Yes I have and I firmly believe they are guilty and So do a lot of other people.
Annkitty0630...... Go to The Hoax board and tell Todd Moore what you just told me .
I'm reading the transcript of Jessie's confession again in case I missed something the first time around. Nope. It's still very clear and detailed. Mind boggling.
Yes, it is.....
Do you publish your research? I've only followed some of this case off and on. I have to say the celeb bandwagon turns me off and tends to color my opinion. I would like my information unbiased and factual. It seems to me things can be twisted to fit the side of whoever is presenting it.
ETA: In other words presented without commentary
I was just thinking about all the new things that have came out over the length of time they were in. Cell phones weren't as popular, let alone smart phones. I figure they probably were into video games, look at how that has change since then. Internet and computer capabilities, wow they have alot to learn and catch up on. I wish them the best. My son was 7 when this happened.
Okay, now let's think outside the box. If you are truly reading the transcripts and police doc's, then, are they tainted by the innuendo and BIASED say so of the law enforcement to outrage the general (public) people at that time??? Do you not believe in the era of the early 90's that the public was feeding into the Voodoo and Satanic rituals which were associated with the California Witch Hunt for Child Molesters at Day Care Centers in California? So sorry, however, this has always infuriated me at what extent the law will go to secure a conviction and NEVER and I mean NEVER let their position go or admit on behalf of the people of their State they made a MISTAKE!! Again, JMHO, Ann.......... :great::rocker:
The problem with deciding something based only on a confession is that sometimes (more often than you would think) those confessions are false. Either because the person has a problem with confabulation and blackouts or because they are so tired of being interrogated that they will say anything or because they have mental issues that causes them to do things that others wouldn't. Earl Washington had an IQ of 70 and was told that if he told them what they wanted to hear he could go home, so he confessed to 9 rapes and a murder, all of which he didn't commit.
While reading the transcripts of the confession, there are clear and detailed statements. But when looking at those details, things start to fall apart because they don't match the events that happened and the evidence left behind.
Love Ya Honey!! You are on the same page as me!! Bless You and Your Family!! Sweet Dreams every night, Ann!! :seeya:
Professors Richard Leo and Richard Ofshe did a couple of papers that were really big in criminal legal news at the time they were published and in the papers the covered the case of my friend Joe Giarratano, who I talk about that has been in for 32+ years. They also did Jessie's confession, all with citations to where they got all of their information. Here is a little bit of it, just for your consideration:
"Although West Memphis, Arkansas police chose not record Misskelley
s more than 10 hour interrogation, they did memorialize his 20 minute
statement on audio tape.275 The police threatened Misskelley, a seventeen
year old, borderline retarded young man,276 with being treated as one of the
perpetrators of the triple homicide if he did not cooperate with them and tell
them how Echols and Baldwin killed the boys.277 Over the course of this
lengthy, coercive interrogation, the detectives tactics which included
falsely reporting to Misskelley that he failed a polygraph exam278 caused
Misskelley to break down and comply with their suggestions. The interrogators
decided to turn the tape recorder on only after the account they sought
had been rehearsed several times.
...
During the taking of the recorded confession statement, Misskelley was
asked about the time the killings occurred. In his first answer he describes the killings as happening at noon.284 This answer created a problem for the
prosecutor, Mr. Fogelman, who was supervising the interrogation and Detective
Gitchel, who was conducting it. Both of them, but not Jessie Misskelley,
knew that the boys did not get out of school until after 3:00 p.m. and did not
disappear until after 6:30 p.m.285 It took Gitchel, under Fogelmans direction,
ve revisitings of this subject, added pressure and numerous suggestions
to move Misskelleys wrong answer progressively from noon to a time
after the boys had left school, finished playing on their street and were last
seen.286
Misskelley confession also included the following demonstrably false
statements, revealing that he did not possess the kind of knowledge one
would expect from the true perpetrator:287
1. Misskelley said that the victims skipped school the day they were
killed when in fact they were at school;288
2. Misskelley said that the victims were sodomized when in fact there
was no trauma to the anuses of the victims according to the medical
examiners testimony at trial;289
3. Misskelley said the victims were bound with a big brown rope when
they were tied with their own shoelaces;290
4. Misskelley said that the victims were choked by Echols with a big
stick but the medical examiner testied at trial that there were no
injuries to the victims throats;291 and
5. Misskelley said that the victims were killed on the dirt bank where
they were found when in fact no blood was found there, indicating
that the victims were killed elsewhere.292
It goes on and on, but sometimes confessions are not what they seem and its worth looking info further if you get a chance.
You have to download it, it's a PDF here: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1141365
Pardon my ignorance but why would they have to say guilty if they are innocent? That makes no sense to me..................
I was just thinking about all the new things that have came out over the length of time they were in. Cell phones weren't as popular, let alone smart phones. I figure they probably were into video games, look at how that has change since then. Internet and computer capabilities, wow they have alot to learn and catch up on. I wish them the best. My son was 7 when this happened.
Because if they say they are guilty the prosecutors not only save face, they also save money. Now, if they are later proven to be innocent they will not get money for their time. I am looking for a better source, but so far the only people who I have seen saying it are TMZ:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1141365
"The deal doesn't prevent the WM3 from FILING a lawsuit -- however, the prosecutor believes any judge would simply throw such a case out before it went anywhere."
The problem with deciding something based only on a confession is that sometimes (more often than you would think) those confessions are false. Either because the person has a problem with confabulation and blackouts or because they are so tired of being interrogated that they will say anything or because they have mental issues that causes them to do things that others wouldn't. Earl Washington had an IQ of 70 and was told that if he told them what they wanted to hear he could go home, so he confessed to 9 rapes and a murder, all of which he didn't commit.
While reading the transcripts of the confession, there are clear and detailed statements. But when looking at those details, things start to fall apart because they don't match the events that happened and the evidence left behind.
Professors Richard Leo and Richard Ofshe did a couple of papers that were really big in criminal legal news at the time they were published and in the papers the covered the case of my friend Joe Giarratano, who I talk about that has been in for 32+ years. They also did Jessie's confession, all with citations to where they got all of their information. Here is a little bit of it, just for your consideration:
"Although West Memphis, Arkansas police chose not record Misskelley
s more than 10 hour interrogation, they did memorialize his 20 minute
statement on audio tape.275 The police threatened Misskelley, a seventeen
year old, borderline retarded young man,276 with being treated as one of the
perpetrators of the triple homicide if he did not cooperate with them and tell
them how Echols and Baldwin killed the boys.277 Over the course of this
lengthy, coercive interrogation, the detectives tactics which included
falsely reporting to Misskelley that he failed a polygraph exam278 caused
Misskelley to break down and comply with their suggestions. The interrogators
decided to turn the tape recorder on only after the account they sought
had been rehearsed several times.
...
During the taking of the recorded confession statement, Misskelley was
asked about the time the killings occurred. In his first answer he describes the killings as happening at noon.284 This answer created a problem for the
prosecutor, Mr. Fogelman, who was supervising the interrogation and Detective
Gitchel, who was conducting it. Both of them, but not Jessie Misskelley,
knew that the boys did not get out of school until after 3:00 p.m. and did not
disappear until after 6:30 p.m.285 It took Gitchel, under Fogelmans direction,
ve revisitings of this subject, added pressure and numerous suggestions
to move Misskelleys wrong answer progressively from noon to a time
after the boys had left school, finished playing on their street and were last
seen.286
Misskelley confession also included the following demonstrably false
statements, revealing that he did not possess the kind of knowledge one
would expect from the true perpetrator:287
1. Misskelley said that the victims skipped school the day they were
killed when in fact they were at school;288
2. Misskelley said that the victims were sodomized when in fact there
was no trauma to the anuses of the victims according to the medical
examiners testimony at trial;289
3. Misskelley said the victims were bound with a big brown rope when
they were tied with their own shoelaces;290
4. Misskelley said that the victims were choked by Echols with a big
stick but the medical examiner testied at trial that there were no
injuries to the victims throats;291 and
5. Misskelley said that the victims were killed on the dirt bank where
they were found when in fact no blood was found there, indicating
that the victims were killed elsewhere.292
It goes on and on, but sometimes confessions are not what they seem and its worth looking info further if you get a chance.
You have to download it, it's a PDF here: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1141365
You are right it is 100% clear- Jessie's confession was repeatedly corrected by the interrogators until they got the story that fit their case.
sorry even without the other inconsistency (of which there are many) in this case I can't get past that interrogation.
Pardon my ignorance but why would they have to say guilty if they are innocent? That makes no sense to me..................
IF they are truely innocent that is just absurd!!! Screw that...............
Well a very obvious reason is because Damien was on DEATH row-
then consider that it might have taken years to get a new trial if they even were granted one.
The people who believe they are guilty will always believe they are guilty no matter what a new trial might find- so they might as well be free rather than sitting in prison on principle.
Pardon my ignorance but why would they have to say guilty if they are innocent? That makes no sense to me..................
Pardon my ignorance but why would they have to say guilty if they are innocent? That makes no sense to me..................