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Wrongful Conviction

Crowe v. County of San Diego

County: San Diego Severity: 9.1/10 Status: Settled — $7.25M Case No: 593 F.3d 841 (9th Cir. 2010)

Three juveniles — Michael Crowe (14), Joshua Treadway (15), and Aaron Houser (15) — were coerced into false confessions for the murder of Michael's 12-year-old sister Stephanie. Police interrogated the boys for hours without parents or attorneys present, lied about evidence, and psychologically abused them until two confessed. The real killer's DNA was on evidence the entire time.

$7.25M
Taxpayer Settlement
14
Years to Clear Names
3
Juveniles Falsely Accused
0
Officers Disciplined

What Happened

On January 20, 1998, 12-year-old Stephanie Crowe was found stabbed to death in her Escondido home. Instead of following physical evidence that pointed to a transient named Richard Tuite — who was seen in the neighborhood that night and whose DNA was later found on Stephanie's clothing — Escondido police focused on her 14-year-old brother Michael and his friends.

Michael was interrogated for hours. Detectives lied to him, telling him blood had been found in his room when it hadn't. They told him he had failed a lie detector test. They used psychologically manipulative tactics on a child with no parent or attorney present. A judge later described the interrogations as "hours of grueling, psychologically abusive interrogation."

Two of the three boys eventually gave false confessions under the pressure. All three were charged with murder.

Meanwhile, Stephanie's blood was discovered on the red sweatshirt worn by Richard Raymond Tuite the night of the killing. The physical evidence had pointed to Tuite all along. The charges against the boys were dropped, but it took until May 2012 — 14 years after the murder — for a judge to formally declare all three boys "factually innocent" beyond a reasonable doubt.

Key Players

Escondido Police Department
Investigating Officers
Conducted hours-long interrogations of juveniles without parents or attorneys. Lied about evidence. Ignored physical evidence pointing to the actual killer. Used psychologically abusive tactics on children as young as 14.
San Diego County DA's Office
Prosecuting Authority
Charged three juveniles with murder based on coerced confessions despite physical evidence pointing elsewhere. Took 14 years to formally clear the boys' names.
Actual Perpetrator
Richard Raymond Tuite
Transient seen in the neighborhood the night of the murder. Stephanie's blood found on his sweatshirt. Eventually convicted in 2004, conviction reversed, convicted again in 2013.

Timeline

Jan 20, 1998
12-year-old Stephanie Crowe found stabbed to death in her Escondido home
Jan 1998
Michael Crowe (14), Joshua Treadway (15), and Aaron Houser (15) interrogated for hours without parents or attorneys
1998
Two boys give false confessions. All three charged with murder.
1999
Charges dropped after Stephanie's blood found on Richard Tuite's sweatshirt
2004
Tuite convicted of voluntary manslaughter (later reversed and retried)
Oct 2011
Crowe family settles civil lawsuit for $7.25 million
May 2012
Judge Kenneth So declares all three boys "factually innocent" beyond a reasonable doubt — 14 years after the killing
2013
Tuite convicted of murder at retrial

Outcome

Settlement
$7.25 Million — Paid by Escondido and Oceanside taxpayers

All three boys were declared factually innocent in 2012. Aaron Houser settled separately for an undisclosed amount. No officers were disciplined for the coerced confessions. The case became a landmark example of why juvenile interrogation protections are necessary.

Why This Matters

This case exposes a systemic failure: when police decide who did it before following the evidence, innocent people — including children — get destroyed. The physical evidence pointed to Tuite from the beginning. But detectives chose to break three kids instead.

California later passed reforms on juvenile interrogation practices partly due to cases like this. But no officer faced consequences. The $7.25 million came from taxpayers, not from the people who conducted the abusive interrogations.

If you're wondering whether the system is capable of railroading innocent people: three children were charged with murdering their sister based on confessions extracted through psychological abuse. The real killer's DNA was on the evidence the entire time.

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