Charges dropped against mother for 1995 fire that killed her 3-year-old son

Kristine Bunch spent 16 years in prison

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Kristine Bunch
Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Posted: 12/18/2012

INDIANAPOLIS - Charges have been dismissed against an Indiana woman who served 16 years in prison after she was convicted of setting a fire that killed her 3-year-old son, the woman's attorneys said Tuesday.

Prosecutors filed a motion Monday to dismiss charges against Kristine Bunch, and the motion was granted Tuesday, according to a release from the Schiff Hardin law office.

"We are extremely happy that the state has dismissed the charge against Kristine," read a statement from the attorneys. "She is innocent. As the Indiana Appellate Court ruled months ago, a jury hearing all of the evidence likely would have found Kristine not guilty."

Bunch spent 16 years in prison after her original conviction. A new trial had been ordered for her. Her original sentence in 1996 was for 60 years.

Prosecutors said Bunch poured kerosene or some other fuel in the bedroom of her son, Anthony, and the living room of their mobile home and lit it on fire.

But attorneys working with the Northwestern University School of Law's Center on Wrongful Convictions said science discovered since the 1990s shows that fuel couldn't have been used and that other possible causes were ignored.

"We do condemn the state for bringing arson-related charges in 1995. That was the equivalent of the Stone Ages for arson investigations," Bunch's attorneys said. "Today, we know so much more about the science of fire. As the new evidence offered by world-renowned experts showed, Kristine could not have set this fire as the state contended. The fire was accidental."

A Supreme Court ruling earlier this year meant the case would automatically be returned to the Decatur Circuit Court, where the state could have retried it or tossed it.

"Kristine lost her precious son, Tony, in this accidental fire. She then lost 16 years of her freedom. The depth of that tragedy is unthinkable," her attorneys said. "Today is the first day she can begin to heal."

Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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