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Webb is making "a contention of innocence that is refuted by the hard evidence in the case," Clermont County prosecutors said in their filing with the parole board. Innocence Projects around the country, which previously concentrated on defendants whose convictions could be challenged through DNA, have taken on a number of deadly arson cases in recent years, including ones in Michigan, Iowa and Pennsylvania. In Pennsylvania, Han Tak Lee has long argued that the 1989 fire that killed his 20-year-old daughter in a cabin at a religious retreat was an accident. On Friday, a federal appeals court ruled that Lee, who is serving a life sentence, can challenge testimony presented at his trial as unreliable according to newly developed scientific methods. The investigators who testified against Lee relied on once-common beliefs when they said that because the fire spread rapidly and was particularly hot, it must have been arson. But tests conducted in the 1990s showed that fires can hit the point of "flashover"
-- when all combustible surfaces ignite at once -- in under four minutes with no accelerants. Connections between a fire's speed and heat and the possibility of arson have "been discredited and shown to be much less significant than previously thought in the investigation of a fire," Florida-based fire scientist John Lentini, one of the country's leading independent fire analysts, said in a 2002 affidavit on Lee's behalf. "Back in the day there were a lot more fires called arson that were actually accidents," Lentini said in an interview. "There was a lot of misinformation out there." Just over a year ago in Massachusetts, a federal judge granted James Hebshie a new trial on charges he burned down his convenience store for the insurance money, and prosecutors subsequently agreed to drop the case. The judge said Hebshie's lawyers should have challenged a weak government case. "By 2006, when Hebshie's trial took place, a number of articles in legal journals and cases cast a critical eye on the scientific reliability of arson evidence, methodologies, and techniques," wrote Judge Nancy Gertner. The judge also noted that the testimony of the handler of the dog used to detect an accelerant "was a lengthy, almost mystical, account of the dog's powers."
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