When my cousin was 16 she was living with relatives and was home when their house was gutted by a fire. A week later they found an empty charcoal lighter fluid bottle with 2 of her fingerprints on it, as well as several other smeared finger prints that they could not identify as hers. She denied she was the one who started the fire, and I believe her, but due to being the only one there (was sick in bed,) they are “positive“ she did it even though she nearly burned in her bedroom on the second story. I went to her trial and even read the trials document word for word. All they had was those fingerprints on the bottle, yet they did not even know what flammable liquid was used. What is more is it was a standard plastic one which they found out of the way of where the fire started (she is smart, so why wouldn‘t she have burned it?) plus the area in which they said it started and was spread is a larger area then that bottle alone could have covered. Her relatives were an uncle and his wife she had been living with for a year. Her Uncle was a deputy Sheriff while she had been a Sheriff explorer, which is basically like boy/girl scouts for law enforcement. What is more a few months before the fires they had had an insurance agent asses the value of the property inside, and then about a week and a half before the fire, there had been a different one she had not been home for. It just caused a lot of smoke damage so clothing etc were all sent to cleaners, except a work/school weeks worth of clothing and pillows/sheets (summer.) Not long after they had insurance on their place they had a garage sale and sold most of the valuable stuff, saying they wanted to get newer things since they had all just moved there a year ago. In the trial her relatives had said they lost everything, but my cousin remembers helping them go through things that were just fine, or weren’t even there due to being sold, the week before she was arrested. Also she since she was 16 she was being tried as a juvenile. When they brought her in to “ask” her questions and told her they would just read her, her rights due to having to with everyone who comes in to be talked to. Her relatives had not been her legal guardian yet, and they did not notify her guardian, nor did they bring an attorney into the actual interrogation (“questioning”,) while asking her questions. Before they even had her fingerprints to try and match the ones on the bottle they began accusing her of this and even handcuffed her to chain at her feet. Of course she was found guilty of felony arson with a LARGE restitution that is unlikely to ever be fully paid in her lifetime. She was given 8 years (back in 2001 around 9/11,) and committed to a youth authority. After having been in custody for 1 ½ years (up for juvenile parole in another 1 ½,) she had a talk with her therapist in there who believed in her innocence. Her therapist told her that anyone here is not “innocent,” and unless she “admits” her guilt and jumps through all the hoops they want her to, she will spend her whole 8 years there. So she “admitted” her guilt and after serving over 3 years she was paroled. Now understand my cousin was a good girl, she has had a hard life, but was very positive about her future getting nearly straight A’s and doing after school activities. She is now in her early 20’s and due to her high restitution she will not be able to get her records sealed, nor be released off of parole till 25, even though if she had no restitution she would have been able to be let go due to good behavior. She had been a model inmate, and is now a model parolee. Is there anything she can do to get her named cleared, or get a new trial? She is on a very low-income and there is no one who had enough money to help her with a real attorney. Also she still has almost 3 years of parole left. How did they find her guilty with no real evidence, only circumstantial?
2007-09-28
16:05:36
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7 answers
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Law & Ethics