"How did things go so wrong in the Morton case? Aside from questions of prosecutorial misconduct, a columnist for the Austin-American Statesman described a perfect storm of tragic events: prosecutor Ken Anderson had a fine reputation, wrote Alberta Phillips, and so the jury was too willing to believe him.
Moreover, they wanted to believe him. It made everybody in the community feel safer that, with Morton in prison, "[n]o monsters lurked under our beds," Phillips wrote.
Bryan, the distraught juror, is surely not unique in her anguish over convicting an innocent man."DAVID PAULIN: AMERICAN THINKER; American Thinker is a daily conservative online magazine] dealing with American politics, foreign policy, national security, Israel, economics, diplomacy, culture, and military strategy.
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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.)
"A  tragic and Kafkaesque miscarriage of justice in central Texas grows  more intriguing by the day, with one stunning development after another  generating new headlines," the American Thinker story by David Paulin,  published on November 17, 2011 under the heading, "In Texas, a tragic miscarriage of justice fails to excite the Liberal media," begins.
  "Yet, strangely, the wrongful conviction of  Michael Morton in 1987 for murdering his wife has failed to excite  liberal media outlets and advocacy groups that typically go wild over  such cases.  Why?," the story continues.
"On Wednesday, the newest twist in the case made headlines: District Judge Ken Anderson --  the lead prosecutor who convicted Morton 25 years ago -- publicly apologized to  Morton and those adversely affected by the wrongful conviction.  The  legal system had suffered a "system's failure," Anderson admitted.  But  he denied charges that prosecutors hid evidence that would have  bolstered Morton's defense.
The former district attorney of Williamson County spoke outside the same historic courthouse where Morton, after being convicted 25 years ago, collapsed at the defense table, sobbing and proclaiming his innocence.
"I didn't do this. That's all I can say. I did not do this," said Morton, then 32 years old -- a man with no history of violence. He was sentenced to life in prison.
The case against Morton was built upon circumstantial evidence -- including what prosecutors in Williamson County, just outside the capital of Austin, had portrayed as Morton's supposedly inappropriate reactions to news of his wife's murder and a claim that there were some tensions in his marriage.
Prosecutors put forth a murder theory tailor-made for lurid supermarket tabloids: Morton was upset that  his wife didn't have sex with him on his birthday, the previous day,  and so he bludgeoned her to death in her bed.  He then went calmly to  his job at a grocery store at 5:30 a.m.
Morton, now 57, was exonerated last month by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals after lawyers for Barry Scheck's New York-based Innocence Project overcame six years of objections from the William County district attorney and got a court order for new DNA testing of crime-scene evidence. The testing indicated that an intruder killed Christine Morton in 1986, as well as an Austin woman named Debra Baker after Morton was sent to prison. In 1988, Baker was beaten to death in her bed.
Last week, another stunning development made headlines: police arrested a suspect in Christine Morton's murder -- Mark Alan Norwood, 57, a dishwasher in Bastrop, Texas.  He has a long criminal history.   A bandana found near the crime scene contained DNA linked to Norwood  and his victim.  He has yet to be charged in Baker's death.
Morton's wrongful conviction has roiled the state's legal community as questions have emerged about prosecutorial misconduct in the case. Morton's lawyers are now pursuing Anderson and former assistant district attorney Mike Davis, now in private practice, claiming that they withheld evidence. Among other things, they want to know why a transcript from Christine Morton's mother was not made available to defense lawyers. She told the case's lead investigator that the couple's three-year-old son told her that a "monster" -- not his father -- had beaten his mother to death.
Prosecutors also allegedly withheld two other pieces of information: two weeks after Christine Morton's murder, her credit card was used in San Antonio. And a check made out to her was cashed with a signature deemed a forgery.
Judge Anderson, whom Gov. Rick Perry appointed in 2002, initially stonewalled efforts by Morton's lawyers to provide depositions aimed at learning whether he had intentionally withheld information that could have prevented Morton's wrongful conviction. However, a ruling by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals forced him to provide depositions. That same ruling applied to Davis.
The Texas attorney general plans to reinvestigate the murder case, and the State Bar of Texas, in charge of lawyer discipline, is undertaking its own investigation focusing on Anderson and Davis.
One of the jurors who convicted Morton was distraught and teary-eyed when discussing her role in convicting him -- and she was particularly upset that exculpatory evidence was allegedly kept from the jury. "We should have known something more," Lou Bryan, a retired high school English teacher in Round Rock, told a local television news channel. "And if that's the way it works in our system, then there is something wrong."
She noted that a few jurors had found holes in the case during their twelve hours of deliberations; however, their doubts were cast aside by, among other things, testimony from a forensic specialist that Christine Morton was killed when her husband was still at home, based on food in her system she'd eaten the previous night.
During Judge Anderson's public apology, one young woman at his news conference said that she wasn't about to forgive him. Caitlin Baker, daughter of the second woman whom Norwood is thought to have killed, said that "[m]y mother could be alive right now" if Anderson hadn't convicted an innocent man. "If he feels bad, prove it -- resign."
Morton now lives with his parents as he tries to rebuild his life. He's eligible to receive $2 million from the state for his wrongful conviction -- $80,000 for each year he spent in prison. "Thank God this wasn't a capital case," he said after a judge released him from prison early last month.
All in all, it has been a breathtaking series of events in recent weeks. So where are all the nation's liberal media outlets -- CNN, the New York Times, and others who love to showcase abuses of power and miscarriages of justice? Perhaps the case lacks an essential element for them: race.
Michael Morton is white, as was his wife. So were the prosecutors who convicted him. What's more, he was convicted in overwhelmingly white Williamson County by a jury that presumably was overwhelmingly white. All of this is at odds with the favorite liberal media narrative about horrific miscarriages of justice -- that they're typically committed by white prosecutors and white juries who allegedly harbor a racial animus against hapless black defendants and other minorities.
How did things go so wrong in the Morton case? Aside from questions of prosecutorial misconduct, a columnist for the Austin-American Statesman described a perfect storm of tragic events: prosecutor Ken Anderson had a fine reputation, wrote Alberta Phillips, and so the jury was too willing to believe him.
Moreover, they wanted to believe him. It made everybody in the community feel safer that, with Morton in prison, "[n]o monsters lurked under our beds," Phillips wrote.
Bryan, the distraught juror, is surely not unique in her anguish over convicting an innocent man. Her reaction reflects a bedrock value in America's criminal justice system and, indeed, Western culture. "Better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer," observed famed English jurist William Blackstone.
Blackstone's 10-1 formulation has biblical underpinnings -- Abraham's argument with God over the fate of Sodom. "Will you consume the righteous with the wicked?" Abraham asks, and then presses that point, saying: "What if ten [righteous] are found there?" God replies: "I will not destroy it for the ten's sake." It's a concept that's hardwired into our culture and the expectations of ordinary Americans.
Liberal media outlets may find the Morton case dull -- not worthy of any showcase stories because in their minds, it fails to illuminate deeper problems in American society. But the perfect storm of events leading to Morton's conviction will continue to play out for months in Texas, out of sight and mind of liberal media outlets that cannot further their political agendas by covering the story in a big way. It would be another matter entirely if Michael Morton was black.
It's another sad aspect of this case."
For a YouTube clip of Morton being released by a judge on October 4, 2011 in Georgetown, Texas, click here. For a TV news clip of distraught juror Lou Bryan discussing her role in convicting Morton, click here.
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;