DA Continues to Pursue Seven-Year-Old Charges Against Ernesto Galvan
In June of 2005, Ernesto Galvan and his brother Fermin were out on Riverbank Road in West Sacramento when they were approached by Officer Schlie of the West Sacramento Police Department.
What would ensue would leave Ernesto Galvan badly beaten and disfigured after police unleashed a series of baton blows to his head. The District Attorney’s office would charge the men with obstruction and delaying a police officer as well as misdemeanor counts of battery on a police officer.

In two weeks, at
Flawed Work by FBI Led to At Least One Wrongful Execution Paper Reports
Cruz Reynoso to Present Award to Pepper Sprayed Students; Northern California Innocence Project Honored
In a few weeks, Franky Carrillo will speak at the Vanguard‘s annual Dinner and Awards ceremony. His wrongful conviction, that cost him 20 years in custody, was based not just on the faulty memory of the witnesses but also intentional manipulation by law enforcement.
Maurice Possley, Winner of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize To Speak at Vanguard Event
A San Diego County Supervisor would criticize the state’s realignment process, arguing, “Since [the law] was passed, theft is up in this county by 16 percent, including autos. You can’t blame that on our budget. But it’s Sacramento’s budget that has presented us with this dilemma.”
A recent study noted that 15% of the wrongful convictions reviewed involved a false confession. A reasonable person would have to ask, “How can that happen?” Phil Locke, Science and Technology Advisor, Ohio Innocence Project, posed this question in a recent blog entry on the Wrongful Convictions Blog.
by Ramon Solis –
One of the problems facing those who believe that the problem of wrongful convictions is far deeper that statistics currently available would indicate, is the dearth of reliable longitudinal data.

On May 26, the Vanguard reported on a Davis Police incident that began with a police response to Glacier Drive to a reported fight. The responding to the 911 call ended up with police having to use a Taser on Jerome Wren and confront Tatiana Bush who had intervened.
When Clinton Parish decided to Challenge Dan Maguire for judge, he immediately cited the fact that Dan Maguire was a “political appointment” by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.