At the beginning of his four-decade career as a Ramsey County medical examiner, Michael McGee solved cases that had for years stumped his predecessors.
He told Star Tribune reporters in 1986 it took him only a cursory review of records to determine one victim, a 3-year-old boy, had been beaten to death, reinvigorating a case that had been cold for 20 years. The difference was in the science. Before 1979, Ramsey County had relied on part-time coroners to rule on causes of death. McGee was a doctor — trained in the science of forensic pathology — which allowed him to see what the others could not.
“It isn’t some medical mystery,” he said almost 40 years ago.
Now the integrity of the science McGee has used over his career is being challenged.
In a lawsuit filed earlier this year, McGee is accused of fabricating medical conclusions and providing false testimony in the 1996 drowning death of Jane Rhodes, resulting in 25 years of wrongful imprisonment for her husband. After Thomas Rhodes’ release a year ago, an investigation by the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office found evidence McGee used “medically unsupported testimony” to arrive at his opinion.
“McGee reasoned backward — from the nonmedical evidence to the medical findings,” the report said.
Rhodes is at least the fourth person to either be released from prison or resentenced to a lower penalty after revelations that McGee provided flawed or inaccurate testimony leading to their convictions, according to court records. In the wake of these reversals, a series of judges’ orders and reports has described his work as reckless and lacking in scientific discipline.
U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Ralph R. Erickson called McGee’s testimony in the case of Dru Sjodin, a college student who was kidnapped and murdered in 2003, “so unmoored from a scientific basis that it should not have been received at all.”