Dallas DNA
April 30, 2009
Dallas DNA chronicles a pioneering unit within the Dallas County District Attorney's office where post-conviction DNA testing is being used to clear the innocent, as well as confirm the guilty.
When Craig Watkins ran for district attorney in Dallas County, he promised to fight for justice and through an innovative and unconventional new division he founded; he's been true to his word. In July 2007, Watkins created the nation's first Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU) run by a DA's office and tasked it with re-examining hundreds of petitions submitted by inmates seeking post-conviction DNA testing and reinvestigating the cases that could be possible examples of injustice.
Dallas County has more exonerations than any other jurisdiction in the nation since state law began allowing post-conviction testing in 2001. In that time, more than 40 cases have received post-conviction DNA evidence analysis and the results have stunned the nation - to date, 19 cases were found to have wrongful convictions, and under DA Watkins' leadership ten innocent men have walked free.
The legal drama and the astounding ramifications including exonerations after men wrongfully spent decades behind bars is captured in Investigation Discovery's new six-part series DALLAS DNA, which is now on Investigation Discovery Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET.














King keeps his finger on the pulse of true crime. Not only does he write excellent true crime books on factual events, but in this article he keeps us current on how Dallas law enforcment agencies keep fighting for justice as technology in this field rapidly progresses.
Posted by: Jade Montrose | April 30, 2009 at 06:27 PM
Being wrongfully convicted is so tragic, but somehow, although they may have served many years in the mean time, due to heroes like Mr. Watkins, there is justice.
Posted by: Ajlouny | May 25, 2009 at 05:38 PM