Oct. 12 PENNSYLVANIA: Cleared death row inmate at Duquesne Kirk Noble Bloodsworth has returned from death row with a message for the people who put him and dozens of others like him there, awaiting execution, though they were innocent. "The bottom line is, if this could happen to me, it could happen to anybody," he said. Bloodsworth is the nation's 1st death row inmate to be exonerated by DNA, the genetic fingerprint that is unique to each individual. The same scientific test used to clear him of murder charges was used last year to identify the real killer. Now, Bloodsworth is on a mission to ban capital punishment and use DNA to clear suspects unfairly accused. "I oppose the death penalty, because they could execute an innocent person," said Bloodsworth, who will speak tomorrow at Duquesne University about a new book which details the rush to judgment and faulty prosecution that nearly resulted in his execution. "I want to make sure that people like myself, the average guy that doesn't have any money, [will] have some protection, some money to do DNA tests." Bloodsworth and the author of the book, Tim Junkin, will be in the Bayer Learning Center in Pappert Hall from 5 to 7 p.m. to discuss "Bloodsworth: The True Story of the First Death Row Inmate Exonerated by DNA." Bloodsworth, a former Marine and crab-trolling waterman from Cambridge, Md., was arrested in 1984 for the murder, rape and sexual mutilation of a 9-year-old girl in Baltimore County. >From the beginning, Bloodsworth professed his innocence, but was found guilty and spent nine years in a Maryland penitentiary for the crime. After his first conviction, he was sentenced to die in Maryland's gas chamber and spent two years on death row. He won a new trial, but was again convicted and sentenced to life without parole. His determination and the work of defense attorneys led to the DNA test. But it was 10 years after Bloodsworth gained his freedom that the state tied DNA evidence from the crime to Kimberly Ruffner, who at one point had been in the same cell block as Bloodworth. The day Bloodsworth walked out of the penitentiary, the prosecutor who tried the case said she believed he should still be there, despite the DNA evidence. But she acknowledged that had the evidence been available in 1984 -- DNA testing still was being refined at that time -- he would not have been prosecuted. For his trouble, Maryland gave Bloodsworth $350,000 and a grudging apology. (source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) LOUISIANA: Louisiana Serial Killings Case Goes to Jury The lawyer for a serial killings suspect cast doubt on the only witness linking the man to any crime, suggesting Monday that the woman's memory of the vicious beating she survived had "grown" over time. Each side rested its case Monday in the latest trial of Derrick Todd Lee. Prosecutors presented eight days of testimony and evidence. Lawyers for Lee, who has pleaded not guilty to killing Charlotte Murray Pace, called no witnesses. Lee's lawyers have challenged DNA evidence used to link him to the death of Pace and others in southern Louisiana. On Monday, one of his lawyers questioned the credibility of Diane Alexander, who told the jury she survived a beating and attempted rape by Lee in July 2002. The lawyer, Bruce Unangst, noted changes in Alexander's statements to police since the 2002 attack. "Is it safe to say that your memory has grown of this event?" he asked. Alexander, whose testimony has already helped convict Lee in the death of Geralyn DeSoto, described Monday how Lee forced his way into her home and beat her nearly unconscious before her son interrupted the attack and Lee fled. "I didn't just decide to say this. I remember it happening," she said. She said Lee showed up at her mobile home, saying he was lost on his way to a construction job. She said Lee forced his way inside, catching her by the throat and pushing her onto the floor. "He whispered in my left ear and said, 'I've been watching you,'" Alexander testified, before pointing at Lee in court. Lee stared at her, his chin resting on his hand. Prosecutors said Alexander's testimony provides a witness who can describe how Lee gained access to women's homes and attacked them. Forensic analysts have said Lee's DNA matched evidence from the slayings of 5 women. "While my other victims have spoken from the grave, this lady has been interpreting what they said," First Assistant District Attorney John Sinquefield said. The defense noted differences in the descriptions Alexander gave of her attacker in statements she gave to hospital personnel, to police and in court. Alexander said her vision of Lee as her attacker "was just as clear as though it was yesterday." Lee was sentenced to life in prison in DeSoto's death. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in the death of Pace, in May 2002. Authorities say DNA evidence links Lee to the deaths of seven women from 1998 to 2003, but prosecutors have introduced evidence from only 5 killings in the Pace case. "Thank God for DNA," said Lynne Marino, mother of Pam Kinamore, who was abducted from her home in July 2002. "Without that, there could have been a lot of doubt." Mike Mitchell, a lawyer for Lee, said prosecutors failed to meet their burden of proof. Prosecutors disagreed. "We believe we've got enough," Sinquefield said. "We believe we've proven Derrick Todd Lee is guilty of the first-degree murder of Charlotte Murray Pace." (source: Washington Post)
