Right name, wrong man leads to week in jail



By Andrew Brown

He wasn't the right Jose Alicea but still spent week in jail
When Jose Alicea left work on April 15, he thought that he was going to the last meeting of his 12-month probationary term. He told his boss he would be back shortly.
He was proud of the progress he made since he pleaded guilty to drug paraphernalia charges in May 2013. Alicea had found a good place to live, started a full-time job working for Singh Auto Group, and was spending time with his 3-year-old daughter every week.
But when he arrived at the Northampton County probation office, he was told that a warrant had been issued for his arrest in Lehigh County. He was handcuffed and taken to the Northampton County Prison.
When he asked what he was charged with, he was told that a protection-from-abuse order had been filed against him and that he had failed to appear in court when he was summoned.
Alicea, of Bethlehem, protested. He didn't know anyone who would file a protection-from-abuse order against him, and he knew that he hadn't done anything wrong.
But the arrest warrant didn't lie. It had his name, date of birth and place of residence printed on it. He couldn't understand what was happening.
"As soon as I had my life set up, boom, something like this happened," Alicea said, recounting that day.
As Alicea, 43, sat in jail for a week waiting for his bail hearing, he was racked with worry. He couldn't sleep. The few phone calls he was given were wasted; his former girlfriend, the mother of his child, wouldn't speak with him, believing that another woman had filed a protection-from-abuse order against him.
He worried that he wouldn't be allowed to see his daughter anymore. He was concerned that he would lose his job and apartment. But the worst part was the gnawing anxiety of not knowing how his name ended up on the warrant.
"Mentally, I was stressed out because I had no clue why," Alicea said.
When Alicea was transferred to Lehigh County for his scheduled court date, he still had no answers, but his bail was set at $2,000 and his mother and aunt gathered the $200 needed for his release.
Alicea wasted no time.
He immediately began calling the probation officers in Northampton and Lehigh County. But after those calls provided no information, he went to the Lehigh County Court's Clerk of Judicial Records to request the protection from abuse order that sent him to prison.
When the clerk handed him the order, Alicea was in disbelief. The protection order was proof that Jose Alicea had not violated his probation — at least not this Jose Alicea.
The name on the order matched Alicea's, but the date of birth, Social Security number, residential address and physical identifiers didn't match his own, according to the documents obtained by Alicea.
Alicea said he couldn't believe that a clerical error could put him in prison, and more importantly, that nobody else had realized the mistake.
"If I wouldn't have made bail, I never would have been able to resolve this," Alicea said.
While Alicea's case is troubling, it is far from uncommon. Wrongful arrests and convictions occur throughout the United States — often the result of clerical errors.
In August, the Clay County Sheriff's Office in Florida settled a lawsuit for $67,000 with a woman who was wrongfully arrested twice, according to the news website WKRG.com.
Ashley Nicole Chiasseon of Louisiana was extradited and spent four weeks in jail on charges of grand theft and writing bad checks. The woman authorities sought was named Ashley Odessa Chiasseon, according to the website. Four deputies were suspended without pay for the mistake.
In May, WFAA.com reported that the Dallas Police Department's Internal Affairs Division had investigated six cases of wrongful arrest in the year preceding the news article, including that of Shantel Johnson, who was picked up on a domestic violence case. The woman police sought had a similar name but was 20 years younger.
In many wrongful arrest cases, like Alicea's, the people who are wrongly accused often have prior criminal records that open them up to mistakes by law enforcement. In 1993, Alicea pleaded guilty to drug charges in addition to his 2013 arrest.
"Having any prior criminal record — essentially being known to law enforcement — is a factor that is linked to wrongful conviction," said Jon Gould, an American University criminal justice professor.
In 2013, Gould and his colleagues at American University published research funded by the National Institute of Justice that identified several factors associated with wrongful convictions, including the age of the defendant, wrongful eyewitness identification and an individual's criminal history.
"Knowing nothing else about the case," Gould said of Alicea's arrest, "the thing that jumps out at me is that this is someone who has a prior criminal record."
From his experience, Gould said he believes that someone eventually would have recognized the mistake during Alicea's court proceedings. But Alicea was able to do that for himself, acting as his own defense attorney, Gould said.
"In terms of what the lessons are for law enforcement and for prosecutors," Gould said, "it's to sweat the details."
But even when criminal justice employees realize their mistakes before conviction, the wrongful arrests can cause serious problems for the accused. And in some cases, records are never corrected, leaving room for future confusion and mistakes by law enforcement.
When Alicea was released from jail, he had no money, no apartment and no job — in Alicea's absence, his boss hired another employee.
"I got out with nothing," Alicea said, "and all I got was: 'I'm sorry.'"
Alicea said that the Lehigh County probation office apologized when they realized its mistake.
But for Alicea it was a little too late.
"They were trying to do anything possible to make it better for me," Alicea said, "but it's already done. What can they do?"
According to Lehigh County District Court Administrator Bill Berndt, the mistake was made when the probation office received the civil court listing and mistakenly matched Alicea's name with the man who had the protection-from-abuse order filed against him. Berndt said he did not know of any similar mistakes made by probation officers.
"The employee who checked it was not as diligent as they should have been," Berndt said.
Berndt said the mistake had been fully investigated, but would not say whether any disciplinary action had been taken against the staff member that made the mistake.
But Berndt emphasized the fact that Alicea never would have been arrested if he had shown up at court when he was summoned. Berndt said that since protection-from-abuse orders are a civil matter, the only reason Alicea was arrested was because he had failed to appear in court for the protection-from-abuse order.
"His failure to appear compounded our mistake," Berndt said.
Alicea said that he never received a letter summoning him to appear in front of a Lehigh County judge. But even if he had, Alicea said the court administration is missing the point. He said if they wouldn't have mixed up his name, he never would have been summoned to court in the first place.
Since April, Alicea has found another place to stay. He's back doing detail work at Singh Auto Group again, but his hours have been limited because he can't find a ride to work everyday.
Alicea said he's upset and frustrated that his life was disrupted by someone's mistake. He said he would like to seek some type of compensation for being wrongly accused, handcuffed, strip-searched and jailed. He has sought consultation from lawyers specializing in false arrests.
According to lawyers who specialize civil rights cases, not all wrongful arrest cases can lead to winnable lawsuits.
"It sounds like they dropped the ball in this case," Robert Magee, a partner at the law firm of Worth, Magee & Fischer in Allentown, said after being told details of Alicea's case.
But Magee, who litigates civil rights cases, said winnable civil suits focusing on wrongful arrests don't come along every day. He said it often depends on in what jurisdiction the arrest occurred and whether the victim can prove that law enforcement officials didn't operate in a professional manner.
Alicea said the point of seeking civil action isn't about retribution; it's about principle.

"That's a week out of my life that I'll never get back," he said. "Some people may not think it's a lot, but it is for me."