Ralph Erdmann
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Ralph R. Erdmann (August 8, 1926 - July 23, 2010) was a contract medical examiner (
forensic pathologist Forensic pathology is pathology that focuses on determining the cause of death by examining a corpse. A post mortem examination is performed by a medical examiner or forensic pathologist, usually during the investigation of criminal law cases ...
) who was convicted on several counts of
evidence tampering Tampering with evidence, or evidence tampering, is an act in which a person alters, conceals, falsifies, or destroys evidence with the intent to interfere with an investigation (usually) by a law-enforcement, governmental, or regulatory authority. ...
and
perjury Perjury (also known as foreswearing) is the intentional act of swearing a false oath or falsifying an affirmation to tell the truth, whether spoken or in writing, concerning matters material to an official proceeding."Perjury The act or an inst ...
for examinations he did beginning in the early 1980s throughout rural Texas.


Early years in Texas

In 1981, 25 years after receiving a medical degree in Mexico Erdmann moved to Childress, Childress County,
Texas Texas (, ; Spanish: ''Texas'', ''Tejas'') is a state in the South Central region of the United States. At 268,596 square miles (695,662 km2), and with more than 29.1 million residents in 2020, it is the second-largest U.S. state by ...
. He started doing autopsies for five small area hospitals on a private contract basis. In 1983 he expanded his practice to the entire Texas panhandle area to the Rio Grande. During the next ten years Erdmann performed over 3,000 autopsies in 41 different jurisdictions. During his busiest year in 1990 he did 480 autopsies. In 1991 he did 310 autopsies, most of which were in Lubbock County. He charged Lubbock an annual fee of $140,000, and the smaller counties paid him $650 for each autopsy he performed.


Texas autopsy scandal

In 1992, he was convicted of falsifying autopsy reports. The scandal began in 1991 when the family of Robert Craig Newman questioned the findings of an autopsy report. It included information about the weight of the dead man's spleen and gall bladder. The deceased man's son told authorities that his dead father had had his spleen removed years earlier. When the body was exhumed, there was no evidence that an autopsy had even been performed. In another case Erdmann claimed to have examined a woman's brain, but there was no sign any cut had been made. In another case of a murder, authorities from Odessa said Erdmann had misplaced the head of the victim. Without the head, where the bullet wound was located, there was no evidence and the charges against the accused murderer had to be dropped. Several lawsuits had to be settled as a result of Erdmann's incompetence. In one case Lubbock County paid a man $15,000 for wrongful imprisonment after the man spent for months in jail charged with the death of his infant son. A second autopsy by a competent pathologist revealed the death had been an accidental drowning. Erdmann was not just incompetent, but he was also corrupt. In 1995 Erdmann was indicted on charges of perjury and tampering with evidence relating to the trial of Johnny Lee Rey in 1990. Rey was on death row for two years based on Erdmann's testimony, which was found to be false.


Convictions

He pleaded
no contest ' is a legal term that comes from the Latin phrase for "I do not wish to contend". It is also referred to as a plea of no contest or no defense. In criminal trials in certain United States jurisdictions, it is a plea where the defendant neith ...
to seven felony charges. He was sentenced to 10 years probation, 200 hours of community service and fined $17,000 for botched autopsies and exhumation expenses. He also surrendered his medical license and moved to Washington state. As a convicted felon it was unlawful for Erdmann to own guns, but in 1995, police found 122 weapons including shotguns, handguns and a fully automatic M-16 rifle. The weapons were confiscated from his Redmond, Washington home. Two years later he was released.


60-Minutes

Erdmann's story was once the topic of a 60-Minutes news story segment.


Teacher's assistant

In 1994, after he moved to Washington State, he found work as a teacher's assistant for special education in the
Lake Washington School District The Lake Washington School District #414 or LWSD is a public school district in King County, Washington, in suburbs east of Seattle. Its headquarters is in Redmond. it is the second-largest school district in Washington. It serves the region t ...
. He worked 86 days at Rose Hill Junior High School and 32 days as a school-bus assistant.


References


External sources


Fight the Death Penalty in USA
* ''Actual Innocence : Five Days to Execution, and Other Dispatches From the Wrongly Convicted'' -
Barry Scheck Barry Charles Scheck (born September 19, 1949) is an American lawyer. He received national media attention while serving on O. J. Simpson's defense team, collectively dubbed the " Dream Team", helping to win an acquittal in the highly publicize ...
,
Peter Neufeld Peter J. Neufeld (born July 17, 1950) is an American lawyer, cofounder, with Barry Scheck, of the Innocence Project, and a founding partner in the civil rights law firm Neufeld Scheck & Brustin. Starting from his earliest years as an attorney rep ...
, Jim Dwyer (Doubleday, 2000) {{DEFAULTSORT:Erdmann, Ralph 2010 deaths People from Redmond, Washington Wrongful convictions 1926 births