• Hi Miss Schmitt:

    There was a good deal of malice by the police in Kevin’s prosecution, and once they declared him the lone assailant the malice took full full force. The hard thing for me to grasp is why they would allow three killers to go free and very likely kill again. When the woman turned her in her boyfriends bloodied coveralls, the sheriff’s department could have closed the case in a few days and indicted the actual killers.

  • Panyia

    Does police ever have any conscious or feeling of guilt as they throw away evidence? I mean, they are human right? Shouldn’t they at least felt like it was wrong in some sense to be holding back information?

  • Miss_Schmitt

    How are we, as American citizens, supposed to feel safe when the justice system fails us in such unethical ways? In Kevin Cooper’s case, the detective work was was not simply lazy it was malice. The initial motivation may have simply been to bag and tag a known criminal and make the streets aprear safer. But, the police force had to do a lot of (sloppy) work in order to make Mr. Cooper look guilty enough to be convicted.

    This leads me to believe that the police force not only wanted to put Mr. Cooper back in prison (which they had the right to). But, because he was also a convicted kidnapper and rapist, the police force decided that Mr. Cooper’s prison sentance could never be enough. So even though they may have let the true killers free, (Sarcasm) This guy desearves to die anyways.(End Sarcasm)

    Guilty until proven innocent, am I right?

  • Domino14

    Just watched the video… I am absolutely appalled..

    and who takes off the walls of a house from a crime scene?? I have never heard of that..

    • @Domino14 Seriously?!! Judge Huff and the DA are the real criminals here… no doubt.

      • Domino14

        @Seeta

        and all involved will just get away with it???

        • @Domino14 yes… the judge has immunity. I wonder where the DA is now…sick bastards

        • Domino14

          @Seeta

          yes – sick..

          broken. system. indeed.

        • @Seeta @Domino14

          The chief prosecutor, former San Bernardino County D.A. Dennmis Kottmeier, retired in 1994. He currently teaches law at Cal State in San Bernardino. The other prosecutor was John Kochis. He is now the chief deputy D.A. for San Bernardino County.

        • @jpoconnor @Domino14 Scary.

  • Folks really need to watch the video — The Framing of Kevin Cooper — things like “Hang Kevin the Ape” and “Kill the African” were shouted at his prelim hearing. A toy gorilla was hung as an effigy…. appalling. Dumb question, but do we know whatever happened to the three white suspects?

  • Wow, a gruesome, troubling story on so many levels. The violence that family suffered in their last moments. The violence Kevin Cooper suffered at the hands of the state and a D.A. who would seek frame Cooper for his own personal gain. Truly sickening.

    • @Seeta yes start to finish

    • @Seeta

      The incredible violence of these murders shocked everyone. It was as bad or worse than the Manson murders in 1969. No one person could have possible perpetrated this crime. Three or four separate weapons were used. The little girl who was murdered made it outside during the attack and had to be brought back in. The adults murdered both had loaded weapons in the master bedroom where the assault took place. The only survivor of the attack, 8 1/2 year-old Josh Ryen, told ER nurses and doctors that his attachers were three white men.

      • @jpoconnor Good god. Absolutely incredible.

      • KayWhitlock

        @jpoconnor @Seeta A brutal nightmare. And of course, the situation was perfect for selecting a scapegoat. And what better scapegoat than a black man?

  • The thing that shocks people the most when I tell them about the Kevin Cooper case is that the sheriff’s office destroyed evidence that would have established his innocence and pointed directly to three white men as the perpetrators. In effect, the sheriff’s department let three white killers go free in order to pin the crime on Cooper.

    • @jpoconnor how many times??

      reminded me immediate;y also of the execution of Dobie Gillis Williams

      http://www.law.northwestern.edu/cwc/issues/wrongfulexecutions/lawilliamsdgsummary.html

      DOBIE GILLIS WILLIAMS

      Executed in Louisiana on January 8, 1999, for the murder of Sonja Knippers in Sabine Parish on July 8, 1984. Williams, an indigent black man with an IQ of sixty-five and no record of violence, was convicted by an all-white jury based primarily on an alleged confession that he had not signed and that made little sense. The victim, who was white, was stabbed eight times in the bathroom of her home. Although the victim bled profusely, there was no blood on Williams’s clothes when police found him sleeping on the couch of his grandfather’s house, where he was staying, four-tenths of a mile from the crime scene. His so-called confession included no details of the crime that were unknown to the police and was silent regarding a motive and how he entered or left the home. He had an alibi, provided by his sister who swore that he was home at the time of the crime. The alibi was corroborated his girlfriend’s cousin who testified that she spoke with him on the phone at about the same time. The prosecution theory of the crime was dubious ? Williams cut a screen on the bathroom window to enter the house, found a knife that he used to stab the victim on the back of the commode, escaped through the same window, and dropped the knife in the yard. Police recovered a knife. There was no blood on it, but a prosecution expert testified the blood must have been washed away by the dew. The prosecution claimed that a blood spot on a bathroom curtain was consistent with Williams’s blood, but the spot was never subjected to DNA testing. The victim’s husband, who was at home when the crime occurred, apparently was never viewed as a suspect. He testified at the trial that he heard his wife screaming and rushed to the bathroom. Her dying words, according to the husband, were, “A black man has killed me.” Williams insisted to the end that he was innocent.

      • @nancy a heitzeg

        When are juries going to wake up and learn that the cops fudge the evidence to make their cases. When anyone testifiies that the blood or the hair or anything else is “consistent with” red lights should go off in the courtroom.

        • @jpoconnor yes

          when someone points to the “black man” in a midst of white suspects — police had better learn to stopping running that way

        • @nancy a heitzeg

          There were a lot of terrible racial overtones in Kevin’s case. The sheriff’s department demonized him over and over again while he eluded capture for eight weeks. They said they couldn’t catch him because he was a cross-dresser, a homosexual who associated with transvestities, and that he had Houdini-like powers of escape. Cooper was portrayed as some sort of super-predator with manical inclinations. The public bought into it. At Cooper’s arraignment and a toy ape was hung in effiigy outside the courthouse that read “Hang Kevin the Ape.”

        • @jpoconnor so disturbing – but unsurprising

          these themes are endlessly recycled

        • @nancy a heitzeg

          That is true. There is an incredible patter to innocence cases of the prosecution withholding evidence and the defendant being represented by overwhelmed public defenders.

        • @jpoconnor@nancy a heitzeg wow — didn’t know this.

      • @nancy a heitzeg @jpoconnor Hadn’t heard of this story, Nancy. Thanks for posting. Amazing that the victim’s husband was not viewed as a suspect — his hearsay evidence was allowed?? And it was believed. Amazing.

        • @Seeta @jpoconnor thank you seeta

          as always for hosting this splendid

        • @nancy a heitzeg @jpoconnor it’s my honor. thank you for gracing this space with you presence! amazing … i am sick to my stomach over this story.

        • @Seeta @jpoconnor yes it is a particularly egregious one

          on so many levels

    • @jpoconnor what can readers do on behalf of kevin cooper???

      your thoughts here would be greatly appreciated

      • @nancy a heitzeg

        One pro-active thing people can do for Kevin Cooper is to write to Gov. Jerry Brown and proclaim his innocence and ask that he give Kevin a full pardon.

  • Domino14

    Thankyou for this interview

    It took me all of 2 seconds to be convinced of his innocence..

    this is horrible..

  • Hello Hans: I miss you!

  • so glad you made it — much gratitude for all your work

    livefyre will grow on you :)

    • @nancy a heitzeg

      It took me a while to find out how to log in but I’m glad I made it.

  • Hi Nancy: Pat O’Connor here. I’ve never used livefyre before. Sorry.

    • Hi Pat!

    • KayWhitlock

      @jpoconnor Great to see you! (I’m a Criminal Injustice contributing editor). Your work is so important. It may help save Kevin Cooper’s life.

      Grateful to Judge Fletcher for speaking out.

      • @KayWhitlock

        Judge Flecther’s dissent was the best presentation of the framing of Kevin Cooper I’ve seen.

      • @KayWhitlock

        I wanted the book to establish a hard record of just how the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office railroaded Kevin Cooper and then how Federal District Court Judge Marilyn Huff sabotaged his appeal hearings.

        • KayWhitlock

          @jpoconnor Yes, establishing that record is critical. And now, more of us can do what we can to support Kevin Cooper’s struggle.

          It is impressive that you began with an open mind and no firm opinion on the case – and traveled all the way to this book.

        • @KayWhitlock

          Most people indicted and convicted are actually guilty but there are a low percentage of accussed who are totally innocent and are turned into scapegoats so cases can be closed. Kevin was one of those unfortuante ones.

        • @jpoconnor @KayWhitlock thanks

          you are right — the appeal sabotage isstunnning

          i know you have written about Mumia — so many parallels

        • @nancy a heitzeg @KayWhitlock

          One thing both Kevin and Mumia’s cases have in common is that the constitutional violations at their trials that normally would have merited a new trial — if not outright exoneration — were denied them.

        • @jpoconnor @KayWhitlock once the system sets on a pathway — however wrong — no stopping the machine

          no admissions of errors

        • @nancy a heitzeg @KayWhitlock

          One major problem when a sheriff’s department frames a person is that it puts inself in a position of no return, even when evidence piles up that implicates other perpetrators. They get too far down the road by planting evidence that there is no way they can admit they did that and keep their jobs.

        • @jpoconnor @nancy a heitzeg @KayWhitlock
          Exactly
          Indeed, as you say in the video interview, the system is broken.

        • @Nancy @KayWhitlock

          People like to explain away innocence cases by saying there is one or two rotten apples in every police department. But to frame an innocent person it takes an entirely corrupt police department — corrupt detectives, corrupt crime lab personnel, corrupt medical examiner — and a D.A.’s Office willing to prosecute a trumped up case.

  • Hi Nancy, Pat O’Connor here

  • KayWhitlock

    Your interviews are outstanding, Hans.

    And yes, I’ll be getting that book.

  • yes!

    thank you!!!

  • Thank you Nancy!
    This is such an outrageous story.
    I encourage everyone to read Pat’s book for more.

  • KayWhitlock

    Thank you, J. Patrick O’Connor, Hans Bennett, and Prison Radio.

    Kevin Cooper’s struggle is so difficult.

    How many times must we hear this story of withheld and destroyed evidence that would go to a person’s innocence?

    • @KayWhitlock it is seemingly endless…

      i do love kevin cooper’s art — beauty out off pain

  • thank you so much Hans and Mr O’Connor for exposing this horrific miscarriage of justice..

    So wrong — so many