CRIMINAL JURISDICTION

Criminal Law Blog by Defense Lawyer John Floyd and Mr. Billy Sinclair

August 1, 2010

MISTAKEN IDENTIFICATIONS SENT TWO INNOCENT MEN TO PRISON

Suggestive Police Procedures and Mistaken Identification Resulted in Two More Wrongful Convictions and Incarcerations, One for 27 Years

By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

Our criminal justice system is flawed. Its imperfections can be found in the 255 DNA exonerations of innocent offenders and the 138 people released from death row since 1973 in this country. But, paradoxically, its perfection lies in its willingness and ability to correct the imperfections brought about by human mistake. According to the New York-based Innocence Project, mistaken identification is the “greatest cause for wrongful convictions,” playing a role in 75 percent of the nation’s DNA exonerations. Twice this year we have posted pieces dealing with the dangers, and, yes, tragedies caused by, the mistaken pointed finger (here and here).

Two recent Harris County cases involving wrongful convictions of innocent men brought about because of mistaken identification illustrate not only the tragedy but just how easy it for an innocent man to be sent to prison, especially with emotionally charged crimes such as sexual assault. The first case brought to the public’s attention by the Houston Chronicle (here, here, here, and here) was Allen Wayne Porter who was convicted of rape and robbery in 1991. The case from the outset had some strange twists and turns.

In June 1990, three armed masked men invaded a Houston apartment where they terrorized and robbed its four occupants, and also raped its two female occupants. The apartment reportedly was the residence of a known drug dealer and the armed intruders were looking for $30,000 in cash. The leader of the trio was Porter’s nephew, a man named Jimmy Hatton. Another man, though never charged with the crime, named Perry Harrison would later admit to being one of the other two men who accompanied Hatton. The robbers were driven to the drug dealer’s apartment by Hatton’s former wife, Stephanie Wallace-Venters.

Hatton was arrested shortly after the home invasion. He was put on trial in December 1990. He was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Porter attended the trial and was seen by one of the rape victims who immediately identified him as one of her attackers. Porter was arrested, put to trial in 1991, and, like his nephew, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

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July 29, 2010

CAMERON TODD WILLINGHAM: IMPROPER OR WRONGFUL CONVICTION?

Texas Forensic Science Commission Concludes Flawed Science Used In Trial That Led To Conviction and Execution

By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

It was December 1991 in Corsicana, Texas. Cameron Todd Willingham was alone in his residence with his three small children—Amber 2, and one-year-old twins, Karmon and Kameron. A fire broke out in the residence. Willingham managed to escape the fire. The three children did not, dying a horrible death trapped in the flames that quickly engulfed the residence. Willingham was immediately targeted as a suspect for arson murder. He was indicted on January 8, 1992. After turning down an opportunity to plead guilty for a life sentence, he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death in August 1992. He was executed on February 17, 2004, angrily telling all those present that he was an innocent man. The political and media fallout from Willingham’s execution began before his remains were laid to rest. The case’s controversial history can be found on Billy Sinclair’s blog here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. But essentially Willingham was convicted and executed because state officials involved in the case—and with a lot of help from the condemned inmate himself—successfully portrayed him as a “monster” throughout the trial and execution process. The basis for this portrait was:

  • According to neighbors who witnessed the fire at the Willingham residence, he “crouched down” in his front yard and refused to make any effort to rescue his children from the fire despite repeated pleas by neighbors for him to do so. These statements, of course, influenced arson investigators at the scene of the fire to conclude Willingham must have had something to do with the fire.
  • When the fire blew out the windows of the house, Willingham reported hollered out concern about his car which was parked close to the residence. Witnesses said he jumped up, ran toward it, and moved it away from the house so it would not be damaged by the fire.
  • Willingham did not express any grief over the loss of his children at the fire scene or at the hospital after the fire.
  • Willingham reportedly expressed upset to firefighters at the scene that his dart board had been lost in the fire.
  • The morning after the fire, which was Christmas Eve, Willingham and his wife went to their burnt out house and were seen by neighbors laughing as they pored through the debris with loud music blaring from their nearby vehicle.
  • A neighbor testified that Willingham had once beaten his pregnant wife in an effort to induce an abortion, but his wife testified at the trial and disputed the neighbor’s claim by saying Willingham had never beaten her, much less when she was pregnant.
  • Another witness said he once saw Willingham slap his wife, but Willingham’s wife denied the incident ever happened.
  • Willingham reportedly bragged to a friend that he once brutally killed a dog.
  • Willingham reportedly told a “jailhouse snitch” that he killed his children to cover up evidence of abuse. Willingham’s wife, however, testified that her husband never abused the children.
  • Dr. James Grigson, a prosecution “expert,” testified at Willingham’s trial, telling the jury that Willingham was a violent sociopath who did not have a conscience and had no regard for other people’s property or for other human beings (even though there was nothing in Willingham’s criminal history to support this violent assessment).
  • In April 1986 Willingham was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon and public intoxication. He was sentenced to four days in the county jail, and ordered to pay a fine and court costs.
  • In May 1986 Willingham was arrested for second degree burglary. He was placed on probation and assigned to a Non-Violent Intermediate Offender Act.
  • In May 1986 Willingham was again arrested: this time for entering a building with unlawful intent and contributing to the delinquency of a minor (supplying paint to a 12-year-old to sniff). He was sentenced to 15 days in the county jail, ordered to pay restitution, and placed on probation for six months.
  • In November 1986 Willingham was arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor (supplying paint to a 12-year-old and an 11-year-old to sniff). He was sentenced to 60 days in the county jail.
  • In April 1987 Willingham was arrested for grand larceny. He was sentenced to 60 days in the county jail and placed on two years probation.
  • In November 1988 Willingham was arrested for driving under the influence of drugs (sniffing paint). He was sentenced to one year probation on the condition that he would check into an in-patient rehabilitation program for paint abuse.
  • In February 1989 Willingham was arrested for shoplifting. His probations for the previous 1987 grand larceny and 1988 DUI convictions were revoked and he was placed in a special boot camp program, given a 2-year sentence with all but 74 days suspended on the conditions that 1) he complete a substance abuse program, 2) attend AA once a week, and 3) undergo urinalysis every week and a half.

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July 6, 2010

A DEFENSE ATTORNEY’S NARROW MARGIN FOR ERROR

Filed under: Houston Criminal Lawyer — Tags: , , , , , — johntfloyd @ 5:21 pm

Ineffective Assistance of Counsel: Criminal Defense Lawyer’s Questions about Defendant’s Post Arrest Silence Opens Door to Cross Examination
By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

Criminal defendants have a Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel in criminal prosecutions against them. The United States Supreme in 1984 handed down Strickland v. Washington which set forth the constitutional standard a criminal defendant must satisfy in order to establish that he/she was not effectively represented by their attorney. First, the defendant must prove that the defense attorney’s performance “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,” and, second, the defendant must prove that counsel’s deficient performance so prejudiced his/her defense that the guilty verdict is unreliable and fundamentally unfair.

Every defense attorney walking into a criminal trial does so with the explicit understanding that his/her actions throughout the trial will be the subject to second-guessing should the result prove unfavorable to the defendant. That’s why the Supreme Court underscored the Strickland decision with the caveat to all state and federal courts reviewing ineffective assistance claims that a defense attorney’s tactical and strategical choices are presumed effective and insulated from second-guessing and hindsight. The Court specifically stated that “[n]o particular set of detailed rules for counsel’s conduct can satisfactorily take account of the variety of circumstances faced by defense counsel or the range of legitimate decisions regarding how best to represent a criminal defendant.”

Still, a defense attorney must recognize that he/she has a narrow margin for error. That’s what happened with the defense attorney who represented Wendell Keith White in a 1998 murder trial. In April of that year White went to Koach’s Club where a pool tournament was underway. One of the tournament’s contestants was Tracey Johnson who was at the club with a large group of friends, including Latasha Vasquez. At some point during tournament play Johnson stepped away from a pool table leaving her custom cue stick behind. Upon her return, Johnson found White using the cue stick without her permission and hitting it against the table. Enraged, she began cursing White before the bartender told her calm down and not to cause any trouble. White apologized to Johnson and bought her and her entourage drinks.

The club closed at 2:00 a.m. Shortly before closing time a sequence of events took place which were hotly contested by the parties involved. Johnson said White came up behind her and rubbed up against her as he grabbed her breasts. That groping incident triggered a second cursing outburst with Johnson calling White “just about every name in the book.” Although there was no physical contact between the two parties, one of Johnson’s friends had to restrain her by pulling her away from White. Johnson went outside in the parking lot where she was joined by a large gathering of friends.

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May 18, 2010

TWO MORE DNA EXONERATIONS

Criminal Defense Lawyers Must Never Give up, Never Lose Faith That Justice Will Ultimately Prevail

By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

There have been at least 254 DNA exonerations in this country, according to the Innocence Project of New York. Each new DNA exoneration cast a dark shadow over the nation’s criminal justice system, particularly its judicial system. These exonerations are not only a barometer for measuring the imperfections of our system of justice but the failings of its adversarial nature either through law enforcement misconduct or “tunnel vision,” prosecutorial zeal or ineffective defense representation. It is a shame each of us involved the justice system must endure, a constant reminder that we can all do better; that we must do better.

The latest two DNA exonerations—one in New York, the other in Ohio—really underscore that point. In November 1988, Viola Manville, a 74-year-old grandmother, was bludgeoned to death in Monroe County, New York. The elderly woman was attacked as she walked near her home in Hilton, a Rochester suburb.

In July 1991 Frank Sterling, a truck driver, was questioned about the Manville murder. After an all-night interrogation session (which had been preceded by a 36-hour work shift), Sterling confessed to the brutal murder. He later recanted the confession, claiming he slipped into a “hypnotic state” and simply recounted details about the crime given to him by the police. He was convicted and sentenced to 25 years to life in the New York prison system.

In 1994 Mark Christie was imprisoned for the strangulation death of a four year old neighbor, Kali Ann Poulton. It would prove to be a significant development in the Sterling case.

Sterling’s attorney, Donald Thompson, had worked since the mid-1990s to establish his client’s innocence. In 2004 he managed to enlist the support of the Innocence Project to help him. The project obtained DNA evidence from Manville’s clothes, and while it was not a definitive match, the match was sufficient to identify Mark Christie as the potential murderer. After two interview sessions with John G. Reid & Associates, a private investigation firm that specializes in interrogation techniques and hired by the Innocence Project, Christie confessed, providing details only the killer would know.

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April 16, 2010

TEXAS COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS STRIKES BALANCE FOR RULE OF LAW

Filed under: Homicide Crimes Lawyer — Tags: , , , , , — johntfloyd @ 12:53 pm

Wilson v. State; Court Reverses Conviction Obtained After Finding Investigator Used False Fingerprint Lab Report to Obtain Confession

By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

It was New Year’s Day, 2006. Ronald Wilson called 911 to report he had discovered a man’s body on a San Antonio street while walking with his son. The police responded to the call and found the body of Amos Gutierrez who had been killed with a single fatal gunshot. The police also found a magazine clip near Gutierrez’s body. The investigation into Gutierrez’s death quickly revealed information implicating Wilson in the crime. He was arrested on misdemeanor charges. 1/

A San Antonio police detective named Roberts was assigned to the case. One of his preliminary tasks was to interrogate the suspect. He was an experienced law enforcement officer. He knew both state and federal courts have sanctioned the use of deception and trickery by law enforcement to get a suspect to confess to a crime. 2/ Roberts decided to employ a extraordinary kind of deception on Wilson.  He used an old crime lab report as a template to create a false crime lab report on his computer. He changed the heading on the old report to read, “Bexar County Criminal Investigation Laboratory.” He then typed in the following information: “Results: Examination of Item I revealed the Two Latent Prints lifted from the Firearm Magazine belong to those of Ronald Wilson, a Black Male with the date of birth 11-13-84.” The false report listed Wilson’s city, county, state and federal law enforcement identification numbers.

Armed with the impressive albeit false crime lab report, Roberts entered the interrogation room at 10:02 p.m. He asked Wilson if he had touched anything at the crime scene. Wilson repeatedly said he had not. At 10:13 p.m. Roberts showed the report to Wilson who, while shaking his head in disbelief, studied its contents. Roberts told the suspect “they had his fingerprints” along with other incriminating evidence which the detective began to recite. At 10:17 Wilson interrupted the detective to say he didn’t how his prints wound up on the clip. Not deterred, Roberts continued to press Wilson, recounting for the suspect at 10:20 p.m. the laundry list of evidence against him beginning with the fingerprint report. “[I] can’t get over the prints,” Roberts said at 10:24 p.m. “Let me remind you, I’ve got that report. Those guys are experts. They’re like DNA experts. They’re like experts. What they say is the truth” Wilson put his hands on his head and looked down, saying: “Okay. Okay.” 3/

Detective Roberts apparently was not aware of Article 37.09(a)(2) of the Texas Penal Code which states that if a person, “knowing that an investigation is pending or in progress, makes, presents, or uses a document with knowledge of its falsity and acts with the intent to affect the course or outcome of the investigation,” he has violated Texas law. And the detective must not have been aware of Article 37.10 of the Texas Penal Code which provides: “A person commits an offense if he makes, presents, or use any record, document, or anything with knowledge of its falsity and with the intent that [it] be taken as a genuine governmental record.”

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March 31, 2010

MIRANDA TAKES MORE HITS FROM SUPREME COURT

Florida v. Powell and Maryland v. Shatzer:  Why Criminal Suspects Should Never Talk to the Police Without an Attorney

By: Houston Criminal Defense Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

In December 2008 police officer Timothy Abernethy was chasing a suspect through a Houston apartment complex when the suspect, M. J. Landor, reportedly fired several shots at the officer. According to official reports, one of the bullets knock the 11-year police veteran to the ground at which time Landor approached him and shot him in the head. A massive police manhunt was undertaken to apprehend Landor, a parole violator, who was captured several hours later. Landor reportedly gave the police a detailed confession to the crime during several hours of police questioning.

Landor’s capital murder trial got underway recently with the Harris County District Attorney’s Office seeking the death penalty. Laine Lindsey, Landor’s attorney, filed a motion to suppress the videotaped confession his client gave to the police. Evidence presented at the hearing, and reported in the Houston Chronicle, revealed that the police questioned Landor for approximately four hours before they actually began to videotape the suspect’s statement. Landor told the court he falsely confessed to shooting Abernethy because he was afraid the police were going to kill him. Assistant District Attorney Maria McAnulty dismissed Landor’s testimony as being untruthful, telling the court the videotape clearly shows the suspect was advised of right to remain silent.

Lindsey pressed the court to suppress the confession because the police, three of whom were in the interrogation room and a larger group standing outside the room, questioned Landor for more than four hours before turning on the recorder and videotaping just 20 minutes of the interrogation. During the 20-minute taped session, Landor said the shooting of Abernethy was a “freak accident;” that he fell while being chased by the officer and the gun went off at which time he kept shooting. McAnulty called several police officers who testified about what Landor reportedly told them when the interrogation session was not being taped; specifically, that Landor admitted he walked over and shot Abernethy in the head as he lay wounded on the ground.

Given the discrepancies between what Landor told the police during the 20-minute videotaped session and what he reportedly told the police during the four-hour non-taped session, Lindsey had every reason to press for the suppression of the all statements made by his client. Not unexpectedly, however, State District Judge Michael McSpadden denied the defense attorney’s suppression motion.

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February 24, 2010

A TIP OF THE HAT FOR A JOB WELL DONE

Court Recommends New Trial for Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Capital Murder After Finding State’s Expert Testimony Incompetent

By: Houston Criminal Lawyer John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

We have blogged rather extensively about the “convict at any costs” agenda which has ruled the Harris County District Attorney’s Office for the past three decades. “Convict at any costs” means the frequent use of fabricated forensic evidence, knowingly allowing perjured testimony into a criminal trial, withholding exculpatory evidence from defendants (particularly those known to be innocent), and injecting race in its death penalty decision-making.

These experiences with the Harris County District Attorney’s Office do not give rise to much hope that a District Attorney could be an example of courage. But that is precisely what we found in the recent actions of former Montgomery County District Attorney Michael McDougal, who lost his bid for re-election to Brett Ligon. Nearly 12 years ago McDougal’s office prosecuted Neil Hampton Robbins for capital murder in connection with the death of Robbins’ former girlfriend’s 17-month-old daughter, Tristen Rivet. Robbins was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the toddler’s death.

Robbins’ conviction was based in large part of the testimony then Harris County Medical Examiner, Dr. Patricia Moore. We have also blogged in the past about Dr. Moore’s history of providing false or discredited testimony in child death cases. http://www.johntfloyd.com/comments/september09/17.htm On January 22, 2010, the proverbial chickens came home to roost in the Neil Robbins case. Montgomery County District Court Judge K. Michael Mayes ruled that Dr. Moore had given inept testimony during Robbins’ May 1998 murder trial. Judge Mayes’ concluded the former medical examiner was too incompetent “to offer objective and pathologically sound opinions on the cause and manner of [the] death [of Tristen Rivet].”

In May of 2007 Dr. Moore tried to clean up the testimony she had given in the Robbins case by reviewing her findings that Tristen Rivet’s death was a homicide. Based on unidentified information she said she had not reviewed in her original examination of Rivet’s body (after which she found the toddler’s death was a homicide caused by a compressed skull), Dr. Moore changed her “cause of death” finding from homicide to “undetermined.”

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October 24, 2009

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE – A SENSITIVE SUBJECT TO APPROACH

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month: Friends and Family Need to Get Involved to Stop the Cycle of Abuse, Save a Life

By: Houston Criminal Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

This past August Christiana “Tina” Guerra Lewis became another statistic; a victim of a social epidemic far more deadly than the HINI virus. The night before her death, according to the Houston Chronicle, Lewis asked her mother to go with her the next day to get a restraining order against R.P., a man with a lengthy criminal record with at least two dozen arrests including an assault on a family member and injuring a child.

Lewis did not live to see the next day.  She became one of the every three women murdered each day in this country by their spouses or intimate partners, according to a recent Chronicle op-ed article by Rebecca L. White, president and CEO of the Houston Area Women’s Center, and James L. Postl, former CEO of Pennzoil Quaker State. Police charged that R.P. stabbed Lewis numerous times in the neck in her trailer residence in Channelview.

R.P. has a long history of domestic violence. He was committed to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice on at least four occasions, the last commitment being for an assault on a family member. He came from a family environment of domestic violence. In 2000 his mother was convicted of killing her live-in boyfriend by dropping a 40-lb cinder block on his head.

While the Lewis family told the Chronicle that Lewis was probably unaware of R.P’s extensive criminal record and history of domestic violence, she was aware of his propensity for violence. The Chronicle reported that four days before R.P killed her, he broke into Lewis’ residence, beat her up, raped her, and stole money from her. He warned her not to call the police, threatening to kill her family if she did. She didn’t. She even refused to go to the hospital for treatment, telling a sister: “For what? They’re not going to do anything.” (more…)

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