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Northwestern launching project on wrongfully convicted women

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For example, Patricia Stallings was convicted in 1991 of murdering her son, who was taken to a Missouri hospital with high levels of ethylene glycol — a key ingredient of antifreeze — in his blood. She was set free when test confirmed he actually died of a genetic disorder that produces false positives for ethylene glycol.

In another case involving a woman accused of killing her child, Chicago mother Nicole Harris was convicted in Cook County in the 2005 death of her son, which had initially been deemed an accident by the medical examiner. A federal appeals court last month vacated her conviction; prosecutors are appealing.

Experts agree that cases involving the death of a child are among the most difficult to defend. Women in particular have to combat what Daniel calls “the mother myth,” the notion that mothers should be able to walk through a wall of fire to save their children.

It’s a perception Daniel said played out in the case of Tabitha Pollock, who was convicted of first-degree murder on the theory that she should have known that her boyfriend, who had confessed to killing her daughter, was dangerous. The Illinois Supreme court reversed Pollock’s conviction in 2002.

Gender bias also has a way of creeping into cases, experts say. Rea’s ex-husband falsely testified that she had contemplated aborting her son, which she said convinced the conservative jury that she was already a murderer.

In addition, Daniel said research has also shown that women tend to communicate in more tentative and indirect ways than men, which does not line up with law enforcement views of how an innocent person should act.

“For (center attorneys) to spread their wings and launch this new project can only enhance the quality of criminal justice,” said Peter Neufeld, a co-founder of the New York-based Innocence Project. “It means that these women who are innocent are going to get much attention than they’ve gotten before. It’s good for everybody.”

Joyce Ann Brown spent more than nine years in prison for a 1980 robbery and murder in Texas before charges were dropped.

“I think (this project) is the best thing that could happen at this point of time,” she said. “I think that when women see that other women have been exonerated, they will begin to stand up and believe there is an opportunity to open the door that has been shut in their face.”

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