Updated Thursdays

Sunday, April 28, 2013

The House of Renewed Hope


I have an interesting story for y’all today, out of Dallas, which I’m just going to write briefly about; I think the article covers it more fully than I could so, if you’re interested, please check it out.

It’s a group of exonerees who’ve come together to help others in similar situations; not just providing support and advice for the newly released, but also actively looking into other cases and helping to exonerate the innocent.

It looks like they’re focusing primarily on those who have been falsely convicted on the testimony of eyewitnesses, which doesn’t directly apply to Coy’s case, but they’re taking a stand against the culture of ‘DNA or get the fuck out’ that seems to be ever-present in Texas’s appeals system.

These cases are not going to be easy to prove, but I am so very encouraged to see them still struggling for justice. If they can climb out of TDCJ’s bottomless pit, and then turn around and extend a hand to those left behind, how can we lose hope? How can we give up? These men lived through it and are not just standing, but still fighting.

Friday, April 26, 2013

Weekend Reading 66

Guys, I forgot to put up The Prison Pensman's outstanding interview with Lil Smitty last week, and now he's got a new interview with Carlos Coy up. I highly recommend you go read both; if you have a minute, please let Young J know how much you appreciate his blog.

Comments are encouraging, and it lets bloggers know when they're connecting their readers with the information they want.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Fal·la·cy, NOUN



A mistaken belief, esp. one based on unsound argument.
A failure in reasoning that renders an argument invalid.
Synonyms
mistake - error - fault - delusion - sophism


Eric said...
This is all bullshit. Just red herring defense tactics that weren't relevant to the case whatsoever. That's why the judge denied it. Even if it was allowed, it would not have changed the jury's opinion. The jury in the civil trial heard some of this bullshit, and they still decided Carlos was guilty. Ponder that for a moment.

 Incandesio said...
I'd rather ponder your claim to know what would and would not have swayed the jury.
Now I'm pondering the possibility that you're actually a psychic;

I pointed out on the last post you commented on that the civil jury was handed a case that was already decided; if what SPM has written is true, they weren't allowed to decide whether or not Carlos was guilty, only what he should have to pay under the assumption that he was. 25k, a paltry amount, x 0. That's not exactly a ringing indictment of a dangerous child molester.

Eric said...
Is 25K really a paltry amount? What kind of bankroll do you have?

Anyway, no, I don't think Carlos is telling us the whole truth, as per usual. According to this Chron article (http://www.chron.com/entertainment/music/article/Family-of-South-Park-Mexican-victim-awarded-1935238.php), "the jury last week unanimously concluded that Coy acted with malice when he molested the girl."

So that should tell you right there that the jury agreed that he was guilty. And think about it, if the jury truly believed he was an innocent man like Carlos claims, then they could have awarded the family zero dollars.

"Eleven of the 12 jurors voted to spare Coy from paying any punitive damages."

At least one juror thought he should have been punished further. Personally, I think he had already been punished enough. I can understand making him pay for past and future therapy (hence the 25K), but there is no need for punitive damages since he had already been sentenced for 45 years, an adequate punishment. I think most of the jury thought the same.

But this is what I find most interesting. In a civil trial, the defendant is required to take the stand. He can't hide behind his lawyer. I would be fascinated to read the transcripts from the civil trial when Carlos took the stand. I would be fascinated to read his deposition too. Think about the goldmine of information we could obtain from that. Finally a chance to read his side of the story, since he hasn't been willing to tell us for over 11 years now. Did he actually admit his involvement? Or did he continue to deny the allegations? Even if the judge ruled that they had to presume he was guilty, Carlos still had the right to deny that and say he was innocent. We need those transcripts, Incandesio. Can you get them?


Once again, I find myself drawn into a discussion of the civil trial by the actions of Eric, this blog’s #1 most-beloved gadfly.

He’s left variations of this argument on a few different posts, and I asked him to go ahead and sum it up for me, which he has not done; he’ll have to be happy with my translation of his arguments:

Argument #1: Two juries decided Coy was guilty, the criminal jury and the civil jury! Coy is obviously lying when he says that the civil jury was forced by the court to view him as guilty!

Dude...in the article you quoted, the defense attorney says “They had to presume some level of actual damages” (emphasis mine.) But okay, we know that you believe defense attorneys are a bunch of unprincipled scumbags.

From the jury instructions signed January 28, 2005:

Mr. Coy has previously been convicted of aggravated sexual assault on [Jane Doe], and that conviction is now final. As a result, the Plaintiff is not required to produce any evidence of Mr. Coy’s liability for actual damages, and the only issues for your consideration are those set forth in Question 1...

...Question 1: What sum of money, if paid now in cash, would fairly and reasonably compensate [Jane Doe] for her injuries, if any, that resulted from the occurrence in question?

There you have it, Eric. You propped up your fallacious and unsupported argument with the assertion that Coy is not “telling us the whole truth, as per usual”, without bothering to do the minimal amount of research it takes to uncover these same documents, thoughtfully provided free of charge by Harris County.

The civil jury convicted him of nothing. They were specifically instructed not to let ‘bias, prejudice, or sympathy’ affect their decisions; they were only allowed to answer the questions put to them using the evidence provided.

I have a great deal of sympathy for anyone who draws a wrong conclusion from legal documents through misunderstanding; I’m a reasonably intelligent person, but half the time it’s like swimming through pudding trying to comprehend the meaning behind all the legalese and lawyer-speak; but for you to come over here dropping obviously, demonstrably wrong arguments on post after post like so many dog turds across my lawn...I don’t like it, Eric. Do better.


Argument #2: 25K is a perfectly reasonable amount for damages! How can you say it’s “paltry”? What are you, some kind of rich fuck?!?

 Ha ha, my bankroll; it's more of a bankflat, actually. But my use of the word paltry has nothing to do with what I have, and everything to do with what the family's lawyer expected to get. I'll talk about that in a minute.

You quoted a newspaper article: "the jury last week unanimously concluded that Coy acted with malice when he molested the girl."

So that should tell you right there that the jury agreed that he was guilty. And think about it, if the jury truly believed he was an innocent man like Carlos claims, then they could have awarded the family zero dollars.

In answer, I draw your attention to this portion of the document mentioned above:

A “yes” answer must be based upon a preponderance of evidence. If you do not find that a preponderance of the evidence supports a “yes” answer, then answer “no”.

Is it possible to commit the aggravated sexual assault of a child without malice? No, it’s not. The jury was instructed not to look at the case as a whole, but to focus in on each question and answer it without regard to the outcome.

Is it possible for a molested child to have suffered no harm? No, it’s not. Because they had to treat the conviction as an accurate account of what had happened, they were legally obligated to compensate for the suffering that would have occurred. Interestingly enough, by finding malice, they opened him up to sky-high exemplary damages.

I notice that you take the argument of the Doe family’s lawyer for your own; that, since Carlos Coy was already sentenced to 45 years, they felt he didn’t need to be punished anymore. But the fact is, that same lawyer expected this lawsuit to have a major payout.
In the Civil Case Information Sheet, filed 9-4-2002, he clearly stipulated that he was seeking damages over $100,000. According to Coy, when his lawyer explained that he would automatically be presumed guilty and recommended he settle:

“I know you don’t want to hear this, but you may want to think about giving them an offer to avoid taking this to court. I think you should talk to your brother and come up with something that’s good for you. I understand that you don’t want to give these people a dime, but you’ve got to weigh out the situation. You could lose everything you’ve ever worked for, and then some.”

The next weekend, I spoke to Tudy. I explained that the fight would be lost even before we put the gloves on. We decided that the smartest thing to do was to make an offer. This was one of the lowest points in my life; having to pay people money who didn’t work for it, and for damn sure didn’t deserve it. We agreed that $300,000 was more than fair, and something we could handle.

A week later, Tudy wrote me and told me that our lawyer gave their lawyer the offer, and their lawyer started laughing. There would be no deal and the trial was locked in.”


He laughed at the idea of $300,000. The Cause of Action, a copy of which is attached to the Defendant’s Amended Motion to Release Documents filed on 8-3-2004, states:

“...Plaintiffs suggest such punitive damages should greatly exceed any actual damages by as much as tenfold.” (emphasis mine)


If my reading of the Texas Civil Code section 41.008 is correct, there was no cap on the amount of damages, so, yeah, compared to what the Doe family’s lawyer apparently thought this case was worth, 25K is a minimal amount.

Really, the exemplary damages seem like the only part of the settlement for which the jury was allowed to make an informed decision; the only time they were asked to consider (from the aforementioned document):

a. the nature of the wrong

b. the character of the conduct involved

c. the degree of culpability of the wrongdoer

d. the situation and sensibilities of the parties concerned

e. the extent to which such conduct offends a public sense of justice and propriety

f. the net worth of Carlos Coy

They were ordered to answer in dollars and cents; their answer, as we know, was zero. A big ol’ goose egg.

Argument #3: Eric really, reeeeeally wants to read what Coy said during the civil trial and asks, “We need those transcripts, Incandesio. Can you get them?”

We need them? Eric, as much as I adore the idea of playing your pal Gal Friday on this Epic Journey into The Goldmine of What You Believe Might Have Been Said, I have to wonder why someone who professes to have so much interest in and knowledge of this case is so unfamiliar with the facts of it.

I mean, you’re willing to dig up an ancient, dust-covered, barely coherent accusation made by an anonymous poster on an obscure brown-pride forum to support your views, but you can’t be bothered to take a look at the easily-available government documents that would prove your entire premise is bullshit, and willfully ignorant bullshit at that.

I don’t need the civil transcripts. Your obsessive desire for them appears to spring out of  nothing more than voyeuristic avarice; if you got them, I suspect you would read them the same way you read this blog, discounting what does not support your opinion as lies and imagining “context” that makes supporting evidence seem more damning than is reasonable.

Eric, you may accuse me of faking these documents; if that has occurred to you, I sincerely invite you to abandon your penchant for sophistry and actually do some damn research. We both know that you’re smarter than the average bear and if I can find these documents, then so can you.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Quick Update 8


Quick Update: The Surprise Choice                                                             4/11/13

Fambo,

            What does it do? I hope it did what it does. If it didn’t do what it does don’t get did by what doesn’t get done.
            For those who need a translation: Hey, how are you? I hope great. If not, just stay strong and things will get better.
            Well, “Angels” won the vote for the free single, releasing May 3rd. Incandesio said it took 33% of the votes, while “K-love Vs. SPM” came in second with 27%. I’m still taken aback that the majority chose “Angels”, knowing it was a Christian song. I’m not saying that I thought you were devil worshippers, but you know what I mean. I’m not exactly known for Christian music.
            In fact, this is the first of it’s kind on an SPM album. I hope you enjoy it.
           
            Incandesio wrote me a letter, and it included some of your comments, and I’d like to respond to a few. I’ll do that now.

1.) Anonymous said....
            I just chose the first track because i want to hear Los destroy his compitition! And im guessing K-love can hold his own since he’s featured in the album All the tracks should be fire so ill take any of them. Cant wait till the album drops!

Response: I wouldn’t say that K-Love could hold his own, but he was definately entertaining. He called me everything from a “bitch” to “a skittle.” (Yeah, the candy.) He tried his best, but I think he knew what was going to happen to him. I guess some people like gettin abused by the Mojado. I don’t understand that enjoyment. I once freestyled against Rasheed, and I won’t do that again.

            Let me say that there’s plenty of guys who can freestyle better than me, but K-Love was not one of them. The battle is fun to hear, though. I give K-Love props for sacrificing himself for the sake of entertainment. Even though he left the battle with his pride stripped away, his confidence trampled and his manhood in question, he tried.

2.) Cristoval Larrazolo said...
            OK my question is “do you think I’m dumb for putting ‘FREE SPM!’ on my knuckles? I don’t care what those haters say but wanna know what you think. They say I’m dumb cause I don’t know you on a personal level ...but I feel I do. even tho I never met you.

Response: Most times people get tattoos of things that mean something to them. My justice and freedom are important to you, so you expressed that. How can someone hate onwhat’s important to you? If they don’t like it, tell them to get their own tattoo that says, “I don’t like Cristoval’s ‘FREE SPM!’ tattoo.” Ya see, Players represent what they love, and haters represent what they hate on. So, as silly as it sounds to get a “hater tattoo”, that’s exactly what they do, anyway. They spend their time “tattooing” themselves with whatever they’re hating on. That’s a crazy-sad life, but their job is vital in strengthening those who operate with love. Use them for fuel, my brother. That’s what they’re here for.
3.) (I’m not sure who said this comment because there’s a space between the name and the comment, so I won’t put the name.)

            Comment:
            I just want to hear an SPM song that doesn’t have Carloyn Rodriguez on the hook i find her singing annoying and she ruins the song 90% of the time. She was overused on The Last Chair Violinist she should have only been on Mexican Heaven and Are We Real nothing else. Now she is going to be on 7 more songs smh! Not looking forward to those. Hopefully SPM stops using her so damn much in future projects.

Response: Carolyn’s in the Dope House Family, and she’s our vocalist. Nobody tells the Black Eyed Peas, “Hey, what the fuck, Fergie is being overused!” What do you want me to do, tell Juan Gotti to sing the hooks? Have you ever heard his singing? Sounds like two sumo wrestlers making love.

            But you know what’s crazy, Carolyn only sings two full hooks, an that’s on “The Poor Kids” and “To The Flame.” I don’t know why I said seven. I guess cause I’m so used to her singing the choruses. She does some partial stuff on “Till They Come”, “Angels”, and ad-libs. But if she were on seven hooks, I’d be just as happy. She’s Mexican Fergie gotdammit!

            But I’ve heard this complaint before, and understand that The DHF is a group that’s for life, por vida. And I know what you’re thinking, but the answer is, no, you can not kill Carolyn. But do me a favor, give her another chance when you listen to The S.O.N. Listen to how she sprinkles dope on “Frustration” and “Till They Come.” That shit is priceless, man. The girl knows what to add, and how to add it, to purify a song. I can’t speak for her solo projects because I haven’t heard them, nor was I involved. But if she needs to be redeemed, let The S.O.N. be her redeemer, because she did the fool.
            Matter a fact, here’s a quick sixteen for my girl:

Quick Sixteen


Why you mad at Carolyn? Cause she isn't Marylynn?

cause she sound like Lucifer when Lucy's shooting heroin?

maybe she would care again if someone pulled her hair a bit

maybe it's them blue eyes, make her look American

when she comes to visit I be starin at her pair and then,

she just looks away, cause she see my Woody Harrelson

now she is embarrassed and she scootin back her chair an inch

while my shit is risin like a mothafuckin Paris bridge

now the fuckin air is thick, Why the fuck she wear that shit?

This should be a movie called "Night Nurse Meets Werewolf Dick"

Damn I jus went overboard, ate my words then ordered more

this shit sounds like horror or, somethin at the porno store

let me use your Ford Explorer, 'pologize from door to door

sorta like a borin tour, all the way to foreign shores

your the core, we the spine, fuck a book, I read ya mind

show up any time I want, but make sho I leave in time.....



I was gonna answer some more comments but I got sleepy.
Plus this is a quick update, so it’s only right that I make it quick. Agree? I figured you wouldn’t.
            I’m still not sure where the snippet/single will be available, but I do know that it’s strictly a digital release. There will not be physical snippets like we did last time. I’ll write you more about everything concerning The S.O.N. as soon as I find out more.

Con Mucho Amor,
Los

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Weak Prosecutors


I want to draw your attention to a great post by Grits for Breakfast; It’s about SB 12, which would allow prosecutors to bring up unrelated, unproven accusations during criminal trials involving charges of sexual assault. I’m not going to talk about it here, because I really want you to head over to Grits and read his excellent description of this piss-poor piece of legislation.

Seriously, read it before you finish this post.

You done? Great. Did you read the comments?

If you did, you saw this gem from an anon @6:50:

“A good prosecutor attempts to convince the jury that the defendant should be convicted because he or she committed the crime in question.

A weak prosecutor attempts to convince the jury that the defendant should be convicted because he or she is a bad person.”

Eloquent in its simplicity, that quote describes so much of the testimony that we see in newspaper articles from the time, and Coy’s Habeas Corpus; how Coy was accused of...

...Killing Jane Doe’s Grandfather by proxy; they said he heard about the abuse, had a heart attack and died.

...Grooming his daughter for future sexual assaults; there was no proof offered, of course, only the ‘feelings’ of state-sanctioned experts.

...Naming his company Dope House Records.

...Being rude, doing drugs, and beating women according to Jane Doe’s mother who, as we know, had a near photographically-accurate memory for things that supported her case.

...and my personal favorite, that he had the audacity to pay money to a defense lawyer! Imagine!

They even tried to introduce the same type of testimony mentioned by Grits during the trial; The Houston Chronicle does not appear to have this article in their archive, but this article's been re-posted in multiple places:

“Prosecutors asked the judge to allow testimony from several other alleged victims who claimed Coy assaulted them. A decision is expected Thursday.
"It’s certainly not right and the judge is seeing their desperation of trying to try other cases in this case as exactly what it is — it’s a desperate effort to save a case they see failing before their eyes," Lewis said.”



When they failed to get unproven accusations admitted into his trial, they simply brought them up during the sentencing phase:

“Andrews and co-prosecutor Denise Oncken reminded the jury that there were seven other charges of sexual assault pending against Coy.

Lewis countered that the prosecution was basing its case on the quantity of evidence, rather than the quality.”

As Grits for Breakfast put it, “...it relieves the prosecutor from the burden of proving the charges they indicted the defendant on. More convictions in which prosecutors don't have to prove their case means more cases with a greater likelihood the evidence wasn't good enough on its own to sustain a conviction, but this bill provides another avenue to convict anyway.”




Monday, April 15, 2013

Letter to Mike Anderson 5

Sorry for the delay! As always I encourage you to print this out and send it in, write your own, or simply print off one of the downloadable flyers and send that in!

D.A. Mike Anderson
1201 Franklin St
Houston, Tx
77002


Sir,
 
I'm writing today about the case of Carlos Coy, #908426.
 
I have been following the news relating to Mr. Duane Buck with great interest; while most of his supporters seem to believe that he should be given a new sentencing hearing because of racism, it is the procedural implications of his trial that I am most interested in.
 
Whatever Dr. Quijano's personal views may be, the prosecutor that elicited the infamous answer asked his questions with care; they say a lawyer should never ask a question he doesn't know the answer to, and I believe this was no exception. The prosecutor wanted the jury to consider not Duane Buck the individual, but Duane Buck, the faceless member of a strange and dangerous group.
 
Sir, I do not know what your decision will be regarding Mr. Buck's case, but I have great respect for those that are standing up for the principles of impartiality and fairness. If he receives a new sentencing hearing, and receives another death sentence, some may believe that the cost incurred was wasted; but by ensuring that each trial is focused on the correct application of justice in every particular, you reassure us that you serve the public interest.
 
That is why I hope the same spirit that prompts Duane Buck's supporters to action will also lead you to provide Carlos Coy with a new trial. I do not believe that he was convicted because of racism; I believe the issues in his trial are deeper than that; the willingness of the judge to exclude evidence, of the prosecutors to allow witnesses to 'practice' their testimony outside the presence of the jury, and the general tendency to view Coy as a member of the most despised group imaginable, and not as a potentially innocent defendant.
 
Please, sir, re-try this case. Give us justice.
 
Me, my address, etc.
 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Whiny Excuse 1

Hey guys, I just now (11:05 pm) got back from a six-hour drive; today's post will be up this afternoon.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Weekend Reading 65

Just a few things today; first of all, 8714 films has some previously-unreleased footage of SPM in concert, check that out here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOpKwIDIR_k&feature=share&list=UUOYg2nVtorGTlFa33yK7uOg

Please, leave him a comment and let him know you appreciate it.

Also,

Local attorneys have differing opinion about new exoneration report

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Foul Blows




He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor-- indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one. -Justice Sutherland


 In 1997, Duane Buck was sentenced to death for shooting three people, two of whom died. Today, there is a movement among the citizens of Harris County, including one of the prosecutors who convicted him and his surviving victim, to re-do his sentencing hearing because of what most seem to believe was racist testimony from a defense expert.

Much has been made of psychologist Walter Quijano’s testimony; a lot of people are accusing Harris County of institutional racism. By focusing on that one (somewhat shaky) conclusion, I believe that the discussion has side-stepped the actual, relevant problem.

According to Quijano, “I was asked a question whether there is a relationship between race and violence or dangerousness,” he said. “The literature suggests that there is a correlation. So I had to say yes.”

Whether the numbers actually support this is a matter of much debate, which would take us even further down the racial rabbit-hole; let’s say that Dr. Quijano spoke in good faith, based on a scholarly investigation of the pure, un-opinionated numbers.

From the sentencing hearing, as written by the New York Times:

Dr. Quijano had been called to the stand by the defense, and ultimately found that the probability that Mr. Buck would commit future acts of violence was low. But under cross-examination, the prosecutor for the Harris County district attorney’s office asked him about the various factors. “You have determined that the sex factor, that a male is more violent than a female because that’s just the way it is, and that the race factor, black, increases the future dangerousness for various complicated reasons,” the prosecutor asked Dr. Quijano. “Is that correct?”

“Yes,” he replied.

In her closing argument, the prosecutor reminded the jury of the psychologist’s testimony. “You heard from Dr. Quijano, who had a lot of experience in the Texas Department of Corrections, who told you that there was a probability that the man would commit future acts of violence,” she said.

There it is; the prosecutor is encouraging the jury to sentence this man, not by his personal likelihood to re-offend, but by his group’s statistical likelihood (accurate or not) to commit violence. Quijano was called as a defense witness, to testify that Buck was unlikely to commit future violence; the prosecutor got up and, with a superb control over his own language and an obvious knowledge of the same statistics the psychologist had, elicited a response to that would permit the jury to consider this man not as an individual, but as a member of a group.

I do not have a lot of sympathy for Duane Buck. If he is guilty (and it certainly appears that he is), we have given the State the right to punish him with imprisonment or death. But to use an individual’s involuntary association with a group -any group- in an attempt to strip him of his life or liberty is heinous; it is disgusting; it is the lowest, slimiest, masturbatory self-aggrandizement possible.

The State is not God. The Jury is not omniscient. They must not be allowed to punish us for the real or perceived sins of our groups. By having the misfortune to be accused of the sexual assault of a child, Carlos Coy was absorbed into one of the most hated and reviled groups on the planet. There are those who would have advocated his immediate execution based on nothing but his involuntary inclusion into that group.

This is our fight; it’s not a popular one, but it is important. The Harris County Justice System itself has shown that it is capable of engaging in that fight, of realizing the severity of these tiny, seemingly insignificant bouts of sneakiness. This is a big part of what Coy’s case is all about; creeping, insidious misbehavior that seems unimportant until enough people, pulling enough political weight, get upset about it.



Sunday, April 7, 2013

Forensic Psychology and the Eternal Quest for Certainty




The scientific evidence marshaled against Coy, at least what we’ve seen of it, came exclusively from therapists, psychologists, and social workers. I have no doubt that it was presented as irrefutable, highly refined, and scien-tastic.

Forensic psychology seems to be a continually evolving discipline, much like the science behind arson investigations; and like the evidence used against Ed Graf, ‘facts’ can mean different things to different people:

The latter half of the 20th century saw a return to a focus on childhood sex abuse as the etiology of later distress and dysfunction. Fueled by the proliferation of scientific evidence, child advocates refused to back down when confronted by skeptics, and staunchly maintained the attitude that "children don't lie; if it hadn't happened, they couldn't report it." An attempt to make up for decades of ignorance and rejection of children's stories of abuse led to an unfettered and unexamined acceptance of every child's story of abuse as true. By the close of the 1980s, the negative repercussions of this attitude were obvious.


The negative repercussions are, indeed, painfully obvious, but have we admitted that we can’t know, with 100% certainty, if a child was truly abused? Without some kind of conclusive physical evidence (which presents its own trouble of interpretive bias), a jury still wants to know that they’re sending a guilty man to prison; the court brings in psychologists, dedicated professionals that can offer what appears to be proof.

“Yes, this child was abused. She drew a picture with hearts and pointy triangles, which is a red flag indicator of abuse.” 

“Yes, this child was abused. When presented with anatomically correct dolls, she immediately tried to stick Tab A into Slot B, which only an abused child would do.”

“Yes, this child was abused; she told us that witches flew her into the air and killed a baby and cooked it, and then everybody had sex in a big vat of blood, and then they returned her to her home and her parents were none the wiser.” (<--Accusations like this are real, and were accepted without question during the satanic-daycare-panic. I shit you not.)

And so we are comforted by the reassuring presence of Science, which assures us that what we’re doing is sanctioned by reason, and logic, and common sense. When the science advances, and the professionals discover that, as in Ed Graf’s arson conviction, the scientists subjectively interpreted objective evidence and imprisoned someone who may very well be innocent, we gasp in horror and swear never to be fooled again...until the next outrageous case comes along.

My point (yes, I have one) is that if a child's testimony is not solid, not consistent enough to convince a jury, should the State be allowed to trot out experts that are willing to swear that that they see symptoms of abuse? Especially considering that efforts to identify any one consistent, pervasive experiential marker have consistently failed?


Friday, April 5, 2013

Weekend Reading 64

Got a question for SPM? Send it in!

In a few days I'll pick four questions & post them on Facebook in a poll; the top two will be sent to SPM for a Response.



Also, check out the Prison Pensman, they have an interview up with Lil Smitty, the artist behind "A letter to SPM": http://theprisonpensman.blogspot.com

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Ed Graf


Ed Graf has completed nearly 25 years of a life sentence for burning his two stepsons to death. The evidence against him was damning...until it wasn’t. The science, apparently never proven even at the time of Graf’s conviction, has now changed even more. Bullshit theories, once widely accepted for no other reason than that they were widely accepted, have given way to testing and reasoned judgment.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has ruled that Graf will either get a new trial, or be released. The prosecution can still bring charges, but they will not have any evidence of arson to use against him; why not? Because even their own expert says that there was none.

There is a significant pile of circumstantial evidence against this man, such as insurance policies taken out on each of his children; in movies that is always a clear indicator of guilt and I imagine it was reported with much glee by the media at the time. Ed Graf was no angel, having been fired from a bank for embezzlement previously.

I make no assumption of Mr. Graf’s guilt or innocence. The life insurance policies, while appearing suspicious when they are reported as nothing but life insurance policies, were actually also college funds. He may have simply been responsibly planning for his children’s future. Embezzlement, if he committed that, is a non-violent, fairly passive crime.

But I want to draw your attention to this quote from the ABC article:

“Prosecutors support a new trial for Graf on the basis of the new analysis, but insist he is guilty.
"In a capital murder case, letting a conviction stand in light of the possibility that an individual was convicted on science now known to be false is unconscionable," prosecutors said in a January court filing.”
(Emphasis mine)
In my mind, there is no better attitude for the justice system to have. They believe he’s guilty, but they’re not willing to use that belief as a shield against proving it. 

Next post, I want to talk about the changing opinions on the signs of abuse.