Last of two parts.
JACKSONVILLE—By the time Leo Jones was executed in
Florida's electric chair in March 1998 for the sniper killing
of a police officer, the case that had sent him to Death Row
16 years before had slowly but unmistakably come apart.
The main witness against him had recanted. Two key officers
in the case had left the Police Department under a cloud, and
allegations that one of them beat Jones before he supposedly
confessed had gained credence.
More than a dozen people had implicated another man as the
killer, saying they either saw him carrying a rifle as he ran
from the crime scene or heard him brag he had shot the
officer.
Even Florida Supreme Court Justice Leander Shaw, a former
chief of the capital crimes division of the state attorney's
office in Jacksonville, wrote that Jones' case had become "a
horse of a different color."
Newly discovered evidence, Shaw wrote, "casts serious doubt
on Jones' guilt." He and one other judge voted to grant Jones
a new trial.
But a five-judge majority of the court ruled that Jones'
claims had no merit. One week later, Jones, 47, was put to
death.
In the American system of criminal justice, the presumption
of innocence vanishes once a defendant has been found guilty,
and the burden of proof shifts from the prosecution to the
defense.
Although Death Row inmates are given numerous opportunities
for appeal—and some have been able to win their freedom—it can
be enormously difficult to persuade appeals courts to embrace
new evidence of innocence.
Evidence that a defendant could capitalize on at trial has
less potency on appeal. Issues of law and procedure, rather
than of innocence, dominate.
Those obstacles exist even though some convictions are
built on weak foundations. A Tribune investigation of
executions in the United States found dozens of cases where
prosecutors relied on dubious evidence or lawyers failed to
mount a vigorous defense, undermining the belief that when the
state employs an irreversible punishment, it must do so with
unshakable certainty.
More than two years after Jones was executed, there are
lingering doubts about his guilt, and questions about whether
the system of appeals in capital cases adequately addresses
claims of innocence.
At the same time, a Tribune reinvestigation of Jones' case
has uncovered new evidence that corroborates Jones'
longstanding claim that his confession was coerced after
Jacksonville police beat him.
In an interview with the Tribune, the lead detective on the
case said he saw another officer attack Jones while he was in
custody and had to pull him off Jones. The detective's
admission contradicts his testimony at trial and in later
court hearings.
The assistant state attorney who prosecuted the case said
in an interview that he suspects that police, angry over the
murder of a colleague, physically abused Jones—though he
insists Jones was guilty.
"To me, the most disturbing point of the case has always
been his confession and the events leading up to his
confession," said Ralph N. Greene III, now an attorney in
private practice. "That series of facts always bothered me as
a prosecutor."
Two jurors at Jones' trial have told the Tribune they now
have misgivings about their guilty verdict, saying that from
what they now know about the case, the evidence they heard at
Jones' trial was incomplete.
"I think we reached a verdict that made sense based on
evidence we heard at the time," said Robert Manley, an
advertising copywriter who voted for a life sentence.
"But then the evidence changed. That changed my thinking."
Said Nadine Appleby, a retired secretary who voted for a
death sentence: "If we had known some of these things that had
come up afterward, it might have made a difference."
Heavier burden of proof
In the U.S. system of criminal justice, appellate courts
are reluctant to second-guess jury verdicts and usually defer
to rulings by trial judges that involve issues of fact. After
all, juries and trial judges observe the demeanor of witnesses
and are seen as best positioned to judge their credibility.
Recantations, where witnesses disavow earlier testimony for
a new version of the truth, are by law viewed skeptically.
New witnesses are viewed with distrust if they have waited
years, or even decades, to come forward, rather than offering
their account immediately after a crime.
Rules also have been written to bring finality to
appeals—in essence, to balance the demands for fairness with a
need for efficiency. Deadlines are in place to keep the
justice system manageable and to prevent defendants from
appealing indefinitely, although they also can hinder
defendants who make legitimate, but untimely, claims.
These circumstances make it difficult for a prisoner trying
to prove he was wrongfully convicted.
"In a lot of ways, innocence is the worst possible issue
someone on Death Row can have," said Michael Mello, a former
appellate attorney in Florida who now teaches law at Vermont
Law School. "There is such a denial that this sort of thing
happens to innocent people."
Perhaps no decision embodied that more than the U.S.
Supreme Court's ruling in the case of Leonel Torres Herrera,
who was convicted of the 1981 murders of two police officers
in Texas and executed by injection in 1993.
Herrera's lawyers claimed in federal court that they had
evidence showing he was innocent. They argued he deserved a
new trial because executing an innocent man violated the
Constitution's protections, particularly those against cruel
and unusual punishment.
In denying Herrera's appeal, Supreme Court Chief Justice
William Rehnquist wrote that the trial was the "paramount
event" in a case and the "presumption of innocence disappears"
once a defendant has been convicted in a fair trial.
In a stinging dissent, Justice Harry Blackmun wrote: "Just
as an execution without adequate safeguards is unacceptable,
so too is an execution when the condemned prisoner can prove
that he is innocent.
"The execution of a person who can show that he is innocent
comes perilously close to simple murder."
The demand for efficiency in the system can put procedure
over substance as deadlines are strictly enforced.
That is what happened in Virginia to Roger Coleman.
Coleman had been convicted of a 1981 murder and rape, in a
case in which prosecutors relied on a jailhouse informant and
imprecise scientific evidence. Coleman had an alibi that, if
true, would not have allowed him time to commit the crime.
In the mid-1980s, Coleman lost a state court hearing, and
his lawyers missed, by one day, a 30-day deadline for filing a
notice of intent to appeal. Later, when they went to federal
court, arguing Coleman deserved a hearing on charges that the
state withheld evidence and that prosecutors presented false
testimony, they were rejected.
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 6-3 decision, also turned them
down, citing the missed deadline. Although Coleman had mounted
a strong case for innocence, the court dismissed his appeal on
procedural grounds.
"This is a case about Federalism," the majority said in an
opinion written by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. The court, she
wrote, should respect the rules the states put in place. Less
than a year later, in 1992, Coleman, still proclaiming his
innocence, was executed.
In at least a half dozen cases, one or more judges on
appeal voted to halt an execution because of their concern the
defendant might be innocent. Most of these objections were
expressed in dissenting opinions.
Earlier this year, on the eve of Freddie Lee Wright's
execution, two judges on the Alabama Supreme Court vigorously
dissented from the court's decision to allow Wright to be put
to death in the state's electric chair.
Wright, a black man convicted of killing a white couple,
had two trials. In the first, he came one vote short of
winning his freedom after a racially mixed jury deadlocked,
voting 11-1 for acquittal. At the second trial, prosecutors
used nearly all of their discretionary strikes to remove
blacks from the jury pool, and an all-white jury convicted
Wright.
Alabama Supreme Court Justice Douglas Johnstone voted to
stay the execution, saying the prosecution did not disclose
crucial evidence impeaching the credibility of its two key
witnesses. Prosecutors also did not tell Wright's lawyers that
another man initially had been indicted. But those charges
were dropped despite eyewitness identification, a ballistics
report matching the man's gun to the crime, and an
incriminating statement from his girlfriend.
In a last-ditch appeal before Wright's execution on March
3, his lawyers argued that electrocution was inhumane. In
response, Johnstone wrote, "Whether Wright is electrocuted or
injected seems insignificant compared to the likelihood that
we are sending an innocent man to his death."
A police officer dies
Early on the morning of May 23, 1981, Leo Jones and his
cousin Bobby Hammonds were in their apartment at 6th and Davis
Streets, just a block from the almost constant rumble of
Interstate Highway 95 in Jacksonville.
Jones was a drug dealer with a handful of arrests and a few
convictions, including one for shooting a teenager when he was
15.
"Everybody knew that Leo sold drugs," said Mike Chavis, who
was an investigator for Jones' appellate lawyers. "He was a
drug dealer. That's what he did."
At 1:10 a.m., two shots rang out. One of the bullets, which
police later determined was fired from a .30-30 rifle, crashed
through the windshield of a police cruiser stopped at the
intersection. The bullet hit the wire cage that separates the
front and back seats, and a bullet fragment ricocheted into
the head of patrolman Thomas Szafranski, 28, killing him.
Within minutes, Jacksonville police officers were searching
Jones' building, and when they burst into a second-floor
apartment, they found Jones and Hammonds.
Police took both men in for questioning and then charged
Jones, who they claimed had confessed. Hammonds gave a
statement, saying he saw Jones leave the apartment with a
rifle and return after he heard some gunshots.
Before trial, Jones' lawyers tried to get his confession
thrown out because, they alleged, it had been obtained through
police coercion. Jones claimed that police beat him and put a
gun to his head. He said he felt he had no choice but to
confess.
Jones, in fact, was taken to the hospital and treated for
minor injuries. A lawyer with the public defender's office who
saw Jones at a bond hearing shortly after his arrest said
Jones had cuts and bruises on his face and neck.
At a pretrial hearing on the validity of the confession,
Hammonds disavowed the statement he had given police. He said
officers had beaten and threatened him, telling him to
implicate Jones.
Police testified that Jones and Hammonds were hurt during a
scuffle as the two resisted arrest. Officers denied any
physical abuse or coercion. Detective Hugh Eason told the
Tribune he simply talked to Jones until he persuaded him to
confess.
Further, Jones' lawyers charged that the confession,
written by Eason and signed by Jones, was suspect because of
the vague description of the weapon as a "gun or rifle."
Eason testified that Jones told him what to write and that
Jones then voluntarily signed it.
Judge A.C. Soud denied the motion to throw out the
confession. At trial, Hammonds changed his story again, this
time testifying against Jones. Jones maintained his innocence,
saying he was in bed when the shooting occurred.
As for the motive, prosecutor Greene said that Jones hated
the police and was seeking revenge when he shot Szafranski.
Jones had been stopped a week before the shooting and,
according to the police officer who stopped him, threatened to
kill an officer.
The officer's report made no mention of any threat, and
Jones denied it.
Police found two .30-30 rifles in Jones' apartment. They
ruled out one as firing the bullet, but tests on the other
were inconclusive.
Although his fingerprints were on one of the rifles, Jones
claimed the guns belonged to Glenn Schofield, an acquaintance
he had sold cocaine to that night.
Jones, who was black, was tried and convicted by an
all-white jury. Szafranski also was white.
In the jury's eyes, there was ample proof of guilt:
Hammonds' testimony, the discovery of the rifles and the
confession, always a powerful piece of evidence.
"The evidence was pretty conclusive," said juror Raymond
Kitchens.
Jurors then voted 9-3 to recommend that Jones be sentenced
to death. The judge accepted the recommendation, which did not
have to be unanimous.
Innocence is not an issue
In Jones' first round of appeals, his lawyers went right
back to the alleged confession and questioned the judge's
decision to let jurors hear it.
By law, the lawyers had to focus exclusively on what
happened at trial, such as whether the judge's rulings were
proper. They could not offer any new evidence, and their
appeals failed.
Over the next five years, as one phase of appeals ended and
another began, Jones' new legal team—led by former public
defender Robert Link—was able to present new evidence, which
it was slowly discovering.
But the lawyers faced a difficult standard if they were to
get a court to reconsider his conviction. Florida law at the
time required that a defendant not only raise doubts about the
jury's verdict, but also present evidence so compelling that a
trial judge would find the jury's verdict a mistake and
declare a defendant not guilty.
In time, Link and his investigators were able to locate
some of the first evidence suggesting that Jones might be
innocent and that another man might have been involved.
Link found witnesses who said the shot that killed
Szafranski came from the bushes in a vacant lot near Jones'
building, not from the building itself as police testified and
as the disputed confession stated.
None of them had been called to testify by Jones' lawyer at
trial.
"And there was no question these people were there," Link
said, "because they were listed on police reports. They
weren't very difficult to locate."
Link also began to build a case against Glenn Schofield,
the man Jones said had been at the building that night to buy
cocaine. Schofield, interviewed by the Tribune in
Jacksonville, denied any role in the murder.
Schofield, now 43, has a lengthy criminal history that,
according to records, has put him in prison for all but about
three of the past 26 years.
In 1974, when he was 17, Schofield pleaded guilty to
manslaughter. He served five years, and was released in 1979.
The next year, he was charged with murder, but those charges
were dropped.
Nine days after Szafranski was killed, according to police
and court records, Schofield shot at a police officer
following a bank robbery. Schofield, who then escaped twice
from jail, eventually pleaded guilty to a weapons charge.
After being paroled in 1989, Schofield was convicted of
another weapons charge. He was released earlier this year.
One police report shows that Schofield was initially listed
as a possible suspect in the Szafranski murder, along with
Jones and Hammonds, but apparently was dropped after Jones was
charged.
Anthony Hickson, a retired Jacksonville homicide detective
who for a time was Eason's partner, told the Tribune that one
of his confidential informants told him that Schofield, not
Jones, had murdered Szafranski.
Hickson said that after the trial, he turned over this
information to either a lawyer or an investigator for the
defense—he's not sure which. He would not identify the
informant.
Link began gathering evidence that Schofield had admitted
to others that he killed Szafranski, and that Schofield was
spotted at the scene of the crime just moments after it
happened.
Paul Allen Marr, a prison inmate and jailhouse law clerk,
told Jones' lawyers he got to know Schofield in the mid-1980s,
when both were serving time at Union Correctional Institution.
Marr, who was convicted of sexual battery, said Schofield told
him that he, not Jones, had killed Szafranski.
Marr, who was paroled earlier this year and now works in
construction, told the Tribune: "The more I listened, the more
he talked. And before I knew it, he told me he had murdered
that police officer. ... He said he had a beef against all
those cops."
Marion Manning, who was a girlfriend of Schofield's, put
him at the scene of the crime. In an affidavit, she claimed
that moments after the shooting, Schofield flagged her down,
jumped into her car and told her to drive away.
Link used the new evidence to bolster his claim that Jones'
trial lawyer had been ineffective. That attorney, H. Randolph
Fallin, had failed to locate the witnesses that Link found.
That was a tough argument to win, though. Fallin, who had a
good reputation, testified he had tried to uncover evidence by
going into the neighborhood where the murder occurred and
looking for witnesses with the aid of Jones' family.
Even with those developments, Link thought it was unlikely
that Soud, who heard the evidence, would grant a new trial.
Soud rejected Jones' appeal, and then in 1988 the Florida
Supreme Court rejected it, saying the evidence was
insufficient.
More witnesses found
The state never wavered in its conviction that Jones was
guilty, that Schofield had nothing to do with the murder, and
that Jones had received a fair trial.
Curtis French, an assistant attorney general who handled
several of the appeals, said the alleged confessions from
Schofield either never were said or were just a matter of
Schofield "running his mouth."
"Our position on newly discovered evidence," French said,
"was that [Jones] didn't have any, or at least it wasn't
credible."
In 1991, Jones' lawyers returned to court with more
evidence favorable to Jones. This time, the lawyers presented
another girlfriend of Schofield's, who said that shortly after
the murder, he asked her to tell police if they came looking
for him that he was with her when Szafranski was killed. She
also claimed that several years after the murder, he bragged
about killing Szafranski.
A girlfriend of Jones', meanwhile, said that she was at the
apartment building the night Szafranski was shot and saw
Schofield running upstairs with a rifle. She said she asked
why he was running, and he replied, "Them crackers are after
me."
Two other witnesses said in sworn affidavits that they were
walking near the apartment building when they heard a shot and
saw Schofield running from the building carrying a rifle. The
lawyers also presented affidavits from three other prison
inmates saying that Schofield had bragged that he, not Jones,
had killed Szafranski.
Finally, the lawyers had a sworn affidavit from Hammonds in
which he reverted to his testimony that he never saw Jones
with a rifle.
Because Jones was scheduled to be executed within a couple
of weeks, Soud ordered a hearing on a Sunday afternoon. He
denied Jones' appeal.
His reasons were set out in a lengthy opinion in which he
said the evidence Jones' attorneys offered still was not so
compelling that, if he were to try the Jones case again, he
would immediately acquit him.
"It was a compelling case of guilt," Soud said in an
interview.
He said Schofield's alleged statements to other inmates
were "less than reliable" because no other evidence supported
them. He also ruled that they were hearsay and that Schofield
didn't say them immediately after the murder, weakening them.
In fact, jailhouse informants often are unreliable. That's
because their testimony typically comes in exchange for
benefits from prosecutors.
But in the Jones case, the jailhouse informants had little
to gain by testifying. The defense could not offer a shorter
sentence or a transfer to another prison—the kinds of
inducements that prosecutors sometimes provide in exchange for
inmate testimony.
Soud cited Jones' alleged confession as a key part of the
prosecution case, and as a reason to find that the defense had
not overcome its burden. He could not reconcile the confession
with Jones' claims of innocence.
When the Jones case reached the Florida Supreme Court, his
lawyers won a bittersweet victory. The court, in a ruling that
cut new legal ground, acknowledged the standard for newly
discovered evidence had been too high and was "almost
impossible to meet."
It said the standard "runs the risk of thwarting
justice...."
From then on, the court said, newly discovered evidence had
to be strong enough that it would likely produce a not guilty
verdict at a new trial. It was a subtle but significant
difference, but it did not matter.
The court said some of Jones' evidence was not new. Some of
the witnesses, the court said, were available for the trial.
Others, such as Paul Marr, were presented on an earlier appeal
and, consequently, did not qualify as newly discovered.
With much of the evidence stripped from Jones' appeal, the
court said his claim did not meet the lower standard.
In some ways, Jones suffered because his attorneys and
investigators developed their evidence in a piecemeal fashion
over years, rather than in a single burst that could have a
dramatic impact on an appeals court.
"It's incredibly frustrating," said Martin McClain, one of
Jones' lawyers. "We thought we were solving the case. We
thought we were doing all the right things."
In their next appeal, the attorneys offered three more
witnesses who placed Schofield at the scene, including one who
said he saw Schofield shoot the rifle from the bushes near
Jones' apartment. They also presented four more prison inmates
to say that Schofield confessed.
But the Florida Supreme Court said this evidence, which the
lawyers sought to use to strengthen what they presented
before, was redundant or less than persuasive.
Schofield, the court said, might simply have been bragging.
Evidence points to beating
Jones' appellate team eventually uncovered the first real
evidence to undercut the police officers' denials that they
had physically abused Jones.
A retired police officer, Cleveland Smith, came forward and
said Officer Lynwood Mundy had bragged that he beat Jones
after his arrest. Smith, who described Mundy as an "enforcer,"
testified that he once watched Mundy get a confession from a
suspect by squeezing the suspect's genitals in a vise grip. He
said Mundy unabashedly described beating Jones.
"Every time you asked Lynwood about it, he would recount
the entire story," Smith said in an interview with the
Tribune. "I must have heard that story at least 10 or 12
times."
Smith, an officer for 24 years before he retired in 1997,
said he waited so long to come forward because he wanted to
secure his pension. He said the culture of the Jacksonville
police force was such that he feared reprisals had he come
forward sooner.
Prosecutors did not challenge Smith's credibility.
Recently, Hugh Eason, who was in charge of the
investigation, said in an interview that he had to pull Mundy
off of Jones outside Jones' apartment. "He hit him, but he
didn't bust him up," Eason said. "But he hit him pretty good."
Mundy, in a brief interview at his home, denied any
misconduct.
"All I did was arrest that man. I didn't hurt nobody. I was
just doing my job," he said.
When Mundy left the department in 1985, it was under a
cloud of suspicion.
In 1982, almost a year after Jones went on trial, two
officers testified in an internal affairs hearing that Mundy
brought false charges against suspects and sometimes perjured
himself when testifying in court hearings. "Officer Mundy,"
one testified, "is just an outright known liar."
A 1985 internal affairs investigation into allegations that
Mundy had roughed up a suspect called the incident "an
embarrassment" to the department. It was amid that
investigation that Mundy resigned.
Eason also came under scrutiny. In March 1987, prosecutors
launched an investigation into allegations that Eason had a
role in the murder of a used-car lot owner.
Prosecutors presented their evidence to a grand jury, but
no charges were filed. After Eason decided to retire in July,
the department's internal inquiry was closed.
Eason, who now makes his living repossessing cars, said the
allegations against him were false but declined to discuss
details.
The prosecutor also ran into trouble. Greene was indicted
by a federal grand jury in 1985 on charges he conspired with a
county judge to intervene in a dozen cases involving friends.
Greene resigned during the investigation, and he was
acquitted at trial.
A Supreme Court divided
On March 17, 1998, the Florida Supreme Court issued its
final ruling on Jones' innocence claims. The majority said
that "at most," the evidence suggested Schofield might have
taken part in the shooting with Jones—a theory of the crime
that prosecutors never before suggested.
Two judges, Leander Shaw and Harry Anstead, issued vigorous
dissents. Anstead even listed each witness—20 in all—who
implicated Schofield or testified to other problems with the
case that would help prove Jones' innocence.
Anstead called the evidence "enormous" and said the court
was being overly restrictive in how it considered it—so much
so that the court threatened "to defeat the ends of justice"
by its nearsightedness.
"...we cannot ignore the fact that the State routinely
relies on 'jailhouse confessions' to secure convictions in
criminal cases, including many murder cases," he wrote.
"Obviously the State would have a powerful case against
Schofield...."
Shaw argued that appeals courts were supposed to be a
"constitutional safety net" to prevent the execution of
innocent people.
"The present case is a classic example of that safety net
working properly—up to the present point," he wrote. "Although
Jones was tried and convicted in 1981, much of the present
evidence did not—could not—come to light until now, more than
a decade later—after Officer Smith and Schofield's accusers
came forward. This evidence vastly implicates Schofield and
casts serious doubt on Jones' guilt."
Thomas Crapps, an assistant general counsel in the
governor's office, recalled that the Jones case was difficult
to resolve for then-Gov. Lawton Chiles. The dissents from Shaw
and Anstead weighed heavily on Chiles, who had to approve the
execution.
"When you start getting into these cases, you realize how
much things change over time and how they're not cut and
dried," said Crapps, now in private practice.
On March 24, 1998, Jones was executed.
"What I always wondered about was whether I failed Leo or
the system failed him," said McClain, one Jones' appellate
attorneys. "And I think that the system failed him. You're
calling on the system to look at itself and own up to making a
mistake. The system doesn't like to do that."
Juror Robert Manley, who then lived in Texas, was on his
way to work one morning when he heard on his car radio that
Jones had been executed.
He said he pulled over to the side of the road and began to
recall his jury duty. He remembered how certain he had been at
trial, how he had been impressed by the strength of the
evidence, how the prosecutors had systematically erased his
doubts.
Then Manley began to think how the certainty he once felt
had eroded over the years as he learned more and more about
Jones' case.
"It just hit me that something I'd been a part of had come
to fruition," he said. "I felt horrible."
Tribune staff writers Maurice Possley and Ken Armstrong
contributed to this report.
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