The following item by reporeter Joel Burgess from the Asheville Citizen-Times speaks for itself:
Antonio Hernandez Carranza took a wrong turn, and it turned out to be one of the biggest mistakes he's ever made. The Carson, Calif., man had driven more than 2,000 miles — three days straight — to see his sister in Johnson City, Tenn. But instead of reaching the home of his sister, whom he hadn't seen in nearly a decade, the 45-year-old carpet cleaner found himself in the Buncombe County jail under a $300,000 bond on charges of driving while intoxicated, failing to heed police lights and sirens and possession of 91 pounds of cocaine. He was released four days later after sheriff's deputies realized Hernandez, who said he doesn't drink at all, wasn't intoxicated and that what was in the back of his truck was exactly what he had said — $400 worth of cheese, shrimp and tortilla and tamale dough meant as a gift to his sister.
Now struggling to reclaim his truck and dog that were taken away, Hernandez said he wants only to see his family and possibly get some compensation for his time and expenses.
While in jail, he called his wife, Bernice, to tell her that he could be facing 40 years in prison and may never see her or their two boys again. 'She and the kids were crying. She was inconsolable,' Hernandez said through an interpreter.
Local residents affiliated with Latino advocacy groups say Hernandez, a legal resident who understands a fair amount of English but doesn't speak it well, was targeted because of his ethnicity. Deputies said Hernandez appeared drunk and they acted quickly to get narcotics test results after he was jailed.
Buncombe County Sheriff's Office Lt. Randy Smart acknowledged that four days in jail under an extremely high bond seemed a stiff penalty for failing to heed police lights and sirens, of which Hernandez was found guilty.
'It's one of those things when you go back and look at it, it does seem a little harsh,' the Sheriff's Office spokesman said.
Hernandez, who came to the United States in1985 to harvest grapes and strawberries, was not a legal resident until 1989 when he received amnesty under a federal program signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. Through that status, he was able to gain employment, such as at the carpet cleaning company, where he now works and had accrued vacation.
While driving to his sister's home, he said he encountered police in Arizona and Texas who also questioned him about what he was carrying and appeared to suspect drugs.
'The police in Texas used dogs to check,' he said.
Each time, he said he was sent on his way. He's not sure how he ended up in Asheville, but believes he stayed on Interstate 40 when he should have turned onto Interstate 81 after Knoxville. He was tired, but he said he kept driving because he was excited to see his sister. In Asheville, he pulled over after he thought he saw steam coming from his truck. A deputy's car approached and an officer told him he couldn't stop there because he was blocking traffic, Hernandez said.
He started driving away and put his flashers on. The law enforcement car followed him with its lights on. Hernandez said he thought the car was shepherding him in the direction the officer wanted him to go. But ahead there were other law enforcement cars blocking his way.
Investigators' incident reports say stop sticks were used, but Hernandez said he doesn't remember seeing them or noticing his tires being deflated until seeing his truck days later in the impound lot.
Officers pulled him from the car, put a knee in his back and pinned his arm behind him, leaving scrapes and bruises.
He was tested several times for alcohol but it came back negative. It was after he was jailed that he learned of the cocaine charges. He said he tried to explain about the dough and how some was already made up for sweet pineapple tamales, but no one seemed to listen. 'Later I was speechless. I didn't eat or sleep while I was in jail. I was thinking about how this could have happened to me,' he said.
His court date was set for May 19. But Wednesday, he was brought out of the jail and to the courtroom where there was a public defender, a prosecutor and a judge. He said he was told he was being found guilty of the one misdemeanor charge and would get credit for his time served in jail. He doesn't remember being asked to enter a plea. On Thursday, Fay Burner, who defended Hernandez, said she couldn't talk about the case without his permission.
It's not clear why deputies originally thought the food was cocaine. It could have been that initial checks showed the dough and other items were narcotics, Smart said. 'We do field tests for presumptive testing,' the lieutenant said. Officers later appeared to push to get full lab tests done quickly, he said.
District Attorney Ron Moore said he wasn't sure of the details of the case and hadn't seen a written report. Others said Hernandez was treated poorly because he is a Latino of Indian origin with limited English.
'If he were white it would have been different,' said Gustavo Silva, a local Latino rights advocate. Silva, a U.S. citizen originally from Uruguay, went to help Hernandez after getting a call from someone in the courthouse about his plight.
Neither he nor Hernandez is sure he'll ever be paid for his trouble, including the food which is gone or the fees for retrieving his truck. 'I asked in court, ‘Who's going to pay me for what I lost?' They said, ‘I don't know. It's not my problem,' Hernandez said."
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Yeah, further proof if you needed any, why anit-immigration law enforcement makes so little sense. It leads to abuses like these.
Showing posts with label wrongful imprisonment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wrongful imprisonment. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Ray Towler Spent 29 Years Behind Bars for a Crime He Didn't Commit, Ohio to Pay Him $2.5 Million
Last year I wrote several posts about Ray Towler (pic) the inmate who spent 29 years behind bars for a child rape he did not commit. Cleveland.com is reporting that Towler has settled with the state of Ohio over his wrongful imprisonment. Something called the Controlling Board has agreed to pay Towler $2.5 million.
Towler was sentenced to life in prison for raping an 11 year old girl. DNA evidence obtained with the assistance of the Ohio Innocence Project.
Towler was sentenced to life in prison for raping an 11 year old girl. DNA evidence obtained with the assistance of the Ohio Innocence Project.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Sheriff's Lawyer, On Wrongful Imprisonment and Strip Search of Identity Theft Victim--[The Sheriff Did] "A Great Job"
"Kimberly Shields, a 23-year-old manicurist from Winter Park, was in tears. She was locked up in the Seminole County Jail, strip searched, deloused, and she had no business being there. A small-time thief with a cocaine addiction had stolen her identity, stolen a car, then confused authorities in Charlotte County, who issued an arrest warrant that landed Shields in jail in Sanford in 2002.
She kept telling jailers they had the wrong person. They checked, found a photo of the real thief, acknowledged that she was the wrong person but still held her for several more hours. How much longer is in dispute. It was at least an additional 24 hours, if you believe Shields, Seminole Sheriff's Office fax records[,] and phone records from Charlotte County. It was four to seven hours, if you believe the Sheriff's Office employee who discovered the error.
Shields is suing the Seminole Sheriff's Office, alleging false imprisonment and negligence. There's a pretrial conference today. The case is tentatively set for trial Sept. 27.
'I was held there when they knew it was not me, then I was strip searched and treated like one of the inmates,' said Shields.
[The Sheriff's Department] failed to follow its own policies, according her attorneys, Crystal Eiffert and Melissa Mak. When employee Kelley Brunelle discovered the jail had the wrong person, it should have called the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office to find out whether Charlotte still wanted her extradited. Defense attorney Tom Poulton said Shields is due no money. The Charlotte County Sheriff's Office is to blame, he said.
Instead of suing Seminole, Shields should thank its employees for 'doing a great job,' discovering the error and turning their findings over to a judge, who ordered her release April 25, 2002, the day after her arrest, Poulton said.
The woman Charlotte County really wanted was Shannon McGuire. She and Shields had similar features. Shields was 5-feet-6 and weighed 120 pounds. McGuire was 5-feet-4 and 135 pounds. Both women have hazel eyes. But the day Shields was jailed, McGuire was in a state prison near Ocala, serving an eight-year sentence for a string of crimes in Pinellas County.
Charlotte County issued its warrant because McGuire, while living near Port Charlotte and using Shields' identity, stole a 1987 Plymouth. She was arrested by Charlotte County deputies later that day and gave Shields' name. She was charged with auto theft, pleaded no contest and was placed on three years' probation, all while pretending to be Shields. Her probation officer knew her as Kimberly Shields. [Ms.] McGuire is now 38, and has been in and out of Florida prisons four times, according to records at the Florida Department of Corrections.
Shields, now 32, has since married — her last name is now Hesketh — and she has two young children. She has never met McGuire, she said. She doesn't know how McGuire got her name. Identity theft can do a great deal more damage than wreck your credit, she said.
'Jail is not fun. I'd hate for anyone to have to go there, especially if you know you're innocent,' Shields said.
Whether Shields was knowingly held overnight is irrelevant, Poulton argued. Only a judge can release someone named in a warrant, he said, and the Sheriff's Office put the facts in front of a judge quickly enough, just before 1:30 p.m. the next day.
But in July, in an unrelated case, when it wanted an inmate freed, its lawyer moved swiftly, put paperwork in front of a judge that same day, and the teenager was released. At midmorning, a judge had sentenced a 16-year-old boy to adult jail — something that's illegal. When the Sheriff's Office general counsel found out, she quickly drafted a two-page motion, pointing out the error, got a judge to sign an order, and the boy was set free.
Shields also contends that she should have been set free as soon as Seminole County Judge Carmine Bravo ordered her release around 2 p.m. She wasn't. She was handcuffed, led from the courtroom and held for another three to 3 1/2 hours. Poulton said it takes several hours for jail employees to run through all their checks and process out an inmate. Shields, he said, was treated no differently than anyone else."
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Occasionally in my career I've heard really tin-eared claims from attorneys advocating on behalf of this or that position. This is one of those situations. I want this Sheriff's lawyer to stand up in front of a jury and argue that the Sheriff's department "did a great job," and Miss Shields should be grateful. Then I want to see how much money the jury gives Miss Shields.
Isn't one of the "unalienable rights" in this country, "liberty?" Please explain to a jury how a Sheriff's department that has wrongfully arrested you, strip searched, deloused, and incarcerated you--did a great job?
UPDATE: The Orlando Sentinel is reporting that a local jury awarded Miss Shields $100,000 ($75,000 for hte false arrest and imprisonment; $25,000 for the strip search) following a trial. The plaintiff burst into tears of joy as the verdict was announced.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Video Link to Ray Towler's Release from Prison
At this link the Cleveland Plain Dealer has the extraordinary video of Ray Towler's release from custody ny Judge Eileen Gallagher.
Another Wrongly Convicted Man Goes Free After 29 Years!
The Columbus Dispatch is reporting on the Cleveland man freed after 29 years in prison. Yesterday a Cuyahoga County judge freed Ray Towler after DNA evidence proved Towler was not the rapist of an 11 year old girl three decades earlier. The Judge, Eileen A. Gallagher, descended from the bench and with tears streaming down her face embraced Mr. Towler who smiled and said he was walking out into "the light."
Look, Ray Towler wasn't on death row in Ohio, but do we need further evidence of why capital punishment is such a bad idea? Until recent decades in Georgia and throughout the south, ( at least, until Corker v. Ga. in 1977), criminal defendants were executed for rape. Want to guess how many innocent men, particularly black men went to their deaths at the hands of a vengeful society intent on stamping out the crime of rape?
Look, Ray Towler wasn't on death row in Ohio, but do we need further evidence of why capital punishment is such a bad idea? Until recent decades in Georgia and throughout the south, ( at least, until Corker v. Ga. in 1977), criminal defendants were executed for rape. Want to guess how many innocent men, particularly black men went to their deaths at the hands of a vengeful society intent on stamping out the crime of rape?
Monday, January 25, 2010
That Candy Is Almost as Addictive as Crack Cocaine
The one of the two gentlemen in the picture spent 5 DAYS IN JAIL because coconut candy found in their work van by an idiot cop was mistakenly believed to be crack cocaine according to an amazing account in the New York Daily News:
"Cops accused Cesar Rodriguez and Jose Pena of having crack cocaine in their work van, but it was only coconut candy, they said Friday. Charges were dropped after tests showed they were telling the truth, but the two men plan to file a $2 million suit against the NYPD.'I spent five days in jail for possession of coconut candy,' said Rodriguez, 33, an ex-con who works as a plumber's assistant. He and Pena were parked near an Arthur Ave. bodega Jan. 15 when two police officers asked to search their green Chevy Venture van, the men said. The cops found pieces of the crystalline candy - known as crema de coco and sold in bodegas across the city - in a plastic baggie. Officer Anthony Burgos of the 48th Precinct arrested the duo for drug possession despite their insistence they were guilty only of a sweet tooth, Rodriguez said.'I kept telling him it is candy,' he said. Rodriguez and Pena were locked up on a Friday night and didn't see a judge for arraignment until that Sunday, said their lawyer, Neil Wollerstein."
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Being an ex-con meant Rodriguez was not able to obtain an affordable bond and he spent 5 days in jail, while Pena spent 3 days, incacerated.
Nice police work, there.
"Cops accused Cesar Rodriguez and Jose Pena of having crack cocaine in their work van, but it was only coconut candy, they said Friday. Charges were dropped after tests showed they were telling the truth, but the two men plan to file a $2 million suit against the NYPD.'I spent five days in jail for possession of coconut candy,' said Rodriguez, 33, an ex-con who works as a plumber's assistant. He and Pena were parked near an Arthur Ave. bodega Jan. 15 when two police officers asked to search their green Chevy Venture van, the men said. The cops found pieces of the crystalline candy - known as crema de coco and sold in bodegas across the city - in a plastic baggie. Officer Anthony Burgos of the 48th Precinct arrested the duo for drug possession despite their insistence they were guilty only of a sweet tooth, Rodriguez said.'I kept telling him it is candy,' he said. Rodriguez and Pena were locked up on a Friday night and didn't see a judge for arraignment until that Sunday, said their lawyer, Neil Wollerstein."
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Being an ex-con meant Rodriguez was not able to obtain an affordable bond and he spent 5 days in jail, while Pena spent 3 days, incacerated.
Nice police work, there.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
A Long, Long Time, Ago
The Dallas Morning News reports on the case of 30 year old Charles Ray Sempe who was busted for a pocket full of marijuana and jailed in the Dallas County jail because he didn't have the $200 bail. Shoved into an overcrowded holding cell, he changed the channel on the television set and was killed by a blow from behind by an enraged cellmate. Dallas County had turned its jails into profit centers, housing every miscreant they could lay their hands on from neighboring jurisdictions to derive revenue for the county.
Sempe's family sued (Chris Sempe holds a picture of his father in the accompanying image.) Twenty years later, after every conceivable antic, er, delay pulled by the County's outside private (billable hour attorneys)--the wrongful death action is scheduled for trial in February.
There is so much that is outrageous embedded in this story. When a civil lawsuit is filed and languishes as this case did, and is carelessly and wrongly dismissed then reinstated and then delayed and delyaed--the law is made to look like an ass. That defense attorneys involved in this matter have obtained hundreds of thousands of dollars from the citizens and ultimately may have nothing to show for it other than a perversion of justice--is outrageous.
The Sempe case is literary, a man jailed for a minor misdemeanor killed for changing a television channel in an overcrowded jail cell, the sheer grinding of the jusitice system, children now adults seeking justice. Good luck.
Sempe's family sued (Chris Sempe holds a picture of his father in the accompanying image.) Twenty years later, after every conceivable antic, er, delay pulled by the County's outside private (billable hour attorneys)--the wrongful death action is scheduled for trial in February.
There is so much that is outrageous embedded in this story. When a civil lawsuit is filed and languishes as this case did, and is carelessly and wrongly dismissed then reinstated and then delayed and delyaed--the law is made to look like an ass. That defense attorneys involved in this matter have obtained hundreds of thousands of dollars from the citizens and ultimately may have nothing to show for it other than a perversion of justice--is outrageous.
The Sempe case is literary, a man jailed for a minor misdemeanor killed for changing a television channel in an overcrowded jail cell, the sheer grinding of the jusitice system, children now adults seeking justice. Good luck.
Friday, December 18, 2009
Texas Justice--Wonderland
Texas likes it's reputation for being "tough on crime" as documented repeatedly at Bad Lawyer but the Dallas Morning News is reporting this morning about the extraordinary story of the "trustworthy" self confessed rapist-kidnapper who pistol-whipped his uncle on two occasions was given a "defferred probationary" sentence by a local judge, Judge John Creuzot (see pic). This means, Lemondo Simmons walks, once again from the consequences of his violent crimes. Yes, dreams do come true, Texas.
According to the DallasNews.com, "Lemondo Simmons kidnapped a couple from Dallas' West End in 1992 and raped the woman. Another man spent 16 years in prison for the crime before DNA evidence freed him. Simmons then confessed, but he was never charged because the statute of limitations on his crimes had passed. " Charming.
According to the report, Mr. Simmons claimed under oath that he was "trustworthy" and didn't need electronic monitoring as asked for by the county probation department. Judge Creuzot agreed!
Judge Creuzot hits the radar for another head scratcher as well, a former Dallas police officer, Randy Anderson got himself all drunk and disorderly and pulled a loaded gun on country music singer, Steve Holy. Creuzot gave officer Anderson 45 days! Most jurisdictions, that would be a mandatory 10 years.
According to the DallasNews.com, "Lemondo Simmons kidnapped a couple from Dallas' West End in 1992 and raped the woman. Another man spent 16 years in prison for the crime before DNA evidence freed him. Simmons then confessed, but he was never charged because the statute of limitations on his crimes had passed. " Charming.
According to the report, Mr. Simmons claimed under oath that he was "trustworthy" and didn't need electronic monitoring as asked for by the county probation department. Judge Creuzot agreed!
Judge Creuzot hits the radar for another head scratcher as well, a former Dallas police officer, Randy Anderson got himself all drunk and disorderly and pulled a loaded gun on country music singer, Steve Holy. Creuzot gave officer Anderson 45 days! Most jurisdictions, that would be a mandatory 10 years.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Wrongful Imprisonment-False Allegations-Part 2
I take seriously the suggestion that I mischaracterize a case that I take from the news to Blawg about, here, which is why I link to the stories that resonate for me. It is true that reporting about legal matters often lacks the dimension of comprehension and that claims are made in news stories that upon greater scrutiny do not bear up. So the other day I wrote about Robert Doyle based on a report from Alabama Online. According to the news account Doyle who had been convicted of molesting his own daughters stemming from allegations arising out of a divorce was exonerated shortly before his death from congestive heart failure. A reader commented that this was inaccurate and that Doyle in fact was a molester--I offered to correct the post if she would provide me with a source. She has not responded.
I confess that it is my natural bias to believe allegations of sexual abuse even though I know that false allegations do happen. When I encounter a case of false allegations I try to publicize it; and, here is a sad case out of New York. A construction worker was sent the prison for the violent rape at knife point of a 22 year old womand, that did not happen. The conviction of construction worker William McCaffrey was thrown out following DNZ evidence that cleared him of the crime and more importantly a confession by Biurny Peguero that she perjured herself in a bid to win sympathy from girlfiriends she was trying to impress. McCaffrey spent several years in prison on a twenty year sentence for the kidnapping and rape he did not commit. Ms. Peguero is facing 7 years on the guilty plea for perjury.
Congratulations to Innocence Project and NYC lawyer, Glenn A. Garber for persistence and outstanding lawyering.
See: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,579928,00.html
I confess that it is my natural bias to believe allegations of sexual abuse even though I know that false allegations do happen. When I encounter a case of false allegations I try to publicize it; and, here is a sad case out of New York. A construction worker was sent the prison for the violent rape at knife point of a 22 year old womand, that did not happen. The conviction of construction worker William McCaffrey was thrown out following DNZ evidence that cleared him of the crime and more importantly a confession by Biurny Peguero that she perjured herself in a bid to win sympathy from girlfiriends she was trying to impress. McCaffrey spent several years in prison on a twenty year sentence for the kidnapping and rape he did not commit. Ms. Peguero is facing 7 years on the guilty plea for perjury.
Congratulations to Innocence Project and NYC lawyer, Glenn A. Garber for persistence and outstanding lawyering.
See: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,579928,00.html
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