overturned on the grounds that the prosecution at the second trial had accused Camm of sexually molesting his 5-year-old daughter Jill, without producing evidence for the allegation.Boney testified against Camm for the first time at the third trial, although his credibility was called into question when he was unable to describe the car Camm drove and also incorrectly described Camm's clothing on the night of the murder. Evidence was presented that Charles Boney's DNA was found on Kim's panties, her shirt, her broken off fingernail, and Jill's shirt, suggesting he physically attacked the family himself. Defense witnesses also testified that prosecution assertions about the stains were not widely accepted by others in the field of bloodstain analysis. It was also discovered that the blood spatter analyst whose analysis had triggered the arrest had falsified his credentials and did not work in the field of bloodstain pattern analysis at all. He had previously testified that he was a professor at Portland State University; it was discovered that he had no affiliation with the university. He testified in the third trial that he had perjured himself during the first two. Dr. Robert Shaler, who served on a committee for The National Academy of Sciences to evaluate forensic methods, testified that blood spatter pattern analysis was found to be unreliable in their studies. Another expert demonstrated that the pattern could be produced through transfer.The defense presented suspicious behavior on the part of Boney, such as visiting the graves of the victims, speaking on the phone to the prosecutors office on 33 occasions in the two week period before his arrest, and hiring Stan Faith, the prosecutor as his defense attorney and discussing the case with him prior to becoming a suspect. They also presented a number of instances of alleged misconduct by the police and prosecutors in the case.Camm was acquitted and freed after 13 years in prison.The case was covered extensively by the media in the southern Indiana and the Louisville, Kentucky area, as well as by national news programs including Nancy Grace, 48 hours, and Dateline. The case is noted for the extensive allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, including witness tampering, evidence tampering, perjury and an overall shoddy investigation and has been detailed in numerous forensic textbooks.".
- David_Camm birthDate "1964-03-23".
- David_Camm birthName "David Ray Camm".
- David_Camm birthPlace Floyd_County,_Indiana.
- David_Camm birthYear "1964".
- David_Camm hometown Georgetown,_Floyd_County,_Indiana.
- David_Camm thumbnail Ryan_Ferguson.jpg?width=300.
- David_Camm wikiPageExternalLink 54240184.
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- David_Camm wikiPageExternalLink investigatinginnocence.org.
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- David_Camm wikiPageRevisionID "705215601".
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink 401(k).
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink 48_Hours_(TV_series).
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Aiding_and_abetting.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Autopsy.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Basketball.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Bloodstain_pattern_analysis.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Bloomington,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink CBS.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:1964_births.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_state_police_officers.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Boone_County,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Criminal_trials_that_ended_in_acquittal.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Evidence_tampering.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:False_evidence.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Living_people.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Overturned_convictions_in_the_United_States.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_acquitted_of_murder.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Floyd_County,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_wrongfully_convicted_of_murder.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Perjury.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Police_misconduct.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Trials_in_the_United_States.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Category:Wrongful_conviction_advocacy.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Clarence_Elkins.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Fingerprint.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Foot_fetishism.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Forensic_photography.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Georgetown,_Floyd_County,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Guilt_(law).
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Hostage.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Indiana_Department_of_Correction.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Indiana_State_Police.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Indiana_University_Maurer_School_of_Law.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Innocence_Project.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Investigating_Innocence.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Jane_Velez-Mitchell.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Juan_Rivera_(wrongful_conviction).
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Lebanon,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Life_imprisonment.
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- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink List_of_miscarriage_of_justice_cases.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink List_of_wrongful_convictions_in_the_United_States.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Louisville,_Kentucky.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Medical_examiner.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Motive_(law).
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink NBC.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink National_Academy_of_Sciences.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Network_affiliate.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink New_Albany,_Indiana.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Overturned_convictions_in_the_United_States.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Parole.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Perjury.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Petroleum_product.
- David_Camm wikiPageWikiLink Pièces_à_Conviction.