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 Post subject: OH - DNA test matches neither murder suspect
PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 7:00 pm 
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Joined: Thu Jul 26, 2007 2:31 pm
Posts: 607
Location: The Netherlands
DNA test matches neither murder suspect

Finding undermines story of death row inmate who confessed to killing
Melinda Stevens.

By Tom Beyerlein, Dayton Daily News

Forensic scientists have successfully created a DNA profile from semen
samples taken from the body and clothing of Springfield murder victim
Melinda Stevens. But the DNA doesn't match either Timothy Coleman, the man
condemned to die for her murder, or William Sapp, another death row inmate
from Springfield who once confessed to killing Stevens.

"It's a good profile - it just didn't come back to Coleman or Sapp,"
Coleman's attorney, Kelly Culshaw of the Ohio public defender's office, said
Thursday. She has asked a federal judge to include the findings in Coleman's
official case record, and the Ohio attorney general's office said it won't
object.

She said she doesn't know if she'll seek to have the DNA run through
national databases in an attempt to find a match. There's no evidence that
whoever had sex with Stevens was the killer.

But the defense had hoped the DNA would be traced to Sapp, who signed an
affidavit four years after Coleman's conviction claiming he, not Coleman,
killed Stevens after having sex with her. Sapp is awaiting execution for the
notorious 1992 rape-murders of two pre-teen Springfield girls - Phree Morrow
and Martha Leach - and the murder of another woman, Belinda Anderson.

The DNA profiling "undermines Coleman's theory of what really happened
because it showed Sapp was not the source of the DNA," said Leo Jennings
III, spokesman for the Ohio attorney general's office.

U.S. District Judge Edmund A. Sargus Jr. last fall ordered the state to turn
over the evidence to Forensic Science Associates near San Francisco for DNA
testing. Earlier testing by another lab was inconclusive.

Stevens, a 33-year-old mother of five, was killed by two gunshot wounds to
the back of the head in a Springfield alley on Jan. 2, 1996. A crack addict,
she had worn a hidden recording device and made three undercover drug
purchases from Coleman in 1995. Prosecutors said Coleman killed her to
silence a witness in his upcoming trial.

No one saw the killing, but witnesses saw Coleman with Stevens shortly
before the murder and said he bragged about it later. Coleman maintains he's
innocent. His attorneys have said prosecutors ignored other suspects and
some witnesses had reason to lie.

---

Source : Dayton Daily News

http://www.daytondailynews.com/n/conten ... leman.html


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 7:01 pm 
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Joined: Thu Jul 26, 2007 2:31 pm
Posts: 607
Location: The Netherlands
August 3, 2007

Ohio

Convicted killer seeks a new trial

By Lisa Miller, Bucyrus Telegraph Forum

BUCYRUS -- Local police made a "a disturbing rush to judgment," according to
a motion filed Wednesday seeking a new trial for a Crestline man convicted
of three murders in 1994 at a Marion Road apartment complex.

It also alleges at least three officers lied in the case in which they
"pinned the crime on the wrong man."

Attorneys from the Ohio Public Defender's Office are asking that Kevin Keith
be given a new trial based on new evidence, some of which was reportedly
discovered in early July.

Keith was sentenced to die a year to the day after the Feb. 13, 1994,
shooting of Marichell Chatman, her 4-year-old daughter, Marchae; and her
aunt, Linda Chatman.

Now on death row in Youngstown, he was also convicted of attempted murder
for the shooting of Marichell's boyfriend, Richard Warren, and her cousins,
Quentin and Quanita, who survived the attack at Bucyrus Estates.

The motion filed in Crawford County Common Pleas Court says Keith is linked
to the crime "by inconsistent and incredible 'eyewitness' testimony, and a
ludicrous connection to the car that was supposedly the getaway vehicle."

With Judge Russ Wiseman, who prosecuted the case in front of then Judge
Nelfred Kimerline, now on the bench, the motion asks Judge Thomas Patrick
Curran to grant the motion for a new trial.

The attorneys say victim identification and Keith's motives because of drug
raids earlier in 1994 were two major aspects of the case against him but
"both evaporate in light of this new evidence."

The 15-page document looks at many different elements in the case, including
how the police lineup was conducted, Warren's supposed identification of
Keith and descriptions of the getaway car that got stuck in the snow that
night with its license plate number indented in the snow.

Retired Police Captain John Stanley's testimony abut getting the name Kevin
from a nurse is called into question in a recent interview with a nurse who
said she never told Stanley or anyone else that Warren said the gunman's
name was Kevin. She said she didn't ask for that information because she
didn't want to know, the motion says, adding, "In other words, Captain John
Stanley lied."

When contacted, Stanley said he didn't want to make a comment.

The motion also accuses then Police Chief Joe Beran of lying about the
Reeves' children's identification of Keith in a newspaper story published
the day before jury selection and then captain (later chief, now retired)
Mike Corwin of false testimony about not having the name of any other Kevin
as a potential suspect. Beran no longer lives in the area. Phone messages
were left for Corwin.

In asserting that the wrong man was "pinned" for the crime, the motion said
Rodney Melton told a confidential informant in late January 1994 that he had
been paid $15,000 to cripple the man who was responsible for the drug raids
in Crestline the previous week. During Keith's trial, the prosecution
pointed to Marchiell's brother Rudel Chatman as the man responsible for the
January 1994 drug raids.

"Keith's newly discovered evidence erodes any potential confidence in the
outcome -- an outcome that will cost him his life," according to the motion.

"I'm almost speechless," said Charles Keith of the attorneys appointed in
April coming up with the new evidence in a matter of months. He has long
proclaimed that his brother did not shoot six people, including three
children.

Noting that he last talked to Kevin, now a grandfather, a few days ago,
Charles said, "I told him that he was convicted on paper ... Everything's
going to unravel ... He's an innocent man sitting there for 13 years."

---

Source : Bucyrus Telegraph Forum

http://www.bucyrustelegraphforum.com/ap ... 30302/1002


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 7:01 pm 
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Joined: Thu Jul 26, 2007 2:31 pm
Posts: 607
Location: The Netherlands
August 3, 2007

Ohio

Burge dismisses contempt charge saying he doesn't know who wrote offending
motion


ALEX M. PARKER, The Morning Journal

ELYRIA -- A boiling feud between a judge and an assistant county prosecutor
seems to have cooled -- for now.

Lorain County Common Pleas Judge James Burge dismissed a contempt citation
he had filed against Assistant Prosecutor Tony Cillo, over a motion Cillo
filed in a death penalty review case.

During a hearing yesterday, Burge said he didn't think Cillo actually wrote
the motion which Burge said was disrespectful of the court.

''He may not have appreciated what (the motion) contained,'' said Burge, who
claimed he had heard ''noise'' around the Justice Center suggesting the
motion was signed, but not written, by Cillo.

Cillo's motion objected to a request from attorneys for Ronald McCloud, who
is facing the death penalty, to join with another death penalty defendant,
Ruben Rivera, in a hearing called to question whether the death penalty is
unconstitutional.

The motion said Burge would be ''sandbagging'' the prosecution's attempts to
impose the death penalty if he ruled against the prosecutor's office -- a
passage Burge objected to.

Both Burge and Cillo, who have tussled over various issues since Burge took
office this year, offered the olive branch during yesterday's brief hearing.

Burge said Cillo was ''keeping his mouth shut'' about who really wrote the
motion, and he said he admired Cillo for not blaming it on someone else.

Cillo declined to comment after the hearing, but apologized to Burge for
comments he had made in the past.

''I let my emotions get the better of me,'' said Cillo.

Burge had said previously Cillo had said Burge's decision in another case
was ''sheer lunacy,'' which Cillo apologized for yesterday.

Cillo was allegedly reacting to Burge's decision to reduce the sentence for
Thomas Holmes, who was convicted of felonious assault and domestic violence
under his predecessor, Lynett McGough. Holmes had to be resentenced and
Burge lowered the sentence from the original 23 years to six years.

Assistant County Prosecutor Scott Serazin, who represented Cillo yesterday,
said he was glad both sides can now move on.

''These things happen occasionally,'' said Serazin. ''Hopefully, we'll be
able to move on without any personal feelings about it.''

Serazin said the county prosecutor's office does thoroughly review all of
its motions.

''Sometimes, the same words can mean different things to different people,''
said Serazin.

Prosecutor Dennis Will said he believed Cillo will be able to continue to
prosecute cases in Burge's courtroom, despite their disagreements.

''I believe that's been concluded, and we'll move on to other matters,''
said Will. ''I believe that Mr. Cillo is a professional, and he has chosen
prosecution as a profession. I have no reason to expect that it won't
happen.''

---

Source : The Morning Journal

http://www.morningjournal.com/site/news ... 6371&rfi=6


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