harris meant to kill his son. the prosecution says the jury got it completely right. but hearing the word guilty was no cause for celebration. what i want to hear announced is you know, to bring cooper back. you can t get that from it. three weeks later, a judge sentenced ross harris to life in prison. the sentence in the court is life to serve confinement without parole. reporter: his defense sentenced an appeal arguing that they never should have allowed all the testimony about sex into the murder trial. and the defense says inaccurate information released early on about ross computer searches made it impossible for him to get a fair trial. our personal belief, not lawyer talk, our personal belief in knowing ross, in knowing this case better than anyone in the world, ross harris is an innocent man. are you going to keep
innocence. and then, years later, stoll got word that margie grafton and her boyfriend had been set free. their convictions thrown out. had she been able to prove what both had believed at trial that the children s stories were made up? well, no. instead, grafton s lawyer discovered that a psychiatric analysis had been performed on both margie grafton and her boyfriend tim, and from that analysis it was determined that neither one of them had a sexual inclination toward children. but this very important bit of evidence was ruled inadmissible by the judge at trial. and while margie and tim sat in jail for years and years, an appeal arguing that the psychiatric analysis should have been allowed in court made it all the way up to the california supreme court, which ruled in their favor and ordered their release. how long were you incarcerated? almost eight years. i missed my kids for years.
jail for years and years an appeal arguing that the psychiatric analysis should have been allowed in court made it all the way up to the california supreme court, which ruled in their favor and ordered their release. how long were you incarcerated? almost eight years. i missed my kids for years. i missed their childhood. i didn t get to watch them grow up. i didn t get to watch them lose their teeth or do the little plays in school or anything like that. but for stoll, there was no such exonerating evidence. and normal for him, remained his 6x9 foot prison cell. in 1995, stoll was transferred