Houston News
3 Houston-area men file suit after dogs sent them to jail
05:28 PM CST on Wednesday, November 4, 2009
HOUSTON—Three men who say they were wrongly arrested for crimes they did not commit are suing the Houston Police Department and the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s deputy they say destroyed their lives.
“I lost my house and my cars along with my loved ones,” said Curvis Bickham, who spent several months behind bars on a capital murder charge based on a scent lineup.
Attorneys for the plaintiffs have filed a federal civil rights lawsuit on the men’s behalf. The suit seeks unspecified damages for the over-reliance by law enforcement on what the attorneys call “junk science.”
“I’m embarrassed that prosecutors will use scent lineups to win convictions and destroy people’s lives,” said Katherine Scardino, one of the attorneys representing the men.
The suit claims the scent lineups employed by Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Deputy Keith Pikett have caused irreparable harm to the men and are totally unreliable. Each of the plaintiffs served several months behind bars before having their charges dismissed. Ronald Curtis was accused of aggravated robbery.
“In my case there was a video of all the crime scenes that they could have used to prove it wasn’t me, and yet they relied on a dog scent,” said Curtis.
Deputy Pikett had no comment about the lawsuit. Representatives from the Houston Police Department referred all inquiries to the city attorney’s office.
Supporters of the lawsuit hope it leads to the elimination of scent lineups from the state of Texas.
“This is part of a campaign to restore justice to the criminal courts in the state,” according to Jeff Blackburn of the Texas Innocence Project.
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