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| Colby
Katz |
| In
court last week, prosecutor Charles Morton
(pictured) handed Capt. Scheff more rope with
which to hang the deceased -- and innocent --
Smith |
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Never mind that Frank Lee Smith had done the time
for his past crimes. Forget that he had lived three
quiet, arrest-free years outside of prison before
Broward County sheriff's Det. Richard Scheff swept him
up in a faulty investigative dragnet and charged him
with the rape and murder of 8-year-old Shandra
Whitehead. Disregard the fact that Smith was held up in
newspapers and on television as a monster. And forget
that the real killer, Eddie Lee Mosley, remained on the
street to rape and kill again and again.
Forget too that before Smith was wrongfully
sentenced to death in 1986, he wept, begging the judge
and jury for mercy and swearing he would never, ever
hurt a little girl. Ignore that he was still sent to
death row for a crime he didn't commit and went
completely insane in prison. And forget that he received
scant medical attention during his bout with cancer and
died in an isolation chamber, strapped to a prison
gurney, dehydrated, far from those who loved him.
What really matters is that Smith had a bad past
that included two homicides while he was a teenager. He
belonged in prison.
Richard Scheff, now a Broward Sheriff's Office
captain, says so.
"Regardless of whether [Frank Lee Smith] was
responsible for the murder of Shandra Whitehead or not,
he was really a dangerous guy," Scheff told me. "I think
he was a dangerous guy. He had certainly killed two
other people."
Then he laughed and added, "I mean, how many
people do you have to kill before you forfeit your
freedom?"
And
there it was. Many people had suspected it, but he said
it. Smith, before he was sentenced to death in 1986,
already knew Scheff saw him as a throwaway defendant.
"My past seems to follow me wherever I go," Smith said
in court, "and now it has got me sitting here for
something I haven't done."
Jeff Walsh, a defense investigator who worked
years to exonerate Smith, has long said that Scheff
targeted Smith because his criminal past made him an
easy sell to a jury. "That is the truest thing he's ever
said in his life," Walsh says of Scheff's remarks. "That
is the Frank Lee Smith case in a nutshell. BSO was the
judge, jury, and executioner in that case. He was
convicted on his past, and that is how Scheff operates.
He's a rogue cop."
It's the first time Scheff has ever said anything
publicly about Smith since DNA tests exonerated him of
Whitehead's murder in December 2000, 11 months after he
died in prison at age 52. Scheff remained silent until
last Tuesday, when he was compelled to testify about the
case during the high-profile murder trial of Michael
Scott Keen, whom Scheff also helped send to death row.
Afterward, I questioned the captain outside the
courtroom.
"The man was strange," Scheff said of
Smith. "I mean, I could never figure him out. I couldn't
tell if he was stupid and trying to pretend like he was
smart or smart and trying to pretend like" -- he pauses
here before continuing -- "to tell you the truth, I
always thought he was trying to manipulate me. I had
this feeling like he was trying to handle me....
He should have been honest with me -- or kept his mouth
shut."
I
had to excuse myself at this point to reach down and
pick my lower jaw up off the floor. Talk about strange.
As I described in a news story more than a year ago
("Captain of Deceit," July 26, 2001), it was Scheff who
manipulated the murder case to fit Smith and who
apparently lied in court to keep Smith behind bars.
According to Smith's testimony, it was Scheff who
badgered Smith into talking to him and refused to let
him get a lawyer.
It
is true, however, that Smith wasn't normal. Small
wonder. His parents were murdered in separate incidents,
and his early childhood was spent in and out of foster
care and abusive family situations. When he was a little
boy, a bottle was broken on his head during a street
riot, damaging his brain and permanently distorting his
vision. He suffered from schizophrenia and paranoid
delusions. Throw in his violent youth, the two
homicides, and 15 years in prison and you have the
perfect fall guy for a murder.
Scheff orchestrated the case against Smith with
the skill of a Tchaikovsky. The key controversies
surrounding Scheff's actions involve an alleged
confession by Smith and contradictory testimony the
captain has given about whether he showed a photo lineup
that included the actual killer, Mosley, to the key
witness.
Scheff got witness Chiquita Lowe to identify
Smith at the 1986 trial as the man she'd seen on the
street near Whitehead's house the night of the murder.
Scheff testified at the trial that he never showed her a
picture of Mosley, whom he had ruled out as a suspect
because Whitehead's mother was his cousin and insisted
he wouldn't have hurt her daughter.
He
should have shown her that picture. Lowe recanted her
identification of Smith in 1989 after being shown a
photo of Mosley and realizing he was the man. She also
said that she never really believed Smith was the killer
and that Scheff and prosecutor William Dimitrouleas (now
a federal judge) pressured her to lie in court.
After Lowe's recantation, Scheff contradicted
himself in a 1991 court hearing, saying he had
shown Mosley's picture to the witness back in 1986. This
testimony discredited Lowe and helped make sure Smith
didn't get a new trial or the DNA tests he was seeking
to clear his name.
Later, during a hearing in 1998, Scheff produced
in court the alleged Mosley lineup he'd shown Lowe.
Again, Smith was denied justice.
When, in 2000, DNA tests posthumously vindicated
Smith and proved that Mosley was Whitehead's killer,
Scheff came under fire for the contradictions concerning
the lineup, prompting Gov. Jeb Bush to order a perjury
investigation. Special prosecutor Lawrence Mirman
interviewed Scheff, who told the prosecutor that he
couldn't really remember whether he showed Lowe the
lineup or not. In July 2001, Mirman found there was
"reasonable suspicion" that Scheff had committed perjury
but concluded that there wasn't enough evidence to
charge him with a crime.
Fast-forward to this month's trial of Keen, who
Scheff had arrested back in 1984 for drowning his wife
at sea. Keen was convicted, but the case still had so
many problems that last week he was back in court for
the fourth time. The judge in the Keen trial, Paul
Backman, determined that the Smith case was relevant to
Keen's defense and allowed the defendant (who was acting
as his own attorney) to question Scheff on the stand
about the false conviction.
"Have you ever helped put an innocent man on
death row?" Keen asked Scheff.
"I've never helped put anyone on death row," the
captain replied. "I've simply come into court and
answered questions... and unfortunately in [the Smith
case], it had an awful outcome."
Interesting answer, kind of like a Nazi death
camp director saying he never killed anyone but just
went to work and made sure the line proceeded in an
orderly fashion toward the building with the big
smokestack.
Last week, Scheff again testified that he had
shown the Mosley lineup to Lowe during the 1986 trial.
Apparently his memory has improved since last year, when
he told Mirman he couldn't recall. Scheff testified that
he answered "no" instead of "yes" during Smith's trial
because he was confused by the defense attorney's
"compound question."
Oops.
At
one point, he laughed on the stand and said, "I didn't
realize how big a production this would all be."
I
hear you, captain. Gosh, who'da thunk Smith would be
exonerated after dying in prison?
He
also told Keen and the jury: "You are aware of the fact
that [Smith] would have been in prison anyway."
Here, Scheff is regenerating a callous and false
theory, put forward by the governor and Sheriff Ken
Jenne, that Smith would have been sent back to prison.
The theory hinges on the fact that when Smith was
apprehended in his aunt's front yard on suspicion that
he had killed Whitehead, he had a knife with him. BSO
charged Smith with carrying a concealed weapon -- which
also served as a convenient reason to hold him for
questioning. His aunt, Bertha Mae Irving, says Smith and
her family were about to go fishing. Regardless of the
circumstances, it's ludicrous to assume this minor
offense would have led to a lifetime in prison, but the
theory serves a purpose for Scheff and other
authorities: It makes the horrible miscarriage of
justice seem incidental.
Scheff also swore during the Keen trial that
Smith had indeed made incriminating statements that were
crucial in securing the conviction. Scheff and Tom
Carney, who is now the number two man at BSO under
Jenne, lied to Smith, saying that Whitehead's brother
saw the killer. Smith allegedly replied: "There was no
way he could have seen me; it was too dark."
It's a strange thing for an innocent man to say.
But Charles Morton, who prosecuted Keen and has worked
with Scheff on numerous homicide cases, seemed to make
the issue go away in last week's trial. Isn't it true,
Morton asked Scheff, that Mirman, during his perjury
investigation, found that Smith had "under oath in fact
said he made those statements?"
Scheff answered in the affirmative.
Although Keen didn't challenge this exchange, it
is utterly false. Mirman never made such a finding, and
Smith, during his trial, twice denied making the
statements. So I asked Morton about it; he led me to a
single footnote in the Mirman report, which said that
Smith had testified during the 1986 trial that his
statement "it was too dark" was taken out of context by
Scheff.
"If
it was taken out of context, that means he [Smith] must
have said it," Morton explained.
An
interesting lawyer's trick, but it's still not true.
Although Smith did say that his words were taken out of
context, he never admitted saying anything. According to
the 1986 trial transcript, when asked point-blank if he
said "it was 'too dark,'" Smith unambiguously answered,
"No."
Still, last week's jury heard otherwise, a fact
that might give Keen some ammunition for a fifth trial
(he was convicted again August 8). Worse, even after
robbing Smith of his dignity and leaving him to die
horribly in prison, Scheff is putting damning and false
words in the innocent man's mouth to make himself look
better.
Scheff at least admitted to Keen that he had made
incorrect assumptions in Smith's case. Outside the
courtroom, however, he brought up another dubious theory
designed to explain the failure of the justice system:
Smith might have been at Whitehead's house and tried to
steal a TV set right after Mosley killed her. "If that
is true," Scheff said, "it certainly bodes well for me.
But for that to have occurred, it would have had to be a
huge coincidence, so I'm uncomfortable with it."
But
later, as I followed Scheff down the hall to the
courthouse elevator, he told me, "[Smith] had to have
been there." He didn't elaborate. Then Scheff said of
his investigation of Smith: "I stepped on my dick and
made a mistake."
If
Scheff's railroading of Smith wasn't intentional, it was
certainly an auspicious mistake: The Smith arrest won
Scheff "Deputy of the Month" honors and began his fast
climb up the BSO ladder. Sheriff Jenne apparently has
forgiven Scheff his mistakes -- he promoted him to
commander of countywide operations just last year.
So
Scheff has apparently overcome his shameful past. It's a
crime that he wouldn't let Smith do the same.
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