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The Austin Chronicle: Chronic: Habitually Updated Buzz 4/17/08 10:24 AM
Prosecutors Say New DNA Evidence in Yogurt Shop Case Doesn't
'Exonerate' Defendant
A lawyer for yogurt shop defendant Robert Springsteen says that
retested DNA evidence proves hisclient is not guilty, and that
Springsteen should be released from prison. In the writ, filed
Wednesday morning, attorney Joe James Sawyer argues that “new” DNA
testing of a vaginal swab taken from 13 year-old victim Amy Ayers at
the crime scene in 1991 – testing requested by Travis Co. prosecutors –
has revealed a previously undetected chronicle sports blog male DNA
profile that does not match any of the four defendants. “This
exonerates Defendant Springsteen and makes it clear someone else
committed these murders,” Sawyer wrote.
Travis Co. prosecutors Efrain De La Fuente and Gail Van Winkle said
they disagree with Sawyer's assertion – the new DNA evidence does not
necessarily "exonerate" Springsteen. Moreover, they said they "expect"
that they already know the identity of the DNA contributor.
Springsteen is one of four men charged with the grisly quadruple murder
of four girls inside a North Austin yogurt shop on Dec. 6, 1991. The
girls – Eliza Thomas, 17; sisters Jennifer and Sarah Harbison, 17 and
15; and Ayers – were found dead in a back room of shop, horribly burned
in a fire police said was started to cover the crime. It wasn't until
1999 that prosecutors and police announced that they'd finally found
the murderers – four men who, at the time of the crime, were also
teenagers: Springsteen, who was tried and convicted in 2001; Michael
Scott, tried and convicted in 2002; Maurice Pierce – who prosecutors
claimed was the "mastermind" behind the murders – was indicted and
spent some four years in jail before the D.A.'s office dismissed the
charges against him in 2003, citing a lack of evidence. The case
against a fourth man, Forrest Welborn, was dismissed after two grand
juries failed to indict him. The convictions of Springsteen and Scott
were eventually overturned on appeal because the trial court erred in
admitting into evidence portions of statements each had made to police,
in violation of each man's Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses
against him. Indeed, the state's cases against Springsteen and Scott
have relied almost entirely on the content of their individual
"confessions" to police – confessions not supported by any physical
evidence found at the scene of the crime. That is not because there
wasn't any physical evidence to be found, but because, to date, the
state has failed to tie any of that evidence to any of the four they
charged with the crime. (For example, fingerprints found at the scene
have never been matched to anyone – not the defendants, the four
victims, or any other person known to have been in the shop on the day
of the crime.)
The revelation that additional male DNA has now been identified would
appear to deliver another stunning blow to the state's already wobbly
case – or so one might think. But that's not so, say prosecutors De La
Fuente and Van Winkle. De La Fuente said Wednesday afternoon that,
first, it should be noted that the "state took it upon itself" to
submit "numerous samples" for retesting, in order to "take advantage"
of advancements in DNA testing that weren't available at the time of
Springsteen's 2001 trial. But the fact that the unidentified male DNA
has been found "does not necessarily exonerate" Springsteen (or
co-defendant Michael Scott), De La Fuente and Van Winkle said. The male
DNA is now being tested against other "known samples" – although
neither attorney would reveal whose DNA is being tested – and
prosecutors expect those results by the end of the month. Moreover, De
La Fuente said that prosecutors suspect that a "match" will come from
"someone known to Amy Ayers" – suggesting, perhaps, that the
13-year-old was sexually active at the time of her death, an assertion
never before made.
Neither Sawyer nor any of the other defense attorneys working
Springsteen's case were available for comment. Indeed, both prosecutors
and defense attorneys are bound by a gag order, and De La Fuente said
he believes that Sawyer violated that order by filing an unsealed copy
of the Springsteen writ – and that is the reason he and Van Winkle were
given permission to step outside the order in order to respond to the
Chronicle's request for comment, they said.
Jordan Smith, Wed Apr 16, 9:58pm
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