As primary season heats up, Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley has been repeatedly forced on the campaign trail to defend his role opposing DNA evidence and the release of exculpatory evidence under open records during habeas proceeding challenging Michael Morton's false conviction. But Bradley's statements have strayed so far from the facts, says Morton's attorney John Raley, that the Houston lawyer felt compelled to issue a corrective "Open Letter to Williamson County." In it, he details how and why Morton remained in prison around 2,400 extra days because Mr. Bradley fought testing using every possible means, all the while denigrating Morton in comments to the press. Bradley for a time even opposed Morton's exoneration, a fact he repeatedly obfuscates,
after DNA testing pointed to Mark Allen Norwood as a suspect! Here's the remarkable letter in fulll, it speaks for itself:
Open Letter To Williamson County:
I
have resisted becoming involved in the upcoming election for District
Attorney of Williamson County, because I believe that the decision
should be made by local citizens. However, I have become increasingly
concerned about statements made by Mr. Bradley regarding the Michael
Morton case, and now feel the need to set the record straight. In doing
so, I am not speaking on behalf of my dear friend and pro bono client
for the last eight years, Michael Morton, nor am I speaking on behalf of
my co-counsel with the Innocence Project who fought with me so long for
DNA testing. I am speaking personally, and am not endorsing any
candidate.
The world now knows that Michael is, and always has been, innocent.
His dear wife was murdered in their home while he was at work, just as
he has always maintained. When Michael was formally exonerated last
fall, Mr. Bradley called to apologize to me and asked that I convey his
apology to Michael. I hoped at the time of the call that Mr. Bradley had
learned from this experience and had changed. However, I am concerned
from reading recent statements by Mr. Bradley during the campaign that
he is retracting his previous admission of responsibility for decisions
that kept Michael in prison an extra six years and eight months.
On February 11, 2005, we filed our motion for DNA testing of, among
other things, a bloody bandana found behind the Morton home after
Christine’s murder. Such testing would cost the State of Texas nothing,
because the Innocence Project offered to (and later did) pay for it
completely. In 2005, and in virtually every brief and argument since, in
state trial and appellate courts and in federal court, we contended
that the bandana was found behind the house along the likely escape
route of the murderer. We also pointed out that the bandana (1) may
contain the blood of Christine Morton, (2) may also contain the DNA by
blood, sweat, or skin cells of the murderer, and (3) the DNA of the
murderer may lead to a hit on the national databank of known offenders.
[Note: we did not know at the time that the DA’s trial file from 1987
contained a description of a stranger seen the days before the murder,
driving an old van, and walking around behind the Morton house – exactly
where the bandana was found. Michael’s
1987 trial defense counsel have signed affidavits that they never were
made aware of this key document and other critical investigative
documents that would have been used in Michael’s defense.] Contrary to
Mr. Bradley’s statements during the campaign, there are no valid chain
of custody issues or contamination issues regarding the bandana. The
bandana was seen by law enforcement on the very spot it was found by
Christine’s brother and immediately handed to law enforcement for
safekeeping. Following protocol, it would have been placed in a separate
bag. There is no evidence otherwise. The blood, one day after the
murder, would have dried. But the DNA was there, waiting like a time
capsule to be tested.
I am not a criminal lawyer, but I come from a law enforcement family. I
sought the advice of my father, a retired prosecutor, and he
recommended that I call Mr. Bradley on a personal level to see whether
he would agree to the testing, or at least not oppose it. I made
several such efforts, even driving from Houston to Georgetown for a
meeting with Mr. Bradley and my co-counsel from the Innocence Project,
but all such efforts were rebuffed.
Instead of agreeing to a simple test, that can only reveal the truth,
that would be free to the State, Mr. Bradley spent countless hours and
taxpayer dollars opposing the testing every way he possibly could. It
cannot reasonably be denied that if the murder happened in 2005, the
bandana would have been DNA tested as part of law enforcement’s efforts
to identify the murderer. The technology was not available in 1987, but
it is now. There is no good reason not to allow DNA testing to reveal
the truth – whatever it is. When I asked Mr. Bradley why he was fighting
so strongly against DNA testing, he said “it would muddy the waters.”
I responded, “Mr. Bradley, truth clarifies.” I tried to explain to Mr.
Bradley the many flaws in the State’s presentation at trial against
Michael, but Mr. Bradley was not interested in hearing about it. I tried
to hand him the two lie detector tests Michael passed shortly after his
wife’s murder, and he refused to look at them.
During this time, Mr. Bradley publically belittled our efforts, saying
the bandana was “irrelevant”, that we were “grasping at straws”, and
that we were searching for a “mystery killer.” He wrote letters to the
parole board opposing a parole for Michael (who had by that time spent
23 years in prison) because Michael had not “accepted responsibility for
the murder of his wife by mercilessly beating her to death.” He told
the media: “The public might want to remain skeptical of a defendant who
to this day doesn’t accept responsibility.” Around this time, Michael
was informed that he would be likely paroled if he would “show remorse
for his crime.”
Michael Morton is one of the finest men I know. He is a man of honor
and integrity. He refused to lie to get out of prison. He said “All I
have left is my actual innocence. And if I have to stay in prison the
rest of my life, I am not giving that up.”
When we finally obtained testing of the bandana, after many years of
strenuous opposition by Mr. Bradley, the highly sophisticated technology
revealed (1) Christine Morton’s blood, (2) the DNA of a man who is not
Michael, which when run through the databanks of known offenders (3) led
to a direct hit on Mark Allen Norwood, who has a long criminal record
in several states for, among other things, breaking and entering
residences and assault with intent to murder. Thus, the DNA testing
Mr. Bradley fought against so long not only proved Michael is,
according to the State of Texas, “actually innocent” -- it also led
directly to the arrest and indictment of Mark Allen Norwood, who is now
awaiting trial for the murder of Christine Morton.
Even after the hit on Norwood, Mr. Bradley’s office continued to fight
against Michael’s exoneration, and Mr. Bradley publicly discounted the
bandana’s importance. Our office and the Innocence Project informed the
Travis County District Attorney that a cold case in Austin of the
murder of Debra Jan Baker, who was killed in her bed exactly the same
way as Christine, might be linked to Norwood because he lived nearby at
the time. They investigated and found important evidence, which they
shared with Judge Sid Harle who was, at that time, presiding over the
Morton case. Mr. Bradley could no longer oppose Michael’s exoneration,
and a few days later backed down and agreed to Michael’s release.
I am hopeful people remember that when an innocent man is convicted of
murder and wrongfully incarcerated, that means that the real murderer is
allowed to go free and commit other crimes. Resistance to an honest
search for the truth through DNA testing only prolongs the time that the
the real murderer (or rapist, or other form of serious criminal) may be
at large. People like to talk about being “tough on crime.” I
propose, rather, being “smart on crime” – making sure that the guilty
party is the one who is caught and eventually convicted. That’s what
keeps our streets safe, and is what prosecutors should strive for.
Although Mr. Bradley did not try the case that wrongfully sent Michael
to prison and let the murderer go free, he is largely responsible, in my
opinion, for adding the last six years and eight months to Michael’s
tragic story. For nearly 2,400 additional days, the cell doors clanged
shut on an innocent man. At one time Mr. Bradley accepted responsibility
for his role. I hope he has not changed his mind about that.
Truth and justice are more important than winning an election.
John W. Raley
Via the Wilco Watchdog.
Thank you Mr. Raley.
ReplyDeleteI believe Mr. Morton and his attorneys are not only after justice in this case but a system wide awareness/reform. DNA testing was not available in 1987, but the withheld evidence was. While Bradley fought to keep Morton in jail, the withheld evidence was the root cause. There are plenty of old skool, tough on crime prosecutors and judges engaged in this activity today. Withheld evidence is criminal as Morton's case illustrates, leading to murder, false imprisonment... There is no statue of limitations on murder, false imprisonment is ongoing while innocent people are in jail! It should be recognized for what it is, CRIMINAL obstruction of justice and official oppression. In many instances it is known to LE and prosecutors, thus a conspiracy to convict, not seek justice. No different than organized crime.
ReplyDeleteNiether the State Bar nor the SCJC has shown any huevos here. The Feds have shown some spark, yet refuse to directly go after instances of withheld evidence.
Thanks in large part to GFB, the public is more aware. A system that systematically ignores the truth won't be taken seriously. A system that finds, and fixes mistakes gains respect and power.
I hope everyone emails this to all of their friends. John Bradley finally exposed as the fraud he is. Way to go John Raley!
ReplyDeleteHow is this story only appearing on two blogs and the Jarrell Star Ledger Facebook page? The local media are giving Bradley a pass. Why?
ReplyDeleteWhy is Perry endorsing Bradley?
ReplyDeleteIn politics, Robert, you dance with who brung you. Perry first appointed JB as DA and after the Forensic Science Commission/Todd Willingham episode, JB has proven his unbending loyalty. Bradley's his guy.
ReplyDeleteOrganized crime. Williamson.
ReplyDeletePerry seems to have an infatuation with people like Bradley. He also first apppointed Jack Skeen to the bench several years ago. That was in spite of the fact that Skeen had a well documented history of prosecutorial misconduct, including a series in the Houston Chronicle about the unethical practices in his office. And, of course, on the bench Skeen has proven to be probably the worst judge in the state, recently earning a comment in a court of appeals opinion that he invented ad hoc rules of evidence to help the prosecution win. So, apparently, Perry thinks that lying, cheating, and general dishonesty qualify one for public office. Scary to think how many people wanted this man to be president.
ReplyDeleteTo people that know both Bradley and Skeen it truly shows you what kind of a Governor Rick Perry is. Even if you has somehow missed the presidential campaign debacle these two appointments alone would make you aware that good hair and good looks don't equal intellect and ability, nor do they impart a sense of justice.
ReplyDeleteI am sicken by the fact that John Bradley is even running for re-election. Skeen is also a disgrace however, the biggest disgrace is that Rick Perry paraded his ignorance all over the USA, in his bid for the presidency. Now, how dumb do all of us from Texas look for re-electioning this bumbling idiot for three terms as governor. I hope that Anderson, Bradley, Skeen, Perry and any other person that breaks the law ends up on the other side of the law in prison. Please do not re-elect any of these jerks! There are a lot more "Morton's" out there.
ReplyDeleteI think the people of Will Co spoke quite clearly by giving John Bradley the boot. He'd best hope that karma is a myth. Corrupt, dishonorable men: both John Bradley and Ken Anderson.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of, Ken Anderson was sentenced to 10 days. Not 10 years, 10 days. Quite an abortion of justice if you ask me. And we wonder why Texas is viewed so condescendingly: here's the reason.
Williamson County is corrupt though and through.
There are a few good people doing God's works on earth. Thank You Innocents Project!!!
ReplyDelete