On February 16, 2012, police in Portland, Oregon arrested 21-year-old Andre Mazur after they confiscated a substance from him that field-tested positive for the presence of heroin. On April 17, 2012, Mazur pled no contest in Multnomah County Circuit Court to a misdemeanor charge of possession of a controlled substance. He was sentenced to probation.
The Oregon State Police crime laboratory later tested the seized substance but detected no controlled substance. The report, however, was placed in the closed case file and went unnoticed.
In 2016, the New York Times Magazine published an article about faulty field tests written by reporters from ProPublica, an independent investigative journalism website. The article focused on scores of defendants who pled guilty in Harris County, Texas, based on faulty field tests and were later exonerated by negative lab tests.
Prompted by the article, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s office conviction integrity unit checked cases in which defendants pled guilty to drug possession since 2010. They discovered five cases—Mazur, Marlin Hayes, Steven Ash, Derek Luckovich, and Gary Vinsonhaler, Jr. — where defendants had pled guilty and subsequent lab tests were negative for the presence of any controlled substance. In July 2016, the District Attorney’s office instituted a policy that “All controlled substance based prosecutions must be accompanied by a request for, and report of, confirmatory testing from the Oregon State Police (OSP) Forensic Laboratory for the presence of a controlled substance."
In October and November 2016, the District Attorney's Office moved to vacate the five convictions. The court granted the motions and the prosecution dismissed the charges against Luckovich, Hayes, Vinsonhaler, Mazur and Ash.
– Maurice Possley
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