News
Supreme Court rejects death row inmate's appeal
|
10:24 AM on 11/30/2009 |
| Join Our Mailing List |
An undated police file photogragh of Kevin Cooper
(San Bernardino County Police Department photographic records)
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court has rejected an appeal from a California death row inmate who was convicted in the gruesome murders of four people in 1983.
The justices said Monday they would not review an appeals court ruling that upheld the murder conviction and death sentence of Kevin Cooper.
Cooper came within a few hours of execution in 2004 before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals stepped in to order genetic testing on a hair and a bloody shirt found at the murder scene that Cooper said would prove he was not the killer.
The San Francisco-based appeals court later backed a district judge's ruling that the test results did not show Cooper's innocence.
Cooper, who has long maintained his innocence, had escaped from a California state prison. He was convicted of the murders of Douglas and Peggy Ryen, both 41, their 10-year-old daughter, Jessica, and Christopher Hughes, her friend. They were stabbed and hacked repeatedly with a hatchet and buck knife. Joshua Ryen, then 8, survived a slit throat.
Cooper claimed a trio of murderers committed the attacks and said the DNA tests would exonerate him.
Prosecutors persuaded a jury of Cooper's guilt, but the investigation was plagued with problems.
Judge M. Margaret McKeown agreed with the outcome in the 9th Circuit, but noted that important evidence in Cooper's case was "lost, destroyed or left unpursued." That included blood-covered overalls that a detective threw away and a missing bloody T-shirt.
"The forensic evidence in this case is critical and yet was compromised," she wrote. "These facts are all the more troubling because Cooper's life is at stake."
McKeown also said the criminologist in charge of the evidence turned out to be a heroin addict who was later fired for stealing drugs seized by the police.
"The result is wholly discomforting," she wrote. "But one that the law demands."
The case is Cooper v. Wong, 09-363.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
-
Women's shaved hair revolution taking shape
-
Rap Genius: The top 5 rap lyrics of the week -- Pusha T talks money
-
New MLK assassination footage revealed in Smithsonian Channel doc
-
Komen won't cut breast-screening grants to Planned Parenthood
-
NBA All-Star roster revealed: From Kobe to Chris Paul, LA teams dominate
-
The 10 most memorable presidential campaign themes (SLIDESHOW)
-
Angelo Dundee dead: Legendary trainer for Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard dies at 90
-
Black stars shine at 2012 SAG Awards (SLIDESHOW)
-
'Key & Peele' set to kick off: What are the best Obama parodies?
-
Anthony Mackie in 'Man on a Ledge': Is he the next Denzel? (SLIDESHOW)
-
Black unemployment: What Washington can do now to address the high black jobless rate
-
The trouble with Trump's Romney endorsement: It's the birtherism, stupid
-
Eddie Long 'crowning': Why do black churches often put pastors on a pedestal?
-
Why Jan Brewer's disrespect will motivate black voters for Obama
-
Trump endorsement may hurt, not help Romney
Popular Topics
- Barack Obama: 1767 Stories
- Music: 746 Stories
- Hip Hop: 622 Stories
- Basketball: 449 Stories
- Economy: 438 Stories
- Football: 428 Stories
- Congress: 426 Stories
- NFL: 424 Stories
- NBA: 406 Stories
- Unemployment: 404 Stories
- Haiti: 394 Stories
- Film: 378 Stories
- New York: 377 Stories
- Election2012: 368 Stories
- Michael Jackson: 358 Stories
- Michelle Obama: 357 Stories
- Republicans: 356 Stories
- Murder: 348 Stories
- Democrats: 334 Stories
- Education: 304 Stories



COMMENT NOW
print