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View Full Version : Victim's mother: Va. Gov. to pardon 'Norfolk 4'


samanthajane13
08-06-2009, 03:22 PM
By DENA POTTER and LARRY O'DELL, Associated Press Writers Dena Potter And Larry O'dell, Associated Press Writers – 2 mins ago

RICHMOND, Va. – The mother of a teenager killed in 1997 said Thursday that Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine will grant conditional pardons to four former sailors who confessed and were convicted for the crime.

Kaine had a news conference scheduled for Thursday afternoon. His office would not say what the announcement would be.

Carol Moore's 18-year-old daughter, Michelle Moore-Bosko, was sexually assaulted, strangled and stabbed while her Navy husband was deployed. The slain teen's mother said the governor's office told her Thursday that Kaine was granting the pardon. She made the announcement in a statement but did not say what conditional pardons entail.

"Let him walk in our shoes, let's see how he would feel," a sobbing Moore told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from her Pittsburgh home. "This is nothing but political and John Grisham."

Grisham, a novelist famous for his legal thrillers, has said he believed Derek Tice, Danial Williams, Joseph Dick Jr. and Eric Wilson — known as the "Norfolk Four" — were innocent and he was writing a screenplay about their case.

Each of the men confessed to the murder but then, after they were convicted, claimed their confessions were coerced.

Wilson was convicted of raping Moore-Bosko but was acquitted of her murder. Wilson finished serving his 8 1/2-year sentence in 2005, while the other three were sentenced to life in prison.

A fifth man, Omar Ballard, was later convicted and has said he alone raped and killed Moore-Bosko. His DNA was the only one found at the scene.

"Obviously, Mr. Grisham's wealth and influence are far more important to Governor Kaine's political aspirations and public image than truth or justice," Moore and her husband John said in an e-mailed statement.

Since 2000, Grisham has donated more than $390,000 to Virginia Democrats, including $175,000 to Kaine and his political action committee, according to the Virginia Public Access Project, a statewide tracker of campaign donations.

Kaine had two clemency petitions — one for Wilson and one for the other three. He inherited them from former Gov. Mark Warner, who received them shortly before leaving office in 2006. Supporters have pleaded with Kaine to act on the requests before leaving office in January.

Former attorneys general and FBI agents, several lawyers and a homicide detective have come to the defense of the Norfolk Four, saying they were wrongfully convicted primarily because of false confessions made under threats of the death penalty.

Supporters say the pattern of the victim's wounds suggested there was only one assailant and that the tidy appearance of her apartment was inconsistent with a gang rape and murder. They also claim the confessions conflicted with each other and crime scene evidence.

Kaine was the last hope for the three men, who had exhausted all legal remedies.

In 2006 a Norfolk Cicuit judge vacated Tice's conviction, saying Tice's lawyer should have tried to get his conviction thrown out because he already had invoked his right to remain silent. The Virginia Supreme Court reinstated it two years later.

"It is truly shameful and a disservice to the citizens of Virginia and our family, that the decisions of the courts have been ignored, and confessed rapists and murderers are being set free," the Moores said in their statement.

It is not clear when Tice, Williams and Dick will go free.

Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Department of Corrections, said the department would follow the governor's orders "as quickly as we possibly can."


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090806/ap_on_re_us/us_sailor_convictions

samanthajane13
08-06-2009, 09:36 PM
Va. gov. allows 3 in rape-slaying to be freed
By DENA POTTER and LARRY O'DELL, Associated Press Writers Dena Potter And Larry O'dell, Associated Press Writers – 43 mins ago

RICHMOND, Va. – Three men convicted in the rape and slaying of a fellow sailor's wife more than a decade ago will walk free to the outrage of the victim's family — who blamed the decision on political pressure from novelist John Grisham — and the men's supporters, who say it's not enough and want them declared innnocent.

Gov. Tim Kaine on Thursday granted conditional pardons to ex-sailors Derek Tice, Danial Williams and Joseph Dick Jr. They along another ex-sailor Eric Wilson were known as "The Norfolk Four" and convicted in the 1997 slaying of 18-year-old Michelle Moore-Bosko. Tice, Williams and Dick were sentenced to life in prison but could all be released by Friday, said Williams' lawyer, Don Salzman.

Grisham, who has homes in Virginia and Mississippi and is famous for his legal thrillers, has said he believed all four are innocent and is writing a screenplay about their case. Since 2000, he has donated more than $390,000 to Virginia Democrats, including $175,000 to Kaine and his political action committee, according to the Virginia Public Access Project, a statewide tracker of campaign donations. Grisham also serves on the board of The Innocence Project, which fights to free wrongfully convicted inmates.

"Obviously, Mr. Grisham's wealth and influence are far more important to Governor Kaine's political aspirations and public image than truth or justice," Carol Moore and her husband John said in an e-mailed statement.

Grisham did not immediately return calls for comment.

Meanwhile, attorneys for the men harshly criticized Kaine's decision, saying they would continue to fight for the convictions to be thrown out. The men's relatives were also dissatisfied.

"We are overjoyed that we have a chance to get our sons back, but this is bittersweet," said Derek Tice's mother, Rachel Tice. "This has been an 11-year-plus ordeal for our families. Our sons, who are innocent, lost more than a decade of their lives and their convictions still hang over their heads."

Besides Grisham, 30 former FBI agents as well as some ex-prosecutors have backed the men, saying they are not guilty.

Moore-Bosko's parents charged that Kaine, who is chairman of the Democratic National Committee, bowed to political pressure.

"Let him walk in our shoes, let's see how he would feel," a sobbing Carol Moore told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from her Pittsburgh home. "This is nothing but political and John Grisham."

Kaine, who inherited the pardon requests from former Gov. Mark Warner, said he is the only official who has exhaustively reviewed all the cases and said he's "very comfortable" with his decision. The four men did not conclusively prove their innocence, but there were "grave doubts about at least the level of their complicity in the crime," he said. Each confessed to the murder. After they were convicted, they claimed their confessions were coerced.

When released, the men will be subject to supervision by the state parole board, Kaine said.

"This was a horrible crime that their young daughter was the victim of, and they are entitled to feel however they want to feel and I wouldn't suggest anything about the way they should feel," Kaine said. "My heart really goes out to them like it has through this whole process."

Wilson spent 8 1/2 years in prison but was acquitted of her murder. Because he is no longer imprisoned, he did not qualify for a conditional pardon, which modifies or ends a sentence imposed by a court.

A fifth man, Omar Ballard, was later convicted and has said he alone raped and killed Moore-Bosko, whose sailor husband was at sea when she was slain in her apartment. His was the only DNA found at the scene, and Kaine said his was the only confession that contained information matching the crime scene.

George Kendall, Dick's attorney, said Kaine's failure to grant absolute pardons "further compounds the many mistakes" that were made.

Frank Stokes, one of 30 former FBI agents who reviewed the cases and concluded the men were wrongfully convicted, called the governor's decision outrageous. He said glaring inconsistencies in the confessions "show more the innocence than the guilt of these young men."

Not all the men's supporters reacted as strongly, however.

"While I would have preferred he grant an absolute pardon, it's a very practical-oriented result," said Richard Cullen, a former state attorney general.

Kaine had previously issued just four other conditional pardons and three absolute pardons. Supporters had pleaded with Kaine to act on the requests before leaving office. Kaine said he couldn't immerse himself in the complex case until the last of the appeals were exhausted in January.

The men's lawyers vowed to continue the fight, perhaps by filing a new clemency petition with the next governor. Kaine's nonrenewable four-year term ends in January.

"This grave miscarriage of justice will not fully end until the Commonwealth of Virginia officially recognizes that all four men are innocent and their good names have been cleared," said Des Hogan, who represents Tice.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090807/ap_on_re_us/us_sailor_convictions