Second of two parts
Marshall Frank, a Miami-Dade cop who supervised 3,000 homicide
investigations, retired in 1990, began to write novels, and by
chance discovered what he believes to be an innocent man on
Florida's Death Row, James Duckett.
Convicted in Lake County in 1988, Duckett, now 45, is accused of
the rape-murder of an 11-year-old schoolgirl, Teresa McAbee. Duckett
was a rookie cop in the small town of Mascotte on the night of the
crime, May 11, 1987. He questioned the girl at a Circle K about 10
p.m., he said, and sent her home -- about 400 feet from the store.
She was found strangled and drowned the next morning.
Scrutinizing the case 16 years later, Frank, 64, concludes that
the prosecution misinterpreted fingerprint evidence, fumbled both a
tire cast and pubic hair identification, and failed to pay attention
to exculpatory testimony.
During the trial, the state produced a teenager who testified by
video that she was in the convenience store with two friends the
night of the murder and saw the victim get into Duckett's patrol car
before it drove away.
Gwen Gurley came to the attention of Lake County investigators a
month after the murder. She was 16 and in jail for violating
probation for felony theft.
Just a few days prior to trial, the state took her testimony in a
videotaped deposition in the judge's chambers. She was nine months
pregnant.
Supposedly, two friends of Gurley were with her that night. But
they don't corroborate her testimony. Neither testified. One, Vickie
Davis, then 15, now serving time for aggravated battery, later gave
a handwritten statement, saying Gurley confided that she lied about
seeing Teresa leave with Duckett. She lied, she said, to get out of
jail and have her baby.
In post-trial statements, Gurley herself admitted she lied. The
teenage trio were in and out of the store that night. They saw
Duckett's police car at one point but never saw him leave with
Teresa. Gurley said the detectives took her from jail, fed her
meals, took her for visits with her boyfriend and her mother, and
took her to the Circle K, coaching her on what to say and how to say
it.
They told her, Gurley said, that if she became confused by a
question during the videotaped deposition, she should ask for a
bathroom break so they could coach her. On the videotape, she asks
to be excused to use the bathroom.
During an evidentiary hearing 10 years after the crime, trial
judge Jerry T. Lockett recommended that Gwen Gurley be granted
immunity from perjury prosecution in order to secure her testimony.
Prosecutor Don Scaglione refused.
''It would seem that the wrongful execution of an innocent man
would take priority over a perjury charge,'' Frank says. Perjury in
a capital case carries a stiff prison sentence. Gurley, threatened
by prosecutors with perjury, didn't take that chance. She took the
Fifth Amendment.
TERESA'S PENCIL
Broken in two, it
was found days later
The state entered into evidence a pencil found near the lake.
Supposedly it was the one Teresa bought that night, implying that
she never went home from the convenience store after buying it.
But the pencil, broken in two, wasn't found on May 12. A
sheriff's investigator reported finding it May 21, nine days later.
It was reportedly overlooked during a search that took hours at the
time of the crime. It wasn't visible in any crime-scene photos.
Furthermore, the pencil showed no signs of exposure to weather
conditions for nine days.
During the trial, the state came up with three young women --
Kimberly Sheree Fowler, 16, Shelby Dow, 19, and Linda Dale Upshaw,
17. They testified that Duckett had solicited them for sex while on
patrol. None filed a complaint. Even so, their testimony proved
damning. When Duckett took the witness stand, he vehemently denied
their allegations. One accuser gave a time when he wasn't on
duty.
Rocky Harris, the lead investigator, couldn't remember how he
found the witnesses. ''Someone must've told me,'' he told Frank.
Since the trial, rules for admissibility have changed. The testimony
probably would not be allowed today.
Louise Braswell, a clerk at the Circle K, found the testimony of
the three young women hard to believe. ''I never saw him hanging
around flirting with girls, young or old. He was also very proud of
his wife and children.'' When he was off duty, she said, ``he
brought them into the Circle K and introduced them to us.''
Duckett's former Mascotte boss, Chief Mike Brady, always believed
his man was innocent. ``Duckett was a good cop. Not the sharpest
knife in the drawer, but a good and decent man.''
DUCKETT'S LAWYER
A showy, Buffalo Bill
kind of character
Marshall Frank is highly critical of Duckett's defense lawyer,
the late Jack Edmund, a flamboyant and prominent Polk County
lawyer.
Duckett's mother mortgaged her home to pay him. His fee:
$58,000.
Edmund, a Buffalo Bill sort of character, sported a jaunty cowboy
hat, goatee and bolo tie, and he took a retainer and questioned his
client in jail in October 1987. Duckett said he never saw his lawyer
again until the first day of his trial five months later.
Edmund never took a deposition from anyone involved in his
client's murder case. ''He winged it,'' Frank says. ''Sometimes I
think Jack Edmund was working for the other side.'' He even failed
to show up for the videotaped deposition of Gwen Gurley, the state's
star witness. In his place, Edmund sent Nathaniel White, a young
lawyer who shared his office space and had nothing to do with the
case.
Edmund knew about Peter DeForest, the independent criminologist
and hair-fiber expert who disputed the hair identification. But, in
another strange move, Edmund did not call him.
Neither did he make an effort to obtain Duckett's notebook, which
contained entries detailing his whereabouts during crucial times the
night of the murder.
Frank finds the notebook intriguing. ''Like any good cop, he took
notes the night he questioned Teresa and her Mexican friend [whom
she was seen huddling with behind a Dumpster at the Circle K].'' He
wrote down their names, addresses, dates of birth and clothing
description.
THE SHIRT QUESTION
Did the victim
go home to change?
According to Duckett's notes, Teresa was wearing a blue-green
knit top. Her body was found wearing a tan and white striped shirt.
That led Frank to believe that after Duckett questioned her,
``Teresa had to have gone home. She changed clothes. And she was
found fully dressed after being assaulted.
``I have never seen a killer kind enough to allow a victim to
redress before killing her. My gut feeling is that she was assaulted
at the house, maybe strangled unconscious there, and then taken down
to the lake. It is just down the road and across the street in an
old orange grove, about 1,200 feet away.''
At first, Teresa's mother could not recall what her daughter was
wearing. Teresa often changed clothes five or six times a day, she
said. McAbee's initial description had her daughter wearing a
flowered halter top. Not until after the police told her what the
corpse was wearing did she correctly describe the dead girl's
garb.
Duckett's notebook was never entered into evidence. Frank
believes he knows why: because it contained information that might
have exonerated him. The notepad was found in the police property
room during the appeals process, long after the trial.
Two other entries in the notebook gave Frank pause. Both provided
witnesses who could have vouched for Duckett's whereabouts around
the time of the murder. Neither was called to testify.
CRUCIAL TIMING
At the time of the crime,
officer seen elsewhere
At 10:58 p.m., Duckett responded to a call at the Jiffy Stop
convenience store to find out why the phone line was constantly
busy. Store clerk Rebecca Crawford had accidentally knocked the
telephone receiver off the hook. Duckett recorded the time. Crawford
verified the incident and time.
Between 11:05 p.m. and 11:15 p.m., Duckett returned to the Circle
K to retrieve his coffee cup that he'd left behind earlier. Store
clerk Shirley Williams verified his story.
How could Duckett have been at the Circle K and the Jiffy Stop at
those times if he was somewhere else, raping and killing a child?
Frank asks.
Even more important is another eyewitness never called to
testify. Richard Paul Reynolds, then 30, was at the laundromat next
door to the Circle K. About 10:30 p.m., as he sat by the window
waiting for his laundry, he watched Officer Duckett talking with
Teresa in the parking lot. He saw Duckett drive off alone. The child
paused for a moment as though waiting for someone to pick her
up.
So Reynolds was not surprised, he said, when a ''little blue
car'' pulled up beside the girl. He said the girl spoke to the
driver, then got into the car, which drove away in the direction of
her home. Reynolds told a Lake County detective exactly what he saw
several days later.
In a 1992 affidavit, Reynolds said, ''I told them all that I
knew, and I was willing to testify. I don't know why they didn't
call me.'' Frank noted that Rocky Harris, the lead detective, never
wrote a report about it.
NOT A `VACATION'
A Death Row life
for the last 15 years
After the conviction, Edmund told his client: ''Jim, just think
of this as a long vacation. I will have you out in less than two
years.'' Duckett was convicted on May 19, 1988, and Judge Lockett
sentenced him to death on July 1, 1988, Duckett's 11th wedding
anniversary.
On Death Row ever since, he has outlived his lawyer, his mother
and his marriage. His mother died. His wife divorced him. And Edmund
was killed the night of March 7, 2002, when he made a fatal lane
change in his Lincoln Navigator. He was 76. An obituary called him
``the Matlock of Polk County.''
''Too bad they didn't know what a rotten lawyer he really was,''
Frank says. Edmund died in debt, leaving hundreds of thousands of
dollars in unpaid income taxes, interest and penalties.
Teresa McAbee's short life was not an easy one. She had made no
secret of her wish to live with Pat and Wayne Butler, an aunt and
uncle in nearby Croom-A-Coochee, about 10 miles from Mascotte.
She begged them, according to the Butlers, saying she disliked
living with her mother, who drank too much and whose Mexican
boyfriends made frequent sexual advances toward her.
She told the Butlers that she was frightened by a man she called
''Peeples,'' who often groped her and would try to pull her onto a
couch. The man, who frequented the house, left Mascotte shortly
after the crime.
Lake County detectives didn't consider either Peeples or other
visitors to the home as possible suspects, Chief Brady said. He
suggested that they should. The home was never searched.
STRANGE COINCIDENCE
How Teresa's aunt knew
that girl was `in the lake'
In a 1992 affidavit, Teresa's uncle Wayne said, ''I remember when
I got the news about [her] disappearance.'' Butler was at the auto
body shop where he worked. ''I always got there early so I could
open up.'' Shirley Fernandez, Teresa's aunt who lived in the house
with the McAbees, ``called me sometime between 7 and 7:30 a.m. to
tell me about it.
``She said they thought Teresa had been killed and she was
probably in the lake. This conversation always puzzled me. How could
she know all this before Teresa's body was discovered at 9
a.m.?''
The family was not notified of her death until after 11 a.m.
''The aunt either knew something, or she's Florida's premier
psychic,'' Frank says.
Frank believes the Lake County Sheriff's Department blew the case
in not running down other leads. Besides the man who frequented the
McAbees' house, the Mexican youth at the trash bin should have been
a suspect. The teen, Salvador Calisto, returned to the Circle K
after midnight and, according to the clerk, used a pay phone in an
agitated state.
DIFFERENT LEADS
Various men were seen
with the murdered girl
Another man, Charles Partain, was seen at the Circle K the night
before the murder, hugging and kissing Teresa and giving her money
to play video games. He and his brother, Lewis, were friends of the
girl's mother.
''The Partain brothers came in the store and Charlie Partain was
hugging and kissing on Teresa and gave her some money,'' clerk
Louise Braswell swore in an affidavit.
``I did not trust these men . . . because I knew they were drunks
and had bad reputations. Around this time, the Partains were driving
a blue car.''
Apparently, they left town shortly after the crime.
No one made any attempt to trace a blue car. Neither did anyone
take statements from the Mexicans at the McAbee house and Circle K.
''Nothing exculpatory is in the file,'' Frank says. A police officer
noted scratches on two Mexicans but did not list their names.
Years later, Braswell testified that she had often seen Teresa at
the Circle K late at night. She mentioned an unidentified heavy-set
Mexican with a harelip who gave Teresa money. Teresa ''evidently was
friends with many older Mexican men because she would get money from
them to play the video machines. Many times, I saw her go out to a
car to get money from some men and then come in and play the
games,'' Braswell said.
``I was worried that she was going to get in trouble hanging
around with these men and being out so late, so I complained to two
Mascotte police officers about her. This happened one night when she
was hanging out by the Dumpster with the heavy-set Mexican man with
the harelip. He was an older guy, 21, if a day. This happened
shortly before the little girl was killed. I never saw the Mexican
man with the harelip again. I would have come to the trial and
testified if anyone asked.''
PHYSICAL EVIDENCE
If she was a virgin,
where was the blood?
Other inconsistencies bother Frank.
Despite the medical examiner's reports that the virginal Teresa
would have bled profusely from a tear in her vagina, no blood was
ever found, not on Duckett's police car, not at the trash bin, not
at the site where she was found, and not overly so on herself.
If Duckett was guilty, wouldn't he have tried to wash away the
evidence after his shift? Frank asks. Particularly the palm prints
on the hood?
''Even if he had been a closet pervert,'' Frank says, ``it's
simply implausible that James Duckett, an on-duty uniformed police
officer, would take a child into his highly visible police car in an
area that could easily yield witnesses, with the intent to rape and
kill her just a few hundred feet from her house.
``It is also implausible that he would sexually assault her at
the lake, then take the time to let her get dressed before killing
her. It's even more implausible that he would take her home to
change her shirt.
''I know how cons all say they are innocent,'' Frank says.
'I am not a gullible person and I am not on some `anti-capital
punishment' crusade either. This is not intended to be a crusade.
Fact is, this man did not kill that girl.''