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Eduardo
SANTIAGO
M
12 days after
Prosecutors say Santiago carried out a
murder-for-hire scheme in which he agreed to kill Niwinski in
exchange for a broken snowmobile and his credit card debt being
paid off.
Case
brings up privacy concerns
The Boston Globe
April 28, 2011
A lawyer told the state Supreme
Court yesterday that his client's death penalty case was the
weakest one ever to go before the high court, alleging that the
jury was biased and that key evidence was improperly withheld from
the trial.
Justices heard the appeal of former
Torrington resident Eduardo Santiago, 31, who prosecutors say
agreed in 2000 to kill a West Hartford man in exchange for a
pink-striped snowmobile with a broken clutch. He was sentenced to
death by lethal injection in 2005 after a jury convicted him,
despite no clear evidence that he was the one who pulled the rifle
trigger.
2 other men are serving life prison
sentences for the killing of Joseph Niwinski, 45, who was shot in
the head while sleeping in his home.
Santiago's
lawyer, Assistant Public Defender Mark Rademacher, told the
Supreme Court that there was no way a reasonable jury could have
condemned Santiago. The defense presented 25 mitigating factors,
including Santiago's troubled childhood, for jurors to consider
against the death penalty, while the state based its argument for
execution on one aggravating factor, that Niwinski was killed in a
murder-for-hire plot.
"This is really the least
aggravating case that has ever come before this court," Rademacher
told the justices, who are expected to take several monthsto issue
a ruling. "The victim in this case did not suffer one iota of
pain."
Rademacher alleged jurors were biased in
favor of the prosecution. Santiago's appeal says one juror has
acknowledged that members of the panel were disappointed that
prosecutors had only one aggravating factor and they improperly
considered what they thought were other aggravating factors, but
ones not listed in state law.
In Connecticut,
juries that convict defendants of capital felony must then
consider whether to recommend the death penalty or life in prison
without the possibility of release by deciding whether proven
aggravating factors outweigh proven mitigating factors.
Marjorie Allen Dauster, senior assistant state's attorney, told
the court that prosecutors proved the murder-for-hire aggravating
factor listed in state law and the jury was right to condemn
Santiago. She pointed out that state lawmakers, while debating the
death penalty law in 1973, considered murder for hire to be the
most heinous capital crime.
Justices spent a
good portion of the hearing questioning the lawyers about whether
criminal defendants’ rights trump the privacy rights of others.
The issue was raised in part of Santiago's appeal that accused the
trial judge of wrongly refusing to release an entire state
Department of Children and Families file on Santiago and his
family. While the judge released portions of the file dealing with
Santiago, he declined to disclose other parts dealing with his
relatives because of privacy concerns.
Rademacher says the records document Santiago's grim childhood,
which included beatings by his mother and stepfather, sexual
molestation, and his nine-year journey through foster care,
psychiatric hospitals, orphanages, and shelters. Rademacher said
releasing the rest of the DCF file could have given the jury more
mitigating evidence and a fuller picture of Santiago's troubled
past.