From the TexasTribune.com (more here):
From the moment 4-year-old April Tucker died, Debbie Tucker Loveless and John Harvey Miller told police and prosecutors that she had been mauled by dogs. But in 1989, the couple was convicted of murdering her and sentenced to life in prison.
Four seemingly endless years later, in 1993, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturned their convictions, after a state district judge ruled prosecutors had withheld critical evidence that vindicated the couple.
Between 1989 and 2011, at least 86 Texas defendants including Loveless and Miller had their convictions overturned, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. In an extensive analysis of court rulings, news reports and pardon statements, The Texas Tribune found that in nearly one-quarter of those cases — 21 in total — courts ruled that prosecutors made mistakes that in most instances contributed to the wrong outcome.
The wrongfully convicted in those cases spent a combined total of more than 270 years in prison.
(See an interactive presentation with details about all the cases.)
In the cases, judges found that prosecutors broke basic legal and ethical rules, suppressing important evidence and witness testimony and making improper arguments to jurors.
Despite the courts’ findings of some serious missteps, the State Bar of Texas reports very little public discipline of prosecutors in recent history.
The State Bar does not track discipline of prosecutors separately from other lawyers. But Linda Acevedo, the chief disciplinary counsel for the State Bar who has been at the agency since 1985, said she could recall three prosecutors who were publicly reprimanded.
None of the reprimands were related to the 86 wrongful convictions.
“Right now, there is next to no oversight of what prosecutors do,” said Jennifer Laurin, a professor who teaches criminal procedure at the University of Texas School of Law.
A Deadly Attack
Loveless was overwrought when Laura Ardis met her inside the Gatesville women’s prison in 1993. Four years after she had been convicted of beating and stabbing to death her 4-year-old daughter, Loveless still grieved for the girl and remained adamant that she did not kill her.
Loveless told Laura Ardis and her husband, lawyer Robert Ardis, the same story that Loveless’ husband had recounted from the Huntsville prison unit. A pack of frenzied dogs, they said, had attacked April Tucker, who was bleeding to death when the couple found her in the woods near their home.
Robert Ardis was appointed to represent the couple after their 1989 conviction. Laura Ardis, who was his legal assistant, was convinced of their innocence.
“John was a very sincere person, and he was very forthcoming,” Laura Ardis said. “I may have been naïve back then, but I did feel like that he was telling the truth.”
But Hopkins County Assistant District Attorney Alwin “Al” Smith had convinced jurors that the couple cut April with a hunting knife and beat her with a curling iron. The jury sentenced the two to life in prison.
Soon after he began investigating the case, Robert Ardis discovered 38 photos that prosecutors had not copied for the couple’s lawyers during trial. He tracked down doctors and animal experts who said the photos — which showed bruises in the shape of paw prints and dog hair on April’s body — confirmed Loveless and Miller’s version of what happened.
“This is not a case of child abuse unless you want to call it a case of animal abuse of a child,” said Dr. Charles Petty, a former Dallas County medical examiner, who examined the photos.
In a 1993 finding, state district Judge Lanny Ramsay said the couple fell victim to Smith’s decision to withhold critical information that made it impossible for defense lawyers to present an effective case.
The prosecutor disputed the allegations, arguing he provided the couple’s lawyers with access to the evidence. But the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturned the convictions that same year.
Questions of Immunity
High-profile cases have recently brought national attention to the issue of prosecutorial misconduct of the kind alleged in the Loveless-Miller case. In Louisiana, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a $14 million jury award for John Thompson, who spent 14 years on death row because prosecutors withheld evidence. The high court ruled that prosecutors were immune from civil liability for their errors.
In Texas, the case of Michael Morton has sent shockwaves through the criminal justice system. Morton spent nearly 25 years in prison for his wife’s 1986 murder in Austin. DNA evidence led to Morton’s exoneration last year, and to the arrest of the man who is now facing trial in the murder.
During their investigation, Morton’s lawyers say they discovered that the prosecutor did not disclose key evidence at trial that pointed to his innocence. This fall, an unprecedented legal inquest is set to determine whether the prosecutor-turned-state district Judge Ken Anderson will face criminal charges for his role in the wrongful conviction.
Anderson says he did nothing wrong.
In the aftermath of those cases, lawmakers, defense lawyers and prosecutors in Texas are debating prosecutorial accountability and criminal justice reforms with an eye toward the 2013 legislative session.
Defense lawyers and reform advocates argue that attorneys for the state wield an immense amount of power that goes largely unchecked even in cases of egregious misconduct.
The public, they say, is becoming increasingly leery of a justice system that safeguards the death penalty, yet doesn’t hold accountable the prosecutors who argue for it. They say it is just as disconcerting for people to see a system that allows killers to go free while innocent Texans languish behind bars.
“It does shake the public’s belief and confidence in their justice system,” said Bexar County state district Judge Sid Harle, who ordered the inquiry into allegations of misconduct in the Morton case. “Without jurors coming in and believing in the system, we don’t function.”
But many prosecutors say that serious, intentional mistakes are rare. Most of the court rulings have found only errors that are not tantamount to misconduct. And many prosecutors argue that internal mechanisms in the legal and judicial system already adequately punish bad actors in rare instances of misconduct.
“There’s a lot of folks out there really straining too hard to overstate the extent of the problem,” said Rob Kepple, executive director of the Texas District and County Attorneys Association.
Prosecutors’ Rules
In Texas, as in most other states, prosecutors are generally bound by the same ethical rules and criminal laws as private lawyers. But the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct set out additional requirements for lawyers for the state.
“A prosecutor has the responsibility to see that justice is done, and not simply to be an advocate,” the rules state.
Among those is an expansion of the so-called Brady Rule, named for the 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision that requires prosecutors to provide defendants with exculpatory evidence — information that could help prove their innocence.
In 17 of the 21 Texas cases where courts found prosecutorial error, the judges ruled that prosecutors failed to give defense lawyers exculpatory evidence.
In some instances, like the cases of Loveless and Miller, prosecutors allegedly withheld crucial documents. Judge Ramsay faulted Smith, the assistant district attorney, for failing to provide the couple’s lawyers with copies of autopsy and emergency room photos of the girl.
After Robert Ardis was assigned to the case, he and his wife visited Miller in prison. Miller told them that when he found April bleeding to death near their home, the girl said that dogs had attacked her. The Ardises promised Miller they would investigate his theory.
Robert Ardis demanded that prosecutors show him photos from the autopsy and emergency room where April was treated. The Ardises made copies and showed the photos to doctors and animal experts. Dr. Charles Odom, a medical examiner who worked in Hawaii and in Dallas, testified that a dog attack was the “only reasonable interpretation” of the evidence.
The Ardises also discovered testimony from a social worker, who said she witnessed attacks by the same dogs that were suspected in the girl’s death.
Because prosecutors failed to divulge that information, Ramsay ruled, the couple’s original defense lawyers were left with little ammunition to refute the state’s theory that the couple methodically carved the girl’s body and used push-pins to make the fatal abuse look like a dog attack.
“The Jury Got it Right”
Nearly two decades later, Smith, the lead prosecutor in the case, said Ramsay was wrong, and that he objects to the allegation that he withheld evidence. In objections filed with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Smith said he never received reports of other attacks by the dogs.
And he said in an interview that he allowed attorneys for Loveless and Miller to look at every photo he had.
The problem in the case, Smith said, was that during the trial, Ramsay did not provide the couple with funds to hire experts to review the evidence. That, he contends, is the real reason Loveless and Miller were freed — which he still believes was a mistake.
“I still believe that the jury got it right,” he said. “I’ve never had [a case] where a child was that injured. Never. Even as we’re talking about it, her images are coming back, and it is very unpleasant.”
Soon after the Loveless-Miller case, Smith moved on to become trial chief for the Bowie County Criminal District Attorney and an assistant U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Texas. Now, he is in private practice in Texarkana.
Smith said there’s nothing he would have done differently in the Loveless-Miller case, and he has talked with the current district attorney about trying the couple again.
“There’s no statute of limitations on murder,” Smith said. “He’s still free to prosecute them.”
Decades Behind Bars
More than half of the overturned convictions in which courts found prosecutorial error were murder cases, 13 in total. And in six of those cases, the defendant was freed from death row. Among the cases with findings of error, the shortest sentence any defendant received was 20 years.
In the case of Anthony Graves, who was exonerated in 2010, the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals found that Burleson County District Attorney Charles Sebesta never told defense lawyers that another man, Robert Carter, confessed that he was the sole killer in the massacre of a Somerville family. Both Graves and Carter were sentenced to death. Graves spent 18 years in prison — 12 on death row, where he twice neared execution — before prosecutors dismissed the case against him because of a lack of evidence.
In his final statement before his lethal injection in 2000, Carter again took full responsibility for the crime. Still, Sebesta has stood by his work in the case.
Despite the decades that innocent men and women have lost behind bars, none of the prosecutors involved were publicly disciplined.
“We have a good set of disciplinary rules on paper,” said Robert Schuwerk, a professor at the University of Houston Law Center who served on the committee that wrote the Texas Disciplinary Rule of Professional Conduct. “The question is, is anybody going to enforce them?”
Private and Public Discipline
The absence of a public reprimand, though, doesn’t mean none of the lawyers were disciplined. Lawyers can also be reprimanded privately.
A grievance process is triggered whenever someone files a complaint with the State Bar. Complaints, which can be filed by anyone, are screened, and lawyers are given 30 days to respond to misconduct allegations. If the bar determines misconduct may have occurred, a lawyer can choose to have a hearing in district court or with a local grievance committee.
The only time any of those proceedings become public is when the bar issues public sanctions, which include reprimands, suspensions or disbarments. The bar can also mete out private disciplinary measures, but because the proceedings are secret, there’s no way to determine how many times such measures have been taken in cases involving prosecutorial misconduct.
Betty Blackwell, an Austin criminal defense lawyer who has served on the State Bar’s Commission for Lawyer Discipline, said the oversight agency works hard to ensure that lawyers don’t abuse the public trust.
But she said the nature of wrongful convictions combined with state laws that limit prosecutors’ liability for the errors make it difficult for the State Bar to take action.
Hidden exculpatory evidence typically isn’t uncovered until many years after a conviction is handed down. By then, the four-year statute of limitations on prosecutorial ethics violations has generally expired.
Additionally, because the cases are old, memories of the details have often faded. Prosecutors may have moved on, and, particularly in large district attorney’s offices with dozens of litigators, it’s hard to know who did what in a case and when.
And Blackwell said prosecutors aren’t publicly admonished simply for making mistakes, even when the mistake results in an overturned conviction. The bar rules require proof that the lawyer intentionally behaved unethically.
“Just because a case was reversed for failure to turn over Brady evidence doesn’t mean there was an ethical violation,” Blackwell said.
Heart-wrenching Results
Whether the combined errors that led to the convictions of Loveless and Miller were ethical violations or not, Laura Ardis said, the result was heart-wrenching for the couple.
Not only did they grieve over April’s death, but the couple also spent four years separated from their older children, who lived out of state with relatives. After Loveless and Miller were freed, Laura Ardis said, the two separated and moved on with their lives. Over the years, they lost touch with the Ardises.
For Robert Ardis, who has Alzheimer’s disease, his work on the case remains one of his proudest accomplishments, his wife said. He keeps an award for it on the wall of his nursing home room.
And Laura Ardis holds fast to the memory of the happy day when the couple was released from prison. Reporters and TV cameras clamored around their small law office. The owners of the western wear store next door to the law firm told Loveless and Miller they could pick out any new clothes they wanted for the day.
Loveless and Miller were reunited with their children, who had grown into teenagers.
“It was just amazing that day,” Laura Ardis said.



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Godsey: Good Write (G:GW ☺ ≠ GGW ☺)
Ironically , the issue of whether our Anglican (Church of England) Church had taken a position on tyrannicide was brought up today by yours truly , with our rector after the service. To his knowledge the church had NOT taken a position by he opined that it would probably disapprove. Brief conversation was held concerning tyrants in the Third Reich (Judge Freisler , Heydrich and others) . Freisler was removed from the bench by an air dropped bomb which caused debris to fall on him ; Heydrich was removed post a grenade tossed into his Mercedes.
I’ve not yet studied enough about Hans Frank’s misconduct which cost him his life on the gallows .
Several philosophers in the past have opined that tyrannicide is not a sin. One philosopher opined that it was not only not a sin, but it was a duty to kill a tyrant, albeit an individual had not that right or duty ; only the government may do so.
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▼ MAG (My emphasis) ▼
“ In his final statement before his lethal injection in 2000, Carter again took full responsibility for the crime. Still, Sebesta has stood by his work in the case. ”
▲ MAG (My emphasis) ▲
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▼ DJB opining only for himself ▼
Perhaps because he has not been severely sanctioned and is still alive ‼
▲ DJB opining only for himself ▲
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▼ MAG ▼
“ Despite the decades that innocent men and women have lost behind bars, none of the prosecutors involved were publicly disciplined.
‘We have a good set of disciplinary rules on paper,’ said Robert Schuwerk, a professor at the University of Houston Law Center who served on the committee that wrote the Texas Disciplinary Rule of Professional Conduct. ‘The question is, is anybody going to enforce them?’”
▲ MAG ▲
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▼ DJB ▼
There is no real motivation for anyone to enforce the rules . I witnessed an Ohio disciplinary hearing of a prosecutor and assistant prosecutor . IMLO , the assistant took the fall for the elected chap . The panel, the full board and the Court dismissed the complaint against the elected prosecutor (notwithstanding that he was in the same sandbox with the assistant and failed to say “ HALT ‼ WE MAY NOT DO THAT! IT IS UNETHICAL.” The assistant received a public reprimand (as did the judge) which is no more severe than it should have been under the circumstances .
▲ DJB ▲
I’ll address another Ohio case at another time .
DJB, Associate Member OACDL*
*Opining & typing for me ONLY and NOT OACDL !
I firmly believe that Texas is at the top of the “misconduct” list, I believe that they are all about building “super-prisons” and being the top of the Death Row killers…I also believe that theyhouse more non-violent drug -related offenders n the U.S. I don’t have the figures, but I know this because I did time for a 1st offense…..It’s all about the MONEY…………andeven if you are innocent, it’s YOUR responsiblity to do all the footwork on the case, HUNSTVILLE doesn’t care whether you are guilty or not…the conviction stands until you can find outside help….It’s a mess of a criminal justice system…
PLEASE CONTACT ME i SPENT 10 YRS. IN TEXAS PRISON RECENTLY RELEASED ON PAROLE. i HAVE NEW EVIDENCE PROVING NO OFFENSE OCCURED AND ACTUAL INNOCENCE. i NEED LEGAL ASSISTANCE WITH HC INNOCENCE WRIT. i HAVE CASE LAW TO SUPPORT INEFFECTIVE appointed TRIAL AND APPEAL COUNSEL AND STRUCTURAL DAMAGE COMMITED BY TRIAL JUDGE WHEN LOWERING BURDEN OF PROOF FOR sTATE TO OBTAIN CONVICTION THROUGH OMMITED CuAPABLE MENTAL STATE JURY INSTRUCTION. See Claxton v St. 124 sw3d 761 (2005).I have no funds and cannot pay legal assistance until innocence is established. Due to offense I can even get a job.Ive done all the footwork and spent 5 yrs. in law libary within system I was finally able to get out when atty general ruled for release of p.d. arrest report and parole atty took it and explained it to parole board Sept. 2011
i want to appreciate the effort of Doctor Jefferson for helping me getting my son out from prison and for changing the heart of the judge in my son murder case.if not for him i will have been dead by now for not be able to see my only son because i am 76 years old.and he was sentenced to 21 years imprisonment.Because of the spiritual help of Jefferson he only spent 2 weeks in jail before he was set free by the governor.His email doctorjeffersontemple@gmail.com
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Reblogged this on Citizens, not serfs.
It’s a shame that prosecutors give Texas a bad Rep. Their zealousness to win no matter what they have to do to convict. As in my husbands case…lying, squashing evidence that will prove his innocence, his VA records, medication side effects, and 2 pictures out of 16 were allowed, as to even have a juror member know his witness. The public defender didn’t care one way or another either way she got paid. David Nowlin doesn’t see any wrong doing, he dismissed my claims. On August 13th 2013 is the day of a 20 sec. mistake and a wrongful conviction took place. I wonder if this is a first for Burnet County or Texas convicted an impotent man.
I want to thank you for writing this. My name is Amy. I am the daughter of Debbie Loveless and was the older sister to April. I cannot tell you the anger I still hold to this day for the people who framed my mother! They ruined my mothers life. I was ripped away from my mother an thrown into foster care. My grandparents spent thousands fighting to get me out. I am now 33 and still suffer with the emotional distress this caused me. I am a mother of four myself and have to watch what’s on tv constantly for fear my children will see one of the numerous episodes about my little sisters death. All thanks to Alwin smith who was never punished for the crime he committed against my mother and myself. No he is allowed to wreck lives an still practice law with no restitution to any of us for the horrible torture my mother and Jon miller faced in prison. The torture I faced daily living in home to home foster cares with strangers! The years of countless bullying in school due to parents telling their children my mother was a child killer. Something needs to be done!