Life After Death: The Shocking True Story of a Innocent Man on Death Row (44 page)

BOOK: Life After Death: The Shocking True Story of a Innocent Man on Death Row
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Following is some of the evidence and testimony that Judge Laser was ordered to consider, in addition to the previously discussed evidence that Misskelley’s confession was false, in determining whether the West Memphis Three would receive new trials.

1. DNA

If the prosecution’s claim that two of the boys had been sodomized was accurate, it would have been impossible for the perpetrator not to leave DNA evidence. Yet when nearly seventy pieces of crime scene evidence were finally tested in 2007, the results excluded Echols, Baldwin, and Misskelley as possible sources.
162
Five hairs recovered at the scene were found to have different DNA profiles from those of the convicted men and the victims.
163
Thomas Fedor, a forensic serologist with the Serological Research Institute in Richmond, California, reported that possible sources for two of these five hairs had been determined: Terry Hobbs, the stepfather of Stevie Branch, and Hobbs’s friend David Jacoby, who was with him the day the three boys disappeared.

According to Fedor, a hair found on a tree root at the crime scene contained mitochondrial DNA that matched Jacoby’s, and a hair tied into a knot that bound one of Michael Moore’s wrists to one of his ankles contained mitochondrial DNA that matched Hobbs’s. Since mitochondrial DNA is common only to a maternal line, it is not possible to say with absolute certainty that the hairs belong to Hobbs or Jacoby; they could have come from relatives of either men. Fedor estimated that approximately 7 percent of the population could be the source of the hair on the tree stump and about 1.5 percent the source of the hair in the ligature.
164

The mitochondrial DNA sequence of a third hair, this one recovered from beneath Chris Byers’s ligature, was also successfully determined, but as yet no possible source has been identified. According to Fedor, however, the following can be excluded as possible sources: the three victims, the mothers and siblings of the victims, Terry Hobbs, and the West Memphis Three.
165

Fedor also discussed the fact that a piece of genetic material—an allele—that could not have come from any of the West Memphis Three or the three victims was found on Stevie Branch’s penis. Unlike the hairs, this allele could be tested using a method called STR (short tandem repeat), which, if there is sufficient information, can identify with virtual certainty the individual who is its source. At present, STR testing is not sophisticated enough to identify the source of the allele, but Fedor said that new DNA technology, which can “work with samples that are even smaller and more degraded,” is in development, and the allele “has much greater potential for identifying a person than the hairs.” For now, however, all we can say with certainty is that the DNA evidence excludes the convicted men and potentially implicates Hobbs and Jacoby.
166

In July 2011, additional DNA testing revealed that human DNA discovered on Byers’s shoes and Branch’s body
167
came from two individuals who remain unidentified. Once again, Echols, Baldwin, and Misskelley were conclusively excluded as possible sources.
168

2. P
OSTMORTEM
A
NIMAL
P
REDATION AND THE
C
AUSE OF
D
EATH

As mentioned earlier, six prominent forensic experts, each working independently, unanimously determined that the numerous lacerations, cuts, and gouges on the boys’ bodies were not inflicted by a knife, as Dr. Peretti and the prosecution contended, but were the result of postmortem animal predation. Because the wounds were postmortem, the experts concluded, Chris Byers did not die as a result of blood loss, as the prosecutors had argued, but instead had drowned, as had the other two boys. Unlike Peretti, who has never passed the exam for board certification in forensic pathology,
169
the six experts who reviewed the evidence and Peretti’s reports are among the most eminent authorities in their fields. They included Dr. Werner Spitz, considered the “grandfather” of forensic science; Dr. Michael Baden, the former chief medical examiner for New York City; Dr. Vincent Di Maio, author of the textbook
Forensic Pathology
; Dr. Janice Ophoven, a pediatric pathologist; Dr. Robert Wood, the chief of forensic dentistry of the Ontario Forensic Pathology Service; and Dr. Richard Souviron, a forensic odontologist who was instrumental in the conviction of serial killer Ted Bundy. At a press conference held on November 1, 2007, to announce their findings, Dr. Spitz stated that “the injuries on the body surface of all three victims . . . including the emasculation of Chris Byers, were produced by animals, after death. None of the injuries were caused during life, and none were caused by a serrated knife, or any knife for that matter.” And Dr. Souviron said, “You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to look at these things and know that these are bite marks and that they occurred postmortem.” He added, “There are no stab wounds. If somebody’s going to use a knife, what do you do with a knife, you run around and scrape with it like this? I mean, come on. You stab with a knife. There are no stab wounds on these bodies.”
170

According to these forensic experts, what the prosecutors insisted was a castration performed with a knife was actually a “degloving” caused by an animal. (This would explain the scrapings around Stevie Branch’s genitals, which the autopsy report had noted were consistent with teeth marks.
171
) Riordan summarized the scientists’ conclusions, saying, “It is well established in the medical literature that if . . . an animal pulls on the testes, the skin of the penis comes off like a glove, leaving the corpus of the penis on the body, which is exactly what happened in this case.”
172
Dr. Spitz later said, “There is no question in my mind” that the genital mutilation “was from animal predation.”
173
Further, “the injury in the groin area was almost bloodless or was bloodless for all intents and purposes. And showed ripping, chewing by a predator animal, a carnivorous animal, a large animal with evidence that this did not occur during the life of the boy. So there could not have been bleeding from that source.” Spitz concluded, “I think the medical examiner was wrong. I think they all drowned.”
174

3. J
UROR
M
ISCONDUCT

In recent years, substantial evidence of juror misconduct in the case has been discovered. Both notes taken by one of the jurors and statements by the jurors themselves make it clear that Misskelley’s inadmissible confession played a key role in the jury’s deliberations in the Echols/Baldwin trial.
175
And although no juror admitted knowledge of the confession during the jury selection process, many, if not all, did know of it—a fact that Burnett himself acknowledged when he said during the trial that every juror had no doubt learned of the confession from media reports.
176

Even more significant, Lloyd Warford, a prominent Arkansas attorney, revealed in a sworn affidavit to the Arkansas Supreme Court that the jury foreman, Kent Arnold, phoned him repeatedly while the trial was in progress, in violation of Burnett’s orders that the jurors not discuss the trial with anyone. According to Warford’s May 2008 affidavit, Arnold admitted that he had prejudged the defendants’ guilt on the basis of news reports of Misskelley’s confession
177
; misled the court about his opinions in order to secure his selection as a jury member; and planned to use Misskelley’s confession to sway the jury to return a guilty verdict.
178
Arnold also stated that the prosecution had presented a “weak, circumstantial” case
179
and that “if anyone is going to convince this jury to convict it is going to have to be me.” Warford concluded that “Kent Arnold saw himself as the real hero of this trial” because he had won the conviction by introducing the confession into the jury’s deliberations.
180

Warford’s affidavit is supported by two other affidavits, both sealed because they contain the names of jurors. In one, Lyndall Stout, a former Little Rock television news anchor, states that Arnold “admitted to her in the spring of 2005 that he and his fellow jurors discussed” Misskelley’s confession.
181
In the other, two Arkansas attorneys say that Arnold defended the jury’s consideration of the confession, saying he found the judge’s instruction to ignore it “unreasonable.” They also report that he stated that the confession was “a known event” and, moreover, that it was the “primary and deciding factor” in the decision to convict Echols and Baldwin since the evidence introduced by the prosecution in the trial was “scanty” and “extremely coincidental.”
182

In a June 2008 article in the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
, Arnold publicly acknowledged that he may have asked Warford “questions about procedures during the trial”—something Burnett had expressly forbidden the jurors to do—and that the confession “may have been one” of the subjects on a “large list of pros and cons” the jury compiled.
183
(A large flip chart that the jurors used during deliberations and a small chart in a juror’s notes prove that this inadmissible evidence was indeed on the list of pros and cons.
184
) He acknowledged no guilt or shame for these actions, however. Instead, he expressed frustration at the fact that the confession was ruled inadmissible. “Why not let the decision-makers have all that information?” he complained.
185

Riordan has stated that “the jury foreman’s misconduct is shocking and convincingly proves that Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin could not possibly have had a fair trial. The jury foreman engaged in deceit and bias from his first contact with the court during jury selection, throughout the trial testimony, during jury deliberations and, finally, during the penalty phase after conviction, when Damien Echols was sentenced to death and Jason Baldwin to life without parole.”
186
Representatives of both the Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers seconded Riordan’s conclusion in their joint amici curiae brief, saying: “Echols’s conviction and death sentence have been gravely tainted by the jury’s consideration of the extraordinarily prejudicial—and extraordinarily unreliable—confession of Jessie Misskelley. If any reasonable juror were confronted today with evidence of the Misskelley confession’s unreliability, he would surely conclude that Echols is not guilty.”
187

4. V
ICKI
H
UTCHESON’S
P
ERJURY

In an interview contained in Amy Berg’s 2012 documentary
West of Memphis
, Vicki Hutcheson admits that her testimony at the Echols/Baldwin trial was false. But this is just the latest in a series of admissions that she lied on the witness stand. As early as April 1994, she began making self-incriminating comments about her testimony. After the trials ended, she contacted Ron Lax, a Memphis private investigator, several times about the case. She told Lax that Detective Ridge had promised that the police would “take care of her hot checks in return for her testimony,” a promise which, if it was indeed made, would provide her an additional motive to perjure herself beyond the $35,000 reward she apparently expected to receive.
188
Then, in May 1994, she called Glori Shettles, who worked with Lax, and according to Shettles, “she stated she was thinking of calling Channel 13 News in Memphis to advise she had, in fact, perjured herself.” She did not make that call, nor did she admit to perjury when Stidham interviewed her that August about her conversation with Shettles, but later in the decade, she consented to an interview with Burk Sauls, one of the founders of wm3.org, who briefly posted a transcript on the website. (The posting made Hutcheson fear for her safety, she said, and so it was removed from the site.) In that interview, she said that “basically I said what the West Memphis police wanted me to say. And that was that I went to the meeting. The esbat meeting. It was all their stories.” She also said, “You know what I want to say more than anything? I want to say that I’m sorry. I just want to tell Jessie and Jason and Damien that I’m sorry.”
189

It wasn’t until 2004, however, that Hutcheson followed through on her 1994 desire to admit her perjury. In an
Arkansas Times
interview, she said that “every word” of her testimony “was a lie.” She wanted to set the record straight, she said, because she could no longer carry the burden of being responsible for the conviction of three innocent men. Hutcheson, who was being investigated for hot checks and credit card fraud at the time of the murders, said she had felt “scared to death” by the police and that they told her what to say during their taped interviews with her. “It was like this: I was either going to say exactly what they needed—or else. ‘We’re going to make this easy on you, Victoria, and you’re just going to say exactly what we need or things can get rough on you. You could be implicated in this murder. You could lose your son.’” She said the detectives would turn off the tape if she said something they didn’t want her to say and tell her, “No, that’s not the way it happened, Victoria. You come up with something better.” She also said that the esbat story was dreamed up by Jerry Driver at a meeting detectives held with her. In addition, she refuted the police’s claim that their secret recording of a conversation she had with Echols and Misskelley in her home was inaudible. “The quality of the tape was excellent. You could hear Jessie, you could hear me, you could hear my roommate Christy. You could hear Damien excellent because he was sitting right next to the lamp” where the microphone was hidden. Neither Echols nor Misskelley said anything incriminating on the tape, she said. The police later claimed the tape had been lost.
190

Hutcheson repeated her statements in a sworn, videotaped affidavit to Nancy Pemberton, Misskelley’s private investigator, in 2004, and this affidavit was entered into evidence at Misskelley and Baldwin’s 2009 hearing for a new trial.
191
On August 14, 2009, Hutcheson attended the hearing and said she wanted to take the stand to set the record straight. Burnett informed her that there is no statute of limitations on perjury in Arkansas, so if she testified she could be found guilty of a class C felony. She requested immunity, but it was denied, an act that suggested the State was more interested in enforcing its perjury laws than in correcting an injustice that might cause innocent men to be imprisoned for life or executed. As Leveritt commented, “If there was any lingering doubt, that act erased it: Arkansas officials are not interested in either truth or justice in this case. They care only about preserving the ill-gained convictions.”
192
Given the likelihood of a felony conviction for perjury, and a long prison term, Hutcheson decided not to testify at the hearing.

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