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Texas Bar formally accuses prosecutor of misconduct in death penalty case

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  • Texas Bar formally accuses prosecutor of misconduct in death penalty case



    By Maurice Possley March 18

    In a major turn in one of the country’s most-noted death penalty cases, the State Bar of Texas has filed a formal accusation of misconduct against the county prosecutor who convicted Cameron Todd Willingham, a Texas man executed in 2004 for the arson murder of his three young daughters.

    Following a preliminary inquiry that began last summer, the bar this month filed a disciplinary petition in Navarro County District Court accusing the former prosecutor, John H. Jackson, of obstruction of justice, making false statements and concealing evidence favorable to Willingham’s defense.

    “Before, during, and after the 1992 trial, [Jackson] knew of the existence of evidence that tended to negate the guilt of Willingham and failed to disclose that evidence to defense counsel,” the bar investigators charged.

    The bar action was filed March 5 without any public announcement. It accuses Jackson of having intervened repeatedly to help a jailhouse informant, Johnny E. Webb, in return for his testimony that Willingham confessed the murders to him while they were both jailed in Corsicana, the Navarro County seat.

    Webb has since recanted that testimony. In a series of recent interviews, he told the Marshall Project that Jackson coerced him to lie, threatening a long prison term for a robbery to which Webb ultimately pleaded guilty, but promising to reduce his sentence if he testified against Willingham.

    Jackson has repeatedly denied that he made any pretrial agreement with Webb in exchange for his testimony. The former prosecutor acknowledged that he and others made extraordinary efforts to help Webb, but said they were motivated only by concern for a witness who had been threatened by other prisoners because of his testimony.

    A lawyer for Jackson, Joseph E. Byrne, on Wednesday urged that people withhold judgment about the case until all the evidence was presented and took issue with the grievance filed against his client by the Innocence Project, a legal advocacy group.

    “I disagree with much of the information that was put together by the Innocence Project and do not find it to be objective,” Byrne said.

    From the time of the house fire that killed his children on Dec. 23, 1991, Willingham maintained his innocence. He said that he awoke from a nap to find his home engulfed in smoke and flames, and that he could not locate the three toddlers before stumbling outside to seek help. Texas fire examiners concluded that the blaze was an arson, and Jackson later said it was “very likely” that Willingham had poured some accelerant on the floor in the shape of a pentagram, apparently as a symbol of Satanic worship.

    Willingham was executed on Feb. 17, 2004, after Gov. Rick Perry (R) refused to grant a stay requested by Willingham’s lawyers on the basis of a report by an independent arson expert who concluded there was no evidence the fire was intentionally set. Perry later called Willingham “a monster.”

    Relatives and supporters of Willingham have long sought his vindication but have been frustrated by both the courts and the state government. The Innocence Project, which has investigated the case for a decade, sought a posthumous pardon for Willingham and to have his case reheard by a court of inquiry. Both efforts were unsuccessful.

    In July, the group filed a grievance with the Texas bar accusing Jackson of conduct that “violated his professional, ethical and constitutional obligations” in his handling of the case. That complaint was the basis for the disciplinary petition filed on March 5.

    Told of the state bar’s action, Willingham’s stepmother, Eugenia, said, “John Jackson committed a crime, and I want him punished. If the appeals court had known the truth, Todd would probably be alive today.”

    A staff attorney for the Innocence Project, Bryce Benjet, said the group was encouraged by the bar’s disciplinary action. “Withholding exculpatory evidence and the presentation of false testimony in a death penalty case is quite possibly the most serious ethical breach for a lawyer you can imagine,” he said.

    The disciplinary petition contends that “Jackson failed to make timely disclosure to the defense details for favorable treatment for Webb, an inmate, in exchange for Webb’s testimony at trial for the State.

    “During a pre-trial hearing on July 24, 1992, [Jackson] told the trial court that he had no evidence favorable to Willingham,” the complaint continues. “That statement was false.”

    The Marshall Project disclosed earlier this month the existence of a letter sent by Webb to Jackson in 1996 asking Jackson to comply with what he called their “agreement” to reduce his judgment from aggravated robbery to robbery. Within a few weeks, Jackson obtained a court order that reduced the charge.

    The petition accuses Jackson of obtaining favorable treatment for Webb that included telling the Navarro County Clerk’s Office to inform the Texas Department of Corrections that Webb was convicted of robbery instead of aggravated robbery even though Webb had pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery. In addition, Jackson obtained the court order in 1996 that officially changed the judgment to robbery and requested early parole for Webb with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles.

    Jackson is accused of violating rules that prohibit making false statements to a judge as well as obstructing justice. The petition also accuses Jackson of concealing evidence that “a lawyer would reasonably believe has potential or actual evidentiary value.”

    When early parole was denied, Jackson signed court orders for Webb so that he could be transferred from prison to the Navarro County jail.

    The petition accuses Jackson of violating several sections of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct and seeks that he “be disciplined as the facts shall warrant.” Discipline could range from no discipline to disbarment.

    Byrne, Jackson’s lawyer, said last week that his client would ask to have a jury hear any accusations of misconduct against him, as state bar rules allow.

    Webb’s testimony will likely be a key part of the state bar’s case against Jackson, as well as letters between Webb and Charles Pearce, a now-deceased Corsicana rancher who funneled several thousand dollars to Webb after the Willingham trial. Webb has said the money was promised to him as part of his agreement with Jackson.

    No date for any hearing on the petition has been scheduled.
    I'm guessing that the system will do everything it can to ensure there is a public declaration by a jury that Jackson did nothing wrong. Texas is one of the few states to have a prosecutor serve jail time for misconduct so we shall see what becomes of this.
    Last edited by davbrucas; 03-21-2015, 09:05 PM.

  • #2
    He should face the death penalty if he caused an innocent man to be executed.

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    • #3
      agreed.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Sgt Beavis View Post
        He should face the death penalty if he caused an innocent man to be executed.
        This, if true.

        If anyone deserves a fucking poltergeist, it'd be that prosecutor. How can you sit there and sentence an innocent (probably) guy to death after his kids died horribly?

        You have to be an evil sonofabitch to live with yourself after doing that.
        Last edited by sc281; 03-21-2015, 09:39 PM.

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        • #5
          That case was complete bullshit.
          ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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          • #6
            I watched a documentary about it, and the dude was convicted on junk arson science. Every true expert on fire behavior concluded it was started by faulty wiring.

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            • #7
              Off with his head!
              WH

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              • #8
                i dont remember much about the case as i was too young. does anyone have a link that details what happened?

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by jewozzy View Post
                  i dont remember much about the case as i was too young. does anyone have a link that details what happened?
                  Did Texas execute an innocent man? Several controversial death penalty cases are currently under examination in Texas and in other states, but it's the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham -- convicted for the arson deaths of his three young children -- that's now at the center of the national debate. With unique access to those closest to the case, FRONTLINE examines the Willingham conviction in light of new science that raises doubts about whether the fire at the center of the case was really arson at all. The film meticulously examines the evidence used to convict Willingham, provides an in-depth portrait of those most impacted by the case, and explores the explosive implications of the execution of a possibly innocent man.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by jewozzy View Post
                    i dont remember much about the case as i was too young. does anyone have a link that details what happened?
                    A big consensus is that the guy was a complete dirt bag who deserved to die, just not for this accidental fire.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by GE View Post
                      A big consensus is that the guy was a complete dirt bag who deserved to die, just not for this accidental fire.
                      Maybe so GE, but I think we should expect better behavior from the criminal justice system. If this prosecutor manipulated the case to cause an innocent guy to get the needle then the prosecutor is guilty of death and should be so charged. There are lines and it seems this prosecutor crossed a huge one.

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