Thirty-four years of fighting a wrongful conviction suggests that Maine does not have a functional “justice system.” Instead, we suffer a flawed legal system.

Dennis J. Dechaine, right, shown in court in 2012, has been in Maine State Prison since 1988 after being convicted in the murder of 12-year-old Sarah Cherry. John Ewing/Staff Photographer, File

What kind of legal system allows a prosecutor to argue successfully against DNA testing of any crime scene evidence prior to trial? What kind of system allows a prosecutor to order the incineration of an abundance of crime scene evidence not introduced at trial? What kind of system allows a prosecutor to argue against DNA testing of thumbnail scrapings, then chastises a defense attorney who has the testing done anyway? What kind of system refuses to allow the testimony of experts to establish an exculpatory time of death?

In my case, these particular legal failings are well documented, along with several other obstructions of justice.

In this latest round, DNA testing was limited to the remaining evidence introduced at trial by the state. Some of those items were handled solely by a perpetrator, or perpetrators, and the most sophisticated state-of-the-art DNA testing excludes me. What kind of legal system compels prosecutors to argue against the significance of those results?

When evaluating the newest exculpatory DNA tests, will our legal system finally support truth and justice, or will the status quo continue to be maintained at any cost?

Dennis J. Dechaine
Maine State Prison
Warren

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