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News The Fly-By

Shelby County D.A’s Office Prepares Defense on Ethics Charges

Two of Shelby County’s top prosecutors fired back last week at a state board that claims both should be disciplined for breaking ethics rules in the 2009 murder trial of Noura Jackson.

Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich and Assistant District Attorney Stephen P. Jones were both targeted for discipline by the Tennessee Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Responsibility (TBPR) in January. The Tennessee Supreme Court admits attorneys to practice law in the state, and its TBPR oversees and disciplines those attorneys for violations.

The TBPR opened investigations on Weirich and Jones in 2014. In a January 2016 petition, it claimed that Weirich violated Jackson’s constitutional right to silence in her trial when Weirich implored Jackson: “Just tell us where you were! That’s all we’re asking, Noura!”

Screenshot from video of the Jackson trial

The TBPR found that Jones withheld a key witness statement during the trial, evidence that could have helped Jackson’s defense. Both of these infractions swayed the jury’s decision in the trial, according to the TBPR, and might have unnecessarily sent Jackson to prison.

Jackson’s defense attorneys have said Weirich’s statement poisoned the jury against Jackson, as it appeared that Jackson did not want to answer Weirich’s question. Weirich said she was only reciting testimony from a witness in the trial, which is allowed by court rules.

In ordering Jackson a new trial in 2014, Tennessee Supreme Justice Cornelia Clark wrote that the statement withheld by Jones could have been used by Jackson’s attorneys “to bolster its attack upon the thoroughness of the police investigation and to argue” that the statement could have pointed to another suspect. Jones said while he did withhold the statement, he didn’t do it intentionally.

Both Weirich and Jones filed formal responses to the TBPR in the past two weeks. Both said they should not be punished by the TBPR. Both said they will not accept the board’s recommended discipline, a censure, which is a public rebuke of their actions that comes with some small fees and fines but no suspension of their law licenses.

Both said they will, instead, fight the rulings altogether in separate hearings that work much like criminal trials with witness testimony, evidence, and attorneys. The hearings are not open to the public. Taking the cases to trial, in essence, could result in harsher punishments for Weirich and Jones.

“No court has ever stated that Ms. Weirich acted with intent or was guilty of any ethical misconduct,” wrote Weirich’s attorney Jef Feibelman in his response to the TBPR. “Explicitly and implicitly they have found otherwise.”

Jones said he got the witness statement during the trial and put it in the flap of a trial notebook and forgot about it, though he did mean to turn the evidence over to Jackson’s attorneys. Jones’ attorney Brian Faughnan argued Jones’ action was “unintentional and inadvertent.” As such, he said it would be unfair to so strictly enforce court rules against Jones for an “innocent” mistake.

Jones’ attorney said that the trial caused “significant, atypical stress to Mr. Jones that impacted his health” and asked the board to consider this as a mitigating factor in their case against him.

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News News Blog

Weirich Says She’s Not Guilty of Misconduct in Jackson Trial

YouTube

Weirich (right, standing) implores Noura Jackson (far left, seated) ‘Just tell us where you were!’ during her closing argument.

An attorney for Shelby County District Attorney General (SCDAG) Amy Weirich said she is not guilty of any misconduct in the Noura Jackson trial and charges for discipline against her should be dropped.

These are the two of the biggest claims from Weirich’s attorney Jef Feibelman who filed a response for Weirich Friday to the Tennessee Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Responsibility (TBPR), the agency that oversees and disciplines attorneys in the state.

The TBPR filed a petition for discipline against Weirich last month. Its petition said during her closing argument against Jackson, Weirich improperly commented on Jackson’s Fifth Amendment right to remain silent at her trial by stating “in a loud tone of voice: ‘Just tell us where you were! That’s all we’re asking, Noura!’” (See video below.)

The TBPR also filed petition for discipline against Shelby County Assistant District Attorney Stephen P. Jones for not giving Jackson’s attorneys evidence that could have helped her defense during the trial. The TBPR said Jones has not yet responded to the petition.

The petition against Weirich is listed in 34 separate statements ranging from mundane facts like Weirich’s current work address to the chief charge that her conduct “caused actual injury” to Jackson, to others who participated in the trial, judicial resources, “and to the administration of justice.”

The state’s petition also asked that a hearing on Weirich’s case be convened and order discipline, if the hearing panel deems it fitting. The TBPR prescribed a censure of Weirich, which is a public rebuke of her actions that comes with a small fine but no suspension of her law license.

Weirich’s attorney responded to all 34 statements in the petition, admitting some of them (like her work address) but denying any that suggest wrongdoing on her part.

Feibelman says that opinions from the Tennessee Supreme Court, the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals, and the rulings of the trial court “establish conclusively…that Ms. Weirich is not guilty of any misconduct as charged.”

At the suggestions that Weirich’s closing-argument statements were improper, Feibleman said, “It is Ms. Weirich’s belief that she did not improperly comment on the right of” Jackson to remain silent at the trial.

He said the trial court found that Weirich was not asking the question to Jackson at the time, therefore violating her Fifth Amendment right to silence, but that Weirich was simply quoting a witness, Jackson’s aunt, from earlier in the trial.

“No court has ever stated that Ms. Weirich acted with intent or was guilty of any ethical misconduct,” Feibelman said in his response. “Explicitly and implicitly they have found otherwise.”

As far as the TBPR saying Weirich spoke in a “loud tone of voice,” Feibelman said “the trial of Noura Jackson was very intense and every lawyer, in the course of the trial, engaged in vigorous advocacy.” But, he said, Weirich admits to speaking the words.

Weirich also denied that her closing-argument statement was not supported by relevant or admissible evidence, as the TBPR claimed. Weirich also denies that her statement caused actual injury to Jackson’s defense, the other parties in the case, judicial resources, or the administration of justice.

The TBPR’s petition for discipline for Weirich states that after her misconduct in the case has been established, aggravating factors could be considered to justify an increase in the degree of discipline given to her.

“Ms. Weirich has substantial experience in the practice of law which justifies an increase in the degree of discipline,” reads the state’s petition.

Weirich’s attorney denies this “inasmuch as there has been no misconduct.” As to her level of experience, Feibelman said, “In fact, Ms. Weirich’s contributions to the profession and to her community as well as her many years in public service all speak in her favor.”

To watch Weirich say “Just tell us where you were! That’s all we’re asking, Noura!” — the phrases at the center of her possible discipline — scroll to the 3:27 mark of the video below.  

Weirich Claims No Guilt of Misconduct in Jackson Trial

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Opinion Viewpoint

Making Justice in Shelby County

Making a Murderer has outraged people across the country, but people don’t seem to notice when similar concerns exist in their own communities.  

Shelby County is a good example.

Making a Murderer is a Netflix documentary series that shines light on the questionable conviction of Steven Avery and his nephew, Brendan Dassey, for the rape and murder of Teresa Halbach. This close examination of a murder investigation and trial shows how hard it often is to know if the person accused of a murder is actually the one who did it, even when the police and prosecutors express certainty.

Solving any murder is hard enough. But when evidence is gathered through dubious means and when a prosecutor disregards ethical and legal boundaries in order to secure a conviction, we cannot know if a wrongful conviction has occurred. What’s worse, such actions also obscure the evidence that might have revealed the truth.  

Since Making a Murderer debuted, friends have been asking me if Avery’s story is an outlier. They are surprised and angry when I tell them that unethical and illegal prosecutorial practices can contribute to injustices around the country.

Shelby County is an illustrative example of how prosecutorial misconduct leads to unjust outcomes.   

When prosecutorial misconduct occurs, it’s typically not apparent. And even when revealed, prosecutorial misconduct is difficult to prove. It is all the more notable then that courts have found District Attorney General Amy Weirich and her office to have committed numerous injustices. Separately and together, they raise serious questions about exculpatory evidence being hidden from defendants, juror perceptions being improperly influenced, and unreasonably harsh and unjust punishments being pursued.

A current example is the murder conviction of Noura Jackson. In that case, D.A. Weirich and Assistant District Attorney Stephen P. Jones failed to turn over critical exculpatory evidence to the defense until after the trial. Weirich made improper and prejudicial comments during her closing argument, imploring the defendant to tell the jury where she was that night, in flagrant violation of Jackson’s constitutional right not to testify. The missing evidence was so important and Weirich’s conduct so improper, that the Tennessee State Supreme Court unanimously overturned Jackson’s conviction and ordered a new trial.

As a result, Weirich is one of the few prosecutors in the country facing public censure by a state Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Responsibility.

Unfortunately, the misconduct being explored in the current proceedings is not isolated. This is not the first time that Weirich and senior attorneys working under her supervision have faced public censure for withholding exculpatory evidence during a murder trial.

In the capital murder trial of Michael Rimmer, a judge found that senior prosecutor Tom Henderson blatantly lied to defense counsel, claiming that the state was unaware of any exculpatory evidence, even though he had evidence that a police sergeant had identified someone else as the murderer. The judge blasted Henderson, saying he “purposefully misled counsel with regard to the evidence obtained in the case.” Rimmer, who had been on death row since his conviction in 1998, was granted a new trial in 2012.

A public censure was issued by the Tennessee Supreme Court against Henderson in 2013. Henderson pleaded guilty, but was only ordered to pay a fine, and still practices in Weirich’s office. Weirich has refused to discipline Henderson for this conduct.

Federal Judge Gilbert Merritt perhaps said it best in 2008. Having presided over Shelby County cases for years, he wrote: “This set of falsehoods is typical of the conduct of the Memphis District Attorney’s office during this period.” These examples indicate that what was true of Weirich’s office in 2008 is still true.

Making a Murderer has outraged people across the country, but what those of us who study wrongful convictions know is that the problems plaguing the Avery case are not extraordinary, but shockingly common. And we know that once a case has been contaminated by bad evidence or prosecutorial abuse, it’s almost impossible to find the truth, unless it’s one of the small minority of cases where newly found evidence can be subjected to DNA testing.
Every jurisdiction in this country deserves prosecutions that are ethically and legally sound. The residents of Shelby County would do well to direct their concern about Making a Murderer not on Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, but on the daily realities in their own county.

Daniel S. Medwed, Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of Law.

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News The Fly-By

Q&A with Noura Jackson’s Attorneys

Noura Jackson recently asked her attorney, “What do you mean? You can just talk to your car and not hold the phone?” She didn’t know until recently who Mike Conley is. She couldn’t believe the Memphis Grizzlies were bigger than the University of Memphis Tigers.

Jackson has been out of touch for nearly 10 years, incarcerated since she was 17. Now 27, she’ll likely walk out of jail soon.

She was convicted in 2009 of the 2005 stabbing death of her mother, Jennifer Jackson. That conviction was overturned by the Tennessee Supreme Court last year, which cited then-Assistant District Attorney Amy Weirich with suppression of evidence in the case and illegal statements in her closing argument against Jackson.

Attorney Valerie Corder has worked on Jackson’s case at no charge for the past 10 years. Attorney Michael Working joined Corder on the case in November.

Corder said prosecutors “cheated and lied” in Jackson’s first trial. But, more importantly, she said they ignored physical evidence that she believes points to other, more likely suspects.

Flyer: Why did you take this case?

Valerie Corder: What was compelling to me was that you have a child born and raised in our community, who was simply abandoned by the structure of the community that should have been supporting her.

Michael Working: There’s really a shift in the law about some very basic principles about our country and our justice system at issue here. I’ve really enjoyed getting to know Noura over this case, and I really like Noura a lot. … But the case was bigger than Noura.

Do you think she committed the crime?

VC: There is no physical evidence that she was in any way involved. Quite the contrary, the physical evidence establishes that somebody else entirely separate and different from her was involved.

MW: There was a complete willingness to ignore the science, to ignore the real evidence. Anyway you slice it, the first trial was a public slut-shaming and character assassination of a young girl who hadn’t even started her life yet.

VC: [The trial tactic was]…we’ll trust that you won’t care whether she did it or not. You’ll dislike her so much, you’ll wish to punish her anyway. The Supreme Court said … that was a completely reprehensible trial tactic and the trial judge shouldn’t have permitted that evidence, and we will not permit it if there is a retrial.

What was Noura’s response to the plea deal?

VC: Her first comment was, “But they’re never going to try and find who really killed my mother.” In her childlike mind, she believed if she was acquitted at another trial, they’ll have to actually investigate this from the point of view of “Let’s see what the evidence says.” That was the bigger hurdle than, “You mean I can get out of here and have a bath and scratch a dog’s belly tomorrow?”

What will Noura do now?

MW: Going forward, I think she wants to lead a really simple life out of the public eye. I think she probably does want to do some things in terms of prison reform.

VC: Re-entry is an issue for anyone, but when you are in your formative years of being a teenager when you are institutionalized and that institutionalization lasts for 10 years, you do not develop normally. So, how do you set aside that 10-year deprivation and walk back out into the world?

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Cover Feature News

The Brady Bunch

The two attorneys met, as they’d agreed. They sat side by side and hefted the two large, accordion file folders onto the desk before them and began pulling out stacks of documents. It was not the showy legal work of television dramas; it was the inescapable tedium of reviewing the state’s evidence in a murder trial that had ended five years before. 

The work dragged on. Nothing surprised them, until something did. 

Here’s how Doug Carriker, a prosecutor in the Shelby County District Attorney’s Office, remembered the discovery in a court hearing last year.  

“A: On the outside of the manila envelope, about — just a standard size, maybe four inch by four inch yellow sticky pad note and it had language … something to the likes of ‘not turned over’ or ‘do not turn over to defense,’ and it had initials at the bottom and a date of, I want to say 2005 or so.

Q: Do you recall what the initials were?

A: ‘A’ — it was ‘A’ something, whatever Miss Weirich’s middle name is. A, something, W.”

Carriker and defense attorney Taylor Eskridge had met to review all of the evidence Amy Weirich (now the Shelby County District Attorney General) and her team used in 2005 to convict former middle school principal Vern Braswell of killing his wife.

Justin Fox Burks

DA Amy Weirich

Eskridge testified that the words on the sticky note were written boldly with some kind of broad-tipped marker. The words shocked Eskridge and abruptly stopped the attorneys’ work session. Here’s how she remembered that moment of discovery:

“…As we were going through, we were like, he was like ‘What’s this?’ And I was like shocked. …(The envelope) was closed with a seal that I recall. …What caught our attention was that it had some kind of note that made it clear that the defense couldn’t see it. … I think it said ‘do not show defense’ or something like that. But it was something that caught both of our attention.”  

Prosecutors choose the evidence they hand over to criminal defense attorneys. But federal law (called the Brady Rule) mandates prosecutors hand over any evidence that could help prove the innocence of the accused (called exculpatory evidence). The statements from Carriker and Eskridge — two attorneys who once plotted the other’s defeat in a high-profile murder trial — both point to a possible violation of this law.  

But it is not the first time Weirich’s office has come under fire for Brady violations. Two past murder cases are scheduled to be heard again in court this year in retrials that were won in part because of Brady violations. In fact, the issue was raised again just this week as Weirich recused herself Monday from the new trial for Noura Jackson, who was convicted of killing her mother.  

The discovery of the envelope back in 2011 is still rippling through the decade-old murder case. Braswell is now an inmate at the West Tennessee State Penitentiary, but he’s back in court with a new attorney and a set of new claims that he hopes will win him another trial. 

That discovery was at the core of the controversy for Weirich that boiled over right before the Thanksgiving holiday, when Weirich was ordered to take the stand before Shelby County Criminal Court Judge Paula Skahan. Weirich said she made all required evidence available to Braswell’s attorneys. And as for that manila envelope with the bombshell sticky note: 

“If there were such an envelope and there were such a notation, no, I don’t recall doing that and that was not and is not my practice,” Weirich said in her testimony.  

If Weirich did write those words, it’s possible she violated Braswell’s constitutional rights and broke one of the most basic rules governing prosecutors, which could in turn cost taxpayers thousands of dollars for a new trial. If the original manila envelope and the sticky note are ever found, they could help set free a convicted killer. And it might fundamentally change the public’s opinion of an elected official who just won reelection by a landslide.

A Trend Emerges

At the very least, the alleged statement on that sticky note raised again a troubling charge: that Weirich and some of her top attorneys have hidden evidence in big murder cases. At least two murder cases are set to be reheard this year because either Weirich or an attorney from her office kept evidence from defense attorneys. 

Noura Jackson

• Noura Jackson was convicted of stabbing her mother at least 50 times in 2005. A new trial was ordered for her in August because the Tennessee Supreme Court said Weirich did not give Jackson’s attorney a key witness statement and committed other violations during the trial.

Andrew Hammack was a friend of Jackson’s. She named him as a possible suspect in the murder of her mother, and the police suspected him, too. Hammack told police Jackson called and texted him from her house the night her mother was murdered. His testimony put Jackson at the scene of the crime on the night of the crime.

He later recanted his statement, telling police he was high on ecstasy on the night of the murder and that he didn’t even have his phone that night. Weirich did not give the recanted statement to Jackson’s attorneys. 

In a unanimous opinion from the Supreme Court, Justice Cornelia Clark wrote that it was “difficult to overstate the importance of this portion of Mr. Hammack’s statement” because Jackson’s attorneys could have used it to question the police investigation and “to argue that Mr. Hammack himself was a plausible suspect.” 

Jackson’s new trial was also granted because of Weirich’s blustery closing argument. In it, she turned to Jackson and dramatically implored the defendant to “just tell us where you were (on the night of the murder).” Jackson had decided not to testify in her defense and her attorneys said Weirich’s imperative statement directly to Jackson violated her right not to testify.  

• Michael Rimmer was convicted in two trials (in 1998 and 2004) of killing a hotel clerk whose body has never been found. He was granted a new trial in December 2013 because Thomas Henderson, a high-placed, veteran attorney in the Shelby County District Attorney’s office, did not give relevant evidence to Rimmer’s defense attorneys.

For this, the Tennessee Supreme Court’s Office of Professional Responsibility ordered a public censure of Henderson. The censure was a “public rebuke and a warning to the attorney, but does not affect the attorney’s ability to practice law,” according to a news release issued from the office at the time. Henderson also had to pay the court costs associated with the censure, which totaled $1,745.07.

Henderson argued the state’s case on both of Rimmer’s trials. Weirich pulled him from the new trial after the censure. She called this a “punishment” and a “huge step, and it was a tough conversation to have.” She ordered no other discipline.

• Now comes the case of Vern Braswell, who claims he didn’t murder his wife, Sheila Braswell, in 2004. He says they had rough sex the night she died, and he choked her until she passed out. But he claims she liked it that way, that the couple had a kinky sex life, and on the night of her death she asked for a “fixie,” their term for a round of erotic asphyxiation. 

But Braswell has a history of choking women as a hostile act, according to testimony recorded in court papers. He also had been seeing another woman right up until the time of his wife’s death. Divorce papers were found in Sheila’s purse after her death, and she had sought an order of protection from her husband. 

On the night of her death, Braswell says he and his wife were in the couple’s jacuzzi. They got intimate and moved to their bedroom “as a result of inadequate lubrication” in the jacuzzi. They got out of the bath and into the bedroom and had sex, sex that included a “fixie.” Afterward, Sheila complained of cramps in her abdomen and got back into the couple’s jacuzzi. 

Vern said he went to bed, where he waited for a show called Erotic Confessions to come on. He said he fell asleep at about 1:30 a.m. When he woke at about 3:40 a.m., Sheila was not in bed. Vern Braswell claimed she was in the bathtub with the jacuzzi jets still running. She showed no signs of life, her face and head were submerged in the water. He said he tried to remove her from the tub but couldn’t. He said he called 911, then a police friend of his, and then other family and friends to try to get help.

Three courts have ruled on the facts in the case. Braswell was convicted and lost two appeals. It may be unlikely that another court would hear those details and come up with a different verdict. But his lawyers do have some new facts and a new angle. They want to prove that Braswell and his wife did, indeed, have a kinky sex life and that choking was a part of that. It’s a defense that his former attorney, Javier “Jay” Bailey, crafted but didn’t initially like, he said in hearings in November. 

Bailey said he feared there would be a “creep factor” for a jury “thinking of a second grader’s principal choking a woman he’s having sex with.” But now, years after the original conviction, his attorneys are trying to prove exactly that. 

Braswell’s new attorneys say prosecutors had an unfair advantage in the original 2005 trial. They did not release statements from potential witnesses in the case that could have proved Vern and Sheila Braswell had a kinky sex life. And then there’s that one big unknown: the evidence in that manila envelope that the two opposing attorneys say they saw.

A National Problem?

Shelby County is hardly alone when it comes to cases of prosecutorial misconduct, especially Brady violations (hiding exculpatory evidence from defense attorneys). 

The University of Michigan Law School’s National Registry of Exonerations said in a 2013 report that 43 percent of wrongful convictions in 2012 were attributable to prosecutorial misconduct, including Brady violations, charging a suspect with too many offenses, pressuring witnesses not to testify, relying on fraudulent forensics experts, making improper or misleading statements to the jury, and more. 

“The overwhelming majority of lawyers who choose to become prosecutors are ethical,” said a 2013 white paper by the Maryland-based Center for Prosecutor Integrity (CPI). “But powerful incentives — political ambitions, media pressures, and a culture of prosecutorial infallibility — can serve to induce prosecutors to act unethically.”

Wrongful convictions were once less common. But with the advent of post-conviction DNA analysis in the 1980s, many convictions were overturned. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Chicago Tribune brought prosecutorial misconduct to the national stage with separate high-profile investigative reports in the 1990s. 

The national audience on the issue grew wider in 2007 when the North Carolina State Bar disbarred a district attorney there for “dishonesty, fraud, deceit, and misrepresentation” in the widely televised Duke University lacrosse case. This is all according to CPI’s white paper called, “Epidemic of Prosecutor Misconduct.”

When a case goes to a retrial due to the misconduct of government prosecutors, the cost of government goes up. The Center for Prosecution Integrity’s study did not put a dollar amount on the cost of retrials, nation-wide. But a 2008 investigation by The Dallas Morning News put the cost to Texas taxpayers at $8.6 million from 2001-2008. In Illinois, wrongful convictions on violent crimes from 1989 to 2010 cost taxpayers $214 million and imprisoned innocent people for a total of 926 years, according to a joint investigation by the Illinois-based nonprofit watchdog group, Better Government Association, and the Center on Wrongful Convictions. 

Brady violations returned to the national spotlight in a 2002 federal case against a Spokane man who made ricin, a deadly poison.

Kenneth Olsen was convicted by a federal jury of knowingly developing the biological agent for use as a weapon, according to the lawsuit. Olsen appealed for a new trial because while he admitted he made the poison, he said he didn’t intend to use it as a weapon.

Whether he did or didn’t hinged on the work of Washington State Police Forensic Scientist Arnold Melnikoff. But his work had been sloppy in the past, and at the time of the appeal, an investigation of the scientist had been conducted.

The U.S. Assistant District Attorney prosecuting Olsen’s case downplayed the investigation in “scope, status, and gravity.” The investigation was over, but the prosecutor told Olsen’s attorney it was ongoing, and “there is nothing further you should know about.” The investigation was, in fact, damning and Melnikoff was fired.

A federal judge requested that the case be reheard. A vote was taken by the panel of judges in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and Olsen did not win a retrial. Chief Judge Alex Kozinski wrote a scathing dissent of the decision, declaring “there is an epidemic of Brady violations abroad in the land.”

“[The decision] will send a clear signal to prosecutors that, when a case is close, it’s best to hide evidence helpful to the defense, as there will be a fair chance reviewing courts will look the other way, as happened here,” Kozinski wrote in December 2013. “A robust and rigorously enforced Brady rule is imperative, because all the incentives prosecutors confront encourage them not to discover or disclose exculpatory evidence. This creates a serious moral hazard for those prosecutors who are more interested in winning a conviction than serving justice.”

Who Prosecutes the Prosecutors?

In Tennessee, the very short answer to that question is the Tennessee Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Responsibility, which was created by the court in 1976 to supervise the ethical conduct of attorneys practicing in the state. 

The board is comprised of nine appointed attorneys and three appointed lay members. It now includes Memphians Margaret Craddock, former director of the Memphis Inter-Faith Association, and Odell Horton Jr., a partner at Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs. 

The board also publishes ethics opinions, hosts an ethics hotline, runs a consumer assistance program, and more. But its main focus is disciplinary enforcement of attorneys.  

In fiscal 2013, the board oversaw 21,142 active attorneys in the state. It received 1,474 complaints about attorneys and saw 79 formal cases filed. 

Anyone can file a complaint on an attorney, says Sandy Garrett, the board’s chief disciplinary counsel. But, she says, about a third of the complaints come from other lawyers and judges, “because they have a duty to report misconduct.” Should the board decide a complaint merits the status of actual misconduct, a trial is held, similar to that of a civilian court case, with discovery, witnesses, evidence, proof, and even subpoenas.

After the trial, the board can dismiss the case or sentence the accused attorney to punishments ranging from a public censure (which Henderson received last year) to disbarment. 

District attorneys are governed by the same rules as other attorneys, Garrett says, and are also bound by a set of special rules including mandates on probable cause and disclosing exculpatory evidence to defense attorneys.

“District attorneys have a tremendous amount of discretion, which is what we try and explain to folks again and again and again,” Garrett says. “Which is not to say they should be engaging in misconduct, but we get a lot of complaints about charging decisions, about whether or not a district attorney is ‘picking on somebody,’ or vice versa, that they are not charging somebody that somebody else thinks should be charged.”

Sanctions against prosecutors are relatively rare. The Center for Prosecutor Integrity says that between 1970 and 2003 there were 2,102 cases in which prosecutorial misconduct infringed on the constitutional rights of defendants. Fewer than 50 public sanctions were imposed on those prosecutors. 

“Professional discipline is rare, and violations seldom give rise to liability for money damages,” wrote Ninth Circuit Court Chief Judge Kozinski in his 2013 dissent on the Olsen ruling. “Criminal liability for causing an innocent man to lose decades of his life behind bars is practically unheard of.” 

Kozinski pointed to a 2013 case in Texas in which former prosecutor, Ken Anderson, suppressed evidence in a trial and sent an innocent man to prison for 25 years. Texas settled civil and criminal charges against the attorney by having him forfeit his law license, serve up to 10 days in jail, pay a $500 fine, and perform 500 hours of community service. 

Noura Jackson

The Next Step

It’s unclear what — if anything — will happen to Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich in light of the latest allegation of Brady violations against her office.

One thing’s for sure, though, that original manila envelope and its potential bombshell sticky note are long gone. Carriker, the prosecutor who originally discovered the evidence, said he and Eskridge didn’t open the envelope that day back in 2011. He wanted permission from his superiors first. 

The envelope went back into the state’s file. Carriker was assigned to another unit and never saw the envelope again. Neither did attorneys for Braswell. But they want it now and will likely use its absence in their case for a new trial. 

“I don’t know what’s in that envelope and that envelope is gone,” said Braswell’s new attorney, Lauren Fuchs, in court last year. “It disappeared. It’s no longer in the file. I’ve asked for it. They’ve looked for it. It’s gone.”

Another envelope and sticky note showed up in the Braswell hearings last year, but Carriker said the envelope wasn’t the same and Eskridge said the note didn’t read like the one she remembered. 

The new sticky note reads: “I am NOT giving these items in discovery. 8-22-05 APW.” Then there’s a later notation on the note that reads: “12-6-05 (Investigator Jencks’ statements) of witnesses who testified were turned over at the appropriate time.”

Whether or not the new envelope and sticky note are the originals, Judge Skahan deemed them important enough last year to be entered into evidence. In making sure that the new evidence stayed put, she called for a court officer — not either of the opposing attorneys — to make copies of it. New court dates in the Braswell case are scheduled for March and April.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Dubious Justice in Shelby County

Just based on his dubious record of courtroom failures, Erle Stanley Gardner’s literary fictional prosecutor, Hamilton Burger, the tenacious but inept antagonist of the brilliant defense attorney Perry Mason, wouldn’t seem to have been seen as an icon of jurisprudence. Yet, despite all his embarrassing setbacks as a Los Angeles district attorney, the author still respected Burger enough to label him as being a “stubborn, but honest” public servant in the pursuit of justice.

However, it was Burger’s errors in judgment that came to mind as the Tennessee Supreme Court again ruled in favor of a retrial for a convicted Shelby County inmate sentenced to the state’s death row.

In 2009, I reported on the gruesome double murder trial in the deaths of an elderly Bartlett couple, Clarence and Lillian James, at the hands of sadistic drifter, Henry Lee Jones. The evidence against Jones was overwhelming. He befriended the unsuspecting duo before tying them up, strangling both, and then slashing their throats. It took a jury only three hours to come back with two first-degree murder verdicts.

In overturning the verdicts, the Tennessee justices noted a trial error by former Shelby County Criminal Court Judge John Colton in allowing prosecutors Tom Henderson and John Campbell to tell jurors of Jones’ alleged killing of a 19-year-old man in Florida, just days before the Bartlett murders. They tried to link the cases together in an effort to show the details of the Bartlett deaths indicated the style of “signature crime” Jones committed in Florida. The justices didn’t agree with the comparison, declaring it was too prejudicial to have been introduced at trial.

The Jones case becomes one of four murder convictions now requiring retrials that were judicially kicked back into the lap of the Shelby County District Attorney General’s office within the space of less than a year.

In December 2013, the state justices reprimanded Henderson, a 38-year veteran Shelby County prosecutor, for withholding evidence in the 1998 trial of convicted murderer Michael Rimmer. Rimmer was accused of killing his ex-girlfriend, Ricci Ellsworth, in a case in which her body was never found after disappearing from her work as a motel clerk. Henderson, as the lead prosecutor, was cited for not divulging to the defense that another witness had seen a different man at the crime scene where Ellsworth was last seen. A lead detective was also accused of providing false testimony. However, despite the high court’s ruling, Henderson was not reprimanded or censured by his boss, Attorney General Amy Weirich.

In 1999, Robert Faulkner was convicted and sent to death row after bludgeoning his wife with a skillet during a domestic dispute. At the time of the trial Faulkner showed no remorse, earning the nickname “Skillet” after telling homicide investigators his spouse got what she deserved. Only, this year, it was discovered that the foreman of the jury that convicted Faulkner had intentionally withheld the fact she herself had been a victim of domestic abuse. With a tainted jury, the justices had no recourse but to overturn the conviction and order a new trial.

Also expected to be retried is Noura Jackson, convicted of stabbing her mother Jennifer Jackson 50 times at their home in 2009. But, the justices decided that conviction was tainted by several legal irregularities, including another withholding of evidence charge, this time leveled against Weirich, who was the lead prosecutor at the Jackson trial.

I’m not naïve enough to think that in a county where prosecutors have sent three times as many people to death row as any other county in Tennessee, the majority of the convicted don’t deserve to be where they are. But, I have heard from more than one defense attorney in Memphis that the current atmosphere in this district attorney’s office is “win at all costs.”

The mistakes made in the cases of Henry Lee Jones and Robert Faulkner might be ruled “technicalities,” but the flagrant withholding of evidence is not only disturbing, it’s at best, unethical, at worst, criminal. The district attorneys are supposed to be beacons of the law. Their misbehavior means putting families of the victims through the agony of reliving the gory details of the heinous deaths of their loved ones. And that’s not to mention the many thousands of dollars it costs taxpayers to retry these cases.

I respect stubbornness, but we should never pursue convictions at the expense of surrendering justice for all. Even a perennial loser like Hamilton Burger understood that.