What DNA testing has accomplished is to highlight in a very public
way the utter shortcomings of a seriously overtaxed justice system
that ultimately places justice itself as a low priority.
We all understand that the present drug criminalization regime has
become unenforceable and hugely burdensome as black hole for talent.
Thus we have these horrors.
In my case it took one of the worst serial killers to help me
understand that the death penalty is a very bad idea. I came to
understand that I did not want this man to die at all. Instead I
wanted him to sit in his cell for as long as he had breath in his
body to sit and think about his lot. Death was merely a free ride
that any coward can take for the cost of a second's pain.
The fact that a justice system often gets it wrong is a side issue.
If a cell with no hope is not hell. Then what exactly is hell?
This victim at least had the hope born of his innocence. Like so
many he must now somehow create a new life for himself.
DNA testing frees
man who lived on death row for 15 years
By Ed Pilkington, The
Guardian
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Every morning Damon
Thibodeaux wakes up in his temporary digs in Minneapolis and wonders
when his newfound freedom is going to come crashing down. “You
think you’re going to wake up and find it was just a dream,” he
says.
When he stepped out of
Angola jail in Louisiana several guards were at the gate to wish him
well, addressing him for the first time in 16 years as “Mr
Thibodeaux”. “No offence,” he said, “but I hope I never see
you again.”
He walked out as the
300th prisoner in the US to be freed as a result of DNA testing and
one of 18 exonerated from death row. With the help of science he has
been proved innocent of a crime for which the state of Louisiana
spent 15 years trying to kill him.
For those years
Thibodeaux was in a cell 1.8 metres by 3 metres for 23 hours a day.
His only luxury was a morning coffee, made using a handkerchief as a
filter with coffee bought from the prison shop; his only consolation
was reading reading the Bible; his only exercise pacing up and down
for an hour a day in a the “exercise yard”– a metal cage
slightly larger than his cell.
Like most death rows
in the United States, the prisoners in Angola are treated as living
dead things: they are going to be executed so why bother
rehabilitating them? He watched as two of his fellow inmates were
taken away to the death chamber, trying unsuccessfully not to dwell
on his own impending execution. “It was like, one day they may be
coming for you. At any time, a judge can sign an order and they can
come and take you and kill you.”
At the lowest point,
he says he felt such hopelessness that he considered dropping all his
appeals and giving up. He would become a “volunteer” – one of
those prisoners who are assumed positively to want to die but so
often simply lack the will to live. He read the Bible some more,
shared his fears with other prisoners through the bars and found a
new resolution. “I came to terms with the fact that I was going to
die for something I didn’t do. Truthfully, we’re all going to die
anyway; it made it a lot easier.”
With little hope, he
pressed on with his appeals and, almost imperceptibly at first,
fortune’s wheel began to turn. A lawyer assigned to his
post-conviction appeal became concerned by his case, and she in turn
enlisted the help of the Innocence Project in New York, a
national group devoted to exonerating wrongfully convicted people
through DNA testing.
Also drawn into the
fray were a pair of Minneapolis-based lawyers from the commercial
firm Fredrikson & Byron. In his day job Steven Kaplan works on
mergers and acquisitions, not rape and murder, but he threw himself
at the Thibodeaux case pro bono.
As soon as Kaplan
began reading the legal papers relating to Thibodeaux’s death
sentence, he was astonished. He had never worked on a capital case
before and, like most people unversed in the finer details of the
death penalty in America, had assumed that the judicial process must
have adhered to the very highest legal standards. After all, a man’s
life was at stake.
“When I read the
transcript of the trial for the first time, I thought to myself that
the high school mock trial team that I coached of 15- to 17-year-olds
would have run rings around the lawyers in that courtroom,” said
Kaplan. “We put more energy into a $50,000 contract dispute than
went into the defence at the Damon Thibodeaux trial.”
The sequence of events
that put Thibodeaux on to death row began on 19 July 1996. He was 22
and worked as a deckhand on Mississippi river barges.
Two weeks earlier he
had moved back to New Orleans, where his mother and sister lived, to
help out with his sister’s wedding. He started hanging out with the
Champagne family, distant relatives, who had a flat in a neighbouring
suburb.
He spent 19 July at
the Champagne home with the father, CJ, mother, Dawn, and 14-year-old
daughter, Crystal. At about 5pm Crystal asked Thibodeaux to go with
her to the local Winn-Dixie supermarket but he was busy mending CJ’s
watch. She left the house on her own at 5.15pm.
When she was not back
more than an hour later her mother became alarmed and they began a
search, Thibodeaux joining the effort. They called the police and
searched through the night and through the following day.
It was not until after
6pm on 20 July that Thibodeaux went back to his mother’s house and
lay down to rest. He was just falling asleep when police arrived and
asked him to come with them.
That was at 7.32pm. At
7.40pm Crystal’s body was found on the banks of the Mississippi,
about five miles from the Champagnes’ home. The news was
transmitted to the detectives quizzing Thibodeaux and instantly a
routine missing-person interview became a homicide interrogation.
It started lightly,
then the detectives began piling on the pressure. They repeatedly
told him he was lying, putting their faces close up to his. When he
gave them the names of the people he had been with over the previous
24 hours as alibis, the officers said they had talked to the
individuals who had denied it. “That felt like I was being
abandoned, because they were the only people who could put me in
their presence away from the crime scene,” Thibodeaux said. The
police gave him a lie-detector test. When they returned to the
interview room and told him he had failed, he fainted.
Several hours into the
interrogation, they delivered the coup de grace: they warned him what
would happen if he kept on lying. “They described to me death by
lethal injection: organs collapsing, the brain shutting down, extreme
pain. That’s what they said would happen to me if I didn’t give
them what they wanted.”
The detectives who
interrogated Thibodeaux have consistently denied using techniques
that put pressure on him. But having studied the case for years, his
current lawyers are convinced he was subjected to a prolonged
questioning that interacted with his vulnerabilities and broke down
his resistance. About 4am on 21 July he gave the police what he
thought they wanted. He had been under interrogation for nine hours,
and had no meaningful sleep for 35 hours. “I had no sleep, I was
hungry, I was tired of it. At that point I didn’t care, I just
wanted to stop it.”
He began to confess,
repeating details of the crime scene that the detectives had given
him. “I’m not the smartest person on the planet, but I was able
to figure out how Crystal died and how she was found from what they
were telling me. I just put the pieces together and gave them the
confession they wanted.”
He told them how he
had picked up Crystal in his car and driven her to the crime scene.
They began having sex, then she asked him to stop and he refused. He
raped her, hit her on the face with his bare hand, squeezing her neck
and strangling her with a length of white, grey or black speaker wire
that he procured from his car.
At one point
Thibodeaux told his interrogators: “I didn’t know that I had done
it, but I done it.” Case closed.
Within three hours of
his confession, details emerged that refuted key aspects. Examination
of the crime scene determined the cord that had been wrapped around
Crystal’s neck was a red electrical conductor wire that had been
hanging on a nearby tree, and not the speaker wire Thibodeaux had
confessed to. Crystal’s mother also told investigators within three
hours of the confession that Thibodeaux had been with her in the
their flat when she called the police to report her daughter’s
disappearance – undermining any possibility of him getting to and
from the crime scene in time to have murdered Crystal.
Further evidence came
out that punctured his confession. The autopsy found that Crystal had
been hit around the face with a blunt object, not Thibodeaux’s bare
hand as he had testified. Contrary to his statement that he had had
sex with her and then raped her, the forensic examiner observed no
injuries consistent with violent rape. More than that, he concluded
that Crystal had had no sexual intercourse of any kind, consensual or
otherwise, for at least 24 hours before she died.
All those
discrepancies were known to the authorities before Thibodeaux was put
in the dock for murder and rape. They also knew that there were other
potential suspects who conceivably merited further investigation.
One individual was a
local man with a conviction for paedophilia. Another was a relative
of Crystal’s who lived in a flat two blocks from the crime scene –
a paranoid schizophrenic with a long history of drug abuse and
violence against women.
Being poor, Thibodeaux
could not afford his own lawyer and was assigned a public defence
attorney by the courts. His attorney happened to be a former
detective who had retrained as a lawyer, and this was his first
murder case. At the time of the trial he was, unbeknown to
Thibodeaux, applying for a transfer to the same district attorney’s
office that was prosecuting his client.
“I was willing to
overlook the fact that he was an ex-detective,” Thibodeaux says
now. “But if I had known my lawyer was filing to be transferred to
the DA’s office I would have asked to have him removed from my
case.”
The trial lasted just
three days. Over the course of it the prosecution tried to explain
away the lack of any evidence of sexual intercourse or rape on
Crystal’s body by speculating that “semen-destroying maggots”
had been at work.
Thibodeaux’s lawyer,
for his part, did not even refer to the confession. “You will read
the entire trial transcript and he never utters the word
‘confession’, as though if he didn’t mention it, it would go
away,” Kaplan says.
The jury was out for
just 45 minutes before they delivered a guilty verdict. The next day
the same jury sentenced Thibodeaux to death for murder and aggravated
rape, even though no rape – indeed no sexual contact of any sort –
had taken place.
It took Kaplan and the
other lawyers just a few days to spot the glaring problems with the
prosecution of Thibodeaux. It took them a further 12 years to free
him. With the full co-operation of the current district attorney for
New Orleans, they carried out a fresh round of DNA tests using
world-renowned forensic scientists, such as Dr Henry Lee, who heads a
forensic science school at the University of New Haven, and Dr Edward
Blake, of Forensic Science Associates. They looked again at all the
physical evidence, particularly the clothing of Crystal and
Thibodeaux on the day of her murder. They found there was no evidence
of Thibodeaux’s tissue, blood or fluids on Crystal’s clothing and
none of hers on his – a significant finding as had Thibodeaux been
the murderer and/or rapist, such evidence would certainly have
existed.
In addition, witnesses
were tracked down who gave him a watertight alibi for all but five
minutes of the period between Crystal’s disappearance and the time
of her death. And lest there be any remaining doubt, a forensic
expert on maggots – such people do exist – testified that the
theory of “semen-destroying maggots” was balderdash.
Since his release
Thibodeaux has travelled to the other end of the Mississippi to
rebuild his life with the help of his new lawyers in Minneapolis. The
town has a good rehabilitation programme that should provide a cheap
home, renewed education and job training.
His 15 years on death
row opened his eyes, he says. “We tell the world that our system is
the best in the world, and it’s not.” But he says he still
supports capital punishment in America for the most heinous cases –
with the proviso that the conviction is sound.
Not so Steven Kaplan.
He cites academic studies that suggest that 2% to 4% of death-row
inmates are probably innocent. “If that was the rate of failure of
airplanes,” he says, “would you fly?”
What a brave young man! The most heartening story of all those who worked so hard to get him released. How sad that the original detectives were so lax, casual and cruel in assigning a human life to rot for 13 years with the threat of imminent death hanging over him. I wish him and his family all the best. Good luck to him. He deserves real happiness and a load of compensation.
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