Judge Frees Detroit Man Who Falsely Confessed To Quadruple Murder At 14

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Sanford gave an inaccurate confession to the killings on the advice of an attorney.


A Michigan court threw out the convictions and sentence of a man who was 14 when he pleaded guilty to a 2007 quadruple homicide in Detroit that a professional hit man later confessed to committing, prosecutors and defense attorneys said on Tuesday.

Davontae Sanford’s sentence of up to 90 years was vacated by Wayne County Judge Brian Sullivan, according to statements from the Dykema Gossett law firm, which handled Sanford’s appeal, and the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office, which also moved to overturn the conviction after a reinvestigation.

After being arrested in 2007, Sanford gave an inaccurate confession to the killings and pleaded guilty to four counts of second-degree homicide on the advice of an attorney now suspended from the practice of law, the Dykema Gossett statement said.

“In April 2008, two weeks after Sanford’s sentencing, a professional hit man, Vincent Smothers, confessed to the Runyon Street killings and eight additional murders,” the statement from the law firm said.

More than 1,810 exonerations have been recorded in the United States since 1989, for murder and other crimes, and the pace has increased steadily over the years to about three a week, according to the National Registry of Exonerations run by the University of Michigan Law School.

The trend has been driven both by so-called innocence projects run by law schools and by special units established within prosecutors’ offices to examine possible false confessions and official misconduct.

In the Detroit case, the judge ordered prosecutors to file a motion to dismiss the case, which means Sanford will not be retried, said a statement from Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy’s office.

State police reinvestigated the case and found that a deputy who originally gave sworn testimony that Sanford drew an accurate diagram of the crime scene, later contradicted that testimony, the prosecutor’s office’s statement said.

The Michigan Innocence Clinic and other groups that work to overturn wrongful convictions had appealed the conviction, arguing that Smothers’ confession matched the details of what happened in the murders, while Sanford’s did not.

(Reporting by Fiona Ortiz in Chicago; Editing by Peter Cooney)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/detroit-free-confessed-murder_us_5758a7ace4b0ced23ca70094
 
http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/...gn=Breaking News Alert&utm_term=wdiv_breaking

Warrant pending for ex-deputy Detroit police chief Tolbert in Davontae Sanford case

James Tolbert accused of undermining prior testimony under oath
By Halston Herrera - Digital news editor
Posted: 11:25 AM, June 09, 2016 Updated: 11:32 AM, June 09, 2016

DETROIT - A former deputy Detroit police chief could face criminal charges after a state police investigation found problems with how an alleged confession was obtained in the Devontae Sanford case.

James Tolbert was the deputy police chief in 2007 when Sanford, then 14, was arrested and subsequently pleaded guilty to killing four people in a home on Runyon Street.


A big piece of evidence was a drawing by Sanford that detailed the crime scene.

"The signed sketch was a key piece of evidence because it demonstrated knowledge of a crime scene," Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said. “Mr. Sanford being able to draw the sketch would demonstrate that all of the information came directly from his recollection or from his participation in the crime.”

Worthy said Tolbert testified that Sanford created the drawing on a blank piece of paper. However, in a follow-up interview with state police, Worthy said Tolbert "responded to questions that undermined his prior testimony under oath that Mr. Sanford created the sketch from a blank piece of paper.”

Worthy said Tolbert is heard on tape during the state police interview, saying, "I drew the house."

"This called into question Tolbert's credibility in the case," Worthy said.

A warrant was submitted by state police in May. Worthy said it's still under review.

Tolbert was with the Detroit Police Department until 2013, when he left to become the chief of police in Flint. He was fired from that job in February.

Judge Brian Sullivan this week dismissed Sanford's four guilty pleas to second-degree murder at the request of prosecutors.



:angry::angry::angry: Fuckin' cops railroaded this kid.
 
Coon *******

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Justiced served better late than never!! Its sum sad stuff though we have to go through... i mean dude was just a kid taken advantage of.. young enough to still start over..wow just wow
 
Detroit reaches $7.5M deal in Davontae Sanford wrongful conviction lawsuit

DETROIT – The city of Detroit has reached a $7.5 million settlement with a man who entered prison as a teenager and spent eight years there before a prosecutor agreed to drop four murder convictions.
Davontae Sanford was just 15 when he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the fatal shootings of four people in 2007.
But the case took a strange turn when a professional hit man, Vincent Smothers, stepped forward and said he was responsible for the killings, not Sanford.
The financial settlement with Sanford is on the Detroit City Council's agenda Tuesday.
Although he pleaded guilty, Sanford later insisted he was innocent and took a plea deal only because he felt helpless and poorly represented by a lawyer. He was 14 at the time of the murders.
In 2016, the convictions were dropped at the request of Wayne County prosecutor Kym Worthy and Sanford was released from prison.

Worthy, however, did not cite Smothers as the reason. She said misconduct by Detroit police during Sanford's interrogation had spoiled the case.
At the time, David Moran, director of the Innocence Clinic at the University of Michigan’s law school, said the case revealed a “complete breakdown” in the criminal justice system. The clinic as well as the law school at Northwestern University helped free Sanford.
Smothers, meanwhile, has never been charged in the Runyon Street homicides. He was sentenced to 52 years in prison after pleading guilty in 2010 to eight other killings.
Smothers said he was regularly hired by drug dealers to kill others in the trade but would never take on a teenager as a sidekick.



 
How you gonna get freed from jail then do some stupid shit like that with an assault rifle? He must miss inside
 
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