Thursday, July 15, 2021

Cristhian Bahena Rivera: Iowa: Excellent backgrounder for todays hearing: Reporter William Morris: Des Moines Register:.."The judge overseeing the case of Cristhian Bahena Rivera, convicted in May of murdering University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts, has delayed his sentencing after defense lawyers filed new motions claiming the state withheld relevant information about the case. On July 8, Bahena Rivera's attorneys filed a motion seeking a new trial, saying that two new witnesses had approached police during their client's trial with statements that could corroborate Bahena Rivera's version of Tibbetts' death. Bahena Rivera testified during the trial that he was abducted by two masked men who forced him to assist them in the murder and left him with Tibbetts' body. On Tuesday, his attorneys filed another motion alleging that prosecutors had failed to disclose another investigation in the summer of 2018, when Tibbetts disappeared, into a man living less than 30 miles from Tibbetts' hometown of Brooklyn who was allegedly operating a sex-trafficking ring. Defense attorneys also wrote that at least 10 children have gone missing in and around Poweshiek County in recent years. Bahena Rivera's attorneys asked the judge to push their client's sentencing to a later date, saying additional time is needed to prepare for a new trial hearing. On Wednesday morning, Judge Joel Yates granted that motion. A Thursday hearing will now consider a motion from the defense to compel prosecutors to hand over evidence. Hearings on the motion for a new trial and on Bahena Rivera's sentencing will be set at a later date."


QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Once defense attorneys file a motion for a new trial, a case cannot proceed to sentencing until the judge resolves it one way or another, said Bob Rigg, professor and head of the Criminal Defense Clinic at the Drake University School of Law. "The court is probably going to take all these matters under advisement — I’m sure the court is getting an earful today by both sides, and probably we’ll have a pre-motion hearing tomorrow on the issues of, what are the parameters of how we proceed at this point?" Rigg said. While motions for new trials are common in cases, to have such dramatic new claims emerge at such a late date is less so, Rigg said. "You’re making an allegation that other individuals actually committed the homicide, there’s an admission by someone on that basis, and there’s some corroborating evidence for verification of that," he said. "I would say that’s rare."


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STORY: "Daily briefing: Cristhian Bahena Rivera sentencing  delayed in Mollie Tibbetts murder; Defence raises possibility of a new suspect," by Reporter William Morris, published by The Des Moines Register on July 14, 2021.


GIST: The judge overseeing the case of Cristhian Bahena Rivera, convicted in May of murdering University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts, has delayed his sentencing after defense lawyers filed new motions claiming the state withheld relevant information about the case.


On July 8, Bahena Rivera's attorneys filed a motion seeking a new trial, saying that two new witnesses had approached police during their client's trial with statements that could corroborate Bahena Rivera's version of Tibbetts' death. Bahena Rivera testified during the trial that he was abducted by two masked men who forced him to assist them in the murder and left him with Tibbetts' body.


On Tuesday, his attorneys filed another motion alleging that prosecutors had failed to disclose another investigation in the summer of 2018, when Tibbetts disappeared, into a man living less than 30 miles from Tibbetts' hometown of Brooklyn who was allegedly operating a sex-trafficking ring. Defense attorneys also wrote that at least 10 children have gone missing in and around Poweshiek County in recent years.


Bahena Rivera's attorneys asked the judge to push their client's sentencing to a later date, saying additional time is needed to prepare for a new trial hearing. On Wednesday morning, Judge Joel Yates granted that motion.


A Thursday hearing will now consider a motion from the defense to compel prosecutors to hand over evidence. Hearings on the motion for a new trial and on Bahena Rivera's sentencing will be set at a later date.


Tibbetts' parents, who would have had the opportunity to speak at Thursday's sentencing hearing, did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

Tibbetts, a 20-year-old studying psychology at the University of Iowa, disappeared while jogging near her hometown of Brooklyn, Iowa, in July 2018. 


Bahena Rivera was convicted on May 28 of first-degree murder after jurors heard evidence that Tibbetts' blood was found in the trunk of his car and that, after a lengthy interrogation, he had led investigators to where her body had been hidden in a cornfield.


Defense connects Tibbetts case with 2019 Mahaska County investigation"

Tuesday's filing by the defense team raises the possibility of a new suspect, not just in Tibbetts' case, but in other disappearances in and around Poweshiek County.


According to the new motion, defense attorneys learned Tuesday of a 2019 search warrant seeking access to a New Sharon home where a 50-year-old man was believed to be staying. 


In that warrant, investigators described interviewing a woman who alleged she had met the man in Brooklyn and been invited to his home, where she was then held against her will and sexually abused for more than four months before escaping.


No criminal charges have been filed against the man in that investigation, and the Mahaska County Sheriff's Office said Wednesday the allegations were never substantiated.


The defense filing also seeks to connect the 2019 investigation to another recent Poweshiek County disappearance — that of 11-year-old Xavior Harrelson, last seen May 27. Court records confirm the 50-year-old man in question was, at one time, in a relationship with one of Harrelson's relatives.


The allegations made in the 2019 investigation would seem to align with the reports of two individuals who came forward to law enforcement during the May trial, whom Bahena Rivera's attorneys cited in the motion they filed last week seeking a new trial.


Both individuals said they had heard a third person claim responsibility for Tibbetts' murder, and that he had done so at the behest of a 50-year-old man running a "trap house" near Brooklyn involved in the sex trade.


According to one of the individuals, the third person claimed that he had seen Tibbetts bound and gagged in one of the man's homes, and that he and another man had agreed to kill Tibbetts and leave her body near a Hispanic man after her disappearance sparked a widespread manhunt that brought investigators near the home where she was being held.


Prosecutors: Court should disregard new claims and proceed to sentencing:

The account of two men killing Tibbetts and framing a Hispanic man could corroborate some details of Bahena Rivera's testimony at trial. 


He claimed in May that two unknown men forced him to drive them to a spot on the road where they disappeared, returning with Tibbetts' body, and that they made him drive to a cornfield where they left him with his car, the body, and a warning that they would hurt his family if he reported what had happened to police.


But in the state's response to the defense's motions, filed Wednesday afternoon, prosecutors say the new reports contradict Bahena Rivera in several respects. Bahena Rivera testified the men sought and confronted Tibbetts on a rural road where she was last seen running and that they went directly from there to the cornfield where her body was found. 


There was no mention in his account of a house where she had been held captive, and there was no time in his version when that could have occurred.


"The information is wholly different than the testimony of the defendant and would have most certainly caused his testimony to be further questioned," prosecutors write, adding the new evidence would not have made a difference if presented at trial. "It would make no sense for the defense to offer the testimony of the defendant and then offer a different version of events that contradicts his testimony."


And the defense's claim of newly discovered evidence fails, prosecutors say, because the Freses were told of the reports before the jury returned its verdict. Past courts have held that defense attorneys have a duty to find and present any evidence they know about at trial, even if they learn of it during the trial, and must request that the trial be delayed while they investigate.


According to prosecutors, the Freses were briefed by investigators on the afternoon of May 20, after they finished presenting their case.

"The defense ... declined the State’s offer to send agents to Mt. Pleasant (where one of the new potential witnesses is incarcerated) to pursue the same information and delay the trial to accommodate further investigation," prosecutors write. "Apparently, they now regret that decision.”


Expert: New filings present procedural tangle for judge:

Once defense attorneys file a motion for a new trial, a case cannot proceed to sentencing until the judge resolves it one way or another, said Bob Rigg, professor and head of the Criminal Defense Clinic at the Drake University School of Law.

"The court is probably going to take all these matters under advisement — I’m sure the court is getting an earful today by both sides, and probably we’ll have a pre-motion hearing tomorrow on the issues of, what are the parameters of how we proceed at this point?" Rigg said.


While motions for new trials are common in cases, to have such dramatic new claims emerge at such a late date is less so, Rigg said.



"You’re making an allegation that other individuals actually committed the homicide, there’s an admission by someone on that basis, and there’s some corroborating evidence for verification of that," he said. "I would say that’s rare."

And while prosecutors argue the defense should have paused the trial to investigate if they thought the new evidence might be significant, Rigg says that's not as simple as it might sound.


"You’re putting a judge in a hell of a bad situation, basically asking the jury to stop deliberating, if final arguments have been made and you’ve given final instructions," he said.


Still, although the last-minute delay will likely be frustrating to many, Rigg said it's important that the court system take the time it needs to ensure a just result.


"I think everyone should keep in mind to calm down and let the judge work through this case — he’s got a lot thrown at him quickly, as far as I can tell, and he’ll figure it out," Rigg said. "The system is not set up for immediate gratification; it’s set up to try to get things right.""


The entire story can be read at:


https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGkZQKtzfCbWHPmVBXTdLSpzLKk


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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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;