• Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sample Page
  • Sample Page
Police USA Body Cam
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Police USA Body Cam
No Result
View All Result

When Cops Rescue Innocents From Domestic Abusers

admin79 by admin79
December 11, 2025
in Uncategorized
0
When Cops Rescue Innocents From Domestic Abusers

Boulder Police Arrest Man During Domestic Disturbance Incident

Billboard

Details

Jamie Barker
Public Information Officer

Police arrest a man for a domestic disturbance incident that closed 47th Street north of Valmont this morning.

BOULDER, Colo. –Boulder Police are still investigating after an early morning arrest today of a man for 1st degree kidnapping that began as a reported domestic disturbance and hostage situation.

At around 1:30 a.m. on November 2, 2025, Boulder Police officers were notified that an adult female was being held against her will at a residence in the 4700 block of Edison Ave. Officers were told that the suspect, known to the victim, was threatening the victim.

Boulder Police contacted the individuals at the residence. Boulder Police SWAT and Air1 were activated and responded to the scene. At around 6:50 a.m. the suspect surrendered to officers and was taken into custody. The victim, a female aged 21, was treated by medical for some injuries on scene.

The suspect, Matthew Kiriazis, 35 years old, has been arrested on charges for:

  • 1st degree kidnapping
  • 3rd degree assault
  • Misdemeanor menacing
  • Violation of a protection order
  • Domestic violence
Police News

Police continue to investigate this incident, and additional charges may be filed. Anyone with additional related information is asked to call Boulder dispatch at 303-441-3333 and reference Boulder Police report number 2510572.

Boulder Police Department appreciates the assistance of Boulder Fire-Rescue, American Medical Response, and Boulder County Sheriff’s Office during this incident.

As in every criminal case, these charges are an accusation, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless or until proven guilty.

–CITY–

Trial Judge Recognizes Melissa Lucio’s Innocence — 8 Facts You Need to Know 

After 17 years on death row, new findings affirm Melissa Lucio’s innocence.

04.09.25 By Innocence Staff

Melissa Lucio at the Mountain View Unit in Gatesville, Texas. (Image: Ilana Panich-Linsman for The Innocence Project)

Melissa Lucio at the Mountain View Unit in Gatesville, Texas. (Image: Ilana Panich-Linsman for The Innocence Project)

Melissa Lucio was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death for the accidental death of her daughter, Mariah, who died two days after a fall down a flight of stairs. Ms. Lucio has spent nearly two decades on Texas’ death row for a crime that never happened. 

Just two days before her scheduled execution in April 2022, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) issued a stay and ordered the 138th Judicial District Court of Cameron County to review new evidence pointing to her innocence.

In April 2024, the judge who presided over Ms. Lucio’s original trial — Judge Arturo Nelson — found that the former prosecution team illegally suppressed critical evidence showing that Mariah’s injuries were consistent with an accidental fall, not abuse. Judge Nelson ruled that the suppression of this evidence at Ms. Lucio’s trial violated her constitutional rights under Brady v. Maryland and recommended that her conviction be overturned. Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz agreed, affirming that Ms. Lucio’s rights were violated and that her conviction should not stand.

Then, in October 2024, after further review of Ms. Lucio’s remaining claims, Judge Nelson went a step further: he found that Melissa Lucio is actually innocent and that she did not kill her daughter, and recommended that both her conviction and death sentence be vacated. The case is now pending at the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which will decide whether to adopt these findings and finally overturn her wrongful conviction.

As Vanessa Potkin, director of special litigation at the Innocence Project and one of Ms. Lucio’s attorneys, said, “Melissa Lucio lived every parent’s nightmare when she lost her daughter after a tragic accident. It became a nightmare from which she couldn’t wake up when she was sent to death row for a crime that never happened. After 17 years on death row, it’s time for the nightmare to end. Melissa should be home right now with her children and grandchildren.” 

Read and share these key facts about a woman on death row for a crime that never occurred.

1. The judge who presided over Melissa Lucio’s trial finds she is “actually innocent.”

Ms. Lucio’s conviction was based on testimony from a medical examiner that Mariah’s injuries could only have been caused by intentional abuse shortly before her death. Considering the new medical evidence and witness accounts, Judge Nelson found clear and convincing evidence that Mariah’s fatal head injury was caused by an accidental fall on stairs two days before she died and that her extensive bruising was not caused by abuse but rather a complication of her fall. Judge Nelson found that “no rational juror could have convicted [Ms. Lucio] of killing her daughter after hearing all of the evidence from her original trial alongside all of the new evidence she has presented.”

2. Ms. Lucio’s statements to police have all the hallmarks of a false confession.

Within hours of her daughter’s death, Ms. Lucio was subjected to more than five hours of continuous interrogation. During that time, she asserted her innocence 86 times verbally and 35 times non-verbally by shaking her head. Despite her repeated denials, police refused to accept any answer other than a confession — making it clear the interrogation would not end until she told them what they wanted to hear. While most interrogations last 30 minutes to two hours, false confessions are often extracted during longer, high-pressure sessions, like Ms. Lucio’s. After hours of coercive questioning, Ms. Lucio — exhausted and manipulated — finally relented, saying, “I guess I did it.”

https://youtube.com/watch?v=wa6xx45j35I%3Fsi%3D9AuOVTig-Sl5TpST

Throughout the interrogation, officers used manipulative, psychological tactics known to cause false confessions. They ignored Ms. Lucio’s extreme vulnerabilities, including shock and grief over her daughter’s death, sleep deprivation, emotional exhaustion, high suggestibility, and a lifetime of trauma from sexual abuse and domestic violence. At one point, a detective even shouted at her, “[i]f I beat you half to death like that little child was beat, I bet you you’d die too.” 

Experts on false confessions, including Dr. Gisli Gudjonsson, one of the world’s leading scholars in the field, and David Thompson, an interrogation training expert, reviewed her case and concluded that she “was relentlessly pressured and extensively manipulated.” They further determined that her statements bore “the hallmarks of a coerced-compliant false confession.” Dr. Gudjonsson assessed that her case presents a “very high” risk of false confession, calling the severity and combination of risk factors “exceptional” compared to other cases he has evaluated worldwide. Mr. Thompson added that “repetitive threats combined with promises or suggestions of leniency are known to incentivize innocent subjects to confess” — tactics that were used on her.

These expert findings align with a disturbing national trend: false confessions are a leading cause of wrongful convictions in the U.S. According to the National Registry of Exonerations, among women exonerated after murder convictions, over one-quarter involved false confessions, with nearly one-third involving child victims. 

3. Ms. Lucio’s lifetime of sexual abuse and domestic violence made her especially vulnerable to coercive interrogation tactics.

Ms. Lucio’s jury never heard that her long history of childhood sexual abuse and domestic violence made her especially vulnerable to the coercive interrogation techniques law enforcement used against her. Years of trauma had conditioned her to defer to authority, remain passive in high-stress situations, and suppress visible emotion — all behaviors that were later misinterpreted by police and prosecutors as signs of guilt. Dr. Lucy Guarnera, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, submitted a report explaining that new scientific research — unavailable at the time of Ms. Lucio’s trial — has since established clear links between trauma and heightened vulnerability to coercive interrogation. Dr. Guarnera explains that the tactics used against Ms. Lucio “mirror precisely the dynamics of intimate partner violence,” exploiting the same patterns of control, fear, and compliance that define abusive relationships.

This broader understanding of trauma underscores how Ms. Lucio’s past made her particularly susceptible to pressure from law enforcement — yet the jury was never given the tools to recognize this dynamic. The absence of expert testimony on trauma and its psychological effects allowed harmful assumptions and power imbalances to shape the outcome of Ms. Lucio’s case.

Judge Nelson found that “new scientific evidence regarding [Ms. Lucio’s] heightened vulnerability to interrogative pressure casts doubt upon the reliability of her custodial admissions.” Judge Nelson further found that this new evidence makes it more likely than not that a jury presented with relevant expert testimony would “conclude that [Ms. Lucio’s] vague, cryptic admissions [in the interrogation room] reflect[ed] merely her acquiescence to officers’ demands for a confession,” and not a true confession. 

4. The jury was presented with unscientific testimony asserting Ms. Lucio’s guilt.

Judge Nelson also found that Ms. Lucio’s conviction was based on false evidence — most notably, the testimony of a Texas Ranger who falsely assured the jury he could tell Ms. Lucio was guilty based on her demeanor and body language during interrogation. The judge determined that this claim was “misleading and scientifically wrong,” aligning with current scientific consensus.

Neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, a distinguished professor of psychology at Northeastern University, explained that there is no scientific basis for determining a person’s internal thoughts and emotions — such as guilt or innocence — from their facial movements, posture, body movements, or diction. She noted that contrary to the Texas Ranger’s claim of a “black and white” difference between guilty and innocent suspects, science has established that “there is no single template, fingerprint, or signature of physical signals that express guilt or innocence across all individuals in all situations.”

Judge Nelson, in his Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, credited the evidence presented through Dr. Barrett. The court found that the Texas Ranger’s asserted ability to determine guilt based on demeanor was “disconfirmed” by a broad range of scientific techniques, including brain imaging studies, cross-cultural studies, physiology studies, and experiments using artificial intelligence algorithms. Therefore, the court concluded that the Texas Ranger’s testimony was false.

Further compounding the injustice, the jury never heard critical evidence about Ms. Lucio’s long history of child sexual abuse and domestic violence — trauma that profoundly shaped her behavior in the wake of her daughter’s death. The trial court barred expert testimony that would have helped jurors understand how survivors of severe trauma may respond to stress, fear, and grief.

In her evaluation, Dr. Bethany Brand, a renowned trauma expert, concluded that Ms. Lucio “endured a truly horrendous level of extreme and frequent childhood sexual abuse.” She explained that “the paramedics and detectives who opined that Melissa did not show as much emotion as they thought a mother should show had no awareness of her complex history of trauma” nor “that Melissa had survived daily abuse and degradation by dissociating and suppressing strong emotion.”

Without the crucial context of Ms. Lucio’s trauma, jurors were left to interpret her demeanor through the Ranger’s distorted and unscientific lens — that her slumped posture, passivity and lack of eye contact during the investigation indicated guilt. Her own words, spoken under pressure during a coercive interrogation, and the Ranger’s flawed impressions became the backbone of a wrongful conviction.

The omission of this critical evidence was especially damaging because the prosecution’s case for capital murder was weak — and its case for a death sentence even weaker. Ms. Lucio had no prior record of violence, and there was no reliable evidence of intentional harm. Yet she was sentenced to death, not based on facts, but on misinterpretation and suppressed truth.

8 Facts About Incarcerated and Wrongfully Convicted Women You Should Know

8 Facts About Incarcerated and Wrongfully Convicted Women You Should Know

5. Gender bias shaped Ms. Lucio’s investigation and prosecution. 

Gender bias played a significant role in her investigation and prosecution. While Ms. Lucio and her husband, Robert Alvarez, were both responsible for Mariah’s care, Ms. Lucio was convicted of murder and sentenced to death while Mr. Alvarez — who had a documented history of violence — was convicted only of causing serious bodily harm by omission to a child and sentenced to four years in prison. From the moment police arrived, they judged Ms. Lucio through the lens of gendered stereotypes about how a grieving mother should behave, targeting her as a suspect before gathering any real evidence. In contrast, authorities treated Mr. Alvarez with empathy, despite his known history of domestic violence.

Adding to this injustice, Ms. Lucio’s case was prosecuted by Cameron County District Attorney Armando Villalobos, who was later convicted of bribery and extortion for accepting a bribe to help release a man convicted of murdering his estranged girlfriend. Ms. Lucio was left facing the death penalty at the direction of a prosecutor whose own corruption undermines confidence in every case he handled — including hers.

6. Ms. Lucio is driven by her faith and commitment to her family. 

Although Ms. Lucio grew up without much religious instruction, she began her walk with God on September 26, 2014, and has since become a person of deep Catholic faith. She attends Catholic mass and meets with Deacon Ronnie Lastovic weekly. In 2015, Ms. Lucio and other women on death row formed a Bible study group to support one another. Ms. Lucio’s greatest concern is for her family, especially that her children continue to support each other. 

7. There is broad support across Texas for Ms. Lucio.

In 2022, as Ms. Lucio faced execution, over 100 bipartisan Texas lawmakers signed letters urging the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to recommend clemency. Hundreds of anti-domestic violence and sexual assault organizations also called for clemency, recognizing Ms. Lucio’s long history of abuse. More than 130 Baptist, Evangelical, and Catholic faith leaders, including the executive director of the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas and the director of the Rio Grande Valley Baptist Association, voiced their support.

In addition, 83 Texas legislators from both parties signed a letter urging the governor and parole board to act. Over 30 Latino advocacy organizations, including the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators (NHCSL), backed clemency as well. Eighteen people wrongfully convicted in Texas courts and 26 death row exonerees — including two from Texas — have supported Ms. Lucio’s fight for justice.

8. What’s Next for Ms. Lucio? 

Ms. Lucio’s case is in the hands of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state’s highest criminal court. They will decide whether to accept the judge’s recommendation and finally overturn her wrongful conviction and death sentence. The decision could bring her one step closer to coming home after nearly 17 years on death row for a crime that never happened.

If you have experienced sexual abuse and want to speak to someone, call the free and confidential National Sexual Assault hotline (1-800-656-HOPE or 1-800-656-4673). You can also receive help via online.rainn.org, which is available 24/7.

Previous Post

Welfare Check Reveals a Horrifying Discovery

Next Post

When Cops Find Helpless Victims In House of Horrors

Next Post
When Cops Find Helpless Victims In House of Horrors

When Cops Find Helpless Victims In House of Horrors

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.