i roncally, in the fbi lab that tested the dna. rather than acknowledge that they made a mistake and stop the kay, the prosecution not wanting to admit it made a mistake elicited fraud on the part of the medical examiner and wrongfully convicted me. >> some people might look at you and say this is the exception, a rare case, this doesn't happen all the time. are you the outlier? >> absolutely not. my evidence for that is there has been 314 dna proven wrongful convictions when you factor in non-dna, they start to get into the thousands. last year, 87 people were exonerated in the u.s. and were already on pace this year to en beat that. so, no, it's not an aberration. >> we asked our community, there is all of these flaws in the prison system. how do we fix it? strange bed fellow tweets better funding for crime labs, improved training for, forensic scientists, so fred, you are the whistleblower. you had to pay the price for telling the truth. you have heard some of these suggestions for improvements from strange bed fellow. how can w