Thursday, March 19, 2009

Feingold Reintroduces Bill To Abolish Federal Death Penalty



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Feingold Reintroduces Bill To Abolish Federal Death Penalty


Feingold’s Longtime Effort Comes as New Mexico Repeals Death Penalty


WASHINGTON - March 19 - As momentum builds in states to abolish the death penalty, U.S. Senator Russ Feingold reintroduced legislation today to abolish the death penalty at the federal level. Feingold's Federal Death Penalty Abolition Act of 2009 would put an immediate halt to federal executions and forbid the use of the death penalty as a sentence for violations of federal law. The use of the death penalty has been questioned by a range of prominent voices across the country, recently repealed in New Mexico and New Jersey, and abolished by 123 countries around the world. Feingold's bill would stop executions on the federal level, which are part of a death penalty system that has proven to be ineffective, wrought with racial disparities, and alarmingly costly.


"I oppose the death penalty because it is inconsistent with basic American principles of justice, liberty and equality," Feingold said. "Governor Bill Richardson and the New Mexico legislature's action to abolish the death penalty in that state adds to the growing momentum behind ending the death penalty in this country. It is truly unfortunate that we are in a shrinking minority of countries that continue to allow state-sponsored executions."


Feingold is not alone in his opposition to the death penalty. A range of prominent voices have questioned the system in recent years, including former FBI Director William Sessions, former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, law enforcement officials and many others across the political spectrum. In 2007, only China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan executed more people than the United States.


In 2007, Feingold chaired a Senate Judiciary Committee, Constitution Subcommittee hearing on oversight of the federal death penalty that highlighted the lack of transparency at the Department of Justice in the decision-making process about the death penalty and continuing problems of racial disparities in the federal system. Also in 2007, the American Bar Association called for a nationwide moratorium on capital punishment based on its detailed study of state death penalty systems, which found racial disparities, convictions based on bad evidence, grossly inadequate indigent defense systems, and a host of other problems with the implementation of capital punishment in this country.
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Article printed from www.CommonDreams.org
URL to article: http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2009/03/19-21

Richardson's statement regarding the repeal of the death penalty


Richardson's statement regarding the repeal of the death penalty
Posted: 03/18/2009 06:47:41 PM MDT
SANTA FE Ð Governor Bill Richardson today signed House Bill 285, Repeal of the Death Penalty. The Governor's remarks follow:
Today marks the end of a long, personal journey for me and the issue of the death penalty.
Throughout my adult life, I have been a firm believer in the death penalty as a just punishment Ð in very rare instances, and only for the most heinous crimes. I still believe that.
But six years ago, when I took office as Governor of the State of New Mexico, I started to challenge my own thinking on the death penalty.
The issue became more real to me because I knew the day would come when one of two things might happen: I would either have to take action on legislation to repeal the death penalty, or more daunting, I might have to sign someone's death warrant.
I'll be honest. The prospect of either decision was extremely troubling. But I was elected by the people of New Mexico to make just this type of decision.
So, like many of the supporters who took the time to meet with me this week, I have believed the death penalty can serve as a deterrent to some who might consider murdering a law enforcement officer, a corrections officer, a witness to a crime or kidnapping and murdering a child. However, people continue to commit terrible crimes even in the face of the death penalty and responsible people on both sides of the debate disagree Ð strongly Ð on this issue.
But what we cannot disagree on is the finality of this ultimate punishment. Once a conclusive decision has been made and executed, it cannot be reversed. And it is in consideration of this, that I have made my decision.
I have decided to sign legislation that repeals the death penalty in the state of New Mexico.
Regardless of my personal opinion about the death penalty, I do not have confidence in the criminal justice system as it currently operates to be the final arbiter when it comes to who lives and who dies for their crime. If the State is going to undertake this awesome responsibility, the system to impose this ultimate penalty must be perfect and can never be wrong.
But the reality is the system is not perfect Ð far from it. The system is inherently defective. DNA testing has proven that. Innocent people have been put on death row all across the country.
Even with advances in DNA and other forensic evidence technologies, we can't be 100-percent sure that only the truly guilty are convicted of capital crimes. Evidence, including DNA evidence, can be manipulated. Prosecutors can still abuse their powers. We cannot ensure competent defense counsel for all defendants. The sad truth is the wrong person can still be convicted in this day and age, and in cases where that conviction carries with it the ultimate sanction, we must have ultimate confidence Ð I would say certitude Ð that the system is without flaw or prejudice. Unfortunately, this is demonstrably not the case.
And it bothers me greatly that minorities are overrepresented in the prison population and on death row.
I have to say that all of the law enforcement officers, and especially the parents and spouses of murder victims, made compelling arguments to keep the death penalty. I respect their opinions and have taken their experiences to heart -- which is why I struggled Ð even today Ð before making my final decision.
Yes, the death penalty is a tool for law enforcement. But it's not the only tool. For some would-be criminals, the death penalty may be a deterrent. But it's not, and never will be, for many, many others.
While today's focus will be on the repeal of the death penalty, I want to make clear that this bill I'm signing actually makes New Mexico safer. With my signature, we now have the option of sentencing the worst criminals to life in prison without the possibility of parole. They will never get out of prison.
Faced with the reality that our system for imposing the death penalty can never be perfect, my conscience compels me to replace the death penalty with a solution that keeps society safe.
The bill I am signing today, which was courageously carried for so many years by Representative Gail Chasey, replaces the death penalty with true life without the possibility of parole Ð a sentence that ensures violent criminals are locked away from society forever, yet can be undone if an innocent person is wrongfully convicted. More than 130 death row inmates have been exonerated in the past 10 years in this country, including four New Mexicans Ð a fact I cannot ignore.
From an international human rights perspective, there is no reason the United States should be behind the rest of the world on this issue. Many of the countries that continue to support and use the death penalty are also the most repressive nations in the world. That's not something to be proud of.
In a society which values individual life and liberty above all else, where justice and not vengeance is the singular guiding principle of our system of criminal law, the potential for wrongful conviction and, God forbid, execution of an innocent person stands as anathema to our very sensibilities as human beings. That is why I'm signing this bill into law.

New Mexico becomes the 15th state to ban capital punishment



New Mexico becomes the 15th state to ban capital punishment

By Trip Jennings 3/18/09 6:10 PM

SANTA FE — Tonight, Gov. Bill Richardson signed his name to a law that abolishes the death penalty in New Mexico, saying, “This has been the most difficult decision of my political career.”
With his signature, Richardson made the Land of Enchantment the 15th U.S. state to ban capital punishment and pushed it into the worldwide community of states and nations that have abolished the death penalty, including many countries in the European Union.

“I do not have confidence in the criminal justice system as it currently operates to be the final arbiter when it comes to who lives and who dies for their crime,” Richardson said. “If the State is going to undertake this awesome responsibility, the system to impose this ultimate penalty must be perfect and can never be wrong.”

The news excited supporters who had been pushing for the repeal.

“This is a great day for New Mexico” said Juan Melendez, who spent 18 years on Florida’s death row before being exonerated of a murder he didn’t commit. Melendez, who lobbied lawmakers this year, lives in New Mexico now. In his case, the real killer confessed, making him the 99th person exonerated across the nation, he said.

Richardson’s decision, Melendez said, can help teach “the children that killing is wrong.”
He also said that New Mexico’s example will serve as inspiration for other Western states that are looking at repealing the death penalty, including Colorado.

“Gov. Richardson’s courageous and enlightened decision should send a powerful message to other states, governors and Americans about the need to take a hard look at our error-prone, discriminatory and bankrupting system of capital punishment,” John Holdridge, director of the ACLU Capital Punishment Project, said in a release.

“It is a system incapable of ensuring that innocent lives are not unjustly taken. It is a system plagued by racial, economic and geographic discrimination. And it is a system that police chiefs, criminologists and statistical experts around the country agree does not deter crime. Gov. Richardson deserves enormous credit for acting in the best interests of the people of his state and the people of this country,” the release continued.

The law also creates a sentence of life without parole to replace the death penalty for the most heinous crimes.

The governor’s decision came after New Mexicans by the thousands called, e-mailed and visited with him over the weekend after the Senate passed HB285 by a vote of 24-18 on Friday.
Of more than 11,760 calls, e-mails and walk-ins on legislation, 8,718 were for repeal compared to 3,046 against, the governor’s office said Wednesday afternoon.

Among those urging Richardson to sign the bill was Lt. Gov. Diane Denish.

“I support replacing the death penalty with a sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole,” Denish said in a news release Wednesday. “If you’ve committed murder, you will be behind bars the rest of your life, no exceptions. I will continue working with our police officers and prosecutors and with victims’ families to make sure justice is served.”

The lead up to Richardson’s decision attracted attention across the country as well as beyond its borders.

Viki Elkey of the New Mexico Coalition to Repeal the Death Penalty said Wednesday she had conducted more than 50 media interviews in recent days. And most of the reporters she spoke to hailed from European countries.

The respected British magazine, The Economist, exemplified the interest European countries have in the death penalty. The magazine had a story about the U.S. considering the abolishment of the death penalty, including New Mexico.

New Mexico’s repeal is part of a larger national trend, partly because of the number of death row inmates who have been exonerated in recent years, according to supporters.

About 130 people in 26 states have been exonerated since the early 1970s, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. That number includes four people from New Mexico.
Another factor driving other states to consider abolishing the death penalty is the cost of prosecuting capital murder. Appeals over a several-year period often drive up the costs, say death penalty opponents. The dollars-and-cents argument comes at a time when the economy is in a shambles and many states are struggling to balance their budgets, including New Mexico.
New Mexico has executed one prisoner since 1976 — Terry Clark in 2001.

Opponents have argued unsuccessfully that abolishing the death penalty would remove a deterrent to heinous crimes. They also said a repeal would amount to a rollback of thousands of years of practice and would put police and correctional officers in harm’s way. Richardson acknowledged them in his announcement, saying, “Yes, the death penalty is a tool for law enforcement. But it’s not the only tool. For some would-be criminals, the death penalty may be a deterrent. But it’s not, and never will be, for many, many others.”

Opponents also have recalled crimes striking in their horror, including Terry Clark’s rape and murder of Dena Lynn Gore, a little girl he killed.

New Mexico has executed one prisoner since 1976 — Terry Clark in 2001.

Other U.S. states considering whether to abolish the death penalty include Utah and Colorado, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

When Our Eyes Deceive Us


Ronald Cotton, right, was imprisoned for eleven years for a crime committed by Bobby Poole.



THE VERDICT Dahlia Lithwick

When Our Eyes Deceive Us

Being part of a system that identified and ultimately convicted the wrong man became another form of victimization
.
By Dahlia Lithwick NEWSWEEK

Published Mar 14, 2009

From the magazine issue dated Mar 23, 2009


Describe the last person who served you coffee. What if I helped refresh your memory? Showed you some photos of local baristas? Pulled together a helpful lineup? Cheered exuberantly when you picked the " descending&sortField=" offset=" search.aspx?q=" sortdirection=" services.newsweek.com http:>
Last month, a Texas judge cleared Timothy Cole of the aggravated-sexual-assault conviction that sent him to prison in 1986. Although his victim positively identified him three times—twice in police lineups and again at trial—Cole was ultimately exonerated by DNA testing. The real rapist, Jerry Wayne Johnson, had been confessing to the crime since 1995. Unfortunately for Cole, he died in prison in 1999, long before his name was cleared.

Our eyes deceive us. Social scientists have insisted for decades that our eyewitness-identification process is unreliable at best and can be the cause of grievous injustice. A study published last month by Gary Wells and Deah Quinlivan in Law and Human Behavior, the journal of the American Psychology-Law Society, reveals just how often those injustices occur: of the more than 230 people in the United States who were wrongfully convicted and later exonerated by DNA evidence, approximately 77 percent involved cases of mistaken eyewitness identification, more than any other single factor.

Wells has been studying mistaken identifications for decades, and his objection to the eyewitness-identification system is not that people make mistakes. In an interview, he explains that eyewitness evidence is important, but should be treated—like blood, fingerprints and fiber evidence—as trace evidence, subject to contamination, deterioration and corruption. Our current criminal-justice system allows juries to hear eyewitness-identification evidence shaped by suggestive police procedures.In a 1977 case, Manson v. Braithwaite, the Supreme Court held that such evidence could be used ifdeemed "reliable."Today we know you can have a good long look, be certain you have the right guy and also be wrong. But Manson is still considered good law.
Jennifer Thompson was 22 the night she was raped in 1984. Throughout the ordeal, she scrupulously studied her attacker, determined to memorize every detail of his face and voice so that, if she survived, she could help the police catch him. Thompson soon identified Ronald Cotton in a photo lineup. When she—after some hesitation—again picked Cotton out of a physical lineup a few days later, a detective told her she'd picked the same person in the photo lineup.

But in this case Thompson got it wrong, although Cotton served 10 years before DNA evidence exonerated him and decisively implicated another man, Bobby Poole. The curious part of the story is that despite Thompson's determination to memorize every detail, when she first saw Poole in court she was certain she had never seen him before. Indeed, according to Wells and Quinlivan, "even after DNA had exonerated Cotton and Thompson herself had accepted the fact that Poole was her attacker, she had no memory of Poole's face and, when thinking back to the attack, she says, 'I still see Ronald Cotton'."

In their paper, Wells and Quinlivan suggest a host of tricks the mind can play, ranging from incorporating innocent "feedback" from police investigators to increasing certainty in one's shaky memories that become reinforced over time. Add to that Thompson's determination to regain control over her life, and her need to believe that the justice system was just, and it would have been doubly hard for her to look at a police lineup that, as it happened, did not include an image of the real rapist, and walk away. To hear Thompson and other victims tell it, being part of a system that identified and ultimately convicted the wrong man became another form of victimization, and for that reason alone the system needs to be reformed.

The problems with the eyewitness-identification system cannot be laid at the feet of crime victims any more than they can be blamed on police investigators. Wells's argument for reforming our eyewitness-identification system is that the incentive for the police to subtly nudge our memories is not only uncorrected by the justice system, but also sometimes rewarded by it. Wells wants the Supreme Court to revisit the scientific basis for its 1977 decision.
Whether or not the John Roberts court wishes to take up the issue of innocent prisoners—there is one test casepercolating through the New Jersey courts—a few states and cities have used innocent-exoneration scandals to rethink their eyewitness-identification practices. Proposed changes include showing victims photos sequentially and explaining that the perpetrator may not be included in the lineup, and ensuring that whoever conducts the lineup has no knowledge of which person is the actual suspect.

This is not an issue that tracks the usual left-rightdivide. Some of the most zealous reformers of the eyewitness-identification process are lifelong conservatives who recognize that the credibility of the whole justice system is on the line each time an innocent man goes to jail and a guilty one walks free.

Lithwick is a NEWSWEEK contributing editor and a senior writer for Slate. A version of this column also appears on Slate.com.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Wrongly imprisoned Florida man seeks state compensation


Innocent man who served almost four years for robbery seeks compensation from Florida
By Jon Burstein

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

March 17, 2009

Leroy McGee spent three years and seven months in prison for a robbery he didn't commit.

His pleas of innocence were ignored by Broward jurors, who convicted him. They went unheeded until one of his many letters to the outside landed on the desk of someone who believed he might be telling the truth.

That someone was the same judge who sent McGee to prison.

Broward Circuit Judge Paul Backman eventually overturned McGee's conviction. The victory, though, came a year after McGee finished serving his prison sentence.

McGee, 41, is now seeking compensation from the state for his lost years — time in which he lost his marriage, his job and the chance to watch his children grow up. He is the first person to apply for reparations under the state's Victims of Wrongful Incarceration Compensation Act passed last year. He could be eligible for $50,000 for every year he spent in prison.

"This was an innocent man who hired the wrong lawyer and ended up paying the price," Backman told the Sun Sentinel.

McGee, a soft-spoken carpenter's apprentice for the Broward County School District, said the money isn't as important as what it represents: total vindication. And while the Fort Lauderdale father of five says he has no definite plans for the money, he says it will be used to provide a better life for his children, who range in age from 5 to 22.

"I talk to a lot of people and they say, 'You aren't bitter? I can't see you not being bitter,'" McGee said. "But there's no need for me to be like that. ... I lost everything, but coming back now, I'm getting back double of what I lost."

His legal odyssey began 19 years ago when he walked into a Fort Lauderdale gas station to buy $3 of gas. The clerk was convinced McGee, then 23, was the gunman who robbed him three weeks earlier of $463.

Police arrested McGee a few weeks later.

McGee, who had no prior record, thought it would be easy to prove his innocence. He had been at work as a custodian at Fort Lauderdale High School when the July 31, 1990, robbery occurred. His boss could testify to that. He had a time card. His car had been at a garage for maintenance that day.

McGee said his attorney, Theota McClaine, assured him he was going to win. But when it came to the two-day April 1991 trial, the attorney was woefully unprepared, failing to take depositions or know what his defense witnesses would say, according to court records.

McClaine failed to raise a single objection during the trial. He didn't tell jurors how the clerk's original description of the gunman as skinny with a mustache didn't match McGee, who is stocky and didn't have facial hair. The attorney tried to enter into evidence a time card for the pay period ending July 25, 1990—five days before the robbery.

"It was absolutely the worst performance in the courtroom I've ever seen," said Backman, who as a judge is limited to ruling on the issues presented to him. He's prevented from entering evidence or arguments on the record himself. He said he made suggestions to McClaine that went unheeded. McClaine, who was disbarred in 1993 for mishandling clients' money, could not be reached for comment.

A jury convicted McGee of robbery. Under mandatory sentencing guidelines, Backman had no choice but to give him a 4 1/2-year prison term.

"I went blank after they said I was guilty," McGee said. "Until I got back to that cell, I was blank. I thought, 'How? How could I be innocent and get charged with a crime that I didn't do?'"

Prison changed him—patience was a luxury he didn't have because he didn't want to be seen as soft. Violence surrounded him. One time he was on the phone with his mother when an inmate collapsed near him. He had been stabbed in the chest.

McGee never wavered about his innocence. He wrote letters to anyone he could, from President Bill Clinton to the NAACP. When Backman received a letter, he took it as a legal motion by McGee challenging his attorney's effectiveness. That allowed him to appoint another lawyer, Michael Wrubel, to examine whether he had received adequate representation.

Wrubel argued McGee was in prison because his attorney was ineffective. In August 1995, Backman agreed, throwing out the conviction and ordering a new trial.

"In over 1,200 jury trials this court has never witnessed a more tragic set of circumstances," Backman wrote. "While it is unquestioned that the armed robbery took place, it is also clear that the defendant was not the individual who perpetrated the act."

The Broward State Attorney's Office dropped the robbery charge. And McGee, with the quiet lobbying of the judge, was able to get his job back with the Broward School District.

Thirteen years after his conviction was overturned, McGee said he learned of the Victims of Wrongful Incarceration Compensation Act. Fort Lauderdale attorney David Comras filed paperwork in August asking Broward Circuit Judge Michele Towbin Singer to declare McGee eligible.

In December, Towbin Singer signed an order that McGee had established his innocence by "clear and convincing evidence."

The state Attorney General's Office said that McGee's application for compensation is now under review.

McGee said it's been hard explaining what's happened to his children. He tries not to focus on the negatives, but on what the future holds. He enjoys taking his 5-year-old daughter LeSharria to the park. He's a regular churchgoer. He's ready to finish his carpenter's apprenticeship in December and become a carpenter for the school district.

"I just want the American Dream," he said.

Jon Burstein can be reached at jburstein@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4491.



In his own words
Hear from Leroy McGee in a video interview and read copies of his petition and the state's response at SunSentinel.com/wrongful

Jail deputy accused of roughing up inmate

Last Update: 2/04 12:22 pm

TAMPA, FL -- The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office had to investigate one of their own and what they found led to a week suspension without pay for a detention deputy.

Deputy Milton Fassett will serve a one week suspension without pay after the internal affairs department of the Hillsborough County Sheriffs Office investigated a case of excessive force.

In a release to the media, the female inmate who is housed in the Orient Road Jail refused to obey Deputy Fassett's commands and cooperate during a relocation. She was being moved for acting up and became uncooperative with the deputy. Fassett had to use force to control the inmate.

No complaint was filed on the inmate's behalf but a routine internal administrative review requested an additional review.

After the extensive review which also used the video surveillance, investigators recommended a five day suspension for Deputy Fassett and receive extra training. While the investigation was underway, Fassett was not allowed to have any contact with inmates.

State of Florida Sued in Torture Case

JACKSONVILLE, FL -- A number of boys, who are now men and claim they were tortured at a Florida reform school, have filed a lawsuit against a number of state agencies who were over the facility.

The lawsuit was filed in the last couple of weeks. It names the Florida Department of Agriculture, the DCF, Juvenile Justice and the Department of Corrections as defendants.

It also names two men as those who either sexually abused or beat the boys who went to the reform school.

First Coast News first reported the story back in November, 2008. Since our story aired, Governor Charlie Crist asked for an investigation.

Investigators are dealing with numerous claims of abuse that date back to the 1950s at a facility on the school's campus called the White House.

Those who went to the school say they were taken to the White House for severe beatings. Some say the beatings were done for no reason.

The men also claim they witnessed boys being killed. Dozens of graves have been found near the school site in Marianna. FDLE is trying to find out who is buried inside those graves.

In the last three months, dozens of men have come forward claiming they were sexually abused or beaten at the facility.

Doctors deliver dead fetus from released inmate

By AISLING SWIFT (Contact)
Originally published 8:20 p.m., Thursday, February 5, 2009
Updated 8:23 p.m., Thursday, February 5, 2009

NAPLES — It was a girl.

Doctors removed the dead fetus from Joan Laurel Small on Thursday, a day after her release from the Collier County jail.

The 22-year-old mother cradled baby “Elena Laurel.” Nurses cut a lock of the baby’s hair for a keepsake.

“They cleaned her up and allowed her to hold her,” said Small’s mother, Jennifer Graeber of New Jersey. “The hospital is making her a little remembrance book. They’re putting in a lock of the baby’s hair.”

Graeber said when her daughter arrived at The Birth Place at NCH North Naples Hospital, her blood-pressure had risen and she had a fever.

“That’s the beginning signs of septic shock,” Graeber said of leaving a dead fetus inside a mother.

Because the baby had been left in her womb more than a day, she said, Small could not deliver the baby, but had to undergo a C-section.

Small, a Bonita Springs woman who is recovering at the hospital, could not be reached for comment. Her boyfriend and the baby’s father, Elias Guzman, 24, also could not be reached Thursday.

Graeber said her daughter is very depressed and probably will cremate the baby after an autopsy is conducted.

Small, who was housed in the jail’s medical unit, learned her baby was dead Tuesday morning as she underwent an ultrasound to determine the baby’s sex and to schedule delivery after her Feb. 19 release from jail.

Small, whose 40-week due date was Feb. 21, has said she’d complained about a heavy discharge, which continued for 1 1/2 weeks, but was told it was normal and to monitor it. She told the Daily News the doctor who conducted the ultrasound Tuesday morning told her all her amniotic fluid had leaked out, the baby’s skull collapsed and it had no heartbeat.

A day later, after she remained in jail with the dead fetus inside her, Small’s public defender, Amy Shirvanipour, spoke to Assistant State Attorney Rob Denny, who agreed to a stipulation to modify her sentence to time-served and immediate release. They went to Circuit Judge Fred Hardt, who immediately signed the stipulation.

Three hours later, Shirvanipour was still waiting to take her to a hospital and then learned a deputy would take her. She was released at 3:10 p.m. and Shirvanipour met her at the hospital.

When told of Small’s account, a nationally known medical expert said the death could have been avoided if Small had been taken to a hospital immediately after complaining of the discharge. Dr. Gary Helmbrecht, a member of the The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, called it a case of medical neglect and said the symptoms indicated a pre-term rupture of membranes that required immediate hospitalization.

Small said she’d also requested a RhoGAM shot, which protects her baby from her RH negative blood, but wasn’t given one until Tuesday. The shot is recommended between 28 and 30 weeks and she was jailed on her 30th week.

She’d been held since Dec. 22 after she violated probation by returning home after her nightly 10 p.m. curfew. Small said she’d been attending a parenting class in Naples and couldn’t get a ride home; she has no car. Records show the probation violation involved a 2007 drug charge; an adjudication of guilt was withheld. It’s her only criminal conviction and records show it occurred when she was caught with drugs in the car of her former husband, Ken Enright Small, during a traffic stop; his record includes drug convictions.

Graeber, who said her daughter plans to sue, has contacted local attorneys about the case.

“I feel they were negligent in not taking her to the emergency room when she asked for help and was leaking amniotic fluid,” Graeber said, adding that she hoped a lawsuit would improve care at the jail and help her daughter move on.

Chief Scott Salley, who oversees the jail, said Tennessee-based Prison Health Services, which operates the medical unit, was reviewing what occurred, but said initial reviews show medical and administrative policies were followed.

Sheriff’s Office officials say they cannot discuss details of Small’s case due to HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which prohibits release of medical information without a signed waiver from Small.

Prison Health Services spokeswoman Martha Harbin said her company conducts a full internal medical review after any “sentinel event,” an unexpected occurrence involving death or serious physical or psychological injury — or the risk of one and that was occurring in Small’s case.

“We offer our sincere condolences to the family,” Harbin said. “The loss of a pregnancy is a tragedy. It’s a horrible thing for anyone to go through.”

“... Like any other patient of any other medical provider, Ms. Small deserves the right to privacy with regard to her medical care,” she said of HIPAA. “That right has not been waived by Ms. Small and cannot be waived by media reports, so Prison Health Services cannot comment even though there are significant inaccuracies in what has been reported.”

Small has told the Daily News her complaints were documented by medical care providers at the jail and she’d also called her mother and boyfriend about the problems.

Suspended Hillsborough detention deputy was accused before

By Kevin Graham, Times Staff Writer

Published Thursday, February 5, 2009


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TAMPA — A year ago, the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office defended detention Deputy Milton Fassett when an inmate said he broke her arm.

The woman's attorney watched with interest this week as the Sheriff's Office announced it suspended Fassett for five days for using unnecessary force with a different female inmate.

Attorney Luke Lirot said Wednesday that the Sheriff's Office is discussing a settlement with former inmate Charlana Irving, who threatened to sue the agency over her broken arm.

This week, the Sheriff's Office announced it had punished Fassett for using excessive force while transferring Katiria Baez from one jail to another. Baez, 23, never complained. But a routine review triggered the internal affairs investigation that led to Fassett's suspension.

Lirot said news of Fassett's most recent actions bolsters his client's claims of mistreatment by the deputy. Irving, 29, is permanently disfigured because of her injuries, Lirot said. Her arms are no longer the same length.

Jail video showed Fassett twisting Irving's arm behind her back inside a booking cell in May 2007. An X-ray later revealed that the arm was broken.

The Sheriff's Office said at the time that it was impossible to determine whether Irving broke her arm before or after contact with law enforcement. Fassett was cleared of wrongdoing.

Irving's was one of a string of allegations of jail abuse against Hillsborough deputies that spilled out after a deputy dumped a quadriplegic from his wheelchair.

An independent panel spent six months reviewing the county's jails and called the wheelchair incident an anomaly. Nevertheless, the committee recommended improvements.

Sheriff's officials plan to send Fassett to additional training before allowing him to resume contact with inmates.

Times researcher John Martin contributed to this story

Sick policy: Gassing mentally ill inmates

When federal Judge Timothy J. Corrigan ruled three weeks ago that spraying mentally ill inmates with skin-blistering chemicals violates the Constitution's ban against cruel and unusual punishment, it seemed that Florida might finally put an end to a horrible, unnecessary practice. Instead, the state is fighting the ruling. The rationale? Two of the inmates have now been transferred to a safer facility. Meanwhile, the shameful practice of using pepper spray to subdue mentally ill inmates for misbehaving continues at Florida State Prison.
Poignant video report

In his ruling, Judge Corrigan asked that the Department of Corrections and Attorney General Bill McCollum work with lawyers for the plaintiffs to resolve the issue and report back to him by Feb. 10. Instead, the state filed a response saying: ''Past exposure to alleged illegal conduct does not in itself show a present case or controversy regarding injunctive relief.'' In other words: Evidence of past alleged illegal conduct is no proof of current activities that warrant the court's sanction.

An investigative report in November 2007 by WFOR-CBS4, The Miami Herald's television partner, showed how guards at the prison blasted inmates with pepper spray because they refused to stop yelling or banging on the cell doors. The report shows how a thick cloud of the spray quickly fills an inmate's tiny cell, rendering him helpless. To see CBS4's online video report, go to http://cbs4.com/iteam/gasprisons.james.2.592189.html.

Judge Corrigan found that the spraying was inappropriate for two inmates who, because of their mental illness, did not understand the guards' orders to stop screaming and banging on the cell door. He found that four other mentally ill inmates who were sprayed did have the capacity to understand the orders.

In practice, this is a distinction without a difference. Medication, or the lack of it, is often the biggest determinant in whether an inmates behaves or not. Besides, medication often wears out before another dose is given. At nearby Union Correctional Institution, when mentally ill inmates act out, mental-health counselors are called in to calm them so that they can understand the instructions. Spraying isn't allowed.

Judge's fair ruling

During the 1990s, Florida State Prison also had a no-spray policy, but that changed in 1999 when James Crosby became the warden and began spraying scores of inmates. Crosby later was convicted of taking kickbacks, but his policy of spraying sick inmates continues. Judge Corrigan's ruling is an opening for the state to adopt policies that are more humane and more effective for handling mentally ill inmates.

The state should stop fighting the judge and stop spraying sick inmates.

Inmate collapses while playing basketball in Palm Beach County Jail

By JASON SCHULTZ

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

WEST PALM BEACH- — An inmate in the Palm Beach County Jail died Monday afternoon, according to the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office.

Leonard Jamell King, 18, of South Bay, had been booked into the jail on Jan. 2 after being arrested on charges grand theft of a firearm, burglary and fraud. King was playing basketball with other inmates in the east recreational yard of the jail around 4 p.m. when he collapsed, according to Sgt. Pete Palenzuela.

King was taken to JFK Medical Center in Atlantis, where he was pronounced dead.

Detectives are still investigating the death but there were no signs of injuries or foul play and investigators believe King's death may have been caused by some sort of medical issue, Palenzuela said. An autopsy has been scheduled.

~'jason_schultz@pbpost.com

Monday, March 16, 2009

Bradford Sheriff's Employee Confesses To Sex With Child

WJXT-TV
updated 1 hour, 51 minutes ago

A Bradford County Sheriff's Office employee was arrested Saturday after detectives said he called them to his home and confessed to repeatedly having sex with a child.

Detectives said Howard Austin, 46, of Starke, admitted to having sexual relations with a juvenile for about eight years.

He was charged with sexual battery on a person under 12 years of age.

Austin, who worked in the information technology department of the sheriff's office, was fired immediately upon his arrest.

"It is devastating to hear of an innocent child being victimized in this manner," Sheriff Gordon Smith said in a statement.

Austin was booked into the Bradford County jail, but transferred to an undisclosed facility for security purposes.

Fort Pierce man gets life in prison for 2003 strangulation

By Eric Pfahler

Originally published 05:20 p.m., March 16, 2009
Updated 05:25 p.m., March 16, 2009

The sister of a woman murdered in 2003 said she wanted closure during the sentencing of a Fort Pierce man who was given life in prison Monday.

“I miss her phone calls, her knock on the door on birthdays or holidays or any day she wanted,” Yajahra Garcia read from a prepared statement.

Garcia’s sister Lourdes Cavazos-Blandin, also known as Lulu, was found dead in a wooded lot outside of Fort Pierce on May 24, 2003.

Circuit Judge Dan Vaughn on Monday sentenced Eddie Junior Bigham, 51, to life in prison without the possibility of parole, more than eight months after the Florida Supreme Court voted 6-1 to reverse his first-degree murder conviction and death sentence. Instead, Bigham received a second-degree murder conviction in the strangulation death of Cavazos-Blandin.

Chief Assistant Public Defender Mark Harllee said the sentence was not unexpected, but he planned to file an appeal.

Garcia said she hoped the sentencing would bring finality to the matter.

“The sudden and unexpected murder of my sister Lulu was devastating for me and my family,” a tearful Garcia said. “She was more like a mother to me. She raised me to be the person that I am today.”

Bigham said he was innocent of the crime and showed no emotion throughout the proceedings.

“I am not guilty of this homicide,” Bigham said. “My heart still goes out to the family and stuff, but I am innocent.”

Investigators determined Cavazos-Blandin and Bigham had consensual sex before her death, and Bigham had testified that Cavazos-Blandin was awake and alert when he left the wooded lot after 1 a.m. A medical examiner, however, found signs of strangulation that proved she likely died during or shortly after the pair had sex.

In January 2005, a jury unanimously recommended the death penalty for Bigham, who had previously been convicted of the 1988 murder of a 5-month old baby. He served 14 years in prison in Broward County for that crime and was released less than a month before Cavazos-Blandin’s death. Assistant State Attorney Lynn Park came out of retirement to handle the case.

The Supreme Court later ruled there was insufficient evidence to charge Bigham with first-degree murder.

“It went as expected, really,” Park said. “The part that didn’t go as planned was the Supreme Court sending it back as second-degree (murder), which I disagree with, but that’s what we had to do today.”

Report: Florida prison problems not quickly fixed

By JESSICA GRESKO
Associated Press Writer

The Associated Press
updated 4:11 p.m. ET, Thurs., March. 12, 2009

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - The agency that oversees Florida's six privately run prisons needs to ensure that problems found during audits — such as broken alarms and unsanitary infirmaries — are quickly fixed, lawmakers were told Thursday as part of a report reviewing the agency.

Audits of private prisons by the Florida Department of Corrections had previously found broken escape sensors and buildings that had not been checked for any attempts by inmates to tunnel out. Audits also found delays in medical care and problems involving contraband.

"Some of these problems were repeated year after year at the same prisons," said analyst Vic Williams, who summarized the report for lawmakers in testimony before the Senate Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations.

The report was written by the Office of Program Policy Analysis & Government Accountability and released in December. Lawmakers heard a formal presentation of the details Thursday.

An official with the Department of Management Services, the agency that oversees the private prisons, told lawmakers that his agency has already begun to address some of the issues raised by the report.

"We've already started the process to implement a lot of these recommendations," Department of Management Services' J.D. Solie told the panel.

Solie promised that any future violations found by Department of Corrections audits would be corrected within 45 days.

"This is an eye-opening report," said Sen. Frederica Wilson, D-Miami.

The state has six private prisons housing approximately 8,000 inmates or about 8 percent of the state's inmates. The facilities cost the state about $133 million a year, or some 6 percent of the Department of Corrections' $2.2 billion budget.

The state currently contracts with two private prison companies: Nashville-based Corrections Corp. of America and Boca Raton-based GEO Group Inc. The state's 131 other facilities are run by the Florida Department of Corrections.

CCA said in a statement that it has "worked closely" with the state to "ensure contract compliance and will continue to do so." A message left for a spokesman at GEO was not immediately returned.

Among recommendations, the report also said private prisons should be required to track the percentage of inmates who successfully complete substance abuse and education programs.

It also noted that phone calls made from private prisons are more expensive than calls from prisons run by the Department of Corrections. A 15 minute phone call from a private prison costs around $6 while the same call costs 50 cents in a state-run prison, lawmakers were told.

And while families can visit state-run prisons on Saturdays and Sundays, private facilities allow visits either every other weekend or only one of the two weekend days, the report found.

The Department of Management Services said future contracts would require private prisons to measure and report graduation rates from education and treatment programs. Contracts will also require that phone call prices be "more in line" with the cost at state-run prisons, according to a written reply from the agency.

But, the agency wrote it believed the visitation policies at private prisons were appropriate, though it agreed to ask inmates and families about their satisfaction.

Turnpike slayings: Killers should die, jurors told

By Vanessa Blum

South Florida Sun Sentinel

1:38 PM EDT, March 16, 2009

Two West Palm Beach men deserve to die for executing a family of four alongside Florida's Turnpike, a federal prosecutor told jurors today at the start of the penalty phase in the capital murder trial.

Daniel Troya and Richard Sanchez Jr., both 25, were convicted on March 5 of armed carjacking resulting in the deaths of Luis Escobedo, 28; his wife, Yessica Guerrero Escobedo, 25; and their sons, Luis Julian, 4, and Luis Damian, 3.

In determining the price Troya and Sanchez should pay for their crimes, attorney Richard Burns of the U.S. Department of Justice said jurors should consider the number of victims and the vulnerability of the Escobedo children.

"There is only one appropriate penalty that does justice," Burns said in his opening statement.

Arguing against the death penalty, attorneys for Troya and Sanchez said life in prison would be sufficient punishment in light of their clients' difficult life circumstances.

"Death would not be justice in this case," said Sanchez's attorney Donnie Murrell. "It would simply be revenge."

During the sentencing phase, which could last more than a week, jurors must consider whether Troya and Sanchez should be sentenced to death or to life in prison without the possibility of release.

Federal law requires the jury's recommendation to be unanimous.

Both sides have the opportunity to present aggravating and mitigating circumstances -- evidence weighing in favor of or against execution.

Several relatives of the victims and the defendants are expected to testify.

In his opening statement, Murrell said Sanchez grew up in a home wracked by domestic violence and struggled to overcome severe learning disabilities.

Sanchez, who has a young son, fell in with a local drug ring and was "too naïve and simple" to see he was being manipulated, Murrell said.

Troya's lawyer, James Eisenberg, said his client suffered emotional problems after a friend died in his arms from a gunshot wound when Troya was 12. His downward spiral continued when a family friend died from a drug overdose, Eisenberg said.

No federal defendant in Florida has been condemned to die since Congress reauthorized capital punishment in 1988.

The bodies of the Escobedo family were found in a heap at the side of the road in St. Lucie County on Oct. 13, 2006. Yessica Escobedo tried to use her body to shield her sons, according to prosecutors.

Prosecutors contend Troya and Sanchez killed the Escobedo family to erase a drug debt owed to Jose Escobedo and steal his cocaine.

Eisenberg warned jurors the brutal facts of the crime don't automatically mandate the death penalty.

"Let's get over that right now," he said.

Vanessa Blum can be reached at vblum@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4605.

Family of inmate who died in 2007 sues Hernando jail management company

By John Frank, Times Staff Writer

Published Wednesday, January 28, 2009


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BROOKSVILLE — The morning Edward Duritsky died, his sister came to visit him at the Hernando County Jail.

Duritsky, 53, barely made it to the telephone. He fell as she waited on the other end of a video conferencing system in the jail lobby.

For weeks prior, Duritsky had complained about his health. But after the fall, a jail guard did nothing to help. When a nurse came, she walked away indifferent.

An hour later, at Brooksville Regional Hospital, Duritsky was pronounced dead.

These new details, describing the events of Dec. 20, 2007, are alleged in a negligence lawsuit filed Tuesday against the private company that manages the jail.

Attorneys for Duritsky's family, Jackson Brownlee of Orlando and Jimmy Brown of Brooksville, assert that Corrections Corporation of America, jail medical director Karen Deloreto and an unnamed corrections officer provided "grossly inadequate and incompetent 'medical care' so as to be tantamount to no medical care at all," court documents state.

"If he had received proper medical attention right away, they might very well have saved his life," Brown said in an interview Wednesday.

The civil lawsuit, filed by Duritsky's son, Ricky Duritsky, seeks damages in excess of $15,000. It claims violations of the elder Duritsky's federal civil rights.

Jail warden Russell Washburn said Wednesday he couldn't comment on pending litigation.

The warden at the time of the incident, Don Stewart, told the Times in January 2008 that the family's claims of neglect were "inaccurate."

Hernando County Sheriff's Office death investigation reports also reflect that the jail staff took steps to help Duritsky and labeled the death natural. But Brown said a review of the surveillance camera in the jail's medical ward proves the reports are inaccurate.

"They weren't doing CPR; they weren't doing anything," Brown said. It shows "an absolute indifference to this man's life."

Duritsky began complaining about his health soon after he was jailed Aug. 22, 2007, on a charge of aggravated stalking after violating a domestic violence injunction. He was being held in lieu of $25,000 bail.

An inmate intake health appraisal noted his heart problems. But his condition appeared to worsen Oct. 3, when he complained about being sick and was refused medical attention, the lawsuit states.

A month later, he complained of shaking from severe pain. He was seen a day later and given Tylenol. On Nov. 21, he complained of a tremor and the next day weakness in his right side.

A neurologist, apparently unaffiliated with the jail, ordered a brain scan Nov. 30 and diagnosed him.

Duritsky's problems escalated. He was taken to Spring Hill Regional Hospital on Dec. 12 after his attorneys filed a motion in court, documents indicate. He was diagnosed with an increased heart rate and returned to jail, the lawsuit states.

A week later, and the day before he died, Duritsky's criminal attorney, Ashley Aulls, asked a judge for another medical examination.

But Duritsky died before a judge was assigned. The medical examiner named the cause of death as heart failure.

John Frank can be reached at jfrank@sptimes.com or (352) 754-6114.

Turnpike family's killers hope to avoid death sentences

By DAPHNE DURET

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Sunday, March 15, 2009

STUART — For the murders of Jose Luis Escobedo and his young family, convicted killers Daniel Troya and Ricardo Sanchez in less than two weeks could join the small but growing population of inmates on the federal government's Death Row.

If the 12-member jury that convicted them this month opts for capital punishment at the end of the hearing that begins today, the number of federal Death Row inmates will grow to 57 - a number that, according to death penalty experts, has increased at a time when similar numbers in the state system have dropped.

It would mark the first time the federal death penalty has been imposed in Florida since it was reinstated in 1988.

To secure the death sentence against the pair, both 25, prosecutors plan to rely mostly on evidence presented during their weeks-long trial in the Oct. 13, 2006, shooting deaths of Escobedo, his wife, Yessica, and their 3- and 4-year-old sons, Luis Damian and Luis Julian, along Florida's Turnpike at Port St. Lucie.

Defense attorneys for Sanchez and Troya, meanwhile, will try to get jurors to spare the men's lives by showing that violence in their upbringings led them to commit crimes as adults.

At a hearing Tuesday, Troya's attorney James Eisenberg told U.S. District Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley that he intends to present testimony that Troya suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, fueled in large part by the shooting death of his best friend when he was 13.

Sanchez's attorney Donnie Murrell hinted there were some domestic violence issues between Sanchez's parents when he was growing up and that he has a low IQ.

Over objections from Assistant U.S. Attorney John Kastrenakes, Murrell expects to bring in the psychologist who examined Sanchez's older brother who set fire to the family's house while Sanchez was growing up. The brother was arrested on arson charges. Declared to be mentally retarded and unfit to stand trial, he is housed at a forensic hospital in Chattahoochee, Murrell said.

"This gives some insight as to what it was like to grow up in that environment," Murrell said.

When Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Carlton filed notice that the government planned to seek the death penalty more than a year ago, he outlined several factors that jurors could use to determine whether the punishment is warranted, including the ages of the two slain boys and the facts that multiple people were killed and that the killings showed a reckless disregard for human life.

Carlton cited the effect of the Escobedos' deaths on their families. U.S. Department of Justice attorney Richard Burns will introduce testimony from up to four family members this week.

Jose Luis Escobedo's mother and sister, Rosario Escobedo and Rita Escobedo Flores, and Yessica Escobedo's mother and aunt, Sara Guerrero and Monica Moreno, attended each day of the trial and are expected to be in the courtroom for the penalty phase.

Carlton previously sought to show jurors that both men posed a future danger to others, but Kastrenakes told Hurley on Tuesday that prosecutors have abandoned that argument.

Richard Dieter, executive director for the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, said the omission may not have an adverse effect on the prosecutors' case because a jury needs to find only that prosecutors proved one of their aggravating factors - facts that increase the degree of culpability - beyond a reasonable doubt in order to move toward a death sentence.

From there, Dieter said, jurors would have to believe that the factor outweighed any other defense evidence before returning a death sentence.

If jurors cannot make a unanimous decision on a verdict, attorneys in the case said in court, then Sanchez and Troya will get a life sentence by default.

Federal rules say that in case of a split, the decision goes to a judge, but the judge cannot impose a penalty harsher than 110 years in prison.

Dieter said only a third of defendants for whom prosecutors seek the death penalty actually get that punishment, but results vary widely based on the severity of the crime.

According to his center's statistics, federal juries handed out 36 death sentences between 2001 to 2007, more than doubling the number from the seven-year period before then.

The increase over much of the past decade, death penalty experts say, has come during the tenures of former U.S. Attorneys General John Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzales, who pushed aggressively for capital punishment and at times were at odds with prosecutors who wanted to opt for plea bargains guaranteeing life sentences.

"There can be a political side to that," Dieter said. "I don't know whether that was a factor in this particular case, but it has been for some."

In the past the U.S. Attorney's Office typically would defer to prosecutors when it came to seeking capital punishment, he said.

It's too soon to tell how recently appointed Attorney General Eric Holder will handle capital punishment during President Obama's administration, Dieter added.

Death sentences for Sanchez and Troya would bring them to the federal Death Row facility in Terre Haute, Ind., the execution site for Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and two others since then.

Hearings for Troya and Sanchez are expected to last until next week.

Cooper expected to be sentenced to life in prison Monday

By STEVEN BEARDSLEY (Contact)
5:54 p.m., Sunday, March 15, 2009

LEE COUNTY — Two trials and more than three years after the lifeless bodies of Steven and Michelle Andrews were discovered inside their bedroom, Fred DeWitt Cooper will answer for their deaths.

The former Bonita Springs motorcycle mechanic, convicted of breaking into the Andrews’ Gateway home and murdering the young couple in December 2005, faces sentencing in a Lee County courtroom today. A Pinellas County jury convicted him earlier this month, after his first trial in Fort Myers ended in a hung jury.

He is almost certain to be sentenced to life in prison.

A majority of Pinellas jurors recommended that sentence over state execution during the trial’s penalty phase. Although Lee Circuit Judge Thomas S. Reese can sentence Cooper, 30, to the death penalty, the ruling would be short lived, attorneys say. Case law strictly limits such a move.

“It would be a shock if Judge Reese gave death, and if he did, frankly it would be overturned on appeal,” said John Mills, a criminal defense attorney in Fort Myers.

Stephen Harper, a public defender in Miami with 15 years experience working capital murder cases, recalled only three or four times he’s seen a judge hand down a death penalty sentence after a jury recommended life.

“But I don’t think I’ve seen one that’s been upheld,” he added.

The victims’ family members are still deciding whether they’ll speak in court on Monday, said Samantha Syoen, spokeswoman for the State Attorney’s Office. Parents of both victims spoke to jurors during the penalty phase, but Monday will allow them to address the judge.

Both sets of parents have a standing wish not to speak to the media, Syoen said on Friday.

After the hearing, Cooper will be moved from Lee County Jail, where he has complained of harsh treatment, to a state prison. Unless his sentence is overturned, he will never be released. He will join 118 other Lee County convicts who are serving life sentences, according to the state Department of Corrections. Eight convicts from Lee are on death row.

Cooper can appeal his case to the Second District Court of Appeal in Lakeland, a process that could take a year before judgment is returned. If denied, he can only request future reviews from higher courts, from the Florida Supreme Court to the United States District Court in Fort Myers to the U.S. Supreme Court. The higher the court, the lower the chance his case will be reviewed, Mills said.

The victims’ families will begin a journey of their own after Monday’s hearing, said Nancy Ruhe, executive director of the National Organization of Parents of Murdered Children. “Closure” is never as simple as a conviction or a sentencing, she said.

“The only thing that closes in a homicide case is the lid of the coffin,” she said.

In fact, Ruhe explained, most family members “go downhill” after a long trial ends, even when the outcome is favorable. A trial offers purpose, she said, and media attention keeps the dead ever-present. When both are gone, the finality of murder hits hard, she said.

“The family, now they’ve gone home to figure out how to lead their lives without this person in their lives,” she said.

Man crusades against death penalty



KOB.com
Posted at: 03/15/2009 9:03 AM
Updated at: 03/15/2009 11:24 AM
By: Eyewitness News 4


Man crusades against death penalty

Juan Melendez
A man exonerated after 17 years on Florida's death row is sharing his story in hopes New Mexico repeals the death penalty.

Juan Melendez was sentenced to die after he was convicted of armed robbery and murder. His capital murder trial lasted just four days.

"Thursday they found me guilty, Friday the same week they sentence me to death and the judge complained it was taking too long," Melendez said.

At the time, Melendez did not speak English and did not have an interpreter to help him understand his own trial. But he knew he was in a bind when the prosecutors showed the jury pictures from the crime scene.

"They show the picture, they all look at me with hate in their eyes. So I know this Puerto Rican was in trouble then," he said.

Melendez spent the next 17 years in a six by nine cell infested with rats and roaches. He was finally released when an old confession from the real killer was discovered.

As New Mexico sits on the verge of abolishing the death penalty, Melendez hopes his story can convince Richardson to sign a bill that would exchange capital punishment for a sentence of life in prison.

"You always can release an innocent man from prison, but you can never you can never release an innocent man from the grave," he said.

Melendez, who now lives in New Mexico, said the people of the state have already spoken through their legislators who passed the bill. He hopes the governor will respect their voices.

Poll: Do you support repealing the death penalty?

Photographer, Human Rights Advocate Scott Langley to Present at Florida State


From the Blog of The Innocence Project of Florida :





Innocence Project of Florida will Attend and Table at Community Outreach Event


For Immediate Release


World-renowned photojournalist and human rights advocate Scott Langley will be presenting a photo documentary project on the death penalty at Moore Auditorium at Florida State University on Thursday, March 19 at 7 P.M. Langley’s work has been widely distributed in media such as the Associated Press wire, the Washington Post, and Amnesty International publications. His work has been exhibited internationally in Europe and at top-tier universities in the United States such as Cornell and Harvard.


The Innocence Project of Florida (IPF), a Tallahassee-based nonprofit organization that uses DNA testing to overturn wrongful convictions, will be in attendance. IPF will have a table set up with literature and sign-up sheets for visitors who wish to join its mailing list.


Other organizations will also be in attendance. The event is sponsored by several groups concerned with human rights, such as Amnesty International at FSU, the American Civil Liberties Union, and Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty.


“We always support community outreach events like this to spread awareness of the injustice inherent in America’s death penalty, especially when so many death row prisoners have been found to be innocent through DNA testing” said Seth Miller, Esq., Executive Director of the Innocence Project of Florida. “We’re very supportive of Langley’s work. His mastery of this vivid and powerful medium provides an excellent illustration of the horrors involved when the State chooses to take the life of its own citizens.


”The Innocence Project of Florida is a registered 501(c)(3) organization that works to find and free innocent people in Florida prisons.


Scott Langley is a free-lance photojournalist and political community organizer, currently based in Ghent, New York (upstate near Albany). Scott Langley’s photography work has been widespread throughout the world in recent years. Scott’s work has appeared in the Boston Globe, on the Associated Press wire, the Reuters wire, CNN.com, ABC.com, the Washington Post, PBS, Essence Magazine, Amnesty International publications, and much more. Since 2005, his major documentary project on the death penalty has been exhibited by Amnesty International in Germany, Denmark, Norway, the UK at Harvard University in Massachusetts, Cornell University in Ithaca, NY and in Washington DC. Additionally, Scott travels around the country showing his photos and giving talks about various human rights issues.# # #
View the press release here or download the flyer for this event here.
Visit IPF's Website here; sign up to volunteer here; contribute to our work here.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Guilty plea in Sottile murder

By CHRISTOPHER TUFFLEY

christopher.tuffley@newssun.com

SEBRING -- In a surprise twist, Joshua Lee Altersberger, 21, who was awaiting trial on charges of gunning down Florida Highway Patrol Sgt. Nicholas Sottile on Jan. 12, 2007 entered a plea of guilty Friday afternoon in a Polk County courtroom.

Altersberger reportedly said, "I'm doing it because I wanted to take responsibility and man up to what I did."

Nicholas Sotille's brother, Jimmy Sotille, isn't having any of it.

"This is just his last-ditch attempt to get pity," Sotille said. "He shouldn't even use the term 'man.' A man doesn't go around killing police officers.

"He's a typical coward trying to get out of what he did. He didn't (plead guilty) for the sake of my family, he's doing this for himself. Why wait two years and at the last minute pull this?"

The state had announced the intention of seeking the death penalty and Altersberger's plea does not change that. A sentencing jury will be picked and testimony presented to it, so it can decide whether he should be put to death. The presiding judge will be the final arbiter. That phase of the process begins March 23.

"No matter what, this thing is still up in the air," Sotille said. "This guy can't be trusted. It's like he's calling the shots -- he pleads guilty and everybody says 'thank you, thank you.'"

"The sad part is even if he gets the death penalty, it will be years and years before it's carried out. In other countries it's 30 days and you're dead, especially with a confession."

Sotille added that in this country the discussion centers on the cost of the death penalty.

"We've gotten away from the moral issues," he said.

The evidence against Altersberger is overwhelming, including statements he posted on his MySpace page on the Internet the day of the killing, bragging of his actions. Prosecutors think the weight of that evidence is what led to the guilty plea.

Altersberger had been pulled over on U. S. 27 for a routine traffic stop. A passenger in the car, Quintin Jerome Kinder, has said Altersberger had announced his intentions to kill a police officer prior to the event. He himself fled the car, running into an orange grove to hide without warning Sottile that Altersberger had said he was going to kill the trooper when he was pulled over.

For Trooper Sotille's family, his loss is still overwhelming.

"Maybe this will mean a little less pain for my father," his brother said, "maybe a little less pain."

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor Speech to the Minnesota Women Lawyers group


If statistics are any indication, the system may well

be allowing some innocent defendants to be executed…


Serious questions are being raised about whether the death penalty

is being fairly administered in this country.


Perhaps it’s time to look at minimum standards for appointed counsel

in death cases and adequate compensation for appointed counsel

when they are used.


Justice Sandra Day O’Connor Speech to the Minnesota Women Lawyers group

July 2, 2001

Anatomy of an exoneration


From the Blog : The Defense rests :





On March 12, 2009, Harris County District Attorney Pat Lykos and Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt released a chronology, entitled the Rachell Report, of the wrongful conviction and (eventual) exoneration of Ricardo Rachell. Here is how a miscarriage of justice unfolded:


On October 20, 2002, the complaining witness told two women at a Wyatt's Cafeteria on Griggs Road that a man had tried to kill him. Once he was taken home, the child told the police that a black male offered him $10 to pick up trash and then took him to the 3700 block of Southlawn.


The following morning, the child's mother kept him out of school. As she returned home after taking her oldest son to school she saw the man she thought assaulted her son. She, and a couple of friends, walked around the neighborhood until she saw him again. Her son told her that was the man and she followed him to his mother's house and then called the police.


When the police arrived they placed Mr. Rachell in the backseat of a patrol car and asked the complaining witness if Mr. Rachell was the person who kidnapped him. The boy said he was. The boy then told Officer Wilson that Mr. Rachell took him to a vacant house, pulled down his pants and grabbed him from behind around the waist. ADA James Alston, who was working intake, declined to accept charges at that time.


Officer Wilson found a vacant new house on Foster Street with signs of forced entry and muddy footprints leading to the second floor. He also found bicycle tracks in the yard next door.


The case was then assigned to Ofc. Clemons of HPD's Juvenile Sex Crimes division. Ofc. Clemons contacted the complaining witness' mother to arrange for an interview with her son at the Children's Assessment Center. The boy described his attacker as a light-skinned black man having a "messed up eye" and no teeth. He told Ofc. Clemons he had seen Mr. Rachell in the neighborhood before. Deborah Parks, R.N., then performed a sexual assault examination on the boy and delivered the examination kit to Ofc. Clemons who tagged it.


Ofc. Clemons then spoke to the boy's mother who could not explain why she believed Mr. Rachell was the man who attacked her son. The mother told Ofc. Clemons she saved the clothes her son was wearing that day because a "yellowish cream substance" in his underwear made her uneasy. Ofc. Clemons then placed the sexual assault examination kit and the clothes in the HPD property room.


On October 22, 2002, ADA Serna accepted a charge of aggravated sexual assault of a child against Mr. Rachell. The following day Ofc. Clemons presented the facts of the case to ADA Freyer in person at the DA's office.


The 185th Judicial District Court appointed Ron Hayes to represent Mr. Rachell on October 28, 2002. Mr. Hayes was the only attorney appointed to represent Mr. Rachell and he never requested that tests be performed on the DNA samples.


Mr. Rachell had three prior arrests for possession of marijuana, trespass of a habitation and burglary of a habitation. He had pled guilty to the burglary charge was sentenced to six years in the penitentiary (he was paroled in 1985).


Mr. Rachell was arrested on October 24, 2002 and submitted a sample of DNA to Ofc. Clemons. That sample was also checked into the HPD property room. During an interview recorded by Ofc. Clemons, Mr. Rachell repeatedly denied any involvement in the attack.


On December 12, 2002, the complaining witness and a friend identified Mr. Rachell from a photo array.


Then ADA (now President-elect of the Harris County Criminal Laywer's Association) Joanne Musick presented the case to a grand jury which returned an indictment on January 30, 2003. There were no requests made to test the DNA evidence.


Jimmy Ortiz (also now a criminal defense attorney) took over the case from the departed Ms. Musick on April 25, 2003 and tried the case to a jury in June 2003. Mr. Ortiz never requested tests on the DNA evidence in the state's possession. During the trial of the case, Mr. Hayes brought out testimony that DNA samples were taken but never tested. He brought up the lack of testing again during his closing argument.


At trial, the mother testified that she was not certain the man she saw in the neighborhood the morning after the attack was the man who assaulted her son. She made no mention of Mr. Rachell's deformed face. The complaining witness also failed to mention Mr. Rachell's face.
Mr. Rachell was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child on July 3, 2003 and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.


Hon. Shawna Reagin (now a judge in the 176th Judicial District Court) was appointed to handle Mr. Rachell's appeal. She filed an appellate brief on January 9, 2004. The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction on September 30, 2004.


Mr. Rachell then filed a petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus on September 11, 2005 that was denied on November 7, 2007.


Mr. Rachell sent Ofc. Rodriguez a letter on September 21, 2007 in which he stated that Andrew Wayne Hawthorne was the man who committed the assault for which he was convicted. Lt. Staney reviewed the case and, although he noted similarites in the attack for which Mr. Rachell was convicted and attacks committed by Mr. Hawthorne, he was unconvinced. He did, however, find the untested forensic evidence and requested that the DNA material be analyzed.


In the Spring of 2007, Mr. Rachell filed a Chapter 64 (Texas Code of Criminal Procedure) request in the 185th Judicial District Court asking that DNA testing be performed on the items in evidence. According to the report, Mr. Rachell's attorney failed to file the necessary motion to begin the process of testing the biological evidence. ADA Sally Ring obtained the required affidavits and requested the trial court to order DNA testing.


The Texas Department of Public Safety issued a report on October 28, 2008 that concluded that Mr. Rachell's DNA did not match the DNA samples found on the items collected in this case. A bench warrant was issued for Mr. Rachell and a personal bond was granted (releasing Mr. Rachell from custody) while the state prepared the writ that would lead to the conviction being overturned.


Mr. Hawthorne was identified as the man who assaulted the complaining witness in a DPS lab report dated December 12, 2008. Mr. Hawthorned confessed to the crime on January 13, 2009 and charges were filed against him on February 24, 2009.


According to the report, "[t]he wrongful conviction of Ricardo Rachell and the length of his incarceration [were] the result of a series of unfortunate events, blunders and omissions. There was a cascading, system-wide breakdown."


One of the system failures was the shuttering of the HPD Crime Lab in December 2002 (it would not reopen until May 11, 2005). During the period in which the lab was closed, biological material had to be submitted either to the DPS or to a private lab for testing. This, however, does not explain why neither the state nor the defendant's attorney requested testing on the material.
Mr. Hayes may not have requested testing as part of his defense strategy - raising reasonable doubt. After all, the burden of proof is on the state and it is, therefore, the state's responsibility to test biological evidence in a case. The fact that no tests were conducted could raise a reasonable doubt that Mr. Rachell committed the crime. Mr. Hayes was aware that a DNA analysis could be evidence that Mr. Rachell did commit the crime (sometimes it's better not to conduct tests on evidence).


At the time of the assault, the Harris County DA's Office did not have a policy regarding the testing of biological evidence.


The officers who responded to the initial call did not document the description of the alleged assailant; this, according to the report, may have led to the misidentification of Mr. Rachell.
The report also notes that Ofc. Clemons requested testing on the biological material but that no one ever followed up on his request. But "considering the deplorable conditions and incompetence in the lab, it may have ironically been beneficial to Rachell" that no tests were performed.


Finally, no one in the Juvenile Sex Crimes division was able to detect a pattern in child sexual assaults "virtually identical" to the one in this case that occurred less than one month after Mr. Rachell was arrested. While investigators eventually detected a pattern, no one bothered to review the file in Mr. Rachell's case.


So, in retrospect, we have a police investigation that was inadequate and a district attorney's office more interested in obtaining a conviction than in discovering the truth.


How many other people are wrongly sitting behind bars today in cases in which there is no biological evidence to exonerate them?

Paralyzed Broward inmate gets OK to return to Cuba

BY AMY SHERMAN

A paralyzed Broward jail inmate who has remained incarcerated despite finishing his sentence will be granted his freedom, a judge ruled Tuesday -- along with the right to return home to Cuba.

Broward Circuit Judge Marc Gold gave permission to transfer Enrique Reyes from jail to Miami International Airport so he can fly home. He'll leave the jail in Pompano Beach on Feb. 8, thanks to a relative who is purchasing an airplane ticket for him to rejoin his parents in his native Cuba.

Reyes' public defender, Jose Reyes, jail administrators and the Broward Sheriff's Office have tried for about a year to find a way for Reyes to leave the jail after completion of his sentence for vehicular homicide.

Reyes smiled and gave the thumbs-up sign as he was pushed into the courtroom in a wheelchair Tuesday morning to hear the official words from Gold that he would soon be free to go.

''Mr. Reyes, I don't know if it's the right term: mission accomplished,'' Gold told Reyes on Tuesday morning.

On Aug. 5, 2006, Reyes got behind the wheel of a car after drinking and slammed into another vehicle in Deerfield Beach, killing his friend and leaving himself paralyzed.

Reyes pleaded no contest to the vehicular homicide charge and Gold sentenced him to five years' probation in February. Gold granted the probation because Reyes didn't have a significant criminal history, showed remorse, was paralyzed and the victim's family did not oppose the sentence.

Gold ordered Reyes be sent to Broward General Medical Center, but the hospital argued he was not its responsibility, so he quickly landed back in jail -- despite the fact he was technically free.

The issue: No one wants a poor, homeless, undocumented migrant in a wheelchair. The case highlighted the fact that the jail -- under court orders to avoid overcrowding -- is the dumping ground of last resort. It costs about $115 a day to care for Reyes at the jail, where he has now stayed nearly a year despite no sentence that includes incarceration.

''Unfortunately, the Broward County Jail is sometimes the default provider,'' Sheriff Al Lamberti said. ``We are probably the largest social service provider in the county.''

The Cuban Interests Section in Washington, D.C., gave the go-ahead about a week ago for Reyes to return to Cuba, said his public defender. The Cuban government has made arrangements so that Reyes' family can move from the second floor to the first floor -- a necessity for Reyes because he needs the wheelchair to get around.

Reyes is relieved to start a new chapter in his life.

''He is very happy to be going back to his family,'' attorney Reyes said.

Lamberti said several different agencies worked together to find a resolution.

''It's not a happy ending, but it's a good ending,'' the sheriff said.

DNA Test Clears Ohio Inmate of Rape After 25 Years in Prison





Columbus man finally freed from prison


DNA tests cleared Joseph Fears after 25 years behind bars


Tuesday, March 10, 2009 9:43 PM
By Mike Wagner and Geoff Dutton



THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

SHARI LEWIS DISPATCH
Joseph R. Fears Jr.
Test of Convictions



He started with a bowl of lobster bisque and worked his way down the menu at Mitchell's Steakhouse.


Next up was filet mignon wrapped in bacon, a baked potato, french fries, corn, and asparagus. Dessert was a big piece of cheesecake smothered in strawberries.


To toast his first meal outside of prison walls in 25 years, Joseph R. Fears Jr. washed it all down with a glass of red wine and a shot of cognac.


Fears, a 61-year-old Columbus man, was freed this morning after a DNA test proved him innocent of a 1983 rape. He becomes the eighth Ohio inmate and 234th nationwide to be exonerated by DNA testing.


A Dispatch series, "Test of Convictions," led to DNA testing that freed another inmate in August, which Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said prompted him to order a top-to-bottom inventory of his evidence room.


The search uncovered evidence that Fears had been told for years was gone.
The best part of Fears' celebratory lunch Downtown was enjoying it with the little brother he mowed lawns with as a kid, one of several siblings who doubted his innocence. Fears hadn't seen his brother, Kenneth, in more than 25 years.


"You have no idea what it's like for them to turn their back on you because they think you are guilty," Fears, briefly overcome with emotion, told the judge . "It hurts so much."


Kenneth Fears, a retired Air Force officer who lives in California, sobbed in the front row of the courtroom as his brother stood before Judge Charles Schneider in handcuffs, wearing a shirt stamped "inmate" on the back.


"As soon as he walked out, I saw his pain," Kenneth Fears said. "And in that moment, I knew what it was like to have the whole world against you. It's time for the Fears family to heal."
Two hours later, outside the Franklin County courthouse, Fears bearhugged his younger brother and set aside the anger of his wrongful conviction.


"God is good," he said. "I got my family back. That's all that matters."


There are still more legal challenges ahead if Fears is to resume a normal life. Even before being released, he had to register as a sex offender for another rape conviction. Fears was convicted of two rapes committed a week apart.


DNA testing on recently discovered evidence cleared him of one rape. Tests on underwear from the other victim - an acquaintance who accused him of rape - didn't reveal any male DNA. Fears has acknowledged a confrontation with the woman but said he never had sex with her. She is now deceased.


Fears' lawyer, Isabella Dixon Thomas, said she would seek to overturn that rape conviction, as well.


Meanwhile, O'Brien recommended Fears' release based on time he has already served. O'Brien also said he would consider whatever Thomas brings forward on the second rape conviction, though he noted it clearly wasn't another case of mistaken identity.


"I told Ms. Thomas we'd work with her if she has any other legal theories," O'Brien said. "I'm just trying to do what's fair, right and just."


Also sitting in the courtroom today was Robert McClendon, a Columbus man released in August after serving 18 years for a child rape that DNA showed he didn't commit. At Ross Correctional Institution, McClendon and Fears enjoyed schooling the "young guys" on the basketball court.
Now McClendon wants to help his friend find success and happiness in a world he'll scarcely recognize after a quarter century behind bars.


Fears' mother lives in a nursing home in Georgia, and his father is dead. With no money or immediate family in the area, Fears will move in with McClendon's family until he can build a life for himself.


"I wanted to give back," McClendon said. "That's what it's all about."


Fears also met two adult nephews from Columbus yesterday, and the director of the Ohio Innocence Project took Fears shopping for clothes after lunch.


Fears will be entitled to a minimum of $44,209.40 for every year behind bars, under state law. But that calculation will be complicated by his other rape conviction, and the payment will takes months to process even if he succeeds in overturning it.


McClendon recalled sitting with Fears outside the same courtroom together several years ago, when they were to be declared sexual offenders under what was then a new law.


"We sat down there arguing with the people, saying, 'We're innocent!' We refused to come into the courtroom," McClendon said. "Nobody wanted to listen.


"I just hope as a result of my case, and Mr. Fears' case, that it opens the door for other people."

DNA testing helps clear jailed man


DNA testing helps clear jailed man


By Richard Danielson, Times Staff Writer

In Print: Tuesday, March 10, 2009


TAMPA — On the morning deputies led a shirtless Kenneth Robinson down his driveway and off to jail, he gave neighbors a tiny smile.
It's a mistake, he said.
"He seemed awfully damned relaxed about it," neighbor Richard Stern said. "If it was a mistake, I'd be mad as hell."
But Robinson, 43, was right. He didn't rob that bank. Nor did he break into that medical office, stab that doctor or steal that Lexus.
And after he spent nearly four months in jail, prosecutors dropped the charges.


Luckily for Robinson, someone else kept using the same scheme to rob banks while he was in jail. And the DNA found at the original crime scene wasn't his.
It's always good when the justice system corrects a mistake before an innocent person is convicted, said Chris Watson, felony bureau chief for the Hillsborough County Public Defender's Office.
But, he said, "lots of times in cases like this there is no DNA evidence."
• • •
About 8 a.m. on Oct. 7, two women arrived for work at Mercantile Bank on N Dale Mabry Highway in Carrollwood.
Inside, a masked man who had climbed through a broken window confronted them, authorities said. He told them to put cash in a pillowcase.
He took one teller's car keys but couldn't start the car, so he ran a few hundred yards north to an office park.
There, he smashed through the glass panel in the front door of chiropractor Scott Hegseth's office.
As the receptionist and a patient screamed, Hegseth tackled the intruder. The man stabbed Hegseth with a screwdriver, inflicting two small punctures to his arm and back, authorities said. Then he ran out with the keys to the patient's Lexus and drove off.
He didn't get far. Near Dale Mabry and Fletcher Avenue, a dye pack exploded inside the pillowcase. The robber ditched the car and ran.
Finding the abandoned Lexus, deputies brought in a bloodhound named Ruby. The tracking dog led them about a half-mile to Nundy Road, Robinson's street.
Within minutes, the street filled up with sheriff's cruisers. Deputies fanned out, knocking on doors.
At Robinson's home, his girlfriend told deputies she was alone, sheriff's Capt. J.R. Burton said. A little later, deputies returned to do a safety check at the house and asked if they could look around.
Inside, they found Robinson coming out of the shower, Burton said. He fit the description of the robber. They also found business cards from local banks at the house.
Finally, they brought the chiropractor's receptionist to the scene. She identified Robinson as the man who stabbed her boss.
"We pursued this case in good faith," Burton said. "We followed evidence where it took us, and when we had probable cause, we acted on probable cause."
Robinson said he was innocent. And he repeated it in the months that followed.
"He was very firm about it, but he was very respectful," said prosecutor Matthew Smith, who remembered Robinson from one of his three DUIs. (Robinson's record also includes convictions on charges of theft, battery, trespassing and driving with a suspended license.)
Robinson declined to comment for this article, saying he was in touch with a lawyer. But in two letters to Circuit Judge Ronald Ficarrotta, he said the case threatened everything he had.
Robinson said his parents raised him to understand the value of education. He said he went to Tampa Catholic High School, attended Tulane and Dillard universities and served in the U.S. Army. He has worked as a loan analyst, mortgage broker, event promoter and, more recently, a self-employed detailer, according to jail records.
Robinson wrote that he had a fiancee, a 3-year-old daughter and an 18-year-old son he was helping to prepare for college. But the false allegations made him feel violated, he said.
"Instead of the facts being adjusted to fit the theories," he wrote, "the theories need to be adjusted to fit the facts."
That, officials say, is exactly what happened.
• • •
After Robinson's arrest, investigators sent samples of DNA evidence to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for analysis.
But the turnaround wasn't immediate, and on Jan. 5, there was another robbery.
As in the first holdup, the robber entered the American Momentum Bank on N Florida Avenue through a broken window and waited for employees to arrive. He also demanded an employee's car.
Sheriff's detectives knew Robinson didn't commit the second robbery. Could he have worked with someone else? Or was he innocent?
"If we have the wrong man in jail, we take that very, very seriously," Burton said. Investigators contacted prosecutors and made "every effort" to speed up the DNA analysis.
The robber picked up the pace, too.
On Jan. 9, it was a SunTrust Bank in Temple Terrace. He made off with $8,900 and an employee's vehicle.
On Feb. 17, a robber stole $40,593 from a Wachovia Bank in Temple Terrace. As in the previous three holdups, the thief broke in before the bank opened and waited for tellers to arrive.
Within days, lab results gave detectives a break.
No DNA from Robinson — by then released on his own recognizance at the request of prosecutors — was found on the pillowcase from the first robbery.
But DNA from someone else — an ex-convict named Michael P. Weston — turned up on a mask discarded at the second bank.
On Feb. 19, detectives arrested Weston, who told investigators he committed all four robberies and worked alone.
Burton said the system worked.
He can't say what Ruby the bloodhound tracked from the Lexus to Robinson's neighborhood. But he does say the dog has often found missing people deputies couldn't.
He also said deputies acted on "reasonable suspicion" when they returned to Robinson's home and found him inside. There were similarities in appearance: Weston and Robinson are both in their early 40s and bald, with goatees. Robinson is three inches taller and 20 pounds heavier.
Plus investigators had what seemed to be a solid eyewitness identification and the business cards that suggested an interest in banks.
"Had I been out there under these circumstances, I would have done the same thing, and I'm a 30-year law enforcement officer," Burton said. "Should we have done anything differently? I can't say that we should have."
• • •
Chiropractor Scott Hegseth said he was surprised at how strong the case against Robinson looked and how quickly it fell apart.
"It just seemed so cut and dried," he said. "Thank God we have DNA now."
But there is one more twist.
If anyone can appreciate the time Robinson spent in jail saying he didn't do it, it might be the man who replaced him there.
Weston, 44, of Tampa, now faces numerous counts of armed robbery, carjacking, armed burglary, armed kidnapping, aggravated battery and being a felon in possession of a firearm. He is being held without bail.
It is not his first time in jail. He was released from state prison in March 2008 after serving 20 months for burglary, grand theft and aggravated assault.
And in 2003, authorities arrested Weston on charges that he robbed a dry cleaner at gunpoint.
But the victim described a robber taller and heavier than Weston. And his attorney challenged the photo lineup used to identify him.
Weston passed three polygraphs. Prosecutors dropped the charges.
And after eight months, as fellow inmates applauded, Weston walked out of jail a free man.
Times researcher John Martin and staff writer Arleen Spenceley contributed to this report.