Tuesday, October 17, 2006



TWO VALUABLE BOOKS

During the dozen years her brother was behind bars for a brutal murder he didn't commit, Annette Hudson steadfastly defended him to her neighbors. "They'd say, 'Annette you can't help what you're brother did.' And I would always reply, 'But he didn't do it.'" She was proven right when her brother, Ron Williamson, and a second man, Dennis Fritz, were exonerated by DNA evidence and freed from prison, a tale that forms the basis of new books by Fritz and best-selling author John Grisham.

"What I'm so happy about is that the city of Ada is going to hear my side of the story, what I feel about the district attorney and the police department," said Hudson, who left Ada after her brother's release from prison and now lives in Tulsa. "I have to live with it every day that my brother was wrongfully convicted. I think they did him wrong."

Grisham's first nonfiction book, "The Innocent Man," and Fritz's "Journey Toward Justice" chronicle the 1982 murder of 21-year-old Deborah Sue Carter, the 1987 arrests of Williamson and Fritz, their conviction a year later on first-degree murder charges and how they endured 12 years imprisoned.

"It was like being in a tomb. There were no windows," said Fritz, now 57 and living in Kansas City, Mo. Fritz, wrongly linked to the killing because he was Williamson's friend, was held in isolation for six months in a cell whose main features were a bare light bulb, a smoke-stained plastic mirror and a mattress he described as paper thin. "I would get night and day mixed up," Fritz said. "If I had committed the crime, I could give reason for the time that I was doing. But the justification was not there. ... It just gnaws at you every day to let go of the rope. I was just stubborn."

Williamson, who struggled with mental illness as an adult and was diagnosed bipolar, was particularly troubled during his trial and confinement and would lie awake at night screaming his innocence. "Bloodcurdling screams all through the night," Fritz said. "He would ... scream, and say, 'I'm innocent' over and over and over."

Fritz, a former science teacher and coach, was sentenced to life in prison. Williamson, a second-round draft choice for the Oakland Athletics in 1971, was sentenced to death and was just five days away from his execution when U.S. District Judge Frank Seay, shocked by due process violations that led to his conviction, granted a stay.

DNA tests sought by The Innocence Project, a legal group that uses DNA to exonerate convicts, concluded that forensic evidence from the murder scene, including semen and hair samples, did not match Williamson or Fritz. They were released from prison in 1999 and filed a federal lawsuit against the state a year later that led to a multimillion-dollar settlement in 2003.

Williamson drank heavily following his release from prison and died of cirrhosis of the liver in 2004 at the age of 51. "Just too much agony and pain for him. Ronny relived that nightmare probably a thousand times more than I would allow myself to do," Fritz said. "He just wanted out of this world."

Glen Gore, who knew Williamson, gave authorities a statement that linked Williamson to Carter's death and testified against Fritz. Gore was later convicted of her murder and sentenced to life in prison earlier this year. Gore's 2003 conviction in the case had been overturned.

Ada, located 80 miles southeast of Oklahoma City, is a bustling town of about 16,000 residents that is home to East Central University. The school's 4,500 students, drawn from throughout southern and southeastern Oklahoma, help fuel the city's flourishing commerce and give Ada an energy that is rare for rural Oklahoma. "At one time, there was a lot of money there with oil. It just became corrupted," Fritz said. "The Police Department, their badges and their positions just went to their head."

Carter had been dead longer than she lived when Gore was finally brought to trial and the gory details of her death were resurrected, said former Oklahoma County Assistant District Attorney Richard Wintory, who prosecuted Gore at each of his trials. Evidence indicated that Gore, who knew Carter from her job as a cocktail waitress at the Coachlight lounge, raped and severely beat her before jamming a sock in her mouth to keep her from screaming, and strangled her by wrapping an electrical cord around her neck. Gore came on to her at the Coachlight that night, and witnesses saw her push him away from her car afterward, Wintory said. Later, Gore was dropped off by a friend near Carter's apartment and he talked his way through her door. After Carter's murder, Gore staged the crime scene to look like someone else had broken in and killed her, Wintory said.

Investigators went after Williamson and Fritz, and suppressed evidence that demonstrated their innocence, Wintory said. "Glen Gore conned them," said Wintory, now a deputy district attorney in Tucson, Ariz. "Dennis Fritz and Ron Williamson had ... absolutely nothing to do with the murder of Deborah Sue Carter." Neither Williamson nor Fritz were with Gore on the night Carter was killed and neither had ever met Carter.

Hudson said Grisham did "an excellent job" capturing her brother's character as well as his flaws - including allegations of violent sexual assault in earlier cases in which he was tried twice for rape but never convicted. She said her brother "was a miserable, tormented, pitiful person. It just broke my heart."

Grisham dedicated his book to Hudson and Williamson's other sister, Renee Simmons.

Fritz's book, published by Seven Locks Press of Santa Ana, Calif., is a first-person account that examines the many mistakes and deceptions that led to his conviction and 12-year incarceration. He said it is a "companion book" to Grisham's and that he was encouraged to write it by Grisham, who endorses it as "compelling and fascinating" on the book's cover. "The main thread of the book is the total amount of injustice that I received," Fritz said. Police and prosecutors were under intense pressure to solve the case when they arrested Fritz and Williamson five years after Carter's murder, he said.

Pontotoc County District Attorney Bill Peterson, who prosecuted Williamson and Fritz and is still the county's top prosecutor, said he presented jurors with what he thought at the time were "two fairly strong cases" and was "just stunned" when DNA testing proved their innocence. "What can you say? Our criminal justice system is not perfect. What happened is an aberration," said Peterson, who was not aware at the time of the arrests and trial of problems with the police investigation that were later revealed by the federal lawsuit. "Evidently, there were some reports that never made it to me. It may have made a difference in my charging decision."

Carter's mother and other relatives also feel a sense of injustice after sitting through two trials believing Williamson and Fritz were guilty. "I just despised those two men for years. It really bothers me," said Peggy Sanders, the victim's mother. "I blame our DA for so much." She said she spoke to Williamson several times before his death and still communicates with Fritz. "It's been important for us to hear from Ron and Dennis. It's healing," Sanders said.

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(And don't forget your ration of Wicked Thoughts for today)

1 comment:

Barbara's Journey Toward Justice said...

Who And Where Is Dennis Fritz, You say after reading John Grisham's Wonderful Book "The Innocent man", Grisham's First non-fiction book. The Other Innocent Man hardly mentioned in "The Innocent Man" has his own compelling and fascinating story to tell in "Journey Toward Justice". John Grisham endorsed Dennis Fritz's Book on the Front Cover. Dennis Fritz wrote his Book Published by Seven Locks Press, to bring awareness about False Convictions, and The Death Penalty. "Journey Toward Justice" is a testimony to the Triumph of the Human Spirit and is a Stunning and Shocking Memoir. Dennis Fritz was wrongfully convicted of murder after a swift trail. The only thing that saved him from the Death Penalty was a lone vote from a juror. "The Innocent Man" by John Grisham is all about Ronnie Williamson, Dennis Fritz's was his co-defendant. Ronnie Williamson was sentenced to the Death Penalty. Both were exonerated after spending 12 years in prison. Both Freed by a simple DNA test, The real killer was one of the Prosecution's Key Witness. John Grisham's "The Innocent Man" tells half the story. Dennis Fritz's Story needs to be heard. Read about how he wrote hundreds of letters and appellate briefs in his own defense and immersed himself in an intense study of law. He was a school teacher and a ordinary man from Ada Oklahoma, whose wife was brutally murdered in 1975. On May 8, 1987 while raising his young daughter alone, he was put under arrest and on his way to jail on charges of rape and murder. Since then, it has been a long hard road filled with twist and turns. Dennis Fritz is now on his "Journey Toward Justice". He never blamed the Lord and soley relied on his faith in God to make it through. He waited for God's time and never gave up.