STORY: "Death of innocence: Davontae Sanford’s twisted road to freedom," by George Hunter, published by the Detroit Free Press, published on July 25, 2016.
GIST: "A conversation with a cop sent Davontae Sanford’s life spiraling out of control. It
was Sept. 17, 2007. Four people had been gunned down in a drug house on
Runyon, two blocks from the 14-year-old Sanford’s home on Detroit’s
east side. When the teen ventured outside to see what was
happening, he said he was approached by a Detroit Police homicide
detective, who asked what he knew about the killings. That
question and the police’s actions afterward eventually led to Sanford
confessing and pleading guilty to murders he didn’t commit. Sanford says
he was a naive kid whose confession and guilty plea were coerced by
police and his defense attorney. “I was young; I was just lost in
space,” he said. “I couldn’t really comprehend what was going on; it all
happened so fast. I got arrested, and ... eight months later I was in
prison.”.........For Inmate #684070, it would be a long road to freedom. An
eight-year struggle by family, lawyers and supporters to exonerate
Sanford was repeatedly stymied by prosecutors who insisted his
conviction was solid. The case became a national cause for innocence advocates who called Sanford’s conviction a miscarriage of justice. “This
is the most compelling case you’ll ever see, because it shows how the
system can totally fail a young boy,” said David Moran of the University
of Michigan Innocence Clinic, which represented Sanford’s appeal. “It’s
the thickest file we’ve ever had here at the Michigan Innocence Clinic,
and this case had some of the most complex issues we’ve ever handled. “So
many things went wrong at so many levels, and so many actors were
involved, that it’s really an indictment on the entire criminal justice
system in Wayne County. There’s plenty of blame to go around.”.........Sanford’s luck changed in May, when Michigan State Police
submitted the results of their 11-month reinvestigation of the case:
They said
someone else had committed the killings for which Sanford was convicted.] The
findings set off a whirlwind of developments in Sanford’s case, and
after fighting for eight years, Sanford’s team was finally rewarded when
he
walked out of the Bellamy Creek Correctional Facility in Ionia on June 8, smiling and squinting into the sun. He was free.........
‘Just sign your initials’: Sanford remembers what his aunt served for dinner the night his life changed nine years ago: A roast with potatoes and carrots. When Sanford returned home, his mother told him four people had just been killed on Runyon. “News
vans and police cars had that area blocked off. I start walking up the
street … that’s when … (Sgt. Mike Russell) started asking me questions …
have I heard or seen anything.” “I told them I didn’t know
nothing; that’s when they said they wanted to question me. They brought
me back to my house to get a consent form from my grandmother.” Tolbert,
then a commander in charge of the Major Crimes Section, drove Sanford
around for about two hours, according to Sanford and state police. “(Tolbert)
wanted to know who could have done something like this; what guys were
doing in the neighborhood, that kind of stuff.”Why was he being interviewed? “I asked them ... They said, ‘this is something we need to do.’ ” At
about 3 a.m., Tolbert dropped Sanford off on Runyon, where police
technicians tested his hands and clothing for gunshot residue. The test
was negative. “We went to Coney Island, got something to eat. We
went back to 1300 Beaubien (former police headquarters); they let me get
on the computer. (They were) friendly. It wasn’t hostile at all.” Sanford
said he was pressured into telling police something, so he made up a
story about four older teens from his neighborhood. Police cleared the
four after their alibis checked out. “My first statement was took.
They all left, and I spent the night at 1300 Beaubien, sleeping on the
couch. I was woken up by (homicide investigator) Barbara Simon. She had
my statement; she was like ‘sign your name here, here, here, here.’ I
told her, ‘I can’t read.’ She said ‘just sign your initials.’ ” Officers then took Sanford home. Later that day, police returned to his house. “They
told my mother, ‘we think your son knows something; we think your son’s
lying; he needs to tell the truth.’ And I told them repeatedly: ‘I
don’t know nothing. I don’t know nothing.’ ” Sanford said Russell
told his mom: “We just want to talk to him one more time. I promise you
we’re going to bring him home. I promise you we’re going to bring your
son back.” Sanford said Russell and Tolbert told him to sign a typewritten statement saying he was involved in the killings. “Once
I sign the statement, he was like ‘I’m about to take you to the
precinct so we can get this on camera. Once we do that I’m taking you
home. “Once they got me there, they fingerprinted me, took
pictures. And it’s still not registering to me what is really going on.
After the interview was over, I’m thinking, ‘OK, I’m about to go home;
this is it.’ When I got back in the back of the car, (Russell) was like,
‘I’m sorry to tell you this, but I can’t take you home. I gotta take
you to juvenile.” Detroit police have launched an internal investigation into how detectives handled the case, police Chief James Craig said. Russell,
who now runs the Detroit Police Arson Unit, defended his work in the
Sanford case. “I did nothing improper, so I’m not worried about
anything,” he told The Detroit News. “I handled everything by the book.”
Earliest release date: 2046; After
Sanford was charged with first-degree murder, he said his attorney
Robert Slameka convinced him to plead guilty to second-degree murder,
and to seek a bench trial. “(He said), ‘you’re a black kid from
the ghetto; these white people from the suburbs are gonna come in here
and they’re gonna find you guilty.’ ” Sanford said Slameka, who
has been disciplined several times for
failing to properly serve clients, said he was friends with the judge,
and promised Sanford he’d get a light sentence. Sullivan gave him 37-90
years. Slameka has not returned several phone calls seeking comment."
The entire story can be found at:
http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2016/07/25/davontae-sanfords-twisterd-road-freedom/87514192/
See Shaun King's moving commentary in the New York Daily News '
Blind 14-year-old Detroit boy Davontae Sanford spends nine years in prison for four murders he didn't commit' at the link below; "Davontae Sanford might've been a man when he was exonerated, but he was
no man when he was wrongfully framed, forced into a confession and
convicted for a quadruple murder he did not commit. He was just a boy — a black boy, completely blind in one eye and
developmentally impaired — who was found by police wandering in a
Detroit neighborhood in his pajamas the night the murder took place in a
nearby drug house. He wasn't bloody. He didn't have a murder weapon. He wasn't covered in
gunshot residue from the dozen bullets he would've had to fire to kill
four people. He wasn't seen going in and out of the house by
eyewitnesses. He wasn't known as a local thug who'd kill you if you
crossed him. He was just young and black, in the wrong place at the wrong time. Only
14 years old, Davontae Sanford, after being picked up by police in his
pajamas and taken to a local precinct, was interrogated for two days
without an attorney or any family present. Finally, Sanford confessed.
Any child under so much pressure would've considered the same thing. Even though no evidence backed up Sanford committing the crime, and his
outrageous confession got more details wrong about the case than it got
right, police made it stick. Officers falsely claimed Sanford drew a
diagram of the crime scene. That never happened. Whatever Sanford knew,
he knew because police told him. It stuck, though. From that day in September 2007 until last month, Davontae Sanford
never saw another free day. Convicted for all four murders, he was tried
as an adult, and sentenced to 37 to 90 years in prison.........Davontae Sanford spent each and every day of those nine years in
prison. Like most of us would've felt, he wanted to die and attempted
suicide while incarcerated. Anything seemed better than being there —
for the rest of his life. Then, four full years ago, another man, Vincent Smothers, already in
prison for eight other murders, confessed it was him who shot and killed
four people in the drug house that night in 2007. He had been hired to
do it as he had been hired before. He had never even seen or heard of
Davontae Sanford and openly said Sanford played no role whatsoever in
the murders. Year after year, Smothers continued to claim the crimes as
his own, offering details that only the murderer could've known.
Attorneys for Davontae Sanford repeatedly attempted to appeal the
conviction, but were denied. In 2014, Smothers even offered a 26-page
affidavit in which he detailed every single aspect of the crime. Finally, earlier this year, local prosecutors agreed to hear the case
and the wheels were set in motion to free a man who had his childhood
stolen from him. Davontae Sanford, in June, without even an apology from
prosecutors or police, walked out of prison when a Detroit judge
ordered his release because of a wrongful conviction."
The entire commentary can be found at:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/blind-boy-14-spends-9-years-jail-false-murder-convictions-article-1.2720270
PUBLISHER'S NOTE:
I have added a search box for content in this blog which now encompasses
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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