August 6



OHIO:

2 decades later, questions linger in postmistress slaying


The postmistress in a postage stamp of a village is abducted from work and
stabbed to death. A suspect is convicted and sentenced to die.

No physical evidence tied the suspect, John Spirko, to the crime. And it
was never explained why investigators thought he ended up in Elgin to rob
the post office, 70 miles from where he was living near Toledo. Yet he
told investigators details of the 1982 slaying, including what clothes and
jewelry she was wearing that day.

Months before Spirko is to be executed and 23 years after Betty Jane
Mottinger was killed, his lawyers have asked a federal judge to reopen the
case.

Defense attorney Alvin Dunn says new information casts doubt on whether
Spirko's best friend and former cellmate was in the village the day of the
abduction. Prosecutors originally used that sighting to link Spirko to the
murder.

Spirko's attorney says former postal investigator Paul Hartman said in a
sworn statement that he had decided before the trial that the friend,
Delaney Gibson, wasn't involved in the killing. Hartman has since said the
statements to Spirko's lawyers were false and he wanted to mislead them. A
message seeking additional comment was left at Hartman's home.

"The state put on a case at trial that was not true and they knew it was
not true," Dunn said.

But time is running out. Spirko's execution is set for Sept. 20. He has a
final hearing Aug. 23 before the state parole board, which will recommend
whether to grant clemency. His appeal is pending before U.S. District
Judge James Carr in Toledo.

Mottinger, 48, had worked at the post office in Elgin for just under 4
years when she disappeared Aug. 9, 1982. Her body was found a month later
in a soybean field 50 miles away, wrapped in a paint-splattered cloth. She
had been stabbed in the chest and stomach.

Spirko, 59, insists he's innocent. He did not respond to interview request
from The Associated Press.

He contacted investigators in October 1982 and offered to trade
information about the killing so police would go easy on his girlfriend
who was facing charges in an unrelated case.

Spirko testified during his trial that he talked to the authorities
because he never thought he would get indicted.

Prosecutors say it was information only the killer could know.

"It wasn't the police or prosecutors who put Spirko in the mix. It was
himself," said James Canepa, the state's chief deputy attorney general of
criminal justice.

Spirko's lawyers counter that he thought he was telling authorities what
they wanted to hear. They say what he knew came from newspapers and
lengthy conversations he had with investigators. Some of the details
proved true, but others were made up - Spirko had a history of spinning
tall tales to police.

Canepa said Spirko knew details about what was in Mottinger's purse and a
ring she was wearing, information that never appeared in print. "His best
defense now is to say 'I'm a liar'," Canepa said.

Spirko's past won't win him any sympathy. He's spent most of his adult
life in prison. Trouble started much earlier. At age 8 he started a fire
at a school. He was sent to a reformatory as a teen after getting caught
stealing a car.

He faced the death penalty for strangling a 73-year-old woman during a
robbery in Covington, Ky., but instead served 12 years in prison before
being released. He got out 2 weeks before Mottinger disappeared.

Previous appeals also centered on Gibson, the former cellmate in Kentucky.
Although Spirko was never seen in the Ohio farming village, a witness
testified that she saw a clean-shaven man outside the post office the
morning of the abduction. The witness later identified him as Gibson from
a photograph.

But it was never disclosed that investigators had found photographs
showing Gibson with a beard right before and after the murder. They also
talked to witnesses and had motel receipts that showed he was in North
Carolina the night before the abduction.

Spirko's lawyers found out in 1996 - 14 years after the killing - about
the evidence putting Gibson's whereabouts in doubt and asked for a new
trial. Several courts, though, denied their appeals that claimed
prosecutors withheld the evidence.

The state says whether Gibson was part of the murder doesn't matter.
Canepa said federal and state appeals have looked at the question of
Gibson's whereabouts and determined that it was Spirko's statements that
sealed his conviction.

Both Spirko and Gibson were charged with murdering Mottinger.

Gibson wasn't brought to trial because he was serving time for an
unrelated murder in Kentucky. He was released in 2001 but Ohio prosecutors
didn't pursue him. Last year they dropped the charges against Gibson,
saying the case was too old.

Several other ideas about what happened to Mottinger have been thrown
about. Spirko's lawyers said in a 1997 court filing that she may have been
killed because she knew about a drug ring operating out of the grain
elevator next to the post office. Another theory came out after a former
house painter, John Willier, told an investigator that a group, including
his boss, killed Mottinger after going to the post office to pick up drugs
sent in the mail.

Willier provided enough details to trigger the curiosity of the
investigator, William Latham of the Wyandot County prosecutor's office.
Mottinger's body was found near the home of one of the men he implicated.
"What he told me had a ring of credibility," Latham said.

All of this has added to speculation among residents of Elgin.

"I can't say if they got the right person," said Phil Bradshaw, who lives
just across a pair of railroad tracks from the post office. "But I don't
think they got them all."

He thinks Spirko deserves another trial and that Gibson should be tried,
too.

"It just blows my mind that they're not going after Gibson," he said.
"Murder is murder."

About 50 people live in the sleepy outpost hidden in the flat farm fields
of northwest Ohio. Only the hum of conveyor belts at a grain elevator
interrupts the silence.

There are no stoplights. No grocery. And no school. It's a half-hour drive
to the nearest interstate highway.

Not much has changed inside the tiny post office where a photograph of a
smiling Betty Jane Mottinger hangs on the wood-paneled wall.

Her desk is still there. So are her scissors and a letter opener.

Chris Carder, whose mother was Mottinger's assistant, believes Spirko was
involved somehow but that he wasn't the only one.

"Why her? Why the post office? There's still a lot mystery," Carder said.

On the Net: Spirko supporters: http://www.johnspirko.com/

Ohio attorney general: http://www.ag.state.oh.us/

(source: Associated Press)






DELAWARE:

Prosecutors ask court to deny Capano's death penalty appeal


State prosecutors Friday filed a brief with the Delaware Supreme Court,
asking that the justices deny convicted murderer Thomas Capano's request
to have his death penalty sentence set aside.

Capano was indicted by a grand jury in December 1997 on a capital murder
charge for the death of Anne Marie Fahey, an appointments clerk in the
office of then-Gov. Tom Carper.

During his trial, prosecutors were able to convince a jury that Capano had
killed Fahey in his home and then dumped her body in the Atlantic Ocean
about 60 miles off the New Jersey coast, even though the woman's body was
never found.

In March 1999, Capano was sentenced to death after a 10-week trial.

Capano, a former prosecutor and political insider, unsuccessfully appealed
his conviction and sentence.

In June 2003, Capano filed a 2nd appeal in Superior Court asking that his
death sentence be changed to life in prison. In that appeal, he said that
his death sentence should be set aside because 2 of the 12 jurors voted to
have him spend the rest of his life in jail.

In March, that appeal was rejected, and Capano automatically appealed to
the state Supreme Court.

Prosecutors said in the brief they filed Friday that Capano's arguments
lack merit. It is not necessary under the law or according to precedent
that a jury be unanimous when someone is sentenced to death, they wrote.

Prosecutors also wrote in their brief to the justices that if Capano's
case is sent back to Superior Court for resentencing, they would once
again seek the death sentence.

Finally, prosecutors said, although Capano said in his appeal that his
lawyers were ineffective, there is no evidence to support that charge.

No date has been set for the appeal to be heard.

(source: The News Journal)






OKLAHOMA----clemency denied/impending execution

Clemency Denied For Oklahoma Death Row Inmate


An Oklahoma death row inmate convicted of killing his estranged girlfriend
is scheduled to be executed Thursday after his request for clemency was
denied by the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board.

The board unanimously denied clemency Friday for Tulsa County killer
Kenneth Eugene Turrentine, 52. He was sentenced to die for the 1994
killing of his estranged girlfriend, Anita Richardson, who was shot at her
Tulsa home.

He also received a no-parole life term for fatally shooting his sister,
Avon Stevenson, in Tulsa on the same day. A federal appeals court threw
out his convictions and death sentences for the shooting deaths of
Richardson's children, Tina Pennington and Martise Richardson.

Prosecutors said Turrentine believed Richardson was seeing other men and
that his sister was helping her deceive him.

The clemency denial came after tearful pleas from Turrentine's family
members, who said the murders were out of character for a man who held the
family together and repeatedly came to the aid of financially troubled
relatives.

Turrentine's mother, Dorothy Vinson of Tulsa, said her son was under the
influence of antidepressants and alcohol when the murders were committed.
Vinson is also the mother of Avon Stevenson.

"I am just begging you, please," she said to the 5-member board. "It
wasn't the Kenneth that everyone knows."

Turrentine's daughter, Tani-sha Billingslea, said Turren she was born and
joined the military after high school to support his family.

"He's my father, and I couldn't imagine life without him, even behind
bars," she said. "He's my support, and I just need him to continue to
support me."

No one from Richardson's family spoke at the hearing. But in an earlier
interview, her husband, Jerry Richardson, said he did not support clemency
for Turrentine. Jerry and Anita Richardson were separated at the time of
the murders.

"I love my family very much, and he took them away from me," Jerry
Richardson said. "They can never be replaced."

Turrentine, who turned himself in immediately after the murders,
apologized for the deaths but couldn't answer several board members'
questions about the motive for his crimes.

"I've been struggling with that for years," he said. Turrentine said he
drank and took the antidepressants in the hope that it would help him fall
asleep following bouts of insomnia.

(source: KOTV News)



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