By Tonya Alanez
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
June 16, 2007
The Broward Sheriff's Office has paid $2.7 million in settlements and legal costs for a case in which three men were jailed for 16 months and two of them faced the death penalty for a murder they didn't commit, according to documents obtained by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
The long-standing false confession case had dragged on since 1993 and included two mistrials and testimony from a detective who said he put in a sock drawer at his home evidence that could have exonerated the accused killers.
It cost the agency more money to litigate the case than to pay the plaintiffs.
The Sheriff's Office arrested Carl Stephen Rosati, Peter Roussonicolos and Peter Dallas four years after the 1986 Deerfield Beach slaying of Joseph Viscido Jr. He died from a gunshot wound to the head in what detectives said was a cocaine deal gone bad.
The case rested on Dallas' false confession, which he has said was made amid pressure from detectives. He was the first to settle with the Sheriff's Office in October 2003, for $225,000.
Rosati settled for $1 million last September, and in April, Roussonicolos settled for $89,000. A judge had ruled that the amounts would remain confidential until the third and final settlement was worked out.
In addition, the Sheriff's office paid $1,411,427 in legal fees.
"It doesn't matter what amount of money they give you, you can't pick up the pieces," said Rosati, 47. "The anguish of being in there for a year and a half with the possibility of being electrocuted, it never, never leaves you. I have nightmares, I feel reclusive, and I'm mentally damaged forever."
The Sheriff's Office would have saved tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars had it settled the case sooner, said Roussonicolos' attorney Doug Bates.
The settlements and legal costs will be paid out of one of three sources: the county's self-insurance fund, the Sheriff's Office insurance or the Sheriff's Office general fund, said Elliot Cohen, a spokesman for the Sheriff's Office.
All three men spent 16 months in jail awaiting trial, with the threat of the death penalty looming over Roussonicolos and Rosati. Dallas pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and had been set to testify against the other two men.
The trio won freedom in 1992 after a special prosecutor cleared them of the murder and arrested two other men -- James Traina and Kerry Carbonell.
Traina was convicted and is serving life in prison; Carbonell committed suicide in jail while awaiting trial.
Rosati, Roussonicolos and Dallas filed a civil lawsuit in 1993against the Sheriff's Office and former homicide detectives Steve Wiley, Dominick Gucciardo and Sgt. Thomas "Bill" Murray. Wiley and Gucciardo have since retired, and Murray is stationed in Deerfield Beach.
The case went before jurors and ended in mistrial twice.
At trial, Murray admitted taking home a crucial audiotape that could have led to the real killers. He insisted that he had forgotten about the tape in his sock drawer.
Roussonicolos' settlement package totaled $100,000, said his attorney. In addition to the $89,000 the Sheriff's Office forgave an $11,000 debt Roussonicolos owed for time spent in jail on other charges, Bates said.
State law allows the Sheriff's Office to sue inmates for time they spend in jail, Bates said.
Roussonicolos is back behind bars for violating probation on a racketeering charge.
Bates said his client was satisfied with the settlement despite the many years it took to get it.
"Litigation has a way of wearing people down," Bates said. "He feels justice has been served although justice has been delayed."
Cohen, of the Sheriff's Office, could not specify why the agency opted to settle after so many years.
"This started long before the current administration," he said. "Sometimes it just takes that long to work it all out."
Tonya Alanez can be reached at tealanez@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4542.
I was one of the investigators I did the surveillance on Wiley they didn't want to stop because they didn't give a s***. And that's the way it was because I was f****** there in your bushes Stephen watching you
ReplyDeleteIt would be nice if I could speak with you. For 36 years I have remained silent. There were certain things I was going to take to my grave but I have had a change of heart and I feel that the truth needs to be told.
DeleteNow that John Piscopo has passed away and I no longer have to fear for my life I am going to tell the true story of what really happened.
ReplyDeleteJames Traina was NOT the trigger man, that's all I will say....for now.
John Piscopo was the most evil man that walked the face of the Earth. He was a narcissistic sociopath! He manipulated all of us in one way or another. He preyed on peoples weaknesses, he made a career out of this! It is nice to finally receive the closure we all deserve after all these years. This wont bring Kerry Carbonell back because he hung himself before the trial. This wont free Jimmy Traina because he is serving a life sentence and has now served 27 years so far. All of this is there a result of John's manipulation. He would come up with ideas and find others to act them out, always sitting back with his arms crossed and just waiting and watching While others got into trouble as a result of his evil being.
ReplyDeleteJOHN PISCOPO IS ROASTING IN THE ETERNAL FLAMES OF GELL!! EXACTLY WHERE HE NEEDS TO BE AFTER DESTROYING DOZENS OF LIVES. BURN IN HELL YOU SON OF A BITCH!!!! BURN!!!!!!!