Friday, December 19, 2008

Jimmy Ates likely will be granted new trial (with VIDEO)


Jimmy Ates likely will be granted new trial (with VIDEO)


December 13, 2008 - 3:03 PM


Tom McLaughlin
Daily News


Jimmy Ates reads the book of Revelation, chapter and verse, every day.He has for the last 1,312 days. Today, he'll make it 1,313.He certainly has the time. Ates has been serving a life sentence since 1999 for the murder of his wife, Norma Jean Ates. He reads Revelation daily because he believes it serves a spiritual purpose. Ates said it was only after he began studying the final book of the New Testament three years and 218 days ago that God began paving the way for his release."The Holy Spirit told me ‘this mountain before you shall be removed,' " the former preacher said during an interview last week at Jackson Correctional Institution in Malone. Ates' long journey toward redemption could be over Wednesday, when his conviction likely will be overturned at a 1 p.m. hearing at the Okaloosa County Courthouse in Crestview.The state attorney's office for the 8th Judicial Circuit - the same office that convicted him - has requested that Ates get a new trial.Attorneys from Ates' new defense team, the Innocence Project of Florida, say the offer of a new trial is the least the state can do. They're fighting for exoneration.With both prosecution and defense in agreement, Circuit Judge William Stone is expected to rule in favor of vacating Ates' first-degree murder conviction."I think the hearing will be somewhat perfunctory," said Seth Miller, executive director of the Innocence Project in Florida.If a reasonable bond is set - a hearing on that issue also is expected Wednesday - Ates could be released from custody, Miller said.The only question remaining would be whether the state can or will retry the former teacher at Baker School.That and perhaps this follow-up question: If Jimmy Ates didn't kill his wife, who did?Norma Jean Ates was murdered June 2, 1991, on a stormy night at her home on State Road 189 north of Baker. She was shot several times with a .22-caliber pistol and bled to death on the floor of the house she and Jimmy Ates shared. After the shooting, someone used candles to set a delayed-reaction fire that eventually engulfed the home. Firefighters battling the blaze found Norma Jean's body in the master bedroom.Today, Jimmy Ates stands as staunchly by his alibi on the night of the murder as he did when he became a suspect in the case. He was at a baccalaureate service, he said, and rattled off a long list of people he claimed saw him before and during the event."I've maintained my innocence since day one," he said. "A thousand times I've tried to tell everyone."Ates has been pushing to get the guilty verdict overturned since his conviction. In June 2003, his claim that his trial attorneys were ineffective was denied.Ates suffered another setback when Robert Harper, a Tallahassee attorney, allowed his case to be "time barred," or to pass the date by which an appeal must be filed.
Faulty evidenceAtes big break came in 2005, about the time he began his study of Revelation, when the FBI announced it would no longer use a ballistics testing procedure known as metallurgy.The FBI deemed the procedure, an analysis of bullet lead, was "unreliable and inaccurate."Kathleen Lundy, an FBI expert in metallurgy, testified for the prosecution during Ates' trial. She said bullets owned by Ates likely had been manufactured by the same company at about the same time as the ones that had been used to kill his wife.It was precisely the sort of evidence studies showed was inherently flawed. "The science was simply wrong," Assistant State Attorney Geoffrey Fleck noted in his report calling for a new trial for Ates.Fleck said the FBI repudiation of its expert's testimony gave Ates "new evidence" on which to base an appeal. But why? Ates asked skeptically last week, did the state attorney's office wait until 2008 to call for a new trial for him when it knew in 2005 evidence it had used to convict him was worthless.Ates remarried following Norma's death and had fathered a child with his second wife. The two remained married after his imprisonment, but agreed to divorce when he learned his case had been "time barred" from further appeal. They divorced after 2005. His former wife has remarried."I should have been out in 2005," he said. "If I had been let loose in 2005, my family would still be intact."Ates claims the FBI had advised the state attorney's office in Gainesville about its ruling on metallurgy, but the office refused to act until pushed to do so by Okaloosa County Circuit Court Judge Thomas Remington.As Ates was pushing for his conviction to be overturned based on the FBI ruling, his case was being re-examined by two Crestview residents who decided to make a documentary about the case.The pair requested documentation from the state attorney's office in Gainesville and persisted in their requests, they said, until they finally got it.They said they found enough to convince themselves that Jimmy Ates was innocent."We had tons of boxes, and I would say every box had a dozen ‘aha' moments in it," said Travis Huisken, one of the would-be movie makers. "I think we got to the point where we almost could have recreated the event."The pair - one of whom asked not to be identified - said they received threatening calls when they were collecting and going through the evidence they'd copied and photographed. They eventually gave up on the documentary.However, Huisken and his friend gave what they'd found to the Ates family. Jimmy Ates said he has supplemented his own findings with what the pair discovered."They found this stuff and turned it over to my wife. I looked at some of it. That's what started me on this trip," Ates said.Two items that Ates included in his request to overturn the murder verdict was used by Fleck in his request for a new trial.One was that prosecutors had failed to disclose to Ates' attorneys that they had found a fingerprint on a gun box in Ates' home that contained .22-caliber bullets. The fingerprint didn't belong to Ates, his wife, lawmen at the scene or two people considered "persons of interest" in the crime.Another finding was that DNA samples were taken from two hair follicles found on a bloody towel in the home. The prosecution argued at trial, Fleck said, that no DNA other than Ates' had been taken from the home. Analysts were unable to obtain a positive identification from the DNA samples, but a third follicle found on the same towel was never tested for DNA, Fleck's report said.Ates insists there was more in the state attorney's office's collection of evidence that could have been used to prove his innocence than even what Fleck has revealed. He mentioned videotapes of the baccalaureate service itself. Fleck said in his report that many of the accusations and requests Ates made in his appeal were baseless.
Homicide and politics Norma Jean Ates' murder investigation began with a flourish. Just days after the shooting occurred, lawmen were assuring reporters that they were making progress toward finding a killer.The race to solve the case quickly turned from a sprint to a marathon. Four years after the murder, Norma Jean Ates' body was exhumed for further study.Glen Barberree was the detective who led the investigation. Barberree, who has retired, said Friday, "I don't want to comment" on the case.The investigation also devolved into a political hot potato. Norma Ates' uncle, W. C. "Buck" Bryan, had connections that extended to the office of then-Gov. Lawton Chiles, several sources close to the case have said.Bryan, Ates said, wanted him tried and convicted after Ates began dating a former student, later his second wife, not long after Norma's death."Just because I started dating a young girl, they turned on me," he said of Norma's family.Curtis Golden, who was the state attorney in the First Judicial Circuit at the time of the murder, confirmed he was at a political event when Bryan chided him for failing to prosecute Jimmy Ates. Chiles also was there.Golden said he responded by telling Bryan he didn't feel there was enough evidence to successfully prosecute. Golden eventually recused himself, he said, when Bryan and others implied a cozy relationship between Golden and Ates' brother, Luther. The case was transferred from the 1st Judicial Circuit to the 4th Judicial Circuit in Jacksonville. That circuit also declined to prosecute because of a lack of evidence, Golden confirmed.Rod Smith, the state attorney in the 8th Judicial District, agreed at Chiles' request to take the case. Smith would later run for governor.Smith won the case with evidence that all parties acknowledged was primarily circumstantial.Ten years ago, the trial of Jimmy Ates elicited strong feelings on both sides. Today, many people who were contacted to comment on the case declined to do so and said they wished the case would just go away.Bryan, who perhaps pushed harder than anyone to see Ates convicted, has since passed away. His wife, Joyce Bryan, although hesitant to speak, has not changed her opinion of Ates' guilt."Oh sure he's guilty. He may get out, but he's guilty," she said. "He was there when she was murdered."Glenda Tharp, Ates' newly remarried ex-wife, continues to maintain his innocence."I still support him with all my heart," she said. "I want to see him walk out of that jail."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

In Baker there is nothing that nobody knows. It is a small town and Jim Ates did not kill Norma Jean. I lived in Baker at this time. Every town there is a good cop doing bad things to help a friend out including a murder.

Anonymous said...

Whoever posted the initial comment is clueless and is likely a family member of Jimmy Ates as those are the only people who are able to support him. I was present for the second trial from start to finish. This was a compelling and overwhelming case of Jimmy Ates guilt. And now 18 jurors from the community have agreed in two separate trials. His conviction was based on the fact that he himself said he was in the home at the time the victim dialed 911 (he didn't know she was able to dial). Additionally, 6-7 other folks put both of the Ates vehicles at the house during and after the known time of the victim's murder. An alibi fire was set in the home (no other person needs to set an alibit fire- they would be concerned with setting an evidence destruction fire); and jimmy ates got caught in so many lies on the stand. I'm sorry his family members are having a hard time accepting this- I know they have spent over $500,000 trying to buy justice- but the facts are the facts and the truth is the truth whether its 1991, 1998 or 2011. And fyi- Curtis Golden declined the case not based on anything to do with the evidence but because he was close friends with the Ates family and believed he had a conflict. The next state attorney didn't decline the case either but instead was dragging his feet so the Governor removed him and appointed the attorney who tried Jimmy Ates the first time in 1998. Praise God- to Him all the glory for making sure justice had the final word in this case!