http://www.memphisflyer.com/content.asp?ArticleID=6&ID=5838

The Rest of the Story
Two Memphis federal court cases get lopsided coverage from local media.
JOHN BRANSTON

Media coverage of two big pending federal court cases -- one involving former medical 
examiner O.C. Smith and one involving football booster Logan Young -- again failed to 
note the significance of the latest developments.

In the Smith case, a fellow medical examiner concluded that the Shelby County Regional 
Forensic Center is unresponsive and handles evidence carelessly and that Smith, 
accused of faking a bizarre attack on himself in 2002, made statements under oath with 
professional certainty that were actually "opinions" and "speculative."

In Young's case, a judge promised to act within a month on a motion to dismiss the 
case. In a related case in Alabama, two University of Alabama officials gave 
affidavits about the NCAA investigation of the Albert Means recruiting case that 
suggest that it may be a house of cards.

The Commercial Appeal, heavily invested in the credibility of Smith in general and in 
the NCAA and state and federal prosecutors in Young's case, ignored key elements of 
both stories.

Taking the Smith case first, Smith's apologists put a positive spin on Nashville 
medical examiner Bruce Levy's report last month, in which Levy agreed that Philip 
Workman fired the gunshot that killed Memphis police lieutenant Ronald Oliver in 1981. 
Workman is on death row.

Governor Phil Bredesen asked Levy to review Smith's testimony in clemency hearings for 
Workman in 2000 and 2001. (Smith is under federal indictment for giving false 
statements about the alleged attack on him.) Last year, Bredesen issued a stay of 
execution for Workman pending completion of the Smith investigation. When the feds 
called Smith a liar, the governor asked Levy to review his Workman testimony.

"I am not at all surprised by Dr. Levy's opinion," said Shelby County district 
attorney general Bill Gibbons. "It is what I expected. Twenty-two years ago, a jury of 
citizens decided that Philip Workman deserved the death penalty. It is past time to 
carry out that decision."

Levy's report, however, should give pause to any prosecutor dependent on Smith. It is 
anything but an endorsement. On the contrary, Levy was critical of Smith on several 
counts, including his work on the Workman case. "There was initial difficulty locating 
the original autopsy materials" from Smith's office, according to Levy. Levy requested 
materials from Smith's office in February but was told that they were missing. "They 
were eventually located after my fourth request, reportedly during a search of the 
basement of the Shelby County Regional Forensic Center on or about April 2, 2004. They 
were reportedly in an unlabeled evidence bag behind some boxes."

Levy said he is "concerned about the obvious violation of the proper handling and 
storage of autopsy evidence and materials, especially given recent allegations of 
other missing evidence from the forensic center."

The "missing evidence" is body parts. Smith also allowed the professional 
certification of the office to lapse. The highly secretive office was as sloppy and 
unresponsive to the governor as it was to local media. And in Workman's case, 
"Although the recovered bullet could be the bullet that killed Lt. Oliver, Smith's 
opinion that it is the fatal bullet to the exclusion of all others is speculative," 
Levy wrote.

This is the medical examiner whom Gibbons and fellow prosecutors have relied on in 
hundreds of close cases that are matters of life and death.

In Logan Young's case, U.S. District Judge Daniel Breen said last week he will rule 
within 30 days on a defense motion to dismiss. Such motions are commonplace, but this 
one plausibly argues that even if Young gave money to former high school football 
coach Lynn Lang, it wasn't a federal crime because it would not have corrupted Lang in 
the performance of his public duties as a football coach. Defense attorney Robert 
Hutton says it is analogous to a parent paying a teacher to tutor a child as opposed 
to bribing a teacher to give a child a high grade.

Breen has already affirmed an order of U.S. magistrate Diane Vescovo requiring the 
NCAA and University of Tennessee football coach Phil Fulmer to produce tapes and 
records. Federal prosecutors have appealed. The next court date is May 24th.

Meanwhile, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Circuit Court, university officials Gene Marsh and 
Marie Robbins were dismissed from a related case because the plaintiffs decided they 
were "used and misled" by the NCAA and the university in the investigation of 
Alabama's football program. Marsh is a law professor and a member of the NCAA Division 
I Committee on Infractions. Robbins is associate athletic director. The plaintiffs are 
former Alabama football coaches Ronnie Cottrell and Ivy Williams.

Marsh says in an affidavit that the NCAA "failed to share information they had 
received with us and failed to allow us to take efforts to prevent impropriety from 
occurring" in the Means case. 

Date created: 5/6/2004 



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