Tuesday, March 17, 2026

March 17: Jay Dill; Bermuda: He is seeking to sue the island's top prosecutor over her handling of a review into criminal cases involving evidence from since-discredited DNA expert Candy. Zuleger, founder of beleaguered Trinity DNA Solutions, as reported by The Royal Gazette (Reporter Sam Strangeways), noting that: "Mr Dill, 36, in a sworn affidavit accompanying the application, said that on January 20 this year, Ms Clarke refused to disclose material relating to her review of convictions involving expert evidence from Trinity DNA Solutions and its founder Candy Zuleger, and refused to refer his murder conviction for independent expert review. He claimed the latter refusal went against undertakings the DPP gave to the Privy Council in 2024 about how the review of hundreds of convictions would be handled. “I respectfully contend that the DPP’s decision was unlawful, irrational, procedurally unfair and contrary to legitimate expectation and that it effectively prevents me from meaningfully pursuing appellate remedies,” said Mr Dill, as he asked the court to overturn it."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY:  "Jay Dill, who was jailed for life in 2013 for fatally shooting footballer Randy Robinson, filed an application in the Supreme Court on Wednesday for permission to seek a judicial review of a decision taken by Cindy Clarke, the Director of Public Prosecutions. Forensic scientist Ms Zuleger worked on about 450 cases for the Bermuda Police Service between 2006 and 2016, appearing repeatedly as a prosecution witness before the Supreme Court in criminal cases. Problems with her DNA analysis techniques emerged in 2024 when the convictions of a man jailed for life for murder and attempted murder, Julian Washington, were quashed by the Privy Council in London because of inaccurate evidence she gave at his trial. Two more potential “miscarriages of justice” were identified by the review, which ended in August. The review involved looking at all of the evidence in the prosecutions which resulted in convictions, with referral to an independent forensic expert only for those cases where it was concluded a jury or magistrate might not have convicted without the DNA evidence."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "Prosecutors said at the trial of Mr Dill that DNA from him, as well as gunshot residue component particles, were found on motorcycles seized as part of the investigation. Further component particles were found on clothing belonging to the defendant. In 2016, the Court of Appeal threw out an appeal by Mr Dill against his murder conviction, finding that though the evidence in the case was circumstantial, it was compelling. He now wants to take his case to the Privy Council in London, Bermuda’s highest court of appeal. He said in his affidavit that Ms Clarke’s decision in January denied him “access to the information necessary to determine whether my conviction was affected by the flawed DNA methodology identified” in Mr Washington’s case."

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STORY: "Murder convict challenges DPP over Trinity DNA review," by Columnist  Sam Starngeways, published by The Royal Gazette, on March 13, 2026.


GIST: "A man convicted of murder is seeking to sue the island’s top prosecutor over her handling of a review into criminal cases involving evidence from a since-discredited DNA expert.

Jay Dill, who was jailed for life in 2013 for fatally shooting footballer Randy Robinson, filed an application in the Supreme Court on Wednesday for permission to seek a judicial review of a decision taken by Cindy Clarke, the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Forensic scientist Ms Zuleger worked on about 450 cases for the Bermuda Police Service between 2006 and 2016, appearing repeatedly as a prosecution witness before the Supreme Court in criminal cases.

Problems with her DNA analysis techniques emerged in 2024 when the convictions of a man jailed for life for murder and attempted murder, Julian Washington, were quashed by the Privy Council in London because of inaccurate evidence she gave at his trial.

Two more potential “miscarriages of justice” were identified by the review, which ended in August.

The review involved looking at all of the evidence in the prosecutions which resulted in convictions, with referral to an independent forensic expert only for those cases where it was concluded a jury or magistrate might not have convicted without the DNA evidence.

Mr Dill was one of 14 serious crime convicts who sent a joint letter to Ms Clarke in January asking “urgently” for information about the involvement of Ms Zuleger in their matters.

Ms Clarke told Mr Dill in a January 20 letter that his case was not referred to independent DNA expert Barbara Llewellyn during the review “because, having considered the nature of the evidence as a whole, I concluded that your conviction was safe, irrespective of the DNA evidence provided by Ms Zuleger”.

The DPP also told the Westgate prisoner: “I do not accept that there was any obligation to notify you personally of the review.

“The existence of the review was a matter of public record.”

Prosecutors said at the trial of Mr Dill that DNA from him, as well as gunshot residue component particles, were found on motorcycles seized as part of the investigation.

Further component particles were found on clothing belonging to the defendant.

In 2016, the Court of Appeal threw out an appeal by Mr Dill against his murder conviction, finding that though the evidence in the case was circumstantial, it was compelling.

He now wants to take his case to the Privy Council in London, Bermuda’s highest court of appeal.

He said in his affidavit that Ms Clarke’s decision in January denied him “access to the information necessary to determine whether my conviction was affected by the flawed DNA methodology identified” in Mr Washington’s case.

Mr Dill said: “Without disclosure of the review materials, I cannot meaningfully assess whether there are grounds to pursue an appeal.”

He compared his situation with that of his brother, Kofi Dill, who was convicted of handling a firearm in 2011.

Ms Clarke’s review found that Kofi Dill’s guilty plea was tainted by flawed DNA evidence from Trinity but the Court of Appeal declined to quash his conviction in November.

Jay Dill alleged: “The fact that the DPP facilitated such a referral [to the Court of Appeal] in that case, but refuses even to disclose the underlying review materials in my case underscores the arbitrariness of the decision under challenge.”

Mr Dill is being assisted in his pursuit of a judicial review by paralegal Eron Hill, the founder of the Bermuda Equal Justice Initiative. Mr Hill told The Royal Gazette he filed Mr Dill’s application with the court on Wednesday.

Ms Clarke was contacted for comment."

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.royalgazette.com/court/news/article/20260313/murder-convict-challenges-dpp-over-trinity-dna-review/

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


 FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!

Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;


Monday, March 16, 2026

Amanda Knox: USA: Neonatal Nurse Lucy Letby: UK: In an interview with the Independent's Megan Lloyd Davies, Amanda Knox explains why she is taking on the case of Nurse Letby's on the release of her new podcast, which examines Lucy Letby’s conviction in August 2023 for the murder of seven babies and attempted murder of six others when working as a neonatal nurse at the Countess of Chester Hospital. She was subsequently convicted of another attempted murder and sentenced to 15 whole-life terms"..."Knox, who was infamously convicted of the murder of British student Meredith Kercher in Perugia before Italy’s highest court threw out the verdict, is now adding her own thoughts to the debate, in her new podcast investigating the nurse, Doubt: The Case of Lucy Letby."... Amanda Knox: “I was not looking for Lucy Letby,” Amanda Knox tells me. “Lucy Letby found me.”


PASSAGE ONE OF THE DAY: "The 36-year-old’s 10-month trial was one of the longest murder trials in UK history. Two applications for permission to appeal have been refused, and the case is now with the Criminal Cases Review Commission. But last year, an international panel of 14 medical experts who had examined medical records and witness testimony on a pro bono basis found no evidence of deliberate harm. They concluded that all of the incidents could be explained by natural causes. This is despite those who have heard the full evidence over a number of months – jurors, judges and families – consistently maintaining that Letby is guilty, and describing outside claims as “purely speculation”.

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "cross 10 episodes, Knox takes listeners through the deeply complex Letby case, but she admits there are aspects that resonated particularly with her. She highlights the diary entries that were key to the prosecution’s argument and became one of the most contested aspects of the trial. Letby’s entry “I AM EVIL I DID THIS” made international headlines. But it was subsequently revealed by The Guardian that the nurse had also written “Why me?” and “I haven't done anything wrong” after being encouraged to write her thoughts by a therapist as a way of coping with extreme stress after discovering that some of her colleagues suspected her."

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PASSAGE TREE OF THE DAY: "“Something that I found personally troubling was just how Lucy Letby’s personality was dissected through these personal, ambiguous diary writings,” says Knox. “You are going through an incredibly surreal, overwhelming experience, accused of a crime that you did not commit, and you are trying to make sense of. “When I was in prison, I was trying to think, ‘Why is this happening to me?’ And I was coming to crazy conclusions. Maybe we’re all supposed to suffer a certain amount in our life, and mine is all just happening all at once. Or maybe fate forgot about me, and I was supposed to have a terrible childhood, but I had a great childhood, so now I‘m having a horrible adulthood. “The accusation and situation are so overwhelming that you find yourself trying to make sense of it. And I think it’s also a stereotypically woman thing to find fault in oneself to try to take the blame because we are socially sort of encouraged to do that.”

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STORY: Amanda Knox: 'I was not looking for Lucy Letby; Lucy Letby found me’ by Megan Lloyd Davies, published by The Independent, on March 14, 2026.

SUB-HEADING:  One is a high-profile woman definitively acquitted of a murder conviction; the other is serving a life sentence as Britain’s ‘worst child serial killer’ and fighting to have her appeal heard from behind bars. Here, after examining the details of her case, Amanda Knox tells Megan Lloyd Davies what she really thinks of Letby’s claims

GIST:  "Amanda Knox smiles as she greets me. Dressed in a multi-coloured cardigan, face bare of make-up, she seems relaxed and at ease as we speak.

Knox has agreed to talk to me on a Zoom call ahead of the release of her new podcast, which examines Lucy Letby’s conviction in August 2023 for the murder of seven babies and attempted murder of six others when working as a neonatal nurse at the Countess of Chester Hospital. She was subsequently convicted of another attempted murder and sentenced to 15 whole-life terms.

The case has dominated headlines ever since, the subject of heated debate between those who are convinced of Letby’s guilt and those who question it.

The 36-year-old’s 10-month trial was one of the longest murder trials in UK history. Two applications for permission to appeal have been refused, and the case is now with the Criminal Cases Review Commission. But last year, an international panel of 14 medical experts who had examined medical records and witness testimony on a pro bono basis found no evidence of deliberate harm. They concluded that all of the incidents could be explained by natural causes. This is despite those who have heard the full evidence over a number of months – jurors, judges and families – consistently maintaining that Letby is guilty, and describing outside claims as “purely speculation”.

Knox, who was infamously convicted of the murder of British student Meredith Kercher in Perugia before Italy’s highest court threw out the verdict, is now adding her own thoughts to the debate, in her new podcast investigating the nurse, Doubt: The Case of

“I was not looking for Lucy Letby,” Amanda Knox tells me. “Lucy Letby found me.”

Knox has a uniquely painful experience of how narrative can shape everything from how police investigate to public perception, and says that today she does a lot of work in the criminal justice space. “But I’m more interested typically in the institutional and legal aspects,” she says. “I’m not just consuming true crime news.”

Soon after Letby’s conviction, people began to reach out. Initially, Knox says statisticians contacted her with concerns about how evidence presented at trial was, they claimed, “flagrantly misused”. But others claimed they had also noticed patterns and similarities to Knox’s experience.

In 2007, Knox was a 20-year-old American studying in Italy when her flatmate, Meredith Kercher, a British exchange student, was sexually assaulted and murdered. When Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, the 23-year-old man she had been seeing for just six days, found Kercher’s body, it was the start of an eight-year ordeal.

The pair were convicted of murder in 2009, released on appeal, then convicted again before a final appeal. A third defendant, Rudy Guede, whose DNA was found at the scene, opted for a fast-track trial and was found guilty in 2008 of sexually assaulting and murdering Kercher.

Knox and Sollecito, however, had been identified as suspects by police and prosecutors intent on proving they were complicit. Finally, in 2015, Italy’s highest court definitively quashed their convictions. Judges said no “biological traces” had been found of either individual at the murder scene, key forensic evidence presented by the prosecution had been potentially contaminated, while police and prosecutors were accused of displaying “stunning weakness” and “investigative bouts of amnesia”.

And yet the story around Knox lingered, a highly charged media and public fascination sparked into life in the days after Kercher’s murder when headlines painted “Foxy Knoxy” as a sexually deviant killer.

The narrative around criminal cases involving women is Knox’s entry point into Letby’s story.

“There was little to nothing the public knew up until (Letby’s) conviction,” says Knox. “But as soon as that conviction took place, it was like the dam broke and this tidal wave of a fully formed narrative about her took hold.”

Knox then claimed that for some, “she’s a psychopathic serial killer who somehow perfectly represents this archetype of the hidden female psychopath who has no history of violence, no history of any mental illness, no motive whatsoever, and no one saw her do anything. And yet one day she just snaps or decides to put this calculated plan into play.”

Knox, 38, has lived with the consequences of this type of speculative narrative for years, and continues to do so. After returning to the US in 2011 after her first successful appeal, she was at the centre of intense press interest. Despite trying to keep her 2020 wedding to author and filmmaker Christopher Robinson “utterly locked down and secret”, for instance, paparazzi turned up.

Knox is articulate about the impact of wrongful conviction and the ongoing effects that do not end when the legal process does. She has spoken in the past about feeling “completely ostracised” on her return home to Seattle after her first acquittal in 2011. She was convicted for a second time in absentia in January 2014 and her life continued to be subsumed by the legal process from afar.

“Prison was almost easier,” she says. “It was obvious why I was sad and frustrated. I’m in prison for a crime I didn’t commit. My fantasies always involved getting the life back that had been stolen from me.

“And the cruel reality that I faced upon coming home was that it didn’t exist for me any more. I did not get to go back to being that anonymous college student. I am a public figure. I am branded with the crimes of someone else. It was incredibly debilitating, and I entered into a state of deep existential crisis trying to 

Slowly, however, Knox carved a path through the wreckage and in the years since has built a career as a journalist, author, podcaster, campaigner and executive producer working to highlight the issues raised not just by her own story but those of other victims of miscarriages of justice.

“It’s not lost on me that of the two of us, me and Meredith, I am the lucky one because I am alive,” she says. “I’m trying to take a very, very bad experience that I had and make some good out of it.

“I’ve learned a lot about how justice systems work, how media systems work, how human minds work, especially around emotionally and morally charged stories. Instead of just keeping that knowledge to myself, I’m applying it and sharing it where I can.”

Across 10 episodes, Knox takes listeners through the deeply complex Letby case, but she admits there are aspects that resonated particularly with her.

She highlights the diary entries that were key to the prosecution’s argument and became one of the most contested aspects of the trial. Letby’s entry “I AM EVIL I DID THIS” made international headlines. But it was subsequently revealed by The Guardian that the nurse had also written “Why me?” and “I haven't done anything wrong” after being encouraged to write her thoughts by a therapist as a way of coping with extreme stress after discovering that some of her colleagues suspected her.

“Something that I found personally troubling was just how Lucy Letby’s personality was dissected through these personal, ambiguous diary writings,” says Knox.

“You are going through an incredibly surreal, overwhelming experience, accused of a crime that you did not commit, and you are trying to make sense of.

“When I was in prison, I was trying to think, ‘Why is this happening to me?’ And I was coming to crazy conclusions. Maybe we’re all supposed to suffer a certain amount in our life, and mine is all just happening all at once. Or maybe fate forgot about me, and I was supposed to have a terrible childhood, but I had a great childhood, so now I‘m having a horrible adulthood.

“The accusation and situation are so overwhelming that you find yourself trying to make sense of it. And I think it’s also a stereotypically woman thing to find fault in oneself to try to take the blame because we are socially sort of encouraged to do that.”

So, having examined Letby’s case and spoken to so many people who are questioning the evidence, does Knox believe she is innocent?

“I cannot personally say anything definitive about this case the way that I can definitively say things about my own case,” she says. “I think there is a lot of ambiguity here. There are reasonable alternative explanations for what took place. I absolutely believe the conviction is unsafe.

“My concern here is the insistence that the only respectful way of approaching this story is through silence at the expense of truth and justice.”

This is a particularly potent aspect of both Knox and Letby’s stories because human tragedy lies at the heart of both cases – the deaths of children whose parents’ grief has been made unimaginably more complex by combative legal processes. A solicitor for six of the victims’ families said speculation about Letby’s innocence has been “upsetting” and harmful for relatives still grieving.

Knox is keenly aware of the need to “respect and value victims”. But she also questions our collective tendency to see things in black and white, good and evil, and highlights the need to balance the emotional stakes these cases raise with a dispassionate appraisal of the evidence, police investigation and legal process.

“One of the biggest criticisms that I get to this day is basically ‘How dare you talk about your own case when there’s a grieving family?’” says Knox. “You are a secondary victim at best. You’re probably guilty anyway, so just shut up and disappear.

“And I believe that is completely unfair and unjust. I think you can have compassion for the victims of the original crime and you can scrutinise the way that crime was talked about in the media and the way it was presented at trial.”

Knox references the “institutional issues” that her case – and possibly Letby’s – raise. In her case, police procedures, incompetence, and bias, in Letby’s possible NHS pressures, staffing shortages and infrastructure challenges.

“That’s a way more difficult problem to address than just ‘we have a bad apple’,” she says. “There’s this push to find fault in individuals because that also leads to easy solutions.”

What’s clear is that even if an individual is exonerated, the echoes of their experience are ever-present. There is no neat ending.

“A bomb went off in my life,” says Knox. “I’ve just been picking up all the pieces and trying to build a monument to that tragedy that does it justice from all those pieces.”

She has clearly found purpose in her professional life and meticulously worked through many phases of her personal recovery. But Knox meets many fellow exonerees and says they share the sense that they will “have to spend the rest of our lives proving our innocence”. She says she has learned to live with the suspicion that persists.

“I have a lot of compassion for people who to this day still believe wrong things about me, because they were lied to,” she said. “People just refuse to look at it because it’s too painful, the idea of having your entire belief system rewritten.”

Knox’s world today remains inextricably bound up with her past and the retelling of her story, and she says her husband has been trying to encourage her to work on something “just for joy”.

“It’s hard,” says Knox. “When you’ve lived through a catastrophe, it almost feels like unless you’re picking up a piece of that catastrophe, you’re being frivolous.”

To give herself permission to feel joy, she has started doing stand-up comedy in a bid to push herself into more playful territory. Knox’s face also illuminates as she speaks about becoming a mother to daughter Eureka, four, and son Echo, who was born in 2023.

“I’m very much like all mums. But at the same time, I’m aware that the only thing that really exists is what’s happening right now,” she says. “So if imagining worst-case scenarios is going to take me away from just being with them right now, I’m not going to.”

She does, however, admit that it will probably get harder as her children get older and closer to the age

Knox’s story – or at least the one confected around her – was known worldwide, but she says she had little sense of its massive impact until she got home to the US. But she smiles as she remembers going to the local record store she used to visit as a teenager, soon after getting home, and seeing “Welcome home, Amanda” written on the notice board outside.

“That was really big,” she says. “And it was really comforting in a way. It gave me hope. People are concerned about the truth and getting it right, and doing the right thing. That has always been a comfort to me, and I hope that’s a comfort to Lucy.”

Doubt: The Case of Lucy Letby’, hosted by Amanda Knox, is a production of iHeartPodcasts, Knox Robinson Productions and Vespucci. It is available now on streaming platforms

https://www.the-independent.com/news/people/news/amanda-knox-lucy-letby-innocence-b2938160.html


Lucy LetbyAmanda KnoxpodcastConvictionPodcasts

information


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


 FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!

Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;


Sunday, March 15, 2026

James Duckett: Florida: His lawyers claim that a single piece of hair that has never been tested for DNA until now could prove his innocence; He is to be executed on March 31. As Martin E. Comas reports in the Orlando Sentinel: "James Duckett has always maintained his innocence. His lawyers have argued his conviction was based on circumstantial evidence — including an FBI report that has largely been discredited, the testimony of a pregnant 16-year-old who later recanted, tire tracks of a police car, palm prints, and a single piece of hair that has never been tested for DNA until now."


PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "But the most compelling pieces of evidence in the Mascotte murder, according to prosecutors, were a single hair found in Teresa’s panties and a now-dried vaginal swab with semen. Those were never tested for DNA, a procedure not commonly used in the late 1980s. An FBI analyst’s report — which was later called into question — stated the strand of hair was nearly identical to Duckett’s hair. This month, Duckett’s attorneys successfully argued for Circuit Court Judge Brian Welke to order the evidence sent from the Lake County Sheriff’s Office to a private lab in Deerfield Beach to be tested. Those DNA results, they hope, could overturn his conviction. But Welke on Friday denied Duckett’s attorneys’ request for a 30-day stay of his execution to allow more time to analyze the test results, which are to be completed by March 18 — less than two weeks before he is to be put to death."


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STORY: "Amid his father’s last-minute bid to avoid execution, Joshua Duckett focuses on finding his son," by Martin E. Comas, published by The Orlando Sentinel, on March 15, 2026. (Martin E. Comas covers Seminole County and its seven cities for the Orlando Sentinel. Martin is a University of Central Florida graduate with degrees in journalism and business administration. He is fluent in Spanish.)


IMAGE CAPTION: "James Aren Duckett awaits his execution on March 31 for the rape, strangulation and drowning of an 11-year-old in 1987 while he was a Mascotte police officer. But it’s not the only dark chapter for the Duckett family. James Duckett’s two-year-old grandson, Trenton Duckett, went missing from his mother’s Leesburg apartment in August 2006. Since then, Joshua Duckett — James’ son and Trenton’s father — has not given up hope that his son will be found, while trying to not think about his father, who is on the verge of being put to death by lethal injection."


GIDT: "Joshua Duckett was three years old when his father was sent to Florida’s Death Row, convicted of raping, choking and drowning a fifth-grade girl while on duty as a police officer for the small rural town of Mascotte in Lake County.

As the elder James Aren Duckett awaits his execution at the end of this month, his lawyers are scrambling for a last-minute stay, counting on new DNA testing that could either prove his innocence after 38 years or seal his fate.

For the family of Teresa McAbee — who was 11 years old in May 1987, when she was killed and her body dumped by the side of a lake — Duckett’s execution will mean justice.

But for the Duckett family, it’s just another dark chapter.

In 2006, Joshua Duckett’s two-year-old son, Trenton Duckett, went missing on a warm August night in Leesburg, sparking a nationwide search and global media sensation. His ex-wife, Melinda Duckett, killed herself weeks later at her grandparents’ home in The Villages.

Today, Joshua Duckett, 40, prefers not to talk about his father. He said Thursday he does not keep up with his father’s case and is focused on finding his son.

“I’ve tried my hardest to keep those two cases separate,” he said. “I don’t want the negativity from his case to affect our search for Trenton.”

Trenton Duckett — a dark-haired, cheery child, who loved Chicken McNuggets and chasing ducks at a pond — has never been found. But Joshua Duckett still holds annual vigils in the belief that Trenton, who would now be 21 years old, will come home someday.

“We continue to be hopeful, to locate him, to get any information that we can,” Joshua Duckett said. “That’s our goal.”

He acknowledged that he and his family have been handed tragic fates from multiple directions.

“Life’s hard in general,” Joshua Duckett said. “We’re all dealt certain hands in life. You live and push forward. Or you give up. And I don’t want to give up. My son still deserves to be found and be brought back home, to be with his family.”

During his father’s trial in the spring of 1988, Joshua’s mother, Carla Duckett, would take him and his older brother Justin to stand outside the Lake County Jail and look toward the fourth floor with binoculars, hoping to get a glimpse of their “Daddy.” Carla Duckett could not be reached for comment.

The boys, holding children’s books and flashcards, were too young to understand when their father was found guilty by a jury, which recommended by an 8-to-4 vote to sentence him to death for first-degree murder and sexual battery on a child younger than 12.

James Duckett, now 68, has since lived in a cell at Florida State Prison in Raiford. He is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection on March 31 after Gov. Ron DeSantis signed his death warrant in late February. It is the fifth death warrant DeSantis signed this year and would be the third execution carried out this month.

James Duckett has always maintained his innocence. His lawyers have argued his conviction was based on circumstantial evidence — including an FBI report that has largely been discredited, the testimony of a pregnant 16-year-old who later recanted, tire tracks of a police car, palm prints, and a single piece of hair that has never been tested for DNA until now.

Just before 10 p.m. on May 12, 1987, Teresa McAbee told her mother, Dorothy, that she needed pencils to finish her fifth-grade homework assignment at Mascotte Elementary. She asked her mom if she could walk to a convenience store about a block north at the corner of Sunset Avenue and State Road 50.

Across the highway, James Duckett, a rookie police officer barely seven months into his job, sat in his patrol car running radar checks. With roughly 1,600 residents, Mascotte was a mostly agricultural community and a notorious speed trap for lead-footed drivers.

He watched as the brown-haired skinny girl walked into the store and came out talking to a group of boys in the parking lot, according to court documents.

Duckett testified one of the teen boys kept looking around nervously and eyeing the patrol car, so he went inside to ask the clerk about the boy and the girl. He then told the boy to leave, according to records, and the boy walked to a nearby coin laundry, where his uncle waited for clothes to dry.

Duckett said that Teresa briefly sat inside the patrol car while he “chewed her out” for being out late at night and violating a city curfew for children. He then watched as she walked around the store to head back home on Sunset Avenue. Other witnesses also said they saw Teresa walk away.

When Teresa did not return by midnight, a frantic Dorothy McAbee drove to the police station to report her daughter missing.

James Duckett walked into the station, took down the information and told McAbee he saw Teresa at the convenience store, according to court records. Duckett then printed and posted flyers about the missing girl.

Teresa’s body — still wearing hi-top sneakers and jeans — was found early the next morning along the shore of a lake, less than a mile south of the store.

matched Duckett’s patrol car along the dirt road leading to the lake where her body was found. But Duckett’s attorneys argued that he and other officers had searched the lakeshore after Teresa was declared missing.

Investigators also found palm prints on the hood of Duckett’s patrol car that matched Teresa, which prosecutors claimed was from her being raped while on the car and trying to push away.

Duckett insisted those prints were from when he was talking to her in the parking lot. His attorneys argued the car’s hood was too hot to sit on, based on testimony from other officers, and her body didn’t show evidence of burns.

A teenaged Gwen Gurley testified she saw the officer drive away from the convenience store, then return and leave with “a small person” in his patrol car. A year after Duckett’s conviction, Gurley said she made up the story.

Duckett also is a suspect in the strangulation murders of an unidentified woman in 1986 and a 14-year-old girl in 1987, both in Lakeland, before he became a police officer.

But the most compelling pieces of evidence in the Mascotte murder, according to prosecutors, were a single hair found in Teresa’s panties and a now-dried vaginal swab with semen. Those were never tested for DNA, a procedure not commonly used in the late 1980s. An FBI analyst’s report — which was later called into question — stated the strand of hair was nearly identical to Duckett’s hair.

This month, Duckett’s attorneys successfully argued for Circuit Court Judge Brian Welke to order the evidence sent from the Lake County Sheriff’s Office to a private lab in Deerfield Beach to be tested.

Those DNA results, they hope, could overturn his conviction.

But Welke on Friday denied Duckett’s attorneys’ request for a 30-day stay of his execution to allow more time to analyze the test results, which are to be completed by March 18 — less than two weeks before he is to be put to death.

An undated photo of Melinda Duckett and her 2-year-old son Trenton Duckett.

rom his cell nearly 20 years ago, James Duckett watched as the world searched for his missing 2-year-old grandson, Trenton Duckett, and relied on family visitors and a prison chaplain to keep him updated. He kept photos of Trenton in his cell.

The toddler disappeared on Aug. 27, 2006 from his bedroom after his mother, Melinda, put him to sleep. She told investigators that someone had cut through a screen window while she watched a movie in another room with friends.

But Melinda Duckett soon became a person of interest after detectives found sonogram photos and other items from Trenton in a dumpster at the family’s Leesburg apartment complex.

Two weeks later, Melinda Duckett was interviewed by CNN host Nancy Grace, who grilled the 21-year-old about her son’s whereabouts and accused her of hiding something. Before the episode aired, Melinda Duckett shut herself inside a closet at her grandparents’ home in The Villages and killed herself with a rifle, according to police reports.

Leesburg police said Trenton Duckett’s disappearance is still an active investigation. Joshua Duckett said he often talks to investigators, and photos of the boy at 2 years old and what he might look like today are on the department’s website.

Last August, a candlelight vigil was held at Leesburg Town Square to mark 19 years since Trenton went missing.

“It’s always hard every time you hit a birthday, every time you hit an anniversary,” Joshua Duckett said at the event. “But I still have hope that one day we’ll get answers.”


The entire story can be read at:



PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system.   Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan: Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;


 FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!

Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;