Preserving Evidence to Convict the Guilty and Protect the Innocent: Massachusetts' Post-Conviction Access to Forensic and Scientific Analysis Act

56 Boston Bar Journal (No. 4, 2012)

6 Pages Posted: 9 Apr 2015

See all articles by David M. Siegel

David M. Siegel

New England Law | Boston

Gregory Massing

Massachusetts Appeals Court

Date Written: September 12, 2012

Abstract

This brief article is the second of a two part series analyzing Massachusetts General Law Chapter 278A, which provides a mechanism for persons who claim they are factually innocent of crimes for which they were convicted to obtain testing and analysis to show this. This part examines the first-ever statewide evidence preservation obligation the Act creates, and suggests considerations for implementing regulations.

Keywords: Evidence Preservation, Evidence Retention, Collection, Biological Materials

Suggested Citation

Siegel, David M. and Massing, Gregory, Preserving Evidence to Convict the Guilty and Protect the Innocent: Massachusetts' Post-Conviction Access to Forensic and Scientific Analysis Act (September 12, 2012). 56 Boston Bar Journal (No. 4, 2012), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2591639

David M. Siegel (Contact Author)

New England Law | Boston ( email )

154 Stuart St.
Boston, MA 02116
United States
(617) 422-7270 (Phone)
(617) 422-7453 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.nesl.edu/clsr/

Gregory Massing

Massachusetts Appeals Court ( email )

MA
United States
617-725-8050 (Phone)

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