For Baker’s children, Jesse and Caitlin Baker, the recent events have been bittersweet.
"The arrest the other day was not for our mother, so we were all a little conflicted about it," Jesse said.
A bandana found near the crime scene of Christine Morton’s murder matched 57-year-old Mark Alan Norwood. That DNA also matched the previously unknown suspect in Baker's murder.
"It's not done yet, so I am glad [Norwood] is off the street,” Caitlin said. “Of course we don’t know for sure. He is a suspect but he actually hasn't been charged or convicted."
District Judge Ken Anderson was the prosecutor in the Morton trial. He now faces accusations of holding back key evidence which supported Morton's innocence.
Wednesday, Anderson publicly apologized for what he called the "system failure,” leaving the Baker family torn with emotion and confused with the latest development in their mother's case."
REPORTER JOHN A. SALAZAR; YYU;
(Photo: Michael Morton);
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BACKGROUND:  (Michael)  Morton was the victim of serious  prosecutorial   misconduct that  caused him to lose 25 years of his life  and completely   ripped apart his  family.  Perhaps even more  tragically, we now know   that another murder  might have been prevented  if law enforcement had   continued its  investigation rather than  building a false case against   Mr. Morton,”  said Barry Scheck,  Co-Director of the Innocence Project,   which is  affiliated with  Cardozo School of Law.  “This tragic   miscarriage of  justice must be  fully investigated and steps must be   taken to hold  police and  prosecutors accountable.”   In August, the   Innocence  Project  announced that DNA testing on a bandana found near   the Morton’s  home  where the murder occurred contained the blood of the   victim,   Christine Morton, and a male other than Morton. According to   the  papers  filed by the Innocence Project yesterday, new DNA testing   has  connected  the male DNA on the bandana to a hair that was found at   the  crime scene  of a Travis County murder that was conducted with a    similar modus  operandi after Morton was incarcerated.  Morton always    maintained that  the murder was committed by a third-party intruder.  In    the  filing, the Innocence Project charges that Morton would never   have  been  convicted of the crime if the prosecution had turned over as    required  evidence pointing to his innocence.  Newly discovered   evidence  that was  uncovered through a Public Records Act request that   was not  given to the  defense includes:   • A transcript of a taped   interview by  the  chief investigator, Sgt. Don Wood,  with the victim’s   mother where  the  mother says that the couple’s three-year-old child   witnessed the  murder  and provided a chilling account of watching a  man  who was not  his father  beat Christine to death. • A handwritten   telephone  message to  Williamson County Sherriff’s Office (WCSO) Sgt.   Wood dated  two days  after the murder reporting that what appeared to   be Christine  Morton’s  missing Visa card was recovered at the Jewel Box   store in San  Antonio,  with a note indicating that a police officer  in  San Antonio  would be  able to identify the woman who attempted to  use  the card. •  A report  by WCSO officer Traylor that a neighbor had  “on  several  occasions  observed a male park a green van on the street   behind [the  Morton’s]  address, then the subject would get out and  walk  into the  wooded area  off the road.” • An internal, typewritten  WCSO  message  to Sgt. Wood  and follow up correspondence reporting that  a  check made  out to  Christine Morton by a man named John B. Cross  was  cashed with   Christine’s forged signature nine days after her  murder.   The Innocence  Project. (Morton's lawyers contend the  Williamson County District Attorney at the  time, Ken Anderson, withheld  evidence that would have exonerated Morton.  Lawyers have questioned  Anderson, now a district judge, and others  involved in the case to  determine if there was misconduct involved. That process continues)
"DNA evidence proved Morton's innocence and linked the murder to another man. Now, investigators say the new suspect may have also killed Austinite Debra Baker. Baker was also beaten to death, two years after Christine Morton," the story continues.
"For Baker’s children, Jesse and Caitlin Baker, the recent events have been bittersweet.
"The arrest the other day was not for our mother, so we were all a little conflicted about it," Jesse said.
A bandana found near the crime scene of Christine Morton’s murder matched 57-year-old Mark Alan Norwood. That DNA also matched the previously unknown suspect in Baker's murder.
"It's not done yet, so I am glad [Norwood] is off the street,” Caitlin said. “Of course we don’t know for sure. He is a suspect but he actually hasn't been charged or convicted."
District Judge Ken Anderson was the prosecutor in the Morton trial. He now faces accusations of holding back key evidence which supported Morton's innocence.
Wednesday, Anderson publicly apologized for what he called the "system failure,” leaving the Baker family torn with emotion and confused with the latest development in their mother's case.
Caitlin said she believes if Anderson would have done a more thorough job investigating Christine Morton's murder, her mother may still be alive.
"I did hope for more from that press conference that we didn't get, like an apology, or I thought he was going to resign. That would have been great," she said.
Jesse is more reserved in his search for the truth.
"I have a lot of questions about [Anderson's] involvement in the Morton case and how that has affected us, but I am trying, struggling, to give the process time to see his side of the story before I make a final decision about it," Jesse said.
The Travis County District Attorney's office continues to investigate Debra Baker's murder. Caitlin said she's grateful to both the Travis County DA and the Austin Police Department for their decades of work on the investigation into her mother's death.
Meanwhile, Norwood remains in jail in Williamson County, facing capital murder charges for the death of Christine Morton.
The story - with videos -  can be found at:
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: 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. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at:
http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith
Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at:
http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html
Harold Levy: Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog; hlevy15@gmail.com;