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Thread: Kerry Cook, Still Not "Innocent," Learns The Murder Weapon Was Taken Home as Souvenir

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    Kerry Cook, Still Not "Innocent," Learns The Murder Weapon Was Taken Home as Souvenir

    Kerry Max Cook
    Released but Never Exonerated, a Man Fights for Freedom
    March 31 2012
    A couple of Fridays ago, Kerry Max Cook, who was released from Texas’ death row in 1997 after two decades, went to pick up his 11-year-old son, Kerry Justice, from his North Dallas school. Class was just letting out. As Mr. Cook approached a group of children and their parents, a little girl squirmed out of her mother’s arms and ran toward him. “Mr. Kerry!” she called. He laughed as she jumped into his arms. “Haleigh!” he shouted, and began tickling her. “She adores Mr. Kerry,” her mother said.
    The same jolly scene followed Mr. Cook as he walked around the small campus — children calling out to him, laughing, jumping into his arms. Vicki Johnston, the school’s director, looked on, smiling. “Kerry’s such a big part of the school,” she said. “He’s like a pied piper to the kids.” Asked about his past, Ms. Johnston simply said: “We know him. We know what kind of man he is.”

    Unfortunately for Mr. Cook, 15 years after his release, the State of Texas still does not share Ms. Johnston’s view. Though he is widely recognized as one of the country’s most famous exonerated prisoners, Mr. Cook is not legally exonerated. In fact, in the eyes of the state, he is still a killer — convicted of the 1977 rape and murder of Linda Jo Edwards.

    Mr. Cook’s situation is complex. His death sentence was twice overturned by higher courts, and DNA taken from the victim’s underwear did not match his own, and the evidence used to convict him has been shown to be entirely fallacious — but because Mr. Cook pleaded no-contest to the murder on the eve of what would have been his fourth trial, he cannot be declared actually not guilty.

    Nevertheless, Mr. Cook has become a high-profile spokesman for the wrongfully imprisoned. He has published a book about his experience and has been one of the subjects of a popular Off Broadway play, “The Exonerated,” which was later made into a film. He has given speeches all over the United States and Europe. His Facebook page contains pictures of Mr. Cook with actors like Robin Williams, Richard Dreyfuss and Ben Stiller, who have been drawn to his story.

    Yet Mr. Cook lives in the shadows with his wife and their son, knowing that whenever he applies for a job or gets on an international flight, he will be identified as a convicted murderer. Now he hopes to change that, with two motions filed recently in Smith County, where the case was originally heard, that could finally clear his name.

    Mr. Cook has always claimed to be innocent of the murder of Ms. Edwards, a woman who lived in the same Tyler apartment complex. The case against him was largely circumstantial, including the words of a jailhouse informant who said that Mr. Cook had confessed to him and the recollections of a man who said that on the night of the murder, he and Mr. Cook had had sex and watched a movie that involved a cat torture scene.

    The prosecution’s theory was that Mr. Cook, aroused by the torture scene in the movie, had left his apartment to rape and kill Ms. Edwards.

    In the years after, every piece of evidence used to convict Mr. Cook was revealed to be bogus. The informant admitted he had lied as part of a deal with prosecutors, and the witness who claimed to have had sex with Mr. Cook told a grand jury that there was no sex and that Mr. Cook had not paid any attention to the movie. The prosecution had also suppressed evidence showing that Mr. Cook and Ms. Edwards had known each other casually, which explained a fingerprint found at the scene.

    Mr. Cook’s verdict was overturned on a technicality in 1988. When District Attorney Jack Skeen of Smith County tried him again in 1992, the case ended in a mistrial. Another trial in 1994 resulted in a guilty verdict and a new death sentence, but two years later the Court of Criminal Appeals, the state’s highest criminal court, reversed that conviction, noting that “prosecutorial and police misconduct has tainted this entire matter from the outset.”

    Mr. Cook was released on bail in 1997, but the state prepared to try him for a fourth time. He was presented with an option: plead guilty in exchange for 20 years, which he had already served, and the charges would be dropped. He refused. As the trial date approached, in early 1999, Ms. Edwards’s underwear was sent to a lab for modern DNA testing. Mr. Cook, certain he would be exonerated, gave a blood sample.

    On the morning of jury selection, the district attorney made another offer: if Mr. Cook pleaded no-contest with no admission of guilt, the case would be dismissed and he could go on with his life. Mr. Cook considered the deal. He had suffered terribly during his 19 years in prison — he had been stabbed, raped repeatedly and had tried to kill himself, once slitting his own throat after severing his penis, which was reattached.

    He took the plea deal. Two months later, the DNA results returned. The semen belonged to James Mayfield, a married man with whom Ms. Edwards had been having an affair.

    By then Mr. Cook was trying to move on with his life, but it was harder than he had imagined. The physical and emotional abuse he endured in prison causes nightmares and suicidal urges. And the murder conviction made him a second-class citizen.

    “I couldn’t get a job, couldn’t sign a lease,” he said. “We’ve had to move five times because people would find out about me. One woman threatened to put up posters in the neighborhood saying ‘Convicted murderer lives here.’ ”

    In 2009 Mr. Cook met Marc McPeak, a civil lawyer — with Greenberg Traurig in Dallas — who had read his book. Mr. McPeak’s firm began devising a legal strategy, pro bono, to navigate the difficult road of getting Mr. Cook an official exoneration. The first step was to get DNA testing on other items from the crime scene, including a hair found on Ms. Edwards’s body.

    On Feb. 28, Mr. McPeak filed two motions in Smith County, one for the DNA testing and the other to recuse the judge who would decide whether to allow the testing — Mr. Skeen, the former district attorney. “We want it heard outside of Smith County,” Mr. McPeak said. “Not once in 35 years have officials there shown either the desire or the ability to treat Kerry fairly.”

    They hope that further DNA evidence excluding Mr. Cook will help them to file a writ of habeas corpus to have him declared actually innocent.

    Meanwhile, Mr. Cook waits. He dresses only in black (he swears he will not wear any other color until he is exonerated), and with his dark eyes and white hair, he cuts a striking figure. What he wants more than anything else are life’s simplest things.
    [...]
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/01/us...pagewanted=all

    Kerry Max Cook, on death row at the Ellis Unit north of Huntsville in April 1979

    Kerry Max Cook, Still Not "Innocent," Learns That the Murder Weapon Was Taken Home as a "Souvenir"
    May 10 2012
    In a new twist for a case full of them, lawyers of Kerry Max Cook, the Dallas man sentenced to death for a gruesome rape and murder before being exonerated two decades later, are accusing a prosecutor in his case of taking home the murder weapon as a dark, twisted souvenir.

    This accusation, part of a motion filed in Smith County, is part of Cook's ongoing effort to officially clear his name and record after 35 years of being branded by the state as a murderer. Cook, who now lives in Dallas, pleaded "no contest" to a reduced murder charge in 1999 and reclaimed his freedom. As part of the plea agreement that freed him, he never admitted guilt. But legally, he is not recognized as innocent. His attorneys are now working to get a judge to rule on his innocence, and finally bring an end -- one way or another -- to his 35-year quest to clear his name.

    Lately it's been a mix of setbacks and small victories. A judge recently granted permission for DNA testing of new evidence, but refused a request that Smith County District Judge Christi Kennedy be recused from the case.

    But on Monday they filed a motion to reconsider the judge's denial based on new evidence -- including, they claim, the revelation that the case's original prosecutor, A.D. Clark, III, took home key evidence. That evidence included "the murder weapon -- a blood soaked knife -- and a sample of Mr. Cook's hair," according to the filing. Clark has allegedly had the evidence in his possession for years.

    The revelation surfaced in a phone call last month between Judge John Ovard, Cook's attorneys and Assistant District Attorney Mike West, who said that Clark had kept the murder weapon for the past decade as a "souvenir."

    Clark told the Associated Press that the allegations were "a complete falsehood." West could not be reached, but he told the AP that he had been misheard on that call.

    West told the AP that a Tyler police sergeant named Eddie Clark had kept kept the knife:

    Eddie Clark told prosecutors in an affidavit that he took the knife and the slide of hair with him from an evidence room several years ago when the rest of the material in Cook's case was going to be destroyed -- standard procedure then in a case considered closed, West said.
    "A.D. Clark had nothing to do with that," West said. "They've just totally misrepresented that in the motion."

    West declined to release Eddie Clark's affidavit and said it was unlikely Clark could face any criminal charges for keeping the knife. Eddie Clark did not have a listed phone number.


    Marc McPeak, Cook's lawyer, tells Unfair Park that everyone on the phone seemed to understand that West was talking about A.D. Clark, III, the prosecutor. He classifies West's clarification between "A.D." and "Eddie" as a highly unlikely misunderstanding, and adds that regardless of who took the murder weapon, the key piece of evidence was taken home as personal property by someone in law enforcement.

    Even if it was the sergeant, McPeak says, it "doesn't make me feel any better at all."

    But the knife's disappearance at the hands of someone involved with the case is just one piece in the effort to secure the judge's recusal. McPeak also alleges that the District Attorney misrepresented facts of the case at a recent hearing with "a malicious intent designed to mislead the Court."

    His motion references the well-documented instances of prosecutorial misconduct in Cook's case, and outlines the connections in Smith County's small-town legal system. To acknowledge Cook's innocence, Judge Kennedy would also have to acknowledge her colleagues' wrongdoing, McPeak writes. This includes Judge Jack Skeen Jr., the former District Attorney who originally prosecuted Cook. Clark, who is accused of taking the knife, is the first cousin of Skeen and the husband of Judge Carole Clark, another of Kennedy's colleagues. And Judge Kennedy's husband was an Assistant District Attorney in Smith County at the time Cook was originally prosecuted.

    "As far as we're concerned, any ruling against Kerry, given everything that's happened, will forever be tainted by the misconduct because you can't separate his innocence from their misconduct," McPeak says. "It's impossible,"
    [...]
    Page 2 is at link
    http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/unfa...llege.php#more

    For every murdered child
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    We'll haunt the perpetrators till they Die
    "Rescuing one animal may not change the world, but for that animal their world is changed forever!" - Unknown

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    This man went through so much and in spite of it all still came out a good person, thanks for the link, I have so much respect for him. I hope he gets the evidence then the state needs to pay him restitution x10. Since the DNA showed it wasnt his but Mayfields DNA, I dont understand why the state wont try him, because then they would have to admit their offense against him and this was not a mistake but an offense. So one man has virually gotten away with murder. I dont care how old he is, he needs to be charged. This is the absolute worst case of an innocent man convicted I have read.
    Last edited by VXIII; May 13th, 2012 at 02:06 AM.
    Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one...

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    Unfair Park is one of the main reasons I began reading the Dallas Observer 6yrs ago when I was 16. The Dallas Observer in and of itself is a great free grab and go paper but Unfair Park puts the spotlight on unknown abuses that happen in and around the Dallas metroplex. While paid dailies are jacking up there prices just to keep surviving (1.50 for a daily 2.50 for the Sunday edition, coz its packed w/ fuckin coupons *eye roll*) the Dallas Observer keeps on keeping on. And I hope it stays that way.

    As for Mr. Cook, to have suffered the way he has suffered at his own hands and at the hands of others and not be a bitter psychopath out for the blood of all who falsely accused him is amazing. Sometimes that good ol boy network rears its ugly head and keeps justice from being served. They say its for the good of the public to let sleeping dogs lie but I say bullshit. Wake those motherfuckers up and do your damn job. I hope he gets the justice he so truly deserves.
    Razors pain you, rivers are damp, acid stains you, drugs cause cramps, gun aren't lawful, nooses give, gas smells awful, you might as well live.

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    Some laws really need to be changed. I have read so many cases where innocent people were kept in prison because paperwork wasn't filed in a timely manner (WTF even though they are innocent, still do the time for the crime because of paperwork?) because they took a plea deal (once again WTF they are innocent but because they took a plea they either have to do the time or will never have their name cleared?), because the prosecutor changes the theory of the crime when the DNA shows the person they have in prison doesn't match and then says well they must have had help then...it goes on and on...it is really disgusting. If I wasn't so old I would have went into school for law, but by the time I graduated I would be in my 40's.

    Some of our laws sicken me. I get that people hate that criminals have rights, but people really don't understand that without these so-called rights many innocent people would be in prison for crimes they hadn't committed. Criminals really don't have as many rights as people think they do, yeah there are stories about high profile cases where you are pretty positive the perps are guilty and you wonder why they get so many appeals, but you can't pick and choose who gets appeals and who doesn't. The guy who you thought was for sure guilty? 20 years down the road there may be some kind of new science that says he is absolutely not guilty, the only way we would ever know is because he has the right to appeals. Anyway, off my soapbox, I just hate some of the laws we have in this country.
    I love my mom because she loves me and she is a great mom she loves me so much she bought me a psp that stands for playstation portable.


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