Sunday, May 18, 2014

Brooklyn man cleared of murder charges from 2006 fire

From the NY Daily News:

BY Oren Yaniv
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Friday, May 16, 2014, 8:55 PM


Brooklyn prosecutors officially cleared a man of murder charges relating to a 2006 inferno he was accused of igniting based on an uncorroborated account by someone who claimed he overheard him confess.

Samuel Martinez, 40, thanked his lawyer Amy Rameau Friday and expressed hope the real perpetrator responsible for the four tragic deaths will be caught.

The expected outcome came three weeks after the shaky prosecution collapsed, which was first reported by the Daily News.

Other than our main witness,” assistant district attorney John Holmes said in Brooklyn Supreme Court, “there are no witnesses or eyewitnesses, no physical or other evidence that helps to support that assertion.”

hat witness had claimed he was in a bodega months after the fire when he heard Martinez admit his role to a pal.
 
The only other pillar of the 2012 indictment was a prison snitch who became compromised after a history of delusions and homicidal ideations was uncovered.

The blaze in a Crown Heights tenement claimed the life of a mother, her two young children and another female resident.

Martinez was alleged to have started it after a dispute with a drug dealer. But the fire was one of a string of arsons in the area for which he was never connected.

“The families of the victims — I hope they have justice,” Martinez told the judge.

He is still jailed for an unrelated assault case in the Bronx but his mother said they hope he will soon be able to make bail.

Ken Thompson's Review of Scarcella Cases Produces Its First Three Exonerations

Sorry this is so late. Better late than never, right?

From the village voice:


Last year, then-Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes announced that his office would review around 50 cases involving former-detective Louis Scarcella. Scarcella's alleged dirty tricks included coercing confessions, coaching witnesses to lie, and hiding evidence favorable to a suspect.
Hynes, a 24-year incumbent, lost re-election in the fall largely because of his role in overseeing those and other cases involving possible prosecutorial misconduct. The man who replaced him, Ken Thompson, campaigned on cleaning up Hynes's mess. Within his first five months on the job, he exonerated three inmates wrongfully convicted during the '80s and '90s. Those cases, however, were not part of the Scarcella files.

So last month, around 50 protesters took the steps of city hall, calling on Thompson to speed up his review of the Scarcella cases. Perhaps the voices got to him or perhaps the timing was coincidental. But, as the New York Times reported on Monday night, Thompson has announced the first three exonerees from the Scarcella review: Darryl Austin, Alvena Jennette, and Robert Hill.

Austin and Jennette had been convicted of killing Ronnie Durant in 1985. The investigation went nowhere for two years. Then Scarcella took over the case and he quickly located an eye witness: Theresa Gomez claimed to have seen Austin and Jennette commit the murder.
Meanwhile, prosecutors did not disclose to defense attorneys a police interview with two witnesses familiar with the crime who said that Austin and Jennette were not the killers.
Even though Gomez's testimony included details inconsistent with the physical evidence, it was enough to persuade the jury.

Gomez, the New York Times revealed last year, offered damning witness statements for six murder cases that Scarcella worked on.

Hill's case was one of those as well.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Whose life HASN'T Scarcella ruined? I mean honestly...

Convicts Say New York City Detective Framed Them

Scarcella gives Hynes and Vecchione a run for their money for the worst person in law enforcement award

I sincerely hope that as more and more wrongful convictions come to light there is some serious discussion amongst our policy makers regarding accountability. This is an epidemic in not only our city, but our country. Although I will say, the sheer volume of wrongful conviction cases continuing to come out of Brooklyn is astounding. 

In any event, here's two recent  NYT articles relating to Scumcella:


Notes Found in Review of Police Work Could Exonerate 2 Convicted in Killing
“Scarcella framed me; that I knew already. But that they had the name of another person as the actual murderer? That had me in shock.” — Alvena Jennette

DAMON WINTER / THE NEW YORK TIMES
By FRANCES ROBLES
April 8, 2014

A review of homicide convictions stemming from the work of Louis Scarcella, a Brooklyn detective accused of framing suspects, has turned up a stash of old handwritten police notes that could exonerate two men convicted of a murder in 1985. One of the men served 21 years in prison; the other died behind bars.

The notes were in a file tucked away at Police Headquarters and were written by the first detective assigned to the case. They show that two previously undisclosed eyewitnesses saw the September 1985 killing of a man named Ronnie Durant, but they named killers different from the two men who were convicted. The notebook could have affected the verdict; not turning it over to defense lawyers decades ago is a serious violation of the rules of criminal procedure, experts said.
It was the first significant revelation disclosed by the Brooklyn district attorney’s office in the 11 months since it began a wide-ranging investigation into the work of Mr. Scarcella, who worked the streets of Brooklyn in the 1980s and 1990s and is now retired. One of the most successful detectives in New York City history, he has been accused of a variety of infractions, including roughing up suspects, inventing confessions and even pulling informers out of prison to smoke crack and visit prostitutes or girlfriends.

Questions about Mr. Scarcella prompted the previous district attorney, Charles J. Hynes, to review all the murder cases in which Mr. Scarcella’s work resulted in a conviction. But the revelations were so damaging that they contributed to Mr. Hynes’s surprise defeat in both the primary and general election last year. He was beaten both times — once running as a Democrat and once as a Republican — by Kenneth P. Thompson. 

“Our prompt disclosure in this case to the defense counsel and to the court reflects our determination to review these cases thoroughly and with integrity,” Mr. Thompson, who took office on Jan. 1, said in a statement.

Mr. Thompson’s office disclosed the evidence in a letter to Brooklyn’s chief administrative judge, Matthew J. D’Emic. The letter, signed by Assistant District Attorney Jessica Wilson of the Conviction Review Unit, said the matter was under investigation and did not say what action prosecutors would take.

Mr. Durant, who was known as Pepper, was killed around 12:45 a.m. on Sept. 10, 1985. Witnesses said two men chased him from a spot known for drug dealing on Park Place in Crown Heights, shot him and stole the money from his pockets. He was 34.

The first witness to talk to the police was the victim’s nephew, who blamed two brothers, Alvena Jennette and Darryl Austin — known as Uni — and another man who was not charged. The case was dormant for two years because the district attorney had doubts about the nephew’s character, records show.

The notes show that the first detective assigned to the case, Bobby Jones, interviewed a witness who said that the brothers helped rob Mr. Durant but that another man shot him. Another witness interviewed seven months after the killing said Mr. Jennette and Mr. Austin were standing on a nearby stoop during the shooting but had nothing to do with it, the notes revealed.

The witness implicated another person and even gave Detective Jones the name and whereabouts of the person who had the gun.

“Uni was there, but he did not do anything,” Detective Jones wrote after showing a group of photos to the witness. 

“Alvina Jannette standing on stoop. Did not do anything.”

Mr. Scarcella, who in interviews has denied any wrongdoing, inherited the Durant case two years after the murder because it had gone cold. He solved it by producing testimony from Teresa Gomez, whom he had used in several prior cases. She identified the two brothers as the killers. With her testimony corroborating that of the victim’s nephew, and no mention of other witnesses, charges were filed. Both men were convicted and sentenced to 18 years to life in prison.

Mr. Jennette, 50, served almost 21 years in prison for the robbery and murder of Mr. Durant before he was released on parole in 2007. His co-defendant and brother died in prison at age 37.

Their case was reopened last year after The New York Times revealed that the two men were convicted largely on the word of Ms. Gomez, who had become a witness for Mr. Scarcella in as many as six murder cases.

“Scarcella framed me; that I knew already,” Mr. Jennette said. “But that they had the name of another person as the actual murderer? That had me in shock.”

Detective Jones, who could not be located for comment, testified at the trial and never mentioned these witnesses, Mr. Jennette said in a recent interview.

According to two sources familiar with the investigation, the Brooklyn district attorney’s office file did not contain the notebook belonging to Mr. Jones. It was not immediately clear who failed to turn it over to the district attorney’s office, or whether the prosecutor ever knew about it.

Lawyers for Mr. Scarcella, Alan M. Abramson and Joel S. Cohen, said there was no evidence that Mr. Scarcella ever had the notebook, and accused The Times of engaging in sensational coverage.

“Responsibility for turning potentially exculpatory material to the defense rests solely with the district attorney’s office and not with the case detective,” the lawyers said. “The coverage of Detective Scarcella has been fraught with factual errors, innuendo and misrepresentations.”

Since the 1963 Supreme Court ruling in Brady v. Maryland, prosecutors have been obligated to share exculpatory information with defense lawyers. Violations of this rule can cause convictions to be overturned.

Although prosecutors deemed responsible can be disciplined for such violations, it almost never occurs.

The assistant district attorney in the case, Eric Bjorneby, is now a judge in Nassau County. New York State judicial conduct rules say Mr. Bjorneby can still be disciplined.

Mr. Bjorneby was on vacation overseas and could not be reached for comment, a court spokesman said.

The responsibility to turn the information over fell squarely on the prosecutor, even if the information was at Police Headquarters, legal experts said.

“You can’t just stick your head in the sand and say if you don’t know it, you don’t have any obligation,” said Stephen Gillers, a legal ethics expert at New York University School of Law.

Mr. Jennette’s lawyer, Pierre Sussman, called the failure to disclose the evidence “reprehensible.”
 
Mr. Sussman represents another man, David Ranta, who in February received a $6.4 million settlement from the city after he served 23 years in prison in a murder case lawyers say Mr. Scarcella largely manufactured. The case was considered so egregious that the city comptroller settled it before a lawsuit was filed and without consulting the city attorney.

On Monday, the Brooklyn district attorney announced that a Harvard Law School professor, Ronald S. Sullivan Jr., had been hired to head the new Conviction Review Unit.

“They have information that could exonerate people, but they don’t give it to you,” Mr. Jennette said. “There are probably thousands of cases like mine.

 
Prisoner to Face Parole Board as Questions Grow About His Conviction 
 By: Francis Robles
April 13, 2014 

Robert Hill, a former Crown Heights drug dealer, was convicted of murder in 1988 on the word of a serial eyewitness hooked on crack.

Three other witnesses who insist Mr. Hill is innocent recently resurfaced, and defense lawyers have raised new challenges to the credibility of another witness who testified at the trial.

With questions about his conviction growing and with 28 of his 53 years spent behind bars, Mr. Hill is now among a growing number of convicts who hope the New York State Board of Parole will review their cases with a measure of skepticism and show mercy.

On Tuesday, the board will hear a petition from Mr. Hill. For the hearing, Mr. Hill’s lawyers presented an application explaining that Mr. Hill’s case is one of about 50 reopened last year by the Brooklyn district attorney’s office after allegations of misconduct against a police detective, Louis Scarcella, cast a shadow over convictions in many of Mr. Scarcella’s cases.

The petition and others like it have thrust the board into what some experts say is an awkward and perhaps inappropriate role. As more convictions come under scrutiny for police and prosecutorial misconduct, commissioners are being asked to revisit factual questions that are typically beyond the scope of their mandate.

With no action yet by the district attorney in the case of Mr. Hill, he and his lawyers are hoping the Parole Board will act.
“I am very frustrated,” Mr. Hill said in a telephone interview from Fishkill Correctional Facility. “After all this came out, I thought that I would be declared innocent from the court soon. I haven’t heard nothing. I’m stressed out.”

Although the parole strategy could work — one inmate in a Scarcella case was recently released after a petition similar to Mr. Hill’s — Parole Board members have voiced resistance.

In January, two parole commissioners balked when the state attorney general’s Conviction Review Bureau urged the board to release a Nassau County man, Ronald Bower, who had been convicted of sex offenses. One commissioner asked why prosecutors did not have the “fortitude” to exonerate the man and instead decided to saddle the Parole Board with making the tough call.

“It does put the Parole Board in a very bad position,” one of the parole commissioners, Lisa Beth Elovich, said in January, according to minutes of the hearing published by The Long Island Press.

The parole was granted, and Mr. Bower was released after 21 years in prison.

Although the parole board historically required inmates to express remorse for their crimes, an increasing awareness of wrongful convictions has opened the door for inmates to assert their innocence.

At his hearing, Mr. Hill will have to explain why he expressed remorse at two prior parole hearings. A lawyer for Mr. Hill said he did so because he believed that was a requirement for release. “It is unfortunate that our system of justice at times leads people to believe they have no choice but to admit to things they have not done,” said the lawyer, Sharon Katz, who is working free on Mr. Hill’s case.

The New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision does not track the number of inmates who claim innocence at their hearings. A spokesman for the agency declined to comment.

In January 1987, when Mr. Hill was a drug dealer known as Bobby Love, a man named Donald Manboardes turned up at Kings County Hospital with gunshot wounds. All the police knew was that someone had flagged a taxi in Crown Heights, put the wounded Mr. Manboardes in the car, and sent him on his own to get medical assistance. Mr. Manboardes died.
Mr. Hill was arrested a few months later and charged in the killing, after an unhappy customer of Mr. Hill’s told Detective Scarcella that she saw Mr. Hill shoot the victim on a Rogers Avenue corner and put him into a taxi with the help of a woman and two men.

The witness, Teresa Gomez, got the color of the cab and a few other important details wrong. When she took the stand in court, she was belligerent and answered basic biographical questions about herself incorrectly, the trial transcript shows.
Even the prosecutor once described her as a woman ravaged from head to toe by crack whom no one would ever find credible.

The jury did not know that Ms. Gomez had already testified as an eyewitness against Mr. Hill in a previous murder trial, in which he was acquitted.

She later testified against Mr. Hill’s two brothers, and was known to have offered information on countless neighborhood crimes in exchange for cash, according to former police supervisors in Brooklyn. In all, prosecutors say, she provided crucial testimony in at least six homicide cases, all of which were assigned to Detective Scarcella.

The doubts about Mr. Scarcella’s reliance on the same witness prompted Legal Aid Society lawyers to look further into the background of another woman who was a witness at Mr. Hill’s trial and who testified she overheard him boast that he had killed once before and could kill again.

The Legal Aid lawyers discovered that the woman testified in another trial less than a year after Mr. Hill’s conviction and that, in testimony very similar to what she gave against Mr. Hill, she told jurors that the defendant had said he had killed before and would kill again.

Both that witness and Ms. Gomez are now dead.

Mr. Hill admits that he put the dying man in a cab, but denies that he murdered him.

“I never killed nobody,” said Mr. Hill, who expressed regret for his past lifestyle.

Mr. Hill’s case was reopened last May as The New York Times was investigating the case and others in which Mr. Scarcella was accused of misconduct.

By then Mr. Scarcella had been accused by the Brooklyn district attorney of manufacturing a case against David Ranta, a man who spent 23 years in prison for a murder he almost certainly did not commit. Court records show Mr. Scarcella has been accused of making up confessions, roughing up suspects and taking informers out of jail and letting them smoke crack.

Mr. Scarcella has denied wrongdoing. His lawyers say that it is the detective who has been falsely accused.

“Despite New York Times stories to the contrary, no defendant investigated, interviewed or questioned by Mr. Scarcella, including David Ranta, has been exonerated or proven to be innocent,” his lawyers, Alan M. Abramson and Joel S. Cohen, said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for the Brooklyn district attorney, Kenneth P. Thompson, declined to say whether the office had taken a position on Mr. Hill’s parole.

Mr. Hill should be released because of his improving prison record and his deteriorating health, Ms. Katz said. Mr. Hill has multiple sclerosis.

Robert Dennison, a former Parole Board chairman who now works as an inmate advocate, said the previous admissions of guilt could be a tough hurdle for Mr. Hill. However, he noted that Sundhe Moses, another inmate convicted in a case investigated by Mr. Scarcella, was released after pleading innocence and documenting discrepancies in his case.

“The Parole Board is supposed to measure remorse, which is something that is very difficult to do when someone comes in and says, ‘Look, I’m not guilty, even though society found me guilty,’ ” said Mr. Dennison, who wrote a letter to the Parole Board on Mr. Hill’s behalf. “It puts him in a difficult, but not insurmountable, position.”

Correction: April 17, 2014
An article in some editions on Monday about the coming parole hearing for Robert Hill, whose conviction in the killing of Donald Manboardes is one of the cases reopened after allegations of misconduct against the detective Louis Scarcella, misstated the month and the year that Mr. Manboardes was fatally shot. It was January 1987, not December 1986.
 

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Man Wrongfully Convicted in 1989 Brooklyn Murder Is Set Free (NYT)

Yet another win for the good guys!!



His alibi was simple: He was in Orlando at the time of the shooting, on a family trip to Walt Disney World.
During the trial, Mr. Fleming’s lawyers gave evidence showing that he was in Orlando around the time of the murder — plane tickets and video footage and vacation photos from family members. But prosecutors argued he could have returned to Brooklyn and shot Mr. Alston, producing a list with 53 possible flights he could have taken, according to a document prepared by Mr. Fleming’s lawyers, Taylor Koss and Anthony Mayol. And they cast doubt on the testimony from Mr. Fleming’s family members about his whereabouts.

A woman who said she was an eyewitness, Jacqueline Belardo, identified Mr. Fleming as the killer. Though she recanted what she said before sentencing, saying she had identified Mr. Fleming in exchange for a dismissal of grand larceny charges against her, the prosecution contended that Ms. Belardo was lying, according to the document.
In June 2013, the Conviction Integrity Unit began examining Mr. Fleming’s conviction after investigators and lawyers for Mr. Fleming brought it the new witness statements. In November, the unit turned over to the defense police logs that it had come across during its look at the case. The logs showed that Ms. Belardo, the purported eyewitness, had been brought in after being found in a stolen van and charged with grand larceny; after several hours of questioning, she pointed to Mr. Fleming as the killer, according to the defense document. A little over an hour later, her charges were voided and she was released. Ms. Belardo still stands by her recantation, according to the document.
 
The Conviction Integrity Unit also turned over the phone receipt. At 9:27 p.m. on Aug. 14, 1989, Mr. Fleming had paid a phone bill at the Orlando Quality Inn, making it unlikely he could have made it back to Brooklyn in time for the 2:15 a.m. shooting on Aug. 15. But the receipt was not a part of trial evidence. Mr. Koss said at Tuesday’s hearing that Mr. Fleming had asked about the receipt at the time of the trial and that a detective at the trial was questioned about the receipt and said he did not recall recovering it. Investigators found the receipt in the case file last year.
 
Other new evidence was a report from the Orlando Police Department, which had looked into Mr. Fleming’s alibi at the New York Police Department’s request. The Orlando police interviewed Quality Inn staff members who remembered Mr. Fleming; at the trial, the only witnesses to vouch for Mr. Fleming’s presence in Orlando were family members.
 
It was the new documentary evidence that was most compelling in this case, said Mr. Hale, the assistant district attorney, specifically the receipt and the Orlando Police Department’s letter. “We, in looking at the evidence, do not believe we have the present ability to retry the defendant,” nor will the office be able to retry him in the future, Mr. Hale said.
 
As part of their investigation, the defense and prosecutors then reinterviewed witnesses to the murder, and their accounts pointed to a different suspect.
 
“They’re bringing my baby home,” said Mr. Fleming’s mother, Patricia Fleming, 72. An innocent man “did all this time,” she said. “It was hard on him and it was hard on me.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/09/nyregion/brooklyn-district-attorney-overturns-conviction-in-1989-murder.html?_r=0

Brooklyn DA Appoints New Head Of Conviction Review Unit

Via brooklynda.org:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 7, 2014

 
Kings County District Attorney Kenneth P.
Thompson Announces Harvard Law Professor Ronald S. Sullivan As New Chief of the Conviction Review Unit
Professor Sullivan Also Led Washington D.C.’s Public Defender Service

Brooklyn, NY. Kings County District Attorney Kenneth P. Thompson today named Harvard Law Professor Ronald S. Sullivan, Jr. as Special Counsel to the District Attorney for the revamped Conviction Review Unit (CRU). Professor Sullivan, who teaches at Harvard Law School and heads its Criminal Justice Institute, will guide the CRU, which has been tasked with the responsibility of conducting a thorough and fair reinvestigation of cases under review by the District Attorney’s Office. The CRU has recently been expanded and reorganized and consists of experienced prosecutors, investigators and support staff. They Unit will work in consultation with an outside independent panel of three attorneys, Bernard W. Nussbaum, Jennifer G. Rodgers and Gary S. Villanueva, who will provide assistance in evaluating the cases.

“I am pleased that Professor Sullivan has agreed to bring his considerable legal knowledge, experience and scholarship to lead the efforts of this very important Conviction Review Unit. The CRU has the crucial task of reexamining a number of cases to determine if justice was done and Professor Sullivan’s background and experience makes him an excellent choice to fill this essential role. We will continue our careful and deliberate review of these cases in our pursuit of justice and fairness,” said District Attorney Kenneth Thompson.

Professor Sullivan has been on the Harvard Law faculty since 2007 and teaches and writes in the areas of criminal law, criminal procedure, legal ethics and race theory. Prior to teaching at Harvard, Professor Sullivan served on the faculty of the Yale Law School, where, after his first year teaching, he won the law school’s award for outstanding teaching. Between the years 1995 and 2004, at different times, he served as Staff Attorney, General Counsel and eventually Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Washington D.C. Public Defender Service.

Professor Sullivan also served as Chief Counsel for the Orleans Public Defenders Board, where he designed an indigent defense delivery system for New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. In that role, he implemented a number of reforms that brought the office in compliance with relevant norms and standards for indigent defense. In addition, Professor Sullivan was the Chair and Founding Member of the Jamestown Project, a national, non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to creating, articulating, promoting and implementing new ideas for enriching American democracy. Professor Sullivan also has served as Liaison to the American Bar Association’s Standards Task Force on the Prosecution and Defense Function since 2006.

Professor Sullivan is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Morehouse College, and the Harvard Law School.

Brooklyn DA Drops Appeal in Habeas Corpus Case (New York Law Journal)

Another one for the good guys!

, New York Law Journal


At the direction of a new district attorney, Brooklyn prosecutors are dropping their challenge to a high-profile habeas corpus grant in a case that Eastern District Judge Nicholas Garaufis (See Profile) called "rotten from day one."
Last year, Garaufis ordered the release of William Lopez, who had served 23 years in prison for a murder he insists he did not commit. Garaufis later blocked the possibility of retrial because prosecutors in the office of former District Attorney Charles Hynes did not take "concrete and substantial steps" to retry Lopez within a 60-day deadline.
Hynes' office appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (NYLJ, Jan. 17, 2013; March 21, 2013).
But in March 26 court papers, District Attorney Kenneth Thompson moved for voluntary dismissal of the appeal.
With April 3 oral arguments approaching, the filing in Lopez v. Miller, 13-589 said, at Thompson's request, that the office had "conducted a thorough re-evaluation of the facts of this case. As a result of that re-evaluation, the District Attorney's office has concluded that there is a sufficient possibility that Lopez is not guilty of the crimes that are the subject of this habeas proceeding so as to render going forward with the consolidated appeal to this court contrary to the interest of justice."
Throughout his campaign to unseat the veteran D.A., Thompson raised the issue of questionable prosecutions. During one debate, Thompson challenged Hynes on whether he would apologize to Lopez, who was in the audience. Hynes would not comment, as the case was on appeal (NYLJ, August 23, 2013). The circuit has not yet ruled on Thompson's motion.
Richard Levitt of Levitt & Kaizer represented Lopez.
Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Leonard Joblove, chief of the office's appeals bureau, appeared for the prosecution.

Read more: http://www.newyorklawjournal.com/id=1202648904402/Brooklyn-DA-Drops-Appeal-in-Habeas-Corpus-Case#ixzz2yV0nwk49

Restoring Confidence In Brooklyn DA’s Office (The Jewish Week)

Minor oversight in forgetting to mention the dismissal of charges against Sam Kellner. If ever there was a man who knew what it was like to be stuck on the Charles Hynes Railroad, it's that guy.

This is an editorial from 4/2/2014:

The new Brooklyn district attorney, Ken Thompson, ended Sam Kellner’s three-year legal ordeal last month, dismissing his criminal case after a six-week investigation concluded that the witnesses against him “lacked credibility to such a degree” that the case could not be prosecuted. Kellner is the whistleblower from a chasidic community who pressed charges against Baruch Lebovits for alleged sexual abuse against Kellner’s young son. That brave act turned into a nightmare when Kellner himself was later charged with perjury and extortion.
According to Kellner’s attorneys, in a conference in chambers before the dismissal of those charges, the prosecutor handling the case told the judge that Kellner had been indicted on what was, in effect, manufactured and perjured testimony.
This was a conclusion The Jewish Week, through the meticulous reporting of special correspondent Hella Winston, reached over a year ago, based on an analysis of district attorney and court records, as well as her own extensive, independent investigation. All indications were that the case against Kellner was cooked up by powerful and well-connected supporters of Lebovits — a convicted chasidic child molester — to get him out of jail. That these supporters found such a willing ally in former district attorney Charles Hynes, under whose nose they had also successfully intimidated and then turned an alleged victim of Lebovits against Kellner, is perhaps the most disturbing aspect of this sordid affair.
During his run for office, Thompson made the issue of prosecutorial conduct a centerpiece of his campaign. He has begun putting together a special unit in his office to review possible wrongful convictions, and the New York Law Journal recently reported that he is seeking a half-million dollars to staff it, telling members of the City Council, “We need to give people confidence in the convictions that come out of the Brooklyn office.”
Fortunately for Kellner, whose indictment wreaked havoc on his and his family’s life, not to mention the small community of Orthodox anti-sex abuse advocates and victims, his case was dismissed before an unjust plea deal or verdict could be reached —a fate that wrongfully convicted Brooklyn men like Jabbar Collins, David Ranta and William Lopez were not so lucky to be spared. However, if Thompson is serious about restoring public confidence in the Brooklyn criminal justice system, we believe it is incumbent on him to conduct a full investigation into just how and why Sam Kellner came to be indicted in the first place. In addition, the probe must hold to account those within Kellner’s own community, the district attorney’s office and the wider legal community who were responsible for this perversion of the criminal justice system.

(http://www.thejewishweek.com/editorial-opinion/editorial/restoring-confidence-brooklyn-das-office)

Sunday, March 30, 2014

"Wrongful Convictions: Can Prosecutors Reform Themselves?" by Hella Winston

From The Crime Report:

March 27, 2014

In October 2003, a star college football player named Mark Fisher was found shot dead on a leafy, residential Brooklyn, NY street. The crime attracted intense media coverage and stymied investigators for months.

Indeed, according to a 2005 New York Daily News article, it wasn’t until an “elite team” was set up to investigate the killing, headed by then Brooklyn district attorney Charles Hynes’ controversial top deputy, Michael Vecchione— that prosecutors were able to break what was termed the “wall of silence” and solve the case.

Ultimately, 22 year-old John Giuca and 19 year-old Antonio Russo were arrested and charged with Fisher’s murder. At trial, both Giuca and Russo were found guilty and sentenced to 25 years to life.
At the time, the convictions represented an important victory for both Hynes (who was then running for reelection in a hotly contested race) and the lead prosecutor, Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi, who in its wake appeared on at least two TV specials about the case and has since made a name for herself appearing as a legal commentator on Fox News and Imus in the Morning.

From the beginning, however, Giuca maintained his innocence.

After he was convicted, his mother, Doreen Giuliano, befriended a man who had been a juror in her son’s trial, and then documented, in secretly recorded conversations, that the juror had undisclosed connections to the case and a bias against her son that should have disqualified him from serving on the jury.

These discoveries became the basis of several appeals in which Giuca argued that, because the juror failed to disclose his connections to people involved in the case, he did not receive a fair trial.
All of these appeals failed, however, and until recently it looked as if Giuca would likely serve out his sentence.

Prosecutorial Misconduct?
But over the past year, Giuca’s new lawyer, Mark Bederow, with assistance from Jay Salpeter, an ex-cop-turned-private investigator with a specialty in wrongful convictions, has uncovered what Bederow alleges is compelling evidence of improper conduct by Nicolazzi, the prosecutor.
The alleged misconduct included a failure to disclose—as required by law—any benefit or expectation of a benefit given to a witness, as well as vouching for that same witness’s perjured testimony.

Bederow and Salpeter have also obtained sworn recantations from three prosecution witnesses, two of whom say they were pressured by police and Nicolazzi into making false statements at trial.
Two other witnesses appear to have withheld information from investigators and/or changed their stories multiple times, and both have troubling connections to Hynes: one is the son of a woman who was a member of the executive committee of the Brooklyn GOP, who crossed party lines in 2005 to endorse Hynes for DA (and who allegedly gave her son a false alibi to the press and told a neighbor to stonewall cops by avoiding mentioning her son).

The other is the daughter of a Hynes donor who, since 2012, has been working as an Assistant District Attorney in the Brooklyn DA’s office.

Bederow submitted a petition to the Conviction Review Unit (CRU) of the office of the newly elected Brooklyn DA, Ken Thompson, who made the issue of wrongful convictions one of the centerpieces of his successful campaign last Fall.

Conviction Review Units (also known as Conviction Integrity Units or Post-Conviction Review Sections) are a relatively new phenomenon. The first ones were established by DA Craig Watkins in Dallas in 2007 and by former Harris County, Texas DA Pat Lykos in 2008.

They have begun to crop up in DA’s offices in other parts of the country as well, including: Cook County, IL; Santa Clara, CA; Wayne, MI; and Brooklyn and Manhattan in New York City.
In general, they involve the implementation of what are known as both “front-end” and “back-end” reforms—measures to reduce the risk of wrongful convictions before a case goes to trial and a process to investigate claims of actual innocence after a conviction, respectively.

(Thompson’s office declined to comment on the substance of Bederow’s petition, citing the pending review, but did tell the Daily News that “Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi is a respected and outstanding prosecutor who has an exemplary trial record.”)

Investigating ‘Gross Violations’
While many of the details about how Thompson’s CRU will operate have not yet been made public, a February press release from the office notes that it will consist of “experienced prosecutors, investigators and support staff tasked with the responsibility of conducting a thorough reinvestigation of cases identified as having a colorable claim of actual innocence or gross violations of a defendant’s constitutional rights.”

Thompson also appointed an outside panel of three lawyers to “advise on a range of issues, including whether a conviction should stand, needs additional review or should possibly be overturned.”
Drawing on comments Thompson made during his campaign, Bederow told The Crime Report that, considering Thompson’s pledge to make the review of questionable convictions obtained under the prior administration a priority, “we believe it is in everyone’s interest, including Mr. Giuca’s, to work with the new DA and allow his staff to conduct a careful and thorough review of the investigation and trial, including the evidence we have uncovered, before resorting to adversarial proceedings.”
But is it?

While Conviction Integrity Units can play an important role in implementing much needed “front-end” reforms—including enhanced training, better discovery-related policies and procedures, the use of videotaped confessions and improved practices related to eyewitness identification—their value in evaluating post-conviction claims of innocence is much more questionable, particularly in cases that don’t involve DNA.

Indeed, lawyers with experience working with CIUs point not only to their criteria for re-evaluating a case, but also to their structure and staffing, as major obstacles to their ability to function effectively.
Although these various units are all involved in reviewing possible wrongful convictions emanating from their own offices, they differ in terms of their criteria for post-conviction review.

Standards for Review
While Dallas, Manhattan and Santa Clara all hold as their standard of review whether there is clear and convincing evidence for a plausible claim of actual innocence, the Dallas CIU has noted that it would relax this standard if a post-conviction investigation uncovered “glaring constitutional errors ” at trial, even if those errors did not clearly relate to guilt or innocence—a standard that seems consistent with Thompson’s proposed plan to look at “gross violations” of a defendant’s constitutional rights.

Moreover, unlike Dallas, Manhattan will not reinvestigate a case if a defendant knew or should have known at trial the basis for his current claim—a standard that can, in effect, punish the defense for what is often the failure of prosecutors to turn over certain material to them, or for ineffective assistance of counsel.

Some CIUs will not look at cases in which a defendant pleads guilty, regardless of research that shows that coerced or false confessions are a common cause of wrongful convictions.
Perhaps even more important, there is no uniformity in how these units are structured and operate. For example, while the Dallas CIU—which is headed by a highly regarded former defense attorney—works in collaboration with defense attorneys, local innocence projects and law students, the Manhattan CIU, with a prosecutor at its helm, conducts all of its post-conviction reviews internally.
To veteran defense attorney Ron Kuby, who has worked with DA Conviction Integrity Units in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Nassau County, the Dallas model is far superior.

“Number one, [in Dallas there is] complete transparency,” Kuby told The Crime Report.
“Both sides share all of their information. We get everything in their file, they get everything in our file, except certain privileged communications. And second, the investigation is undertaken in a collaborative way.

“We sit down together and we discuss witnesses. And we discuss…what would be the best side to approach this witness. Should we do it together? Should the defense pursue this witness because frequently the defense is able to win trust where the police don’t, or should the police pursue this particular witness?”

Going to Court
After representing witnesses in a case that was brought to the Manhattan CIU, Kuby decided that he would never bring a case to that office again. In fact, he has concluded that, whenever possible, going to court is the preferable route because in that arena, armed with subpoena power, “it’s easier [for the defense] to convince a judge that a result would have been different at trial than to convince a prosecutor.”

According to Kuby, “[Prosecutors] look for evidence to support the conviction. And defense lawyers who are foolish enough to cooperate with them end up serving up their witnesses, and [then the DA goes out and collects impeachment information] on [those] witnesses.

“The truth is, the hallmark of great lawyering is making a totally truthful person look like a liar.”
Lonnie Soury, a public relations expert who has worked on numerous wrongful conviction cases, including those of Martin Tankleff, The West Memphis Three, Jesse Friedman and Jon-Adrian Velazquez, agrees.

"There's an underlying hope that prosecutors, when exposed to what you believe is strong evidence will say ‘ah ha, this is really compelling.’”

But, according to Soury, this has not been the reaction in the cases he has worked on.
In the case of Velazquez, whose murder conviction was recently reviewed and upheld by the Manhattan DA’s CIU, Soury noted that “[the process] was adversarial.”

“[Defense attorney] Bob Gottlieb turned over witnesses to whom the real killer confessed,” Soury continued. “They exposed themselves, these witnesses came to New York, and they were treated horribly, like defendants. These were witnesses who had a lot to lose. They knew the murderer.” Gottlieb has since filed a 440.10 motion, or a motion to vacate the conviction based on newly discovered evidence.)

Gottlieb, who was appointed in 2008 to the New York State Bar Association’s Task Force on Wrongful Convictions, concedes that the concept of a DA remedying wrongful convictions is “noble”—but he adds there is an “inherent conflict in having an integrity unit in a DA’s office and staffed by prosecutors who are involved in other investigations, in cases, other than examining prior convictions.”

In the Velazquez case, where there was no DNA or physical evidence that could be re-examined, Gottlieb was, he believed, at a significant disadvantage with the CIU. (At least until now: according to Gottlieb, recent scientific advances suggest that some evidence in the case can be tested, something he is now pursuing),

Eyewitness ID
This “conviction was based solely, one hundred percent, on faulty eyewitness (identification) and it has been established by scientific studies that eyewitness ID is inherently suspect, and that conviction is as inherently invalid as the convictions that were based on faulty evaluations of DNA,” Gottlieb told The Crime Report.

However, he continued, “the reality is that it is…impossible to prevail in those cases where the claim is that a person is wrongly convicted based on eyewitness ID, a faulty line-up, (or) perjured testimony, because there is an institutional bias that exists under the present structure, and cannot be overcome, to protect and defend prior convictions.”

To be sure, these units have been instrumental in righting some very serious wrongs.

A recent report found that close to 40 percent of exonerations in 2013 were initiated either by law enforcement or included police and prosecutors’ cooperation. To date, Watkins’ CIU in Dallas has been involved in 33 exonerations. The current Santa Clara, CIU has investigated and exonerated five people, including a man who was serving a life sentence; and another who had served 8 years in prison for a rape he did not commit.

The Manhattan DA’s office has reviewed approximately 140 cases since its formation in 2010, reinvestigated at least 12 of the cases and consented to vacate convictions in three of those cases.
And last year, an investigation by Hynes’ CRU in Brooklyn led to the release of a man named David Ranta, who had served 23 years for a murder that he most likely did not commit.

(Hynes’ office stopped short of declaring Ranta factually innocent, but said instead that the evidence against him had eroded significantly, blaming a retired, “rogue” detective for much of that “erosion.”)
But even the most committed district attorney still has to contend with the fact that the cases that come to his or her office’s CIU or CRU may well involve people who are still employed by the office, or police officers and even judges with whom the office has important relationships it needs to maintain.

For example, in the Giuca case, Thompson will be in the difficult position of investigating allegations against a highly regarded prosecutor (albeit one who was hired by the previous administration) currently working in his office. And he will also have the unenviable task of re-interviewing another current employee who is a factual witness in the case and who, records show, was uncooperative with the initial investigation.

Independent Review
Indeed, in a Huffington Post article he wrote during the campaign, Thompson himself noted that “Internal conviction integrity units are best used to correct mistakes such as eyewitness misidentifications and false confessions. But…wrongful conviction cases premised on serious allegations of police and prosecutorial misconduct require independent review.”
As Kuby notes, “Prosecutors have friends, colleagues” and “even if they have the utmost integrity,” this cannot help but play a role in these reviews.

“If a DA is really serious and committed to having a CIU,” said Gottlieb. “then (the CIU) must be staffed with an inspector general-type prosecutor who has no connection to the past procedures and trials that are the subject of the conviction review.

“That person must be totally separate and apart, with his or her own staff and offices. Members of the CIU (also) cannot include the chief assistant DA or any of the executive staff of the DA’s office. It must truly be an independent entity.

“If you're not prepared to do that, then you really can’t claim that you have an independent unit to evaluate past convictions.”

Kuby believes there is an even bigger problem with a DA evaluating wrongful convictions emanating from his office: overturning too many convictions, even if the evidence requires it, can also raise serious issues not only for prosecutors, but for the system as a whole.

“Outside of incapacitating highly dangerous people, the criminal justice system seeks to create a sense of legitimacy in the minds of the public and to provide deterrence to wrongdoers,” Kuby said.
“It doesn’t much matter if people are guilty or innocent, if people think they are guilty. But whenever you expose a wrongdoing, you undermine the legitimacy of the system.”

That’s why people like Soury believe that the task of reviewing wrongful convictions should not be left to prosecutors, but given to an independent and independently funded entity set up for the purpose.

“We have had far too many wrongful convictions in New York City,” says Soury. “(We) need a [truly independent] official body that can present solutions as well as have investigative responsibilities and subpoena power to review cases where credible evidence exists of a wrongful conviction and prosecutor and /or police complicity.”

But Soury goes a step further, suggesting that the best way to address the problem of wrongful convictions is to “hold public officials who engage in these activities legally responsible: criminally and civilly”— something that almost never happens, because prosecutors and police have close to global immunity for actions undertaken in their law enforcement roles.

As Soury notes, “Prosecutors are virtually omnipotent and protected from any consequences of their actions.”

http://www.thecrimereport.org/news/inside-criminal-justice/2014-03-wrongful-convictions-can-prosecutors-reform-themselv

New Brooklyn DA drops appeal of wrongful conviction in 1989 murder



EXCLUSIVE: New Brooklyn DA drops appeal of wrongful conviction in 1989 murder

William Lopez, 55, was freed in 2013 after serving 22 years for a discredited murder conviction. Former DA Charles Hynes fought for years to keep Lopez locked up, but Kenneth Thompson’s office will not go forward with the appeal. 

BY  

Friday, March 28, 2014

Brooklyn’s new district attorney dropped an appeal that challenged last year’s release of a man who served 22 years in prison for a discredited murder conviction.

William Lopez, 55, was sprung in January 2013 by a federal judge who found that his already questionable case was “reduced to rubble” after an eyewitness recanted.

The judge, Nicholas Garaufis, took his ruling a step further last March when he ordered Brooklyn prosecutors not to retry Lopez and dismiss all charges.

Former DA Charles Hynes, who fought for years to keep the defendant locked up, appealed that decision, but his successor, Kenneth Thompson, has now reversed course.

After reevaluation, Thompson’s office “has concluded that there is a sufficient possibility that Lopez is not guilty” and that moving forward with the appeal is “contrary to the interest of justice,” according to a court document filed Wednesday, a week before oral arguments were set to be heard.
The appeals court still needs to sign off on the dismissal and neither the DA’s office nor Lopez’s lawyer would comment before it does.

Lopez, who always maintained his innocence, was convicted of killing Elvirn Surria with a shotgun in a Brighton Beach crackhouse in August 1989, but the case was riddled with problems.

Thompson’s decision effectively means that he no longer faces the threat of retrial.

The DA, who took office at the start of the year, inherited a trove of alleged wrongful convictions and has said that resolving them is a priority.

He had already cleared two men who spent 21 years behind bars for a triple homicide they didn’t commit.

Jeffrey Deskovic, whose Foundation for Justice helped exonerate Lopez and assisted with his reintegration, praised the DA’s move.

“We applaud the decision by Thompson's office to abandon the appeal,” he said. “It is a clear signal that he intends to honor his campaign promise to correct and prevent wrongful convictions."

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/exclusive-da-drops-appeal-wrongful-murder-conviction-article-1.1737519


 

KINGS COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY KENNETH P. THOMPSON ANNOUNCES PUBLIC INTEGRITY HOTLINE

This is pretty cool. From a press release from the KCDA:

Brooklyn, NY
Kings County District Attorney Kenneth P. Thompson today announced
the creation of a Public Integrity Hotline that citizens can call to report public corruption.
The Public Integrity Bureau proactively investigates a broad range of corruption at all levels of government. 
 
“My office is committed to rooting out public corruption in Brooklyn, and we take every
complaint about corruption seriously. For that reason, I created a dedicated Public Integrity
Hotline to encourage people to come forward with information about government wrongdoing,”
said District Attorney Thompson.
 
The District Attorney’s Public Integrity Bureau will review complaints received on the new
hotline involving: bribery and other malfeasance by elected officials and public servants; fraud in
elections and political campaigns; corruption of the government contracting process, including
bid-rigging and other anti-competitive behavior; and fraud, waste and abuse in government
programs and funds.
 
Anyone with information about government corruption is encouraged to call the Public Integrity
Hotline. People also have the option of filling out a Public Integrity Complaint Form on the
Brooklyn D A’s website, www.brooklynda.org, and clicking on the link to the Public Integrity
Bureau webpage.