Current Events > A prosecution touted by Klobuchar might have gotten the wrong guy

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Antifar
01/28/20 11:55:35 AM
#1:


https://apnews.com/3417e8e96a8acba905a6c54cd9757f0c

During a presidential debate, Amy Klobuchar defended her tough-on-crime record during her days as a top Minneapolis prosecutor.

She recounted a story that has helped propel her political career, including her 2007 Senate bid: Members of the African American community were seeking justice for kids killed in gun violence, she said. When a little girl was struck by a stray bullet while doing homework at the dining room table, Klobuchars office helped put away the shooter.

But what if Myon Burrell a black teen sentenced to life in prison was innocent?

A year-long Associated Press investigation has uncovered new evidence and myriad inconsistencies in the police investigation.

With no gun, no DNA, no fingerprints, the case against Burrell revolved around a teen rival who gave conflicting accounts of the shooting. Later, police turned to jailhouse informants, some of whom say they were coached and have since recanted. Alibis were not questioned. Key evidence has gone missing or was never obtained, including a convenience store surveillance tape that Burrell and others say would have cleared him. And the chief homicide detective was caught on camera offering cash for information -- even if it was just hearsay.

Burrell, now 33, has maintained his innocence.

His co-defendants have confessed to the crime that tragically took the life of 11-year-old Tyesha Edwards in 2002, saying Burrell was not even there.

For years, one of them has insisted he was actually the trigger man.

Im the one that did this, said Ike Tyson, who is serving a 45-year-sentence. I did it.

___

The Minneapolis police declined to comment for this story. Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freemans office said its confident the correct person was convicted but its always open to reviewing new evidence.

A spokesperson for Klobuchars campaign said Burrell was tried and convicted in Tyeshas murder twice, and the second trial occurred when Klobuchar was no longer the Hennepin County Attorney. If there was new evidence, she said, it should be immediately reviewed by the court.

When Klobuchar became top prosecutor in Hennepin County in 1999, crime rates were just starting to fall. But the streets were still flooded by drugs and guns, and Tyeshas death set off an uproar.

Three suspects were rounded up and charged with murder in less than a week.

Ike Tyson, 21, and Hans Williams, 23, were easy. They were seen driving by minutes before the shooting, and one of their girlfriends called 911. Both have confessed.

Burrell was harder. His name was dropped by a jailhouse informant hours after the shooting, helping steer the police investigation.

The lead homicide detective was seen on police video offering major dollars for information, even if it was unconfirmed.

Hearsay is still worth something to me, Sgt. Richard Zimmerman told a man in his interrogation room. Sometimes you get hearsay here, hearsay there. Sometimes its like a jigsaw puzzle, things come together, you know what I mean?

The man said he didnt know much, but gave up a few names. He pocketed $600 for just one: Burrells.

It was around 3 p.m. on Nov. 22, 2002.

Tyson and Williams were driving in south Minneapolis when they spotted a group of guys hanging out. One of them was 17-year-old Timmy Oliver, a rival, who had waved a gun at them weeks earlier.

They drove on, picked up an unidentified acquaintance, got a gun and headed back. They parked a block away, with Williams waiting in the drivers seat for a quick getaway. Tyson and the third man jumped out, cutting through an alley. Obscured by a wall, Tyson fired at Oliver.

Soon after the shooting, Tyson was telling everyone who would listen that Burrell was not at the scene, court records show. But he said his lawyer told him hed never see the outside of a prison unless he implicated the youth. Eventually he buckled, but only after being promised his plea would not be used against Burrell.

Tyson has never named the other man who was with him, saying he doesnt want to pull in a person who was only peripherally involved.

The getaway driver, Hans Williams, did identify a third man, by name and photograph. A 2005 police interview with that suspect was permanently checked out by the Hennepin County Attorneys Office, and now cant be found.

The star witness for the prosecution in Burrells first trial was Oliver, the intended target.

The 17-year-old was interviewed by police for eight hours, before signing a statement saying he saw Burrell standing across the street in an open lot between two houses. Later, as a star witness for the prosecution, Oliver said he could see the 53 Burrell firing from behind a 5-foot wall, 120 feet away.

But thats not what Oliver was saying the day of the shooting, according to his best friend, Antoine Williams.

I asked Timmy at the time, Who, who did the shooting? he said in a taped interview with a private investigator hired by one of Burrells attorneys. He said, I couldnt see where it was coming from.

Oliver died a year later. Without their sole eyewitness, police turned to seven jailhouse informants to bolster their case ahead of Burrells second trial.

Terry Arrington, a member of a rival gang, was one of them.

He says he did not have any information about the case, but was told, if he cooperated, his time would be cut from more than 16 years to three. They basically brought me through what to say.

He got his deal, but now lives with that burden. At least one other informant has recanted.

The afternoon of the shooting, Burrell said, he was playing video games with a group at his friends house. Hungry, they decided to pick up something at a nearby convenience store, just a few hundred yards from Tyeshas house.

Though police mentioned two people who were with him at the store, there is no record detectives tried to track them down. And they told AP they never talked to police. Police also did not pull stores surveillance tapes that Burrell says could have cleared him.

During his 3-hour interrogation, Burrell didnt ask for an attorney, he asked for his mom. Thirteen times. Police would later rule that his rights had been violated.

Initially, Burrell thought police would realize they had the wrong guy, and hed be home. But things kept getting worse. Burrell was certified as an adult and placed in solitary confinement.

One month later, his mother was driving home after a prison visit. She swerved off the road, crashing into a tree. The car burst into flames, kil
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darkmaian23
01/28/20 12:36:42 PM
#2:


The man should be immediately freed, paid a large sum of money by the state, and everyone involved in putting him away should replace him in prison and serve out his sentence. There really is no excuse in the modern age for a "tough on crime stance", and I'm disgusted that Klobuchar ever touted that as a positive. All it results in is more arrests to fill our already maxed out prisons, wrongful convictions to close cases, and ridiculously long sentences.

At this point, I'm convinced that anyone who supports being "tough on crime" hasn't read any of the statistics or is being fed bullshit by conservative news. When Democrats talk about reducing the prison population, they aren't talking about murders or creepers, they mean nonviolent offenders serving long sentences. I think the most pathetic excuse I've heard for the tough on crime stance is that if you don't keep making tougher laws, it hurts police moral. Yeah, that's a thing apparently.
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Zikten
01/28/20 12:44:20 PM
#3:


it's depressing how many innocent people we have in prison
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darkmaian23
01/29/20 1:54:55 AM
#4:


Zikten posted...
it's depressing how many innocent people we have in prison
Indeed. I wish this topic were getting more attention.
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LightningAce11
01/29/20 1:58:12 AM
#5:


It should be a very harsh punishment for those who put the wrong person away. Jail sentence, stripped of licence, fired from jobs.

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