Friday, September 11, 2020

Bob Fenenbock: California: Major (Welcome) Development in quite a shocking case: Exonerated after nearly 30 years behind bars - Judge dismissed the case which was based on coerced testimony from a 9-year-old boy,' The Mercury News, Reporter Nate Gartrell, reports..."The evidence against him was largely based on the word of a 9-year-old boy, Randy, who Gutierrez ruled had been coerced into providing false statements. The youngster was threatened that if the defendants walked, they would come for him next. He claimed he witnessed the murder as he hid below his mother’s blanket and watched as the victim was attacked."


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  A key fact  in this case is that there was no physical evidence  - such as DNA evidence - connecting Mr. Fenenbock to the crime - and no confession. I am seeing more and more cases fitting the pattern where police use their positions of power and authority to coerce witnesses to give them the evidence they seek.  A twist on this observation is -that the more police are required to use investigative techniques designed  to protect the rights of the accused  - such as the videotaping of statements and confessions of the defendant/accused -  the more they will rely on oppressive, underhanded, hard to detect techniques, such as in this case. In my view, it is a very dangerous trend.  (Congrats to The Northern California Innocence Project.)

Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

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QUOTE OF THE DAY: “To implant a memory in a 9-year-old child that, in the Court’s view, is such conduct that is grossly shocking, it’s outrageous, and it violates the universal sense of justice,” (Judge) Gutierrez said, according to a transcript of the hearing."

PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "In August 2019, the California Supreme Court found that evidence of the coerced statement would have “more likely than not” changed the outcome of Fenenbock’s trial. His conviction was overturned, but Trinity County prosecutors promptly moved to retry him. Still, a judge allowed Fenenbock to be free while the case made its way to trial. But rather than argue in front of a jury, Fenenbock’s attorneys filed a motion to throw out the case based on gross government misconduct, a rare move that has a high legal standard for success. Gutierrez listened to five days of testimony — including from Randy and police investigators — before ruling Fenenbock had not received a fair trial. “To implant a memory in a 9-year-old child that, in the Court’s view, is such conduct that is grossly shocking, it’s outrageous, and it violates the universal sense of justice,” Gutierrez said, according to a transcript of the hearing."

STORY: "He spent nearly 30 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit. A California judge  just dismissed the case, calling investigation 'outrageous.'

SUB-HEADING: "Case based on coerced testimony from  a 9-year-old, judge ruled.

GIST: "In 1991, when Bob Fenenbock proclaimed his innocence, facing charges that he joined a frenzied mob in the murder of a Trinity County man, no one believed him. He was convicted and sentenced to life.


In 2019, even after the Northern California Innocence Project took up Fenenbock’s case and wrote a successful appeal, freeing him from prison, prosecutors moved to retry him. Longing to return to his home state of Hawaii, Fenenbock spent a year in California facing the pending murder case, the prospect of returning to prison hanging over his head.


But on August 24, after listening to arguments from both sides, Solano County Superior Court Judge Carlos Gutierrez gave Fenenbock what he’s been spent three decades seeking: vindication. In a blistering order that accused a lead police investigator of “untruths, lies, deception, and coercion,” Gutierrez threw out the case, effectively ending Fenenbock’s nightmare.


“I’ve been screaming this in a cell for 28 years,” Fenenbock said in an interview. “It was surprisingly amazingly incredible that this year of BS was over and I could move on with my life.”


Now back in his native state, Fenenbock has had time to reflect back on the time he spent as a wrongfully-convicted California prisoner, and how different life would be for him if he was still locked away in a prison system rife with overcrowding amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. But for now, he said, he’s focusing on his future.


“I’m just wallowing in my family,” Fenenbock said. “The future holds pretty much whatever I want to do, cuz as of Monday of last week, I’m free…I’m beaming, man.”

Gutierrez’s ruling undid what Fenenbock’s attorneys argued was a case that never should have been filed.


The evidence against him was largely based on the word of a 9-year-old boy, Randy, who Gutierrez ruled had been coerced into providing false statements. The youngster was threatened that if the defendants walked, they would come for him next. He claimed he witnessed the murder as he hid below his mother’s blanket and watched as the victim was attacked.


The victim, Gary L. Summar, 37, was described in media reports at the time as a “nomad” living in remote Trinity County when he was accused of molesting a 4-year-old. Unsatisfied with the police investigation into the alleged molestation, the 4-year-old’s mom organized a group to attack Summar. They lured him to a campsite about 50 miles west of Weaverville and attacked him with knives and blunt objects, breaking bones and stabbing him more than 70 times.


At least, that was the cops’ version of events. According to Fenenbock’s attorneys, Summar had one killer, who admitted his deed, mounted a mental health defense, and told authorities that Fenenbock was not involved. Faced with a lack of physical evidence tying Fenenbock to the murder, authorities interrogated Randy, who at first claimed to have no knowledge of the murder.


“The only way (police) could get a witness to this murder was with manufactured testimony,” Jim Bennett, one of Fenenbock’s attorneys, said in an interview. “They told him, ‘If you don’t stick to this story these guys will come and hurt your family.'”


Though Summar was killed in Trinity County, the high level of media coverage forced the case into Solano County, where Fenenbock was tried and convicted. The media referred to Fenenbock and his co-defendants as the “Hawkins Bar 8.” All but Fenenbock and Bernard MacCarlie, the man who admitted murdering Summar, were acquitted at trial, Bennett said.


The Trinity County District Attorney’s office — which is dealing with the tragic loss of DA Donna Daly in an Aug. 18 car crash — did not return requests for comment on Gutierrez decision.


Fenenbock went through various stages of emotion as he tried to live his life behind bars with the knowledge that he was innocent, he said. He filed handwritten appeal motions from prison, and after a quarter-century attracted the Innocence Project’s help. By then, Randy had recanted his testimony.


Fenenbock holds nothing against Randy, who testified last month that the past 30 years have been “a lifetime of hell” as he wrestled with knowing his testimony put a man behind bars.


“I got nothing but love for Randy to tell you the truth,” Fenenbock said.

In August 2019, the California Supreme Court found that evidence of the coerced statement would have “more likely than not” changed the outcome of Fenenbock’s trial. His conviction was overturned, but Trinity County prosecutors promptly moved to retry him. Still, a judge allowed Fenenbock to be free while the case made its way to trial.


But rather than argue in front of a jury, Fenenbock’s attorneys filed a motion to throw out the case based on gross government misconduct, a rare move that has a high legal standard for success. Gutierrez listened to five days of testimony — including from Randy and police investigators — before ruling Fenenbock had not received a fair trial.


“To implant a memory in a 9-year-old child that, in the Court’s view, is such conduct that is grossly shocking, it’s outrageous, and it violates the universal sense of justice,” Gutierrez said, according to a transcript of the hearing.


The judge’s ruling opens the door for Fenebock to successfully sue, and payouts for wrongful convictions are generally calculated in the millions. Famous examples include the Central Park 5 received $41 million after their rape convictions were overturned, and Craig Coley, a California man who got $21 million after spending 39 years in prison for a double murder case that was eventually overturned.


Fenenbock says he has not yet made a final decision whether to pursue legal action, but believes what happened to him “was not a mistake,” but rather an intentional malicious prosecution.


For the time being, though, he is focused on listening to the laughter of his grandchildren as he soaks in the Hawaiian sun.


“Since the moment he got out he has been all smiles,” said Paige Kaneb, one of the attorneys in his case.""


The entire story can be read at:


https://www.mercurynews.com/he-spent-nearly-30-years-in-prison-for-a-murder-he-didnt-commit-a-ca-judge-just-dismissed-the-case-called-investigation-outrageous

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. 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. 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 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;
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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;
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