Tuesday, March 26, 2013

“I am a Human Being, Y’all !” A Cry from Death Row

Speaking at Gonzaga University and Whitworth College about Kerry's case.







Walla Walla Death Penalty article by Victoria  Thorpe


The pumping sounds repeated over and over through a reggae tune on my car stereo, “I’m a Human being y’al!” hit me hard since I had just left the visitors’ room for the Death Row residents in the Washington State Penitentiary. Michael Franti’s song, A Little Bit of Riddim, was washing over my ears as I drove out of Walla Walla. It was my initial visit to the small city of Walla Walla, Washington State Penitentiary, and my first time to meet the man on the other side of the glass partition.
One of the unexpected reactions I processed after leaving WSP was catching myself singing with Mr. Franti in full voice, bouncing along uninhibited to his inciting lyrics “Rock with me!” I even caught myself hitting the air with my fist and fervently cheering “I’m a human being y’all!” as I couldn’t shake the image of the soul I’d just walked away from. The person behind the glass remained behind until two corrections officers came to chain him up and escort him back to his solitary cell…Meanwhile, I drove away, to any place I wanted. I decided if I’d pick up something to eat and what. I chose which route to drive home to Spokane. I looked forward to being greeted by my family at the end of that day…It all was so much sweeter and real, measured against the lack of freedom my new friend lived with. My own liberties flitted around my mind like Tinkerbell wanting to grant me the ability to fly! I realized I felt so alive - after visiting Death Row in the Walla Walla prison.
The Washington State Penitentiary is an attractive prison, as prison’s go. Built in 1887 it carries some old world charm as you drive under the arching white sign announcing you’ve entered the facility  grounds, where 1,967 beds house men from minimum to max security (8 men are currently living on Death Row). About 1,000 staff work the facility. Though the prison generates approximately $55 million into the local economy (employment, services, medical, etc) Walla Walla residents admit few visit there. Even with the nearly finished expansion, their Prison Research Group didn’t think the populace would be affected by the increased 512 beds at medium security level.
I traveled to Walla Walla the week of January 14th on an invitation to speak with several groups about my own sister’s case and the current campaign in Washington State to end the death penalty. My schedule began with a lovely casual mingle time for Walla Walla folks at my hosts’ home, where I met a former chaplain to the prison, a former mayor of the fair city, and much respected past Superintendant (warden) Dick Morgan. Our conversation circled the subject academically for a while, until I began asking the ex-warden personal questions about his previous work.
What would we lose if we no longer had the Death Penalty?
In reply to my queries, the former Superintendant described the process we use here in our state. Those of us present for his candid explanation were surprised when he said he would create the execution team from among the people who actually knew the condemned man, furthermore; people who liked him, staff who likely were on a first name basis. Such answers sparked the desire in our small crowd to know intimate details. He went on to say that he wanted the last thing that man saw to be the faces of those who cared about him. My God! That took my imagination directly into that room with the team tying down a man, calming him, helping him through his own orchestrated and timed death, telling themselves they were doing their job and the right thing. I can’t imagine how they all carry that burden now. Isn’t that too much to ask of our public servants?
After all, we have the ability to securely contain a person whom we deem a threat to society, as Morgan stressed to me, “There’s absolutely no reason from a public safety standpoint these people can’t be managed as a Life Without [Parole] sentence. If people don’t have faith their prison system can manage these people, the problem is much larger than the death penalty. We’ve got a serious problem with the prison system, because there’s no excuse for the inability to safely manage dangerous inmates, including those that have been previously sentenced to death. And I really want to underscore there really are—there’s lots of murderers in general prison populations that committed crimes as bad or worse than those who are sentenced to death .”
 A prime example is Gary Ridgeway, convicted of 48 murders and incarcerated in the Walla Walla prison, unable to harm any more. According to Dick Morgan, and many other out-spoken retired wardens (such as Dr. Allen Ault of Georgia, and Jeanne Woodford, San Quentin) there is no valid excuse for executions when we have the ability to house convicted persons securely, “Washington State prisons manage over two thousand murderers today based on behavior and not sentence.”
Though I was thoroughly impressed with the many Walla Walla residents I’d met, my favorite was the man I visited in the IMU (Intensive Management Unit, or maximum security) section of the prison. I enjoyed a wonderful exchange about life, spirituality, family, mistakes (mine), and our common desire for growth. Our hope-filled conversation had a great deal to do with my elevated appreciation for life driving away from the picturesque city.  I was amazed yet again at the heights some humans can attain, even in extreme circumstances.
It was not the first Row I’d visited, but everyone is a unique human being, as I was reminded by the earnest eye contact across from me. I’ve come to recognize a disoriented expression common to residents of the Rows, invariably the effect of a constant need to fight to hold onto hope and their own sense of humanity. There is a quiet yet very profound pain to bear when you become transparent; no longer addressed, no longer heard, more of a ghost than a person. By the time the guard announced it was time I follow his escort out of the visitors’ room, my impulse was to hug—or  at least shake the hand of this person I’d just shared such powerful, heartfelt conversation with.  All I could do was touch the glass between us, and thank him for talking with me.
I cannot address the death penalty without at least touching on a few extremely important truths:
We risk killing innocents through an imperfect system run by imperfect humans. Vincent Motto, an exonerated man wrote these lyrics in the years following his release, “You don’t gotta be guilty to do time in the state pen.”  The song After Innocence was featured in the critically acclaimed 2005 film of the same title, documenting seven stories of innocents losing years of their lives before being exonerated, a police officer among them. People make mistakes, people have flaws. No system is perfect; ours has many flaws.  How can we trust a death sentence when we cannot be 100% sure? (142 have been exonerated from Death Rows since 1972)
It is unevenly pronounced: the underprivileged, deprived, poor, minorities, mental needs, abused, and addicted are the people you will find populating U.S. death rows. (3,167 last count)
Most everyone agrees it is not a deterrent. Our killing people—to   illustrate killing is wrong, has never proven to have a positive effect by anyone’s reports.
The financial cost is many times more than a life sentence. (These stats can be found at www.deathpenaltyinfo.org)
But most of all, the cost to our humanity is ultimately priceless. These are human beings, y’all!
One article cannot do justice to all the issues involved in the failure of the death penalty. It is not something a society based on democracy likes to look at; we’ve built specialized death chambers with our tax dollars, ones now looking much like a surgical room. But instead of preserving life, the table, similar to a medical table, is fitted with cross-like extensions to strap down a person’s arms, because this table was built to end a human being’s life against their will.  A few have gone willingly, giving up after years of existence cast outside of humanity. To them death is a relief from the pain of existing as the walking dead. We have heard  many arguments about the cruelty of the execution—but what about the years that lead up to it?
The basic question is this: Do we have the right to take the life of a defenseless person? I ask you, what is our moral obligation to intervene on behalf of those who cannot defend themselves? Under what circumstances do any of us have the right to take another person’s life?  It is my understanding we the people of these United States only have the right to take another’s life in self defense, when we are in eminent danger to the point of death and we cannot escape. All other conditions are not valid.
How then can we convey a power we ourselves do not possess to our government?
“Every day tens of thousands of murderers are managed very safely in prison systems across the country. Washington State prisons manage over two thousand murderers today based on behavior, not sentence,” former warden Morgan told me.
How are we any different than the actions we are outraged by when we ourselves participate in unnecessary killings?  The majority of the industrialized world has banned the practice of killing its own citizens, the European countries have abolished capital punishment, including Russia’s moratorium since 1996 (with the exception of Belarus).  A civilized society strives for peace, and that does not come by way of violence. Our country prides itself on being a free nation of modern thinkers, highly developed, and embracing a diversity of great faiths. Yet we are currently unashamed to be counted among those who participate in the ancient practice of the death penalty: Afghanistan, China, Saudi Arabia, North Korea, Iran, and Iraq. 
Peace and safety develop out of a place of compassion and forgiveness, not vengeance. I have heard it called Justice – but you cannot mask the reality, revenge is a base instinct that is common to us all. However, just as greed and lust are also natural instincts, we are called to restrain those urges to the benefit of us all, not fan them into out of control fires. We need to look deeper into the culture and take individual responsibility for the prevalence of violence throughout our beloved country.
There is no justification for the death penalty in a day and age when we can keep society safe with modern facilities. It is a barbaric choice we make consciously.


This article was published at:

http://spokanefavs.com/politics/legislation/i-am-a-human-being-yall-a-cry-from-death-row



























Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Safe and Just Alternatives


Hearing testimony for  HB1504  March 6th, 2013,                                                 ending the Death Penalty in WA state









Testimony was given by (left to right) former CA prosecutor Darryl Stallworth, former Seattle police Chief Norm Stamper, head of Safe and Just Alternatives campaign Mishi Faruqee, Victims' family member Judy Karr, former WSP Superintendent Dick Morgan, Representative Reuven Carlyle.

Watch the hearing at this link:
http://blogs.seattletimes.com/opinionnw/2013/03/07/poll-should-washington-state-repeal-the-death-penalty/

Testimony submitted from Victoria Thorpe (about 87 min into the hearing)

"I am compelled to come before your audience today because of the experiences that have become an integral part of my personal history and have determined who I am.  I have a sister living on death row in California, (she has struggled to survive for nearly 18 years).
The nightmare that changed both our lives forever has evolved into many privileged experiences that beg to be shared.
It does not flow easily, this attempt to share horror side-by-side with the deepest love and hopefulness; it has painfully evolved over two decades to this present point, where I dare take off my mask and expose my heart and soul to strangers. I come to beg for compassion. I represent the silent victims of the Death Penalty—families and loved ones of human beings sentenced to be executed.
I love my sister dearly, she adds a great deal to my life.
I drive the 1,069 mile trip to Central California about four times each year, I’d go farther if I had to, I’d go more often if it were possible. In a prison I enjoy her company while locked in a tiny room for a few hours. We have both learned to savor life more; I love to watch her describe the new tiny wild flowers that sometimes creep into the Death Row yard, or even better, hear her re-tell her favorite stories of her children, or our childhood, in her animated ways. She misses the wind through her hair on a motorcycle ride. And she is constantly at work on her inner growth. My sister is one of the most honest and loyal persons I know.
I have been forced to imagine what it would be like to witness her execution—we have had to have that conversation—her deep concern is that I not be subjected to watch such an act of brutality carried out. Mine is that I will not be allowed to hold her hand as she has the life extinguished from her, as I would, or any of you would, wish to do for your loved one dying of cancer or such.
Even with the severely limited access to each other, our relationship is always growing, she is my best friend. Among the layers of unimaginable scars this sentence has built upon each of us, the cruelty of seeing her strapped down, rendering her completely helpless, while an audience, much like you all assembled here, watch her being murdered, would just about steal all my hope for human kind.
The system labels someone as a monster or evil in order to ease the guilt of killing a helpless person. But even if I were to concede to this label over any human—how would it be logical? When you attempt to overcome evil (a bad deed) with evil you simply multiply the evil.
In my opinion, in order to really change our current culture of violence, there must be work done to bring our country into a place of balance between protecting the collective and protecting individuals’ well-being. The Death Penalty serves neither the collective, nor the individual’s right to life. It violates them both.
You must stop the killing. You are good people who love their families—please imagine one of them in place of the eight men we house on Washington’s Death Row. Please see their loved ones’ broken hearts. Please allow your compassion to rule alongside your wisdom."


Thursday, March 7, 2013

Judge Thomas J. Whelan's quote, saying there was no one declared deceased during the trial


Excerpt from CAGES, Author's Note:

As a matter of fact, the alleged murder victim had not even been declared deceased during the trial, as the judge pointed out to his jury, “Ladies and gentlemen, in the last question Mr. Dusek asked, he mentioned that the—Melanie May, in this case, is deceased. That’s a fact for you to decide. It’s inappropriate for him to put that in the question…whether or not Miss May is in fact deceased or not, because that’s something for you to decide.” --Judge Thomas Whelan quote, Trial Transcript p. 4661, lines 16-18
The most important point of the defense’s closing argument was that the defendant was left having to prove herself Innocent against evidence that was never recovered and was denied to have existed by half the witnesses; “Theories are not evidence.” That was weighed against the district attorney’s assurance to the jury that his case added up to a torture and death.




No Victim Established in Day 6 of the Trial


IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
      IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO
DEPARTMENT 21               HON.  THOMAS J.  WHELAN, JUDGE
                  CR NO. 135002 TRIAL
                  FEBRUARY  14, 1995
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA,

VS

KERRY LYN DALTON,DEFENDANT.

REPORTERS' TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS VOLUME  35
PAGES  3361 THROUGH  3517

APPEARANCES:
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
JEFF DUSEK
DEPUTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
22 0 WEST BROADWAY
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA 92101


FOR DEFENDANT DALTON

ALEX LANDON AND
ELIZABETH MISSAKIAN
2442 FOURTH AVENUE
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA 92101

MARY E.   ROSS,  CSR NO. 4100 GLORIA J. STERNER,  CSR NO. 3876 SAN DIEGO SUPERIOR COURT OFFICIAL REPORTERS



3507

(Judge Thomas Whelan speaking…FIRST, BY WAY OF FACTUAL BACKGROUND, I THINK THE RECORD IS CLEAR THAT NO BODY HAS EVER BEEN FOUND IN THIS CASE. THE RECORD IS EQUALLY CLEAR THAT THERE IS CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE THAT THERE WAS A HOMICIDE. THERE'S ALSO CONFLICTING CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE THAT IT MAY NOT BE A HOMICIDE; IN FACT,  SHE MAY STILL BE ALIVE,… 
MY REASON FOR MAKING THESE STATEMENTS IS TO ESTABLISH FOR THE RECORD THAT IN MY MIND THE CORPUS IS A LEGITIMATE ISSUE IN THIS CASE. IT'S NOT A RUSE THAT — THERE IS A LEGITIMATE ISSUE BEFORE THE JURY AS TO WHETHER OR NOT THERE'S — A CORPUS OF A HOMICIDE HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED.
(Whelan was addressing, in his own words, the need to establish)MELANIE MAY, IS A VICTIM OF A HOMICIDE, AS VERSUS HAVING DIED OF NATURAL CAUSES OR SELF-INFLICTED WOUNDS OR ALIVE BUT OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY OR ALIVE BUT HIDING WITHIN THE COUNTRY.(Whelan referred to the missing person by her street name, not her legal name Irene Louise May.)


Six days into a capital case and it had not been established there was ever a murder – the "victim" had not even been declared deceased .
Can you find the trial transcripts and read them yourselves?

March 3rd, 2013, Kerry Sends Thank Yous

 Below is a copy of the card I received from Kerry to all you wonderful people who sent her support and love recently. The artwork is by Daphne Odjig. Daphne was born in 1925 of Odawa parents on the Wikwemikong reserve, Manitoulin Island, Ontario.




                                                                       




















Christmas Day, 2012

Sheriff Wilson's Testimony, saying there was no crime scene


Testimony at Kerry Lyn Dalton Case
The following are excerpts from Sheriff Wilson’s Testimony 
(who was at the residence the night of the alleged murder scene 
Dusek & Cooksey described on camera in reference to the Dalton 
case) ;

(p. 2738 line 12-14)
THE CLERK:  PLEASE STATE YOUR FULL NAME FOR THE RECORD AND SPELL YOUR LAST.

THE WITNESS:     DAVID WILSON, W-I-L-S-O-N.

(p.2741,line 2-4)  

Q.(prosecutor Dusek) OKAY. GOING BACK TO JUNE 2 6TH, 1988, DID YOU RECEIVE A CALL LEADING YOU TO A TRAILER PARK?

A. YES, I DID.

Q. ABOUT WHAT TIME DID YOU GET THE CALL, DEPUTY?

A. I COULD LOOK AT MY LOG AND GIVE YOU THE EXACT
TIME.

Q. ALL RIGHT. ALL RIGHT.

A. I HAVE A COPY OF IT. WELL IT IS A COPY. I CAN'T EVEN READ IT. I BELIEVE THAT IT IS 2055 IS WHEN I ACTUALLY RECEIVED THE TELEPHONE CALL AT MY RESIDENCE.

Q. THOSE OF US NOT IN THE MILITARY OR LAW ENFORCEMENT, WHAT TIME IS THAT?

A. THAT WOULD BE 8:55 IN THE EVENING.

(p.2724 line 7-16)Q. WHERE DID YOU GO?

A. SPACE NUMBER 25,IN THE LIVE OAK SPRINGS TRAILER PARK.

Q. ALL RIGHT.CAN YOU DESCRIBE THAT AREA FOR US, WHERE THE TRAILER PARK WAS?

A. THE TRAILER PARK IS — IS IN A — WHAT USED TO BE -IT WAS AN OLD RETIREMENT AREA, SMALL LIKE A LITTLE VILLAGE, THEN THEY ADDED THE TRAILER PARK TO IT SO 
THERE IS A LOT OF SMALL,  OLDER HOMES THERE WITH A SMALL TRAILER PARK, APPROXIMATELY — APPROXIMATELY — PROBABLY ABOUT 30 TRAILERS.

(p. 2745 line 28, 2746 1-10)Q. ALL RIGHT. HOW LONG DID IT TAKE YOU TO GET TO the 
TRAILER, APPROXIMATELY?

A. LET'S SEE, I ARRIVED THERE AT 2102 SO IT WOULD HAVE BEEN 7 MINUTES.

Q. DID YOU GO WITH ANYONE?

A. NO.

Q. WHAT TYPE OF VEHICLE?

A. I BELIEVE AT THAT TIME IT WAS A FOUR-WHEEL DRIVE CHEVY BLAZER. I BELIEVE THAT WE HAD CHEVIES THEN.

Q. MARKED UNIT?

A. YES, IT WAS MARKED.

(p. 2747 21-27,p. 2748 16)Q. DID YOU SPEAK WITH MISS FEDOR?

A. YES, I DID.

Q. DESCRIBE HER CONDITION?

A. SHE APPEARED TO BE ON METHAMPHETAMINE. SHE WAS VERY EXCITED, VERY — SHE WOULDN'T COMPLETE HER SENTENCES. SHE WOULD START HER SENTENCE THEN RESTART ANOTHER ONE. SHE WAS VERY PARANOID ACTING.

A. I HAVE ARRESTED OTHER PEOPLE FOR BEING UNDER THE INFLUENCE O METHAMPHETAMINE AND OTHER DRUGS.I HAD ALSO INTERVIEWED HER IN THE PAST. 
I HAVE HAD CONTACT WITH HER.

(p.2751 line 22-28, 2752 1-23, Q. WHAT WAS THE ORIGIN OF THE CALL, DO YOU RECALL?

A. IT WAS TO TAKE A REPORT OF A BURGLARY.

Q. WHILE YOU WERE THERE, DID SHE REFER TO ANY OTHER ITEMS OF EVIDENCE OR INTERESTS THAT YOU RECALL?

A. YES,SHE SAID THAT — WHEN I ASKED HER WHAT HAD BEEN TAKEN FROM THE HOUSE,  SHE SAID A TRASH CAN HAD BEEN TAKEN,  YELLOW TRASH CAN AND A SLIPCOVER FOR A CHAIR.

Q. DID SHE TALK ABOUT ANY OTHER PIECES OF EVIDENCE THERE THAT SHE WAS CONCERNED WITH?

A. YES, SHE DID.SHE SAID THAT THERE — SHE HAD FOUND A BLOOD SOAKED PILLOW CASE ON HER BED.

Q. DID YOU TRY TO FIND THAT?

A. YES, I DID.

Q. WHAT WAS THE RESULT, WHAT HAPPENED?

A. I WAS UNABLE TO FIND IT.

Q. WHAT DID YOU DO, WHERE DID YOU LOOK?

A. I LOOKED — SHE SAID THAT IT HAD BEEN ON HER BED. I LOOKED ON HER BED, IT WASN'T THERE. THEN SHE SAID THAT THEY PUT IT IN A BOX, IT WAS UNDER THE TRAILER. I LOOKED UNDERNEATH THE TRAILER. THERE WAS NO BOXES OR PILLOW CASE.

Q. DID YOU ACTUALLY GO UNDER THE TRAILER?

A. I KNELT DOWN AT THE TRAILER, WAS ABLE TO LOOK UNDERNEATH ASSISTED BY MY FLASHLIGHT.

Q. HOW LONG WAS THIS TRAILER?

A.I BELIEVE THAT IT IS 60 FEET, I BELIEVE.

Q. AND WHAT LOCATION DID YOU POSITION YOURSELF WHEN YOU LOOKED UNDER THE TRAILER?

A. ABOUT FIVE DIFFERENT POSITIONS.

Q. YOU COULDN'T FIND ANYTHING THERE?

A. NO.

(2753 11-16)Q. YOU WROTE HER OFF AS A CRAZY DOPER?

A.YES,I DID.

Q.HOW LONG DID YOU REMAIN AT MISS FEDOR'S RESIDENCE?

A.I BELIEVE THAT I WAS THERE FOR ABOUT 18 MINUTES.

Q. DO YOU HAVE A LOG THAT SHOWS THAT?

A. YES, I DO. I ARRIVED AT 2102 AND I LEFT AT 2120

(p.2766 line 18-28, 2767 1-6)Q.(cross examination defense attorney Landon) AND WHEN 
YOU CAME INTO THE KITCHEN, DID YOU SEE ANY BLOOD?

A. NO, I DIDN’T.

Q. WHEN YOU WENT INTO THE LIVING ROOM, DID YOU SEE ANY BLOOD?

A. NO,I DID NOT.

Q. AND WHEN YOU CAME INTO THE MASTER BEDROOM, DID YOU SEE ANY BLOOD?

A. NO, I DID NOT.

Q. DID JOANNE FEDOR, THIS INDIVIDUAL YOU HAD CONTACT WITH, POINT OUT TO YOU ANY BLOOD IN THE TRAILER?

A. NO, SHE DID NOT.

Q. IF YOU HAD SEEN BLOOD IN THE TRAILER,WOULD YOU HAVE MADE A NOTE OF THAT?

A. YES, I WOULD HAVE.

Q. WOULD THAT HAVE CONCERNED YOU?

A. YES,IT WOULD HAVE.

(p. 2768 line 9-27)Q. DID YOU — YOU HAD SOME COMMENT MADE BY JOANNE FEDOR ABOUT HER FINDING A BLOOD-SOAKED PILLOWCASE; IS THAT CORRECT?

A. YES.

Q. AND SHE INDICATED THAT SHE HAD — HAD FOUND IT ON HER BED?

A. THAT'S CORRECT.

Q. AND DID YOU GO TO THE BED TO TAKE A LOOK TO SEE WHETHER OR NOT YOU COULD FIND A BLOOD-SOAKED PILLOWCASE?

A. YES, I DID.

Q. AND DID YOU FIND ONE?

A. NO.

Q. AND DID YOU FIND ANY TRACE OF ANY BLOOD ON THE BED?

A. NO, I DIDN'T.

Q. DID YOU LOOK?

A. YES.

Q. ONCE AGAIN USING YOUR FLASHLIGHT TO INSURE YOU HAD ENOUGH LIGHT TO LOOK;IS THAT CORRECT?

A. THAT'S CORRECT.

(p. 2770 line 10-19)Q. YOU INDICATED THAT YOU HAD HAD CONTACT WITH MISS FEDOR' IN THE PAST; IS THAT RIGHT?

A. YES,I HAD.

Q. AND IN YOUR CONTACT WITH HER IN THE PAST, HAD YOU NOTICED HER TO BE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF DRUGS?

A. YES, I HAD.

Q. AND TO YOU, THEN, SHE WAS A KNOWN METH USER; IS THAT CORRECT?

A. YES, SHE WAS.

Q. DID YOU FIND ANY EVIDENCE THAT SUPPORTED A BURGLARY COMPLAINT WHEN YOU WENT TO JOANNE FEDOR'S TRAILER THAT NIGHT ON JUNE 26TH, 1988?

A. NO,I DID NOT.


Kerry Lyn Dalton was wrongfully convicted: based on the testimony of a co-defendant & disreputable hearsay, there is no physical evidence and no common sense evidence. Please look further at this blog for more information.
There is no justice or closure in false convictions.


Deputy Wilson’s testimony covers 42 pages, 
if you are interested in his entire testimony
please leave me your email and I will send it 
to you, I will not publish your email.
This case ended with NO BODY - NO WEAPON - NO BLOOD; the evidence table was empty-There were NO FORENSICS evidence to support the drug induced stories even though
the elite task force conducted 3 searches.
Please ask me questions you may have about the case- I will answer them all,
I want everyone to know the truth.


http://www.safecalifornia.org/home


**Refer to the Nov 21, 2011, article (No Victim Established Day 6 of the Trial), to locate 
case #, Judge and arttorney names.
Looking through older posts will give you much more background and information. Please keep asking me questions