In 1977,
Harrington, who was 17 at
the time, was arrested for
the murder of John
Schweer, a retired police
captain who had been
working as a security
guard. Court records
contain contradictory
accounts of the events of
the evening of the crime.
In the trial, Harrington
said that he had been with
friends at a concert the
evening of the murder.
Several witnesses
corroborated this alibi.
The primary prosecution
witness, 16-year old Kevin
Hughes, told a different
story. He gave a detailed
account of Harrington's
alleged perpetration of
the crime. A year later
Harrington was found
guilty and sentenced to
life without parole, based
almost entirely on Hughes'
testimony.
Now Brain
Fingerprinting technology
has made it possible to
examine scientifically which
sequence of events actually
took place, by determining
which one is stored in
Harrington's brain. Brain
Fingerprinting testing
determines objectively what
information is stored in a
person's brain by measuring
brain-wave responses to
relevant words or pictures
flashed on a computer
screen. When the brain
recognizes significant
information — such as the
details of a crime stored in
the brain of the perpetrator
— the brain responds with a
MERMER (memory and encoding
related multifaceted
electroencephalographic
response). When the
information is not stored in
the brain, no MERMER occurs.
In 1997,
nineteen years after his
conviction, Harrington
petitioned the Iowa
District court for
post-conviction relief
alleging several grounds
for granting him a new
trial, and in March 2000,
he amended his petition to
include the results of the
Brain Fingerprinting
testing.
In the
Brain Fingerprinting
tests, Harrington's brain
did not emit a MERMER in
response to critical
details of the murder,
details he would have
known if he had committed
the crime, indicating that
this information was not
stored in his brain. In a
second Brain
Fingerprinting test, one
that included details
about Harrington’s alibi,
Harrington's brain did
respond with a MERMER,
indicating that his brain
recognized these events.
The details used in the
second test were facts
about the alibi that Dr.
Farwell obtained from
official court records and
alibi witnesses.
"It is
clear that Harrington's
brain does not contain
critical details about the
crime," said Dr. Farwell.
"His brain does, however,
contain critical details
about the events that
actually took place that
night, according to alibi
witnesses who testified
that Harrington was in
another city with friends
at the time of the crime.
We can conclude
scientifically that the
record of the night of the
crime stored in
Harrington's brain does
not match the crime scene,
and does match the alibi."
When Dr.
Farwell confronted him
with the Brain
Fingerprinting test
results exonerating
Harrington, Kevin Hughes,
the key prosecution
witness, recanted his
testimony and admitted
that he had lied in the
original trial, falsely
accusing Harrington to
avoid being prosecuted for
the murder himself.
In November
2000, the Iowa District
Court for Pottawattamie
County held a hearing on
Terry Harrington’s
petition for
post-conviction relief
from his sentence for
murder. This hearing
included an eight-hour
session on the
admissibility of the Brain
Fingerprinting test
report. In March 2001,
District Judge Timothy
O’Grady ruled that Brain
Fingerprinting testing met
the legal standards for
admissibility in court as
scientific evidence.
The judge
also ruled, however, that
the results of the Brain
Fingerprinting test, along
with other newly
discovered evidence in the
case, would probably not
have resulted in the jury
arriving at a different
verdict than at the
original trial, and
therefore he denied the
petition for a new trial.
In August
2001, an appeal of the
District Court’s decision
denying Harrington a new
trial was filed with the
Iowa Supreme Court. Dr.
Farwell and his attorney,
Tom Makeig, filed an
amicus (friend of the
court) brief in support of
Harrington’s appeal, based
on the Brain
Fingerprinting testing
evidence. The Iowa Supreme
Court reversed
Harrington’s murder
conviction and ordered a
new trial.