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So, why shouldn't the defendant be prosecuted for aggravated perjury, having made what he knew was a false claim of innocence? DNA reaffirms guilt of rapist 5:03 PM CT 05:03 PM CDT on Tuesday, June 12, 2007 From Staff Reports DNA test results have reaffirmed the guilt of a man convicted of raping a 12-year-old girl as she walked to church. The Dallas County district attorney's office announced Tuesday that tests have confirmed Culberson Henry�s role in the 1993 crime. Mr. Henry was convicted of aggravated sexual assault on a child under the age of 14 in 1994 and sentenced to 40 years in prison. Mr. Henry filed a motion for DNA testing in 2002, but test results the next year were inconclusive, the district attorney's office said. In 2006, the Actual Innocence Clinic at the University of Texas� School of Law requested a retest with more sophisticated technology. The request was granted in September and results confirmed Mr. Henry�s guilt. �The recent DNA results in the Culberson [Henry] case further emphasize that post-conviction DNA testing not only frees the wrongfully convicted periodically, but equally important, it reaffirms guilt of violent crimes in many cases,� district attorney Craig Watkins said in a statement. | ||
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Wouldn't that have a "chilling effect" on others making false claims of innocense? Come to think of it, maybe that's a good reason to prosecute him for agg. perjury. | |||
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Come on, it happened in 1994. Maybe he just forgot that he really did it. After all these years of falsely claiming innocence, he might start to actually believe it. | |||
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