Crime and Punishment Death Penalty

21 Wrongful Years – and Nearly 20 More -UPDATED

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This story seemed like a good one to post
along with the information below on Schwarzenegger’s attempt to end California’s 15 month death penalty moratorium.

It takes place in Oklahoma, not California
and has to do with a prosecutor bent on conviction, damn the facts, together with a police lab analyst who would lie, destroy evidence and falsify test results to give the prosecutor whatever he needed to win at trial.

This win-at-all-costs prosecutor kept Curtis Edward McCarty locked up for 21 years, 16 of them on death row. McCarty is the 201 person to be cleared in the US through DNA evidence. He was finally released just after noon this past Friday.

Robert H. Macy, was the Oklahoma County District Attorney
who prosecuted McCarty in both of his trials. Over his career, Macy has sent 73 people to death row – more than any other prosecutor in the nation – and 20 of them have been executed. Macy has said publicly that he believes executing an innocent person is a sacrifice worth making in order to keep the death penalty in the United States.

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UPDATE: Yesterday, one more man, Byron Halsey, was released after nearly two decades in prison for the rape and murder of two New Jersey children (The jury declined to give him the death penalty, although prosecutors pushed for it.). Now DNA shows it was likely the neighbor, a sex offender, who committed the crimes. Mr. Halsey, a man with a 6th grade education and severe learning disabilities, signed a confession after 30 hours of interrogation. (Here’s the NY Times article.)

What is it exactly that we gain from the death penalty? Somebody tell me please again because I keep forgetting.

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Here are some snips from the Innocence Project’s press release on the McCarty case:

In 1986, McCarty was convicted of a 1982 murder in Oklahoma City and sentenced to die. Citing misconduct by the prosecutor and a police lab analyst, the Court of Criminal Appeals overturned the conviction, and McCarty was retried in 1989. He was again convicted and sentenced to death. In 1995, the appeals court upheld his conviction but threw out his death sentence; in 1996, he was sentenced to death again. In 2005, the Court of Criminal Appeals again overturned his conviction, citing the continued pattern of government misconduct – and new DNA tests showing that semen recovered from the victim did not come from McCarty…..

…Macy’s conduct in prosecuting McCarty was singled out in the Court of Criminal Appeals ruling that overturned McCarty’s first conviction; that ruling noted that the case was “replete with error” and referred to Macy’s conduct as “improper” and “unprofessional.

“Every piece of evidence in this case, including evidence that was used improperly to secure convictions, now shows Curtis McCarty’s innocence,” said Colin Starger, the Innocence Project Staff Attorney on the case

His misconduct was compounded when he relied on Joyce Gilchrist, a police lab analyst who falsified test results and hid or destroyed evidence in order to help secure McCarty’s convictions…

Gilchrist initially said hairs from the crime scene definitely did not match McCarty, then changed her records and testimony to say they definitely matched him (years later, Gilchrist either hid or destroyed those hairs when they were sought for DNA testing). The prosecution also claimed that semen on the victim’s body came from McCarty, while DNA testing now shows that it did not.

“For anyone who believes the death penalty is being carried out appropriately in this country, and anyone who believes that prosecutors and government witnesses can always be relied on to pursue the truth, this case is a wake-up call,” said Peter Neufeld, Co-Director of the Innocence Project.

Yep, that’s kinda how I saw it.

5 Comments

  • This is no different than a policeman shooting an innocent victim–just slower. People do wrong on both sides of the justice system. The solution isn’t taking away guns from the police or prosecution power from the state, but it lies in getting those responsible for their duties to do them properly rather than not at all.

  • Framed, but Guilty?

    Yes, it appears that Joyce Gilchrist the Forensic Chemist doctored or lost or destroyed trial evidence that was used to convict McCarty 20 years ago.

    However, Judge Twyla Mason Gray said “that although the law required her to dismiss the murder charge, she believed McCarty bore some responsibility for the victim’s death.”

    District Attorney David Prater said he also believes McCarty was involved in the crime.

    The victim was 18-year-old Pamela Willis, the daughter of a police officer.

    http://www.truthinjustice.org/gilchrist3.htm

  • Pamela Willis – Gang Raped and Murdered

    The DNA tests do not exonerate Defendant, however they do show that it is not Defendant’s sperm found in and on the victim… That Defendant’s DNA was not found in the vaginal sample does not exonerate Defendant but it is certainly another piece of evidence from which the finder of fact can evaluate the totality of the evidence… That the Defendant was not the individual who left sperm in and on the victim would have changed the State’s theory of the case and would have been critical to the jury.

    We agree. If Petitioner acted with an accomplice, as theorized and argued at trial, the absence of his sperm on the victim (assuming the victim was raped by the person or persons who killed her) is not, in and of itself, exculpatory.

    http://wyomcases.courts.state.wy.us/applications/oscn/DeliverDocument.asp?CiteID=443249

  • Off topic but related to an recent post on wildfires…this morning I stepped out to the smell of strong smoke and wondered what was its source. Then, the morning news showed that smoke from the fires in south Georgia and Florida have made it past Atlanta and Birmingham–hundreds of miles away. It’s even affecting the take-off and landing separations at the airports. Fortunately, thunderstorms are moving in. I hope the California fires are being controlled now.

  • Curtis bragged about his involvement in her murder to a number of people. He lied to the police about where he was during that time, and changed his story repeatedly. One of his stories to the police was that he was there with a friend, but his friend did it not him. He used that excuse because it worked once before. He took the police to the body of a 7 year old girl that had been gang raped and beaten to death with a baseball bat. He said his “friend” forced him to unwillingly watch this crime, and then blackmailed him to drive around with this poor battered child’s body for several days before burying her in a gravel pit. He also was convicted for a very traumatizing rape against a 14 year old girl. This was all done in just a few short years, and there is far more that happened that he never got in trouble for. You can be sure of that. It is a shame that the evidence was damaged because this man is a menace. It is good that he was off the streets during these years because more children would have been hurt. Let’s just hope the years have numbed his libido and he won’t be involved in the rape and murder of any more young girls.

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