On June 18, 2024, the Virginia Court of Appeals granted Marvin Grimm Jr. a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence, officially clearing him of a crime he had spent 45 years in prison for not committing. The ruling capped more than two decades of legal work by the Innocence Project and the law firm Arnold & Porter, and it exposed the compounded failures — a threatened confession and discredited forensic science — that had cost Grimm nearly half a century of his life.

The case began on November 22, 1975, when a three-year-old boy identified in court records as C.H. disappeared in Richmond, Virginia. Investigators moved quickly to Grimm as the focus of their inquiry. The pressure on law enforcement to solve a crime involving a young child was intense, and that pressure channeled into what wrongful conviction researchers now recognize as tunnel vision — a narrowing of focus onto one suspect at the cost of a fuller investigation.

At trial, the prosecution built its case on two pillars. The first was testimony from Mary Jane Burton, a senior forensic analyst at Virginia's state crime lab. Burton told the jury that hairs found on the floor of Grimm's car and on a child's sock inside the vehicle were "consistent" with C.H.'s hair. The second was a confession Grimm had given to investigators after his arrest.

Both would eventually be shown to be fundamentally unreliable. Hair microscopy — the technique Burton applied — is a subjective comparison method that has since been widely discredited by the scientific and legal communities, its high error rate exposed by decades of DNA exonerations. Beyond the general problems with the technique, Burton's work has attracted specific scrutiny: investigations into her past cases found a pattern of overstating results, presenting "consistency" as something approaching certainty when it was merely a possibility. In Grimm's case, DNA testing conducted years later showed that the hairs from his car did not originate from C.H. — a direct refutation of what the jury had heard at trial.

The confession came with its own problem. Grimm provided it while facing the prospect of execution. False confessions are now one of the most thoroughly documented phenomena in wrongful conviction research: they occur under coercion, under extreme psychological pressure, under the threat of death. A person who believes that signing a statement might save his life from an executioner may sign anything. In 1976, that dynamic was poorly understood. The confession was treated as confirmation of guilt.

Grimm was convicted of the abduction, sexual assault, and murder of C.H. and sentenced to life in prison. He maintained his innocence for decades.

The road toward exoneration began in earnest in December 2003, when Grimm filed a petition for a writ of actual innocence, backed by new DNA testing results. Those results excluded him as the source of biological evidence recovered from C.H.'s throat and excluded C.H. as the source of hairs found on a peacoat recovered from Grimm's car. The same physical evidence that had helped convict him had, under modern analysis, reversed direction entirely.

But DNA results alone were not enough to free him. Virginia's post-conviction laws were restrictive, and the legal path was slow. In 2017, Arnold & Porter and the Innocence Project submitted a clemency petition to the Governor of Virginia, seeking executive exoneration. That route remained unresolved. The legal teams pressed forward.

In April 2023, they filed a formal Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence before the Virginia Court of Appeals. In a significant development, the Virginia Office of the Attorney General joined the petition — an acknowledgment from the state itself that the conviction could not stand.

On June 18, 2024, the court agreed and issued the writ.

Grimm's case is part of a larger reckoning with Mary Jane Burton's body of work. Investigations into her cases have implicated her testimony in multiple wrongful convictions across Virginia. The case also stands as a study in how two flawed instruments — microscopic hair analysis and a coerced confession — can combine to produce a life sentence for an innocent man, and how long it takes the system to correct itself once they do.

The *New York Times* covered the exoneration on the day the writ issued under the headline "Virginia Exonerates Man Who Spent 45 Years in Prison for Death of 3-Year-Old."