USA - California. The State Supreme Court overturned Kenneth Earl Gay’s conviction

05 March 2020 :

The California Supreme Court decided unanimously Thursday to overturn a man’s conviction in the killing of a Los Angeles Police Department officer 37 years ago during a traffic stop, according to a newspaper report. Citing extensive evidence that the defense lawyer for Kenneth Earl Gay was incompetent, the state high court reversed the 1985 conviction that sent Gay to death row in Officer Paul Verna’s killing in 1983, the Los Angeles Times reported. Gay is now 60, White. In 1998, the California Supreme Court overturned the first death sentence on the grounds of incompetent counsel, but left intact the guilty verdict. After a retrial, a San Fernando jury in October 2000 unanimously recommended death, and Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge L. Jeffrey Wiatt agreed on Dec. 5, 2000. But on March 20, 2008 (see) the second death sentence also was overturned. Gay then argued that his lawyer, Daye Shinn, also botched the guilty phase of his trial. Shinn, who was later disbarred and has since died, lied to get Gay’s case, according to evidence. The lawyer also counseled the defendant to admit to incriminating evidence and failed to introduce evidence that might have persuaded a jury to acquit him or spare his life, the newspaper said. Both Gay and a co-defendant, Raynard Cummings, were passengers in the stolen car stopped by motorcycle officer Verna. Witnesses disagreed about which man shot Verna. Both were convicted and sentenced to death. “We cannot say Gay’s murder conviction was the product of a trustworthy adversarial process,” Justice Leondra R. Kruger wrote for the court. “Defense counsel obtained appointment to represent Gay through fraud, counseled him to make damaging confessions to the prosecution ... and failed to conduct a timely investigation into available testimony from eyewitnesses who would have exculpated Gay and peace officers who would have inculpated Gay’s co-defendant.” Verna was 35 when he was fatally shot. While on death row, Gay wrote a screenplay, “A Children’s Story,” which won an American Film Institute contest in 1994. Actor Ed Asner, a judge for the contest, testified on behalf of Gay during his retrial. Los Angeles prosecutors will now decide whether to retry Gay.

 

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