"Framed for Murder?"

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edited January 1970 in General Discussion
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Framed for Murder?
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: December 8, 2010

“California may be about to execute an innocent man.”

That’s the view of five federal judges in a case involving Kevin Cooper, a black man in California who faces lethal injection next year for supposedly murdering a white family. The judges argue compellingly that he was framed by police.

Mr. Cooper’s impending execution is so outrageous that it has produced a mutiny among these federal circuit court judges, distinguished jurists just one notch below the United States Supreme Court. But the judicial process has run out for Mr. Cooper. Now it’s up to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to decide whether to commute Mr. Cooper’s sentence before leaving office.

This case, an illuminating window into the pitfalls of capital punishment, dates to a horrific quadruple-murder in June 1983. Doug and Peggy Ryen were stabbed to death in their house, along with their 10-year-old daughter and an 11-year-old houseguest. The Ryens’ 8-year-old son, Josh, was left for dead but survived. They were all white.

Josh initially told investigators that the crime had been committed by three people, all white, although by the trial he suggested that he had seen just one person with an Afro. The first version made sense because the weapons included a hatchet, an ice pick and one or two knives. Could one intruder juggling several weapons overpower five victims, including a 200-pound former Marine like Doug Ryen, who also had a loaded rifle nearby?

But the police learned that Mr. Cooper had walked away from the minimum security prison where he was serving a burglary sentence and had hidden in an empty home 125 yards away from the crime scene. The police decided that he had committed the crime alone.

William A. Fletcher, a federal circuit judge, explained his view of what happens in such cases in a law school lecture at Gonzaga University, in which he added that Mr. Cooper is “probably” innocent: “The police are under heavy pressure to solve a high-profile crime. They know, or think they know, who did the crime. And they plant evidence to help their case along.”

Judge Fletcher wrote an extraordinary judicial opinion — more than 100 pages when it was released — dissenting from the refusal of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to rehear the case. The opinion is a 21st-century version of Émile Zola’s famous “J’Accuse.”

Mr. Fletcher, a well-respected judge and former law professor, was joined in his “J’Accuse” by four other circuit judges. Six more wrote their own dissents calling for the full Ninth Circuit to rehear the case. But they fell just short of the votes needed for rehearing.

Judge Fletcher laid out countless anomalies in the case. Mr. Cooper’s blood showed up on a beige T-shirt apparently left by a murderer near the scene, but that blood turned out to have a preservative in it — the kind of preservative used by police when they keep blood in test tubes.

Then a forensic scientist found that a sample from the test tube of Mr. Cooper’s blood held by police actually contained blood from more than one person. That leads Mr. Cooper’s defense team and Judge Fletcher to believe that someone removed blood and then filled the tube back to the top with someone else’s blood.

The police also ignored other suspects. A woman and her sister told police that a housemate, a convicted murderer who had completed his sentence, had shown up with several other people late on the night of the murders, wearing blood-spattered overalls and driving a station wagon similar to the one stolen from the murdered family.

They said that the man was no longer wearing the beige T-shirt he had on earlier in the evening — the same kind as the one found near the scene. And his hatchet, which resembled the one found near the bodies, was missing from his tool area. The account was supported by a prison confession and by witnesses who said they saw a similar group in blood-spattered clothes in a nearby bar that night. The women gave the bloody overalls to the police for testing, but the police, by now focused on Mr. Cooper, threw the overalls in the trash.

This case is a travesty. It underscores the central pitfall of capital punishment: no system is fail-safe. How can we be about to execute a man when even some of America’s leading judges believe he has been framed?

Lanny Davis, who was the White House counsel for President Bill Clinton, is representing Mr. Cooper pro bono. He laments: “The media and the bar have gone deaf and silent on Kevin Cooper. My simple theory: heinous brutal murder of white family and black convict. Simple as that.”

That’s a disgrace that threatens not only the life of one man, but the honor of our judicial system. Governor Schwarzenegger, are you listening?

Comments

  • Oh my gosh...I can't believe this is still happening in our world today. Looks like time to delve further into this and spread the word of this man's innocence. This is just not right.
  • MJonmindMJonmind Posts: 7,290
    Makes me think of "To Kill a Mockingbird".
  • SouzaSouza Posts: 9,400

    That is one of the reasons no country should execute anyone. No one has the right to take another one's life, never ever is that justified, although I can understand a mother who kills her child's killer for example out of desperation. Wrong, but understandable.

    I remember a seminar at school from Amnesty International. They showed us a documentary about a black guy that was sentenced to death for something similar. The guy kept saying he was innocent, it was horrible to see the fear in his eyes as the execution date came closer, while his lawyer was on to something and asked the judge for a delay. The request was dismissed. After 9 years in death row he was executed and a week after his death his lawyer had the proof that he was innocent. They caught the real killer as well, and he got 25 years in prison, he was white...

    "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places."

  • paula-cpaula-c Posts: 7,221
    In one of his visits to Venezuela Danny Glover said things as these:

    "Bush is racist, and while he was Governor of Texas died mainly black and Hispanic by the implementation of the death penalty."


    "If he (Bush) is racist." "We, the Americans knew, but now is when it is discovering the world". "As Governor of Texas, Bush imposed a prison system that ran more people than the rest of the States together." "The majority of those who died because of the"death penalty"were blacks and Hispanics."

    "The death penalty is inhumane"

    "The (Bush) promotes a conservative program, designed to remove everything that the Americans have won so far in the field of racism and equality" "something dark and sinister is happening now in this country, and if we do not admit that it is informative, because somehow we are blind"
  • Makes me think of "To Kill a Mockingbird".

    Yeah it does, it also reminds me of this TV show called Injustice were this mentally ill guy was innocent and they found out but the judge wouldn't overturn the death penalty and he died.

    So many innocent people going to jail or getting the death penalty. The other unfair thing as well is when they come out of jail (if they do) they don't get compensation and life has changed so much that its hard to adapt.
  • MissGMissG Posts: 7,403
    Death penalty, what a debate. It is a deep issue to discuss from many points.
    Some Estates in USA don´t show to have the right system of judgement.

    If one thinks how things would have gone for Michael in jail as a "child molester", I think that suicide was on the list to avoid pain.

    Whoever framed Michael, did it intentionally, and the elaboration of it gives me creeps.

    Who could have hated Michael so much, who? Money and greed can be very dangerous.
  • Death penalty, what a debate. It is a deep issue to discuss from many points.
    Some Estates in USA don´t show to have the right system of judgement.

    If one thinks how things would have gone for Michael in jail as a "child molester", I think that suicide was on the list to avoid pain.

    Whoever framed Michael, did it intentionally, and the elaboration of it gives me creeps.

    Who could have hated Michael so much, who? Money and greed can be very dangerous.

    Yes, I think Michael might have committed suicide... That's probably why Mesereau said he treated his case like a "death penalty" case and wanted Michael acquitted on ALL counts. Mesereau was NOT going to let Michael go to jail - one reason why I have enormous admiration for him.
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