The following story, which I wrote and is published on the Wake Forest Law School web site http://law.wfu.edu/
It's a scary account, especially when one considers the devastating effects of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
First American death row inmate exonerated by DNA testing shares his harrowing tale
Kirk Bloodsworth could hear what they were saying. From the defense table, charged with the sexual assault and murder of a 9-year-old girl, Bloodsworth listened to the vitriol emanating from the back of the courtroom. There’s the killer, he remembers them saying. Give him the gas.
But no one would listen to Bloodsworth, an honorably discharged Marine who repeated the same four words over and over again: I’m an innocent man.
Bloodsworth, who ultimately became the first American death row inmate exonerated by DNA testing, shared his story Thursday, Oct. 29, in a standing-room only auditorium in the Worrell Professional Center at Wake Forest University School of Law.
Following Bloodsworth’s account, a panel discussion titled “244 Wrongfully Convicted and Counting: Deconstructing Actual Innocence Cases to Identify Causes, Reforms and Remedies,” explored the causes and risk factors that contribute to wrongful convictions in the U.S. and the role that DNA testing plays in exonerating the innocent. Taking part in the discussion was Darryl Hunt, a Winston-Salem native who spent 19 years in jail for a crime he did not commit. The Wake Forest University Provost’s Office, Wake Forest School of Law, the Law School’s Innocence and Justice Clinic and Innocence Project and the Forsyth County Criminal Defense Lawyers Association sponsored the event.
Bloodsworth works as a program officer for The Justice Project in Washington, D.C., and has been an ardent supporter of the Innocence Protection Act since its introduction in Congress in February 2000. The IPA established the Kirk Bloodsworth Post-Conviction DNA Testing Program, which helps states defray the costs of post-conviction DNA testing. He has spoken about his story on numerous television shows, including “Oprah,” and “Larry King Live,” and has been featured in national publications such as the New York Times Magazine. Bloodsworth’s 20-year odyssey is chronicled by Tim Junkin in the book, “Bloodsworth: The True Story of the First Death Row Inmate Exonerated by DNA.”
On July 25, 1984, the body of Dawn Hamilton was found in Baltimore County, Md. She was lying face down in a pile of rocks, her head had been crushed in with a rock and someone had stepped on her throat with so much force that the imprint of a shoe remained.
About two weeks later, sheriff’s deputies woke Bloodsworth at 2:45 a.m.
“That was the last time I saw my little small town of Cambridge, Maryland, for eight years, 11 months and 19 days … I kept telling them I was not the man they sought.
“Her life was snuffed out by a brutal killer, but it wasn’t me."
Eight months after his arrest, a jury convicted and sentenced Bloodsworth to death. Authorities -- relying partly on the description of a man seen by two boys (8 and 10) -- used a composite sketch to identify the killer, which five people identified as Bloodsworth. The boys, he said, were fishing when they saw the man, who was standing on the rise of a hill with the sun behind him. At trial, one of the boys testified that the man he saw was not in the courtroom that day. Baltimore County authorities, with assistance by the FBI, developed a profile of the killer.
In the picture they painted, said Bloodsworth, “The brushstrokes are too broad.”
From a small cell in the Maryland Penitentiary, Bloodsworth began a letter-writing campaign as he tried to regain his freedom. He penned letters to people “from Willie Nelson to President Reagan.” Neither man wrote back, Bloodsworth said.
A year after he was convicted and sentenced to death, an appeal on the grounds that evidence was withheld at the first trial resulted in a new one, though Bloodsworth was again found guilty and sentenced to two consecutive life terms.
Bloodsworth got a new lawyer, public defender Robert E. Morin, and never gave up seeking his freedom. “I read and read and read,” he said, attributing his love of the written word to his mother, who died while Bloodsworth was in prison. He was allowed to view her body for five minutes but was not allowed to attend her funeral.
“I kissed her goodbye, then I went back to prison.”
One day, a guard passed a stack of books through a slot used to distribute food to the prisoners. On the bottom of the stack, under books about origami, drawing and sex – which he immediately discarded -- was Joseph Wambaugh’s “The Blooding,” which explored the relative new science of genetic fingerprinting, or DNA testing.
“I had an epiphany beyond the scope of this campus … if it can convict you, it can free you,” said Bloodsworth, who began calling Morin.
Morin told his client the DNA evidence was “inadvertently” destroyed, but Bloodsworth persuaded Morin to return to courthouse, where he was told it was in judge’s chambers, tucked away in a paper bag and placed in a closet. In 1992, the evidence was sent to a DNA lab in California.
In 1993, final reports from state and federal labs concluded that Bloodsworth’s DNA did not match any of the evidence received for testing.
He remembers an excited Morin saying, “Kirk, you’re innocent, man. You’re innocent.”
“I know that,” Bloodsworth told him.
By the time of his release, Bloodsworth had spent nearly nine years in prison, including two on death row. In September 2003, Bloodsworth got call from Baltimore County authorities, and they arranged to meet at a Burger King. They found a match in the DNA database linking the Hamilton killing to a man released from prison two weeks before the girl’s murder on charges of attempted rape. Shortly after Bloodsworth’s arrest, the man, Kimberly Shay Ruffner, was charged with another attempted rape and placed in the Maryland Penitentiary, where Bloodsworth was wrongfully imprisoned for so many years. In May 2004, Ruffner pleaded guilty to killing and sexually assaulting the girl.
“I gave this man library books and lifted weights with him, but he never said a word to me,” Bloodsworth said.
Bloodsworth likes to tell the story of his first meeting with a lawyer following his arrest. The lawyer entered the room to talk with Bloodsworth, who was separated from the attorney by a glass partition. The lawyer picked up the phone and said, “‘Kirk you’re in a lot of trouble.’ He was right about that,” Bloodsworth said.
But the lawyer assured him that he knew his way around the courtroom, and that he would do his best to help Bloodsworth. “We’re going to find our way out of here together,” Bloodsworth remembers the lawyer saying before he grabbed his briefcase, turned around and “ran right into the wall.”
“By all means,” Bloodsworth told the law students, “when you stand up, turn around and don’t run into that wall.”
-- By John Trump
Monday, November 9, 2009
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Chicken breasts with sage and mushroom cream sauce
We typically have learned that if you wait, stores such as Food Lion -- the only choice we have, other than Walmart -- will discount their meats to almost half price. So, I buy and make gourmet food. Earlier in the week I made blade pork chops with a coffee and molasses glaze ... amazing. Tonight, I took a pack of $2 chicken breasts, seasoned them with salt and pepper and seared them in a cast iron skillet. Once golden brown -- though not so delicious -- I sprinkled them with fresh rosemary and placed them in the oven at 350 so they could reach 165 degrees. Once finished, I covered them in foil and allowed them to rest while I made the sauce, which included sauteeing some onions and garlic, cooking the mushrooms and slowly adding some cream. Let it go for a couple of minutes, then add somefresh sage and a little while wine. Remember, season at every step. Incredible.
A passion for cooking
As you may or may not know, I've spent my entire life -- since I was 18 -- as a professional journalist -- first in the Air Force, a stint at a community college and sports freelancing, then on to daily newspapers. As you also may or may not know, I left daily newspapers this spring. Thing is, I left the best newspaper in NC -- The Fayettville Observer -- to become the editor of the Media General newspapers in Rockingham county. Big, big mistake! Oh, I did well there, winning NCPA awards for myself and watching staff members win, for the first time in many years for that group of papers. And it would have been OK if not for the fact that as people moved on, which they do at small newspapers, they were never replaced. Media General made one ill advised move after another, finally combining all three Rockingham papers with Lynchburg, which, duh, is in another state. We were asked to take a pay cut. Really? Like I told them, I'm not going from one bad operation to one that's even worse. Anyway, over the past couple years, with the help of people such as Alton Brown and Bobby Flay, I developed a passion for cooking, which I am beginning to do very well. Stay tuned for more.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Rockingham Reads
A librarian in the Mayodan branch of the Rockingham County library system tells me the current selection for Rockingham County Reads, "The Bible Salesman," has been met with something less than enthusiasm. It seems, she says, that residents are finding it "quirky." I have read all of the several selections since the program was started a couple of years ago. "The Kite Runner," of course, amounts to great modern literature. The most recent selection before "TBS" was a story of love, tragedy and hope -- "The Same Kind of Different than Me." It was good but quite depressing; the triumph in the end failed to compensate for the tragic cancer story that dominated the book. "TBS," however, by Clyde Edgerton, is funny and irreverant. In simple terms, it makes you think. Here's my take on the county's reaction: In the book, the protagonist, the Bible salesman, questions certain verses in the Bible that contradict one another. He's right, they are contradictory, but around here the word is the word, and there is never room for gray. It's typical, as I have learned, but continually frustrating nonetheless. Many county residents are simply waiting to die so they can live in eternity, yet they are forgetting to live in the present. In my mind, Jesus did indeed turn water into wine ... They were not drinking grape juice!
Friday, October 23, 2009
Store-bought cakes
New Vision school in Madison is having a cake-walk tonight, and school officials have asked parents to donate a cake for the event. Thing is, the cake must be bought from a "store," meaning home-made cakes aren't allowed. Worried about the flu, they say. Am I missing something here? What if someone involved in the process at the grocery store has the flu? Does the flu virus travel through food, even if it is cooked? Never heard of the flu being spread through cake, or any other food for that matter. Also, if I'm not mistaken, outbreaks of e-coli and other nasty viruses have emanated from farm workers, restaurants ...
Friday, September 18, 2009
Italian health care
http://law.wfu.edu/news/release/2009.09.17.1.php
Recently did a story for Wake about a recent speaker, Amleto Cattarin, from Italy. He runs one of the regional governing agenies that make up the Italian health care system, which provides free treatment and checkups to all citizens, and even those visiting Italy. Was quite interesting, as free care is promised in the Italian constitution. Don't know whether it would work here, however. Not sure we could ever pay for it without huge tax increases or large cuts elsewhere, neither of which Congress would go for. And the bureaucracy it would create ...
Recently did a story for Wake about a recent speaker, Amleto Cattarin, from Italy. He runs one of the regional governing agenies that make up the Italian health care system, which provides free treatment and checkups to all citizens, and even those visiting Italy. Was quite interesting, as free care is promised in the Italian constitution. Don't know whether it would work here, however. Not sure we could ever pay for it without huge tax increases or large cuts elsewhere, neither of which Congress would go for. And the bureaucracy it would create ...
Friday, August 14, 2009
Shooting, lack of local coverage
An 18-year-old man was shot yesterday at a gas station in Madison. The station, by the way, is next door to our boys' school. The shooting happened at 1:43 p.m., and the school was locked down as police responded to the situation. Give a nod to the cops on that one. The kids were told it was a drill and, thankfully, they were never really in any danger. May be a gang-related thing, or the guys had some type of beef. Police are calling it an incident involving a "youth group," according to a video by the News and Record. Whatever that means. The school called later that afternoon with a recorded message about a "serious situation," and the children were safe. Well, that's better than nothing, I guess. The story was obviously the hot topic at the PTO meeting Thursday night, and it ignited quite the buzz within the community, including the nearby Food Lion. The Rockingham County newspapers, where I was the editor, has so far failed to post anything on the shooting ... nothing at all. But, hey, Media General did turn a profit last quarter. Which only shows that if you do enough cutting, any revenue will boost the bottom line. More on this later.
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