
Dr. Michael McGee
ST. PAUL, Minn. (WCCO) โ The Ramsey County Attorneyโs Office says itโs narrowing in on seven autopsies performed by former county medical examiner Michael McGee amid a years-long investigation.
County Attorney John Choi launched a review in 2021 of 215 autopsies performed by McGee during his tenure between 1985 and 2019, the year he resigned.
Choi made the move following the decision to overturn the death sentence of prolific sex offender Alfonso Rodriguez in the 2003 murder of Dru Sjodin due to McGeeโs involvement in the trial. Sjodin was a University of North Dakota student who was kidnapped from outside Columbia Mall in Grand Forks. Rodriguezโ death sentence was reduced to life in prison in May 2023.
Several sentences from cases involving McGeeโs reports and testimony have already been changed or thrown out entirely.
Choi asked the nonprofit Prosecutorsโ Center for Excellence to head the inquiry. In a joint press conference on Wednesday morning, Choi and Kristine Hamann, the centerโs founder and executive director, announced the creation of a panel comprised of three โesteemed medical examinersโ from outside of Minnesota. The trio, which they say has no connection to McGee, will do a โdeep diveโ into his conclusions in those seven cases.
Hamann said in the first two phases of the investigation, a team of attorneys from across the nation examined whether McGeeโs testimonies or reports on the cause and manner of death may have been โerroneous or misstated, and contributed to a defendantโs conviction.โ
โThese cases were, I would guess, some of the most serious cases that have occurred here in Ramsey County over the past 20, 30, 40 years,โ Hamann said.
Investigators scoured through trial and grand jury transcripts, medical examiner files, crime scene photos, police reports and complaints, appellate decisions and more.
They concluded that in the majority of the cases, the cause and manner of death werenโt an issue. And in dozens of cases, McGee was found to have had little involvement.
Hamann stressed her group hasnโt made any conclusions on the remaining cases.
โThey need to have further review by medical experts to understand the significance and the impact that (McGee) had on those seven cases,โ Hamann said.
Members of the Great North Innocence Project were also on hand. The group has been involved in past cases connected to McGee.
โThey talk about where thereโs smoke, thereโs fire. This is a case where weโre beyond the smoke phase,โ said Jim Mayer with the Great North Innocence Project. โWeโve seen the fire. Thatโs why weโre all standing here. The question now is how far the fire has spread.โ
Choi and Hamann gave no specific timeline for phase threeโs completion.
McGeeโs worked on cases for 34 years in more than a dozen Minnesota counties and some in Wisconsin.
Choi said his officeโs scrutiny of McGeeโs work began in 2011 with the exoneration of Michael Hanson, a Douglas County man convicted of second-degree murder in the 2004 death of his infant daughter.
โThere was a judge in Douglas County who had come to the conclusion that, in an infant death case, (McGeeโs) conclusions were false or misleading,โ Choi said. โSo because of that we did a very narrow review around infant death cases and we found a number of things. We found that Dr. McGee hadnโt been connected to the latest research on that topic, and he wasnโt participating in the Association of Medical Examiners.โ
In 2016, McGee testified in the trial of another Minnesota man who was eventually convicted of murdering his infant. In March 2024, Robert Kaiserโs conviction was overturned by the Minnesota Supreme Court after new evidence came to light about a serious brain condition that was originally overlooked in the child. McGee wasnโt specifically noted in that ruling.
In 1998, Thomas Rhodes was convicted of murdering his wife, Jane Rhodes, largely from McGeeโs testimony. Jane Rhodes drowned in Spicerโs Green Lake after falling overboard during a late-night boat ride with her husband.
McGee stated in his testimony during the trial that he believed Thomas Rhodes had grabbed her neck, shoved her off the boat, and then drove over her several times.
In January 2023, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison vacated Thomas Rhodesโ two murder convictions, converting them into a single second-degree manslaughter conviction, leading to his release from prison. Ellisonโs decision rested on new evidence that suggested an accidental fall was unlikely the cause of Jane Rhodesโ death.
Days after his release from the Moose Lake correctional facility, Thomas Rhodes sued McGee.
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