June 14




TEXAS:

Man facing Capital Murder charge for death of EPPD officer pleads 'not guilty'


The man accused of intentionally crashing into police officer David Ortiz pleaded 'not guilty' in court Tuesday morning.

45-year-old John Paul Perry is charged with Capital Murder and Unauthorized Use of a Motor Vehicle, the same vehicle he allegedly drove into Officer Ortiz's motorcycle in East El Paso, killing him.

ABC-7 learned Tuesday Joe Spencer is Perry's new court-appointed defense attorney.

"We just got appointed late last week. I visited with Mr. Perry and I'm very confident after visiting with him, that Mr. Perry did not intentionally mean to cause any harm to anyone," Spencer said.

Spencer said the district attorney's office has to make a decision on whether it intends to seek the death penalty. "We're going to wait for that decision. I think the judge gave them a pretty short deadline and hopefully by next week we're going to know what that decision is and we'll be able to proceed with this case.

ABC-7 has confirmed with Sheriff's officials that Perry, believed to be a member of the Barrio Azteca gang, is being held at the Downtown jail in "separation," meaning he is being kept away from the general population.

Police charged Perry with Capital Murder, claiming he intentionally ran over Officer Ortiz.

? Perry was also charged with unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. That vehicle is the 2006 Kia Optima that Perry allegedly drove into Ortiz's motorcycle at an East Side stop light on March 10.

ABC-7 spoke with the owners of the Kia Optima listed on the incident police report, but they said they sold the car more than two years ago and it was apparently never re-registered by the new owner. They could not recall who they sold the vehicle to.

(soruce: KVIA news)






FLORIDA:

Tommy Zeigler trial plagued by 'significant' problems, report says


An investigative journalism center on Monday published a critical probe of death-ow inmate William "Tommy" Zeigler's 1976 trial, finding that evidence supporting his innocence went overlooked by authorities who investigated the quadruple murder inside his Winter Garden furniture store.

The new report by students at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism comes as a judge considers Zeigler's latest request for DNA testing, an attempt to prove he did not kill his wife, in-laws and a customer 40 years ago on Christmas Eve. It also adds to a growing body of work that questions Zeigler's conviction, including a television movie and a book.

In particular, the report examines new ballistic evidence and what would have been the testimony of 2 key witnesses who were never called to the trial. The students also interviewed Zeigler, now 70, 3 times at Union Correctional Institution near Raiford.

"The students' findings challenge, in many ways, the basic foundations of the entire prosecution," said Alec Klein, the professor who leads the award-winning, national investigative journalism center. "Given that a person's life is on the line here, facing the death penalty, I wonder how the court could justify not allowing Tommy Zeigler to go forward with the DNA testing."

The Orange-Osceola State Attorney's Office has stood by Zeigler's conviction over the decades. Most recently, prosecutors opposed a pending request to have blood-stained clothing from the crime scene retested with more modern DNA techniques. At a March hearing, Assistant Kenneth Nunnelley cited 2 previous opinions from the Florida Supreme Court, which found that evidence about whose blood was on Zeigler's shirt wasn't enough to exonerate him.

Since Zeigler's 1976 trial, prosecutors have alleged Zeigler planned the murders because he wanted to claim his wife's insurance policies, and he shot himself in the stomach to make him seem like a victim too. Eunice Zeigler, her parents Perry and Virginia Edwards and store customer Charles Mays were killed. Zeigler argued they were attacked in a store robbery instigated by Mays.

The Medill report contends it's "practically unheard of" for a person seeking to cover up a crime to choose such a risky - even deadly - way. An analysis of the gunshot wound to Zeigler's lower torso shows he would have used his non-dominant left hand, based on the angle of the bullet, to shoot himself and did not press the muzzle to his body for stability. More often, cover-up attempts include shots to limbs, Klein said.

The report also zeroes in on 2 witnesses, Ken and Linda Roach, who said they drove by the store around the time of the masscre and heard 12 to 15 gunshots within four seconds. An expert interviewed in the story said it's "virtually impossible" for 1 person to fire a single person to fire a non-automatic weapon so quickly, lending more credibility to Zeigler's claim that he and his family were attacked by a group of people led by Mays.

The Roaches told Medill that authorites weren't intersted in their account and didn't tell them how to contact Zeigler's attorneys. 1 of Zeigler's trial attorneys brought up the Roach evidence in a 1986 appeal to a federal appellate court, which won Zeigler's a temporary stay from impending execution.

(source: Orlando Sentinel)


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