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DNA evidence could set woman jailed for 30 years free
Scott Sonner/AP
September 10, 2014
A woman who has been in prison for more than 30
years for a Nevada killing has been granted a new trial thanks to
recently discovered DNA evidence.
Her lawyer said the evidence ties an Oregon
prison inmate to the 1976 slaying of a Reno student and two
killings in California.
The ruling by Washoe District Judge Patrick
Flanagan came after public defender Maizie Pusich said that DNA on
a cigarette butt in a Reno garage where the body of 19-year-old
Michelle Mitchell was found matches that of the inmate currently
serving time for attempted murder.
Pusich represents 64-year-old Cathy Woods, who
was convicted of killing Mitchell on the campus of the University
of Nevada, Reno.
Woods was granted a new trial in the case after
the DNA evidence was presented. Flanagan also ordered her release
on her own recognisance and set the new trial for July 13, 2015.
"We are delighted that Cathy gets to go home
and we get to try to prove to the rest of the world she was
innocent all along,'" Pusich said after the hearing.
"It's a horribly sad situation but thank
goodness today we are moving the right direction."
Pusich said in court papers filed this week
before the hearing that the DNA found on the cigarette butt
matches that of Oregon inmate Rodney L Halbower, aged 66.
The FBI said in a statement issued in San
Francisco that Halbower had been named as a person of interest in
the killings of five young women in the San Francisco Bay Area in
1976 known as the "Gypsy Hill Murders."
The agency said the DNA link to those cases had
been established by crime labs in San Mateo County, California,
and Washoe County, Nevada.
Halbower is not eligible for parole until 2026.
It wasn't immediately clear if he had a lawyer.
Oregon Department of Corrections spokeswoman
Betty Bernt said she couldn't find the name of a lawyer for
Halbower in any prison documents.
Halbower was first sentenced to prison in
Nevada for sexually assaulting a female blackjack dealer in
downtown Reno in November 1975, an attack that occurred roughly
two months before Mitchell was killed a few blocks away, Pusich
said.
He was later sentenced to two life terms for
rape and other charges. He escaped from prison twice but was
recaptured before being paroled in 2013 to begin serving sentences
in Oregon.
FBI spokesman Peter Hill disclosed in March
that the DNA on the cigarette butt in Reno matched that of semen
gathered from at least one crime scene in San Mateo, California,
and that FBI agents had reopened the series of cold cases.
Pusich said the DNA found at two of those
California rape-murder scenes also belonged to Halbower.
"No DNA found at the Michelle Mitchell crime
scene belongs to Cathy Woods," the lawyer said.
Woods' brother, Al Carter, 58, told reporters
with tears in his eyes after the hearing that he had heard there
were other suspects in the 1976 killing.
"I'm so happy," he said about the possibility
of closure for his sister and the family of Mitchell.
While under psychiatric care at Louisiana State
University Medical Center, Woods acknowledged killing Mitchell but
later recanted.
She was convicted of the murder in 1980, won an
appeal before the Nevada Supreme Court but was convicted again in
1985.
Pusich said Woods doesn't remember
acknowledging the killing after she was committed to the mental
hospital by her mother for reasons unrelated to any crime.
"I'm told it was a product of wanting to get a
private room," Pusich said. "She was being told she wasn't
sufficiently dangerous to qualify, and within a short period she
was claiming she had killed a woman in Reno."
Carter said he had tried to maintain hope his
sister would be freed eventually but was starting to fear she
would end up dying in prison.
"I've heard her talk about appeals forever, but
she has talked about it for so long, I thought maybe that was her
mental condition," he said. "It turns out, wow, she's right."
Woman found guilty of murdering teen
nursing student in 1976 gets a new trial after DNA links convicted
rapist to the killing... and deaths of FIVE other girls
Cathy Woods, 64, was convicted of killing
University of Nevada student Michele Mitchell in 1976
However, new DNA evidence connects an
Oregon inmate named Rodney L Halbower to the murder
Woods' attorney believes she confessed to
the murder in order to get a better room at the mental hospital
where she was being treated at the time
Now 64, Woods is set to be released from
prison this week to await a retrial
By Ashley Collman for MailOnline and Associated
Press
September 9, 2014
A woman who has been imprisoned for more than
30 years for the 1976 murder of a 19-year-old nursing student is
set to be released this week, now that another man has been
connected to the crime with DNA evidence.
Cathy Woods, 64, was being treated at the
Louisiana State University Medical Center in 1976 when she
confessed to killing Michele Mitchell.
Mitchell was found dead near the University of
Nevada's Reno campus on February 24, 1976 - her throat slashed
shortly after her car broke down.
The psychiatric patient's public defender says
she only admitted to the killing so that staff would think she was
dangerous, and let her have her own room at the mental hospital.
'I'm told it was a product of wanting to get a
private room,' her public defender Maizie Pusich said. 'She was
being told she wasn't sufficiently dangerous to qualify, and
within a short period she was claiming she had killed a woman in
Reno.'
'I suspect the reason why she thought of this
case is because this was the case everybody around her was talking
about. This is something she would have heard about many, many
times,' Pusich added to SFGate.
Recently obtained DNA evidence, however, links known Reno-area
killer Rodney L Halbower to the crime.
A judge accepted Woods' petition for a re-trial, and will be
released this week to her family in Bakersfield to await her new
court date, July 13, 2015.
We are delighted that Cathy gets to go home and we get to try to
prove to the rest of the world she was innocent all along, Pusich
said after the hearing. It's a horribly sad situation but thank
goodness today we are moving the right direction.
Halbower, 66, only recently submitted a DNA
sample after being transferred in 2013 to a prison in Oregon. That
sample matches a cigarette butt that was found underneath
Mitchell's body.
'No DNA found at the Michelle Mitchell crime scene belongs to
Cathy Woods,' her lawyer said.
The FBI said in a statement issued in San Francisco later Monday
that Halbower had been named as a person of interest in the
killings of five young women in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1976
known as the 'Gypsy Hill Murders.'
Veronica Cascio, 18, was snatched off the street while walking to
a bus stop at Bradford Way and Fairway Drive; her body was later
found on the Sharp's Park Golf Course, Mercury News reported.
Just weeks later, Tanya Blackwell, 14, went missing while walking
from her home, and her badly decomposed remains were discovered
only six months later off Gypsy Hill Road.
Paula Baxter, 17, was abducted February 4, 1976, as she left a
school play rehearsal. The high school student was stabbed to
death and had her head bashed in.
Carol Lee Booth, a 26-year-old housewife, was discovered in a
shallow grave near Colma Creek in March, and the following month,
saleswoman Denise Lampe was raped, murdered and dumped outside a
busy shopping mall.
Halbower was first sentenced to prison in Nevada for sexually
assaulting a female blackjack dealer in downtown Reno in November
1975, an attack that occurred roughly two months before Mitchell
was killed a few blocks away, Woods' Pusich said.
He was later sentenced to two life terms for rape and other
charges.
He escaped from prison twice but was recaptured
before being paroled in 2013 to begin serving sentences in Oregon.
FBI spokesman Peter Hill disclosed in March that the DNA on the
cigarette butt in Reno matched that of semen gathered from at
least one crime scene in San Mateo, California, and that FBI
agents had reopened the series of cold cases.
Pusich said Monday the DNA found at two of those California
rape-murder scenes also belonged to Halbower.
Woods' brother, Al Carter, 58, told reporters with tears in his
eyes after the hearing that he had heard there were other suspects
in the 1976 killing.
I'm so happy, he said about the possibility of closure for his
sister and the family of Mitchell.
Woods was convicted of the murder in 1980, won an appeal before
the Nevada Supreme Court but was convicted again in 1985.
Carter said he had tried to maintain hope his sister would be
freed eventually but was starting to fear she would end up dying
in prison.
I've heard her talk about appeals forever, but she has talked
about it for so long, I thought maybe that was her mental
condition, he said. It turns out, wow, she's right.
FBI links inmate to unsolved Gypsy Hill
killings on Peninsula
By Vivian Ho - SFGate.com
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
A person of interest in a string of unsolved
killings in San Mateo County was identified by the FBI on Monday,
nearly 40 years after the first victim was found near Gypsy Hill
Road in Pacifica.
Rodney Halbower, a 66-year-old inmate at the
Oregon State Penitentiary, was linked to the killings of five
young women on the Peninsula in 1976 after investigators connected
DNA evidence in those cases to a cigarette butt left under the
body of a sixth murder victim in Reno, authorities said.
That victim was Reno resident Michelle
Mitchell, 19, who had her throat slit shortly after her car broke
down near the University of Nevada on Feb. 24, 1976.
Another woman, Cathy Woods, was convicted of
her murder after giving what her attorney said was a false
confession. After more than three decades in custody, Woods
requested a review of the evidence in the case earlier this year.
It turned up the DNA sample on the cigarette butt that linked
Mitchell's murder to two of the cases in San Mateo County.
In turn, that DNA was linked to Halbower, who
had only recently given a DNA sample when he was transferred from
state prison in Nevada to state prison in Oregon, said Woods'
attorney, Chief Deputy Public Defender Maizie Pusich.
"The people that are in custody serving long
sentences, there's a backlog in taking their DNA," she said.
"Thank goodness he transferred jurisdictions and that put his DNA
in the database."
Halbower had been in custody in Nevada after he
was convicted of a 1976 rape just a few blocks from where Mitchell
was found in Reno, Pusich said. In 1986, he escaped the
maximum-security prison where he was being held and fled to
Oregon, where he committed a slew of other crimes.
He was admitted to Oregon State Penitentiary in
November 2013 after he was paroled in Nevada to serve his sentence
for attempted murder, assault and robbery, according to the Oregon
Department of Corrections.
Investigators said they believe Halbower's DNA
also matches the DNA found in some of the unsolved San Mateo
County slayings that haunted the Peninsula for decades.
They began on Jan. 8, 1976, when the body of
18-year-old Ronnie Cascio was discovered at the Sharp Park Golf
Course in her hometown of Pacifica. She had been stabbed 30 times
and sexually assaulted.
A few weeks later, 14-year-old Tanya Blackwell
was reported missing after leaving her home in Pacifica. Her body
was discovered on Gypsy Hill Road in the city a few months later.
The body of 17-year-old Paula Baxter was found
a few weeks after that in her hometown of Millbrae. The next
month, 19-year-old Denise Lampe of Broadmoor was slain in her car
in the lot of the Serramonte mall in Daly City.
Carol Lee Booth, 26, who was reported missing
that March, was found dead in South San Francisco a month later.
She, like Cascio and Baxter, had been sexually assaulted.
The FBI did not say what is going to happen to
Halbower now that he has been named a person of interest. But
Pusich's client Woods will be released and out of custody for the
first time since Feb. 24, 1979. Pusich's motion for a new trial
was granted, and Woods is expected to be released to her family in
Bakersfield by the end of this week.
Woods, now 64, was a psychiatric patient at the
Louisiana State University Medical Center when she told hospital
staff that she had killed a girl named Michelle in Reno. Woods was
diagnosed with schizophrenia, and Pusich said she believes she had
just been trying to get her own room at the hospital.
"She was very sick," Pusich said. "There was
some discussion about whether or not she qualified to be in a
single room, and after they told her she didn't qualify for a
single room, she told them that. I suspect the reason why she
thought of this case is because this was the case everybody around
her was talking about. This is something she would have heard
about many, many times."
Woods' conviction was reversed by the Nevada
Supreme Court when it was discovered that a witness in the case
gave differing testimonies of the events in two separate cases.
She was tried and convicted again in 1995, Pusich said, and had
remained in custody the entire time.
Woods told Pusich that she had never met
Halbower. Pusich said her client was overwhelmed but happy to
finally be reunited with her brother and mother.
"It's bittersweet," Pusich said. "I wish this
had happened on her behalf years and years ago, but it couldn't
have. We didn't have the ability or the authority to do the
testing, and we wouldn't have had the results to compare. Even
though it's been forever, it's the right time."
DNA is key in contested UNR murder conviction
By Scott Sonner, Associated Press
August 21, 2014
Modern DNA technology is the focus of a hearing
Thursday in a decades-old murder case in which a 64-year-old woman
is trying to overturn her conviction after spending more than 30
years in a Nevada prison.
Public defenders for Cathy Woods were scheduled
to make their case for granting a new trial during the hearing in
Washoe County District Court.
Woods was convicted twice of killing Michelle
Mitchell, a 19-year-old nursing student at the University of
Nevada, Reno.
But authorities say DNA evidence on a cigarette
butt that was recently re-examined links someone other than Woods
to the killing scene in a garage on the edge of campus where
Mitchell was tied up and had her throat slashed in 1976.
The FBI announced in March that the DNA matches
that of semen gathered as part of the unsolved killings of five
young women in the 1970s in California in what became known as the
"Gypsy Hill Murders."
Mitchell's long brown hair parted in the middle
resembled that of victims in the "Gypsy Hill" case, the FBI said.
And like Mitchell, several of those victims were attacked after
their car broke down.
Deputy Reno Police Chief Mac Venzon previously
confirmed that the new DNA evidence does not connect Woods to the
killing of Mitchell. However, he said it doesn't exclude her
either because authorities believe she may have had an accomplice.
Lawyers on both sides of the Woods case started
making their arguments at a hearing in May, when a judge granted
prosecutors' request for a three-month continuance so they could
better review evidence.
"If we have the wrong person in prison, I want
to fix it and I want to fix it quickly. But we also have to do it
right," assistant district attorney Terry McCarthy said at the
time.
Public defender Maizie Pusich told the judge
that new DNA technology enabled investigators to tie the cigarette
butt to two other murder cases.
"The DNA evidence has been processed that was
not available to any of the parties in 1976 or even at the time of
the later trial in 1985," Pusich said.
While under psychiatric care at Louisiana State
University Medical Center in Shreveport, Woods acknowledged
killing Mitchell, authorities said.
Court transcripts from her previous trials show
there was heated debate about whether or not her statements should
have been allowed as evidence because of her medical condition.
Pusich said defense attorneys had difficulty
persuading the jury not to believe the statements.
"Now there is scientific evidence that shows
that the jury should not have accepted everything that Cathy Woods
said from the hospital in Shreveport at face value," Pusich said.
New trial possible for convicted killer in 1976 slaying
By Emerson Marcus - RGJ.com
March 11, 2014
The woman convicted of murdering a University
of Nevada, Reno nursing student in 1976 has requested a new trial
based on DNA evidence examined by the Washoe County forensic
examiners.
An attorney for Cathy Woods, 76, filed the
motion in February and a status hearing is set for Wednesday in
Washoe County District Judge Patrick Flanagan's court.
Woods was convicted twice 1980 and 1985 in
the murder of 19-year-old Michelle Mitchell and is serving a
sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
In 2010, Woods filed a post-conviction petition
for DNA evidence to be examined. Officials ultimately found no
evidence from the crime matched Woods' DNA, according to forensic
report issued by the Washoe County Sheriff's Office.
However, a cigarette found in the garage where
Mitchell was left to die with her throat slashed matched the DNA
profile of sperm gathered in a 1976 unsolved homicide in San
Mateo, Calif., the forensic report said.
That unsolved San Mateo murder is one of five
known as the Gypsy Hill slayings.
Maizie Pusich, of the Washoe County public
defender's office, filed the motion for the new trial on Feb. 10.
She could not be reached for an interview
Monday, but said in a voice message that more information is
expected to be released at Wednesday's status hearing.
A detective with the Reno Police Department
remains in the Bay Area this week to investigate the matter with
local law enforcement and FBI there.
Meanwhile, prosecutors in the Washoe County
District Attorney's office have requested more time to review
evidence in the case.
If granted a new trial, it would be Woods'
third crack at acquittal.
John Helzer, Chief Deputy District Attorney,
said depending on Flanagan's decision, both the prosecution and
defense could appeal.
"Both sides will be in wait-and-see mode on
what the judge rules and what the basis is," Helzer said.
Tony Lima
One man, who Woods' defense attorneys argued in
both trials could have been the actual killer in the 1976 slaying
of Mitchell, is no longer considered a suspect, Reno police Deputy
Chief Mac Venzon said.
In 1985, the Nevada Supreme Court granted Woods
a second trial based on the Washoe District Court's 1980 decision
to exclude testimony from Kathy Murnighan.
Murnighan was the Washoe Jail cellmate of Raye
Wood, an exotic dancer in Reno. She was convicted in 1977 of
murdering Peggy Davis, of Reno.
That murder occurred just five days before
Mitchell was murdered in February 1976. Both were stabbings.
Mitchell's murder gained front page headlines
and rocked the university's campus.
Davis' murder was less publicized.
Wood said Lima, her boyfriend, killed a woman
to make detectives believe there was a serial killer on the loose,
and throw them off her tracks, Murnighan claimed Wood told her in
jail.
But even with Murnighan's testimony and a new
trial, Woods was found guilty again in 1985 for killing Mitchell.
Lima denied ever being involved with Mitchell's
death during testimony, but served two years in Nevada State
Prison as an accessory in Davis' murder.
He died in 1991.
Police said Lima was one of the first people
investigated after the case was recently re-opened. But based on
DNA he is not believed to be connected to evidence found in the
garage or the Gypsy Hill murders, Venzon said.
Woods' confession
While in a Louisiana mental institution, Woods
in 1979 confessed to killing a Reno woman named Michelle.
Among other confessions, Woods said she worked
for the FBI and that her mother, who committed her, was trying to
poison her, court records said.
"She was claiming she was going to kill more
girls like she did in Reno," said Cal Dunlap, the district
attorney who prosecuted Woods' first trial.
Woods told hospital employees that on Feb. 24,
1976 she reacted to a "satanic voice" before killing Mitchell,
according to court records.
When Reno detectives arrived that week, she
changed her story and said she killed Mitchell after the sophomore
student declined homosexual advances, records say.
But the defense argued size nine male
footprints were found near the garage on Ninth Street where
Mitchell was killed. Woods wore size seven woman's shoes, the
defense said.
Mitchell was on her way to a bowling alley on
Valley Road when her Volkswagen broke down and she went to the UNR
Agriculture Building to call her mother.
Some witnesses said they saw Mitchell with
Woods. Others said they saw her with a man who acted like a
boyfriend.
Police found her hours later tied up and dead
in a house garage on East Ninth Street.
Dunlap said, just as he believed in 1980, that
he still believes another person worked the murder with Woods.
Supreme Court of Nevada
WOODS v. STATE
696 P.2d 464 (1985)
Cathy WOODS, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Nevada, Respondent.
No. 13318.
March 5, 1985.
Rehearing Denied May 8, 1985.
David Parraguirre, Washoe County Public Defender, Jane G.
McKenna, Michael B. McDonald, Deputy Public Defenders, Reno, for
appellant.
D. Brian McKay, Atty. Gen., Carson City, Mills B. Lane, Dist.
Atty., Edward B. Horn, Deputy Dist. Atty., Reno, for respondent.
OPINION
GUNDERSON, Justice:
Appellant Cathy Woods was convicted of first-degree murder in the
slaying of Michelle Mitchell and was sentenced to life
imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Because we
consider that certain evidentiary rulings of the district court
precluded appellant from receiving a fair trial, we reverse her
conviction.
The record reflects the following facts. On the evening of
February 24, 1976, Michelle Mitchell's car broke down near the
campus of the University of Nevada, Reno, and she telephoned her
mother to ask for a ride home. Mitchell's mother left immediately
but could not find her daughter. Mitchell's dead body was
discovered a few hours later in the garage of a nearby house. Her
hands were bound with twine and her throat had been slashed.
For nearly three years no charges were brought in the Mitchell
killing. In March of 1979, the Reno Police Department received the
information that a mental patient at the Louisiana State
University Medical Center at Shreveport, Louisiana, had told
hospital staff that some years ago in Reno she had killed a girl
named Michelle. The patient was appellant Cathy Woods, who had
been committed to the hospital in February of 1979. Appellant told
the hospital staff and subsequently Lieutenant Dennison of the
Reno Police Department that she had offered to help the girl fix
her car, had taken her to a garage on the pretext of getting some
tools, had made a sexual proposal to her, and when rebuffed, had
cut her throat. Appellant was subsequently brought to Reno and
tried.
Appellant entered a plea of not guilty. The defense theory was
that appellant's confession was the product of her mental illness:
Mitchell had actually been killed by Tony Lima, the boyfriend of
Raye Wood, to cover up the contract murder of Peggy Davis by Raye
Wood and Marjorie Carter. The two women had beaten Davis to death
with a hammer only a few days before Mitchell was killed.1 Raye
Wood's former jailmate, Kathy Murnighan, was ready to testify that
Raye Wood had told her that she and Lima had discussed killing a
woman to cover up the Davis killing by making it appear as though
both murders were the work of a homicidal maniac. One night Lima
told Raye Wood that he had found a girl whose car had broken down
and had slashed her throat. Raye Wood and Lima together disposed
of the murder weapon.
Lima was called during the offer of proof and denied having killed
Mitchell. Raye Wood invoked her fifth amendment privilege against
self-incrimination and refused to testify unless she was granted
immunity. The State declined to seek immunity on her behalf, and
Raye Wood was ruled to be unavailable. Defense counsel then sought
to introduce Murnighan's testimony under NRS 51.345. The district
court refused to allow Murnighan to testify because it did not
consider her testimony sufficiently trustworthy to be admissible
under the statute.
Initially, we note that Murnighan's proffered testimony included
not only Raye
Wood's statements about her own activities but also Raye Wood's
narration of Lima's statements to her. Lima's statements to Raye
Wood present no problem under the hearsay rule. Lima testified at
the offer of proof and denied having killed Mitchell. Had he been
permitted to testify at trial, his statements to Raye Wood would
have been admissible as prior inconsistent statements. NRS
51.035(2)(a). However, Murnighan could not testify about any of
Raye Wood's statements to her including Raye Wood's narration of
Lima's statements unless the district court admitted her
testimony under NRS 51.345. We turn then to consider the
admissibility of Murnighan's testimony under the statute.
NRS 51.345 provides in pertinent part:
1. A statement which at the time of its making: ..... (b) So far
tended to subject [the declarant] to civil or criminal liability;
..... that a reasonable man in his position would not have made
the statement unless he believed it to be true is not inadmissible
under the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a
witness. A statement tending to expose the declarant to criminal
liability and offered to exculpate the accused in a criminal case
is not admissible unless corroborating circumstances clearly
indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.
Under the statute, a statement against penal interest is
admissible if the declarant is unavailable at the time of the
trial and if the statement was against the declarant's penal
interest at the time when made. If the statement is offered to
exculpate an accused, however, an additional requirement exists:
corroborating circumstances must clearly indicate that the
statement is trustworthy.
An examination of the record discloses that Murnighan's proffered
testimony complied with all three requirements. Raye Wood, the
declarant, invoked her fifth amendment privilege and thus became
unavailable within the meaning of the Evidence Code. NRS
51.055(1)(a). Raye Wood's statements were clearly against her
penal interest at the time when made. By admitting that she had
helped dispose of the evidence of the crime, Raye Wood exposed
herself to criminal liability as an accessory after the fact. NRS
195.030(1). Since Raye Wood and Lima had discussed killing a
randomly chosen woman to cover up the Davis murder, Raye Wood
might also have exposed herself to criminal liability for
conspiracy to commit murder. NRS 199.480(1).
It was the requirement of trustworthiness, however, which
preoccupied the court below. In order for a statement to be
trustworthy evidence under the statute, the statement must
actually have been made by the declarant and must afford a basis
for believing the truth of the matter asserted. The legislative
history of Rule 804(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, on
which NRS 51.345 is based, indicates that its draftsmen were
particularly concerned with the possibility of fabrication. United
States v. Bagley, 537 F.2d 162, 167 (5th Cir.1976) and the
legislative history cited therein. "[O]ne senses in the decisions
a distrust of evidence of confessions by third persons offered to
exculpate the accused arising from suspicions of fabrication
either of the fact of the making of the confession or in its
contents." Notes of Advisory Committee on Proposed Rules,
Fed.Rules Evid.Rule 804(b)(3), 28 U.S.C.A. at 697.
In determining whether the declarant in fact made the proffered
statement, the trial court may consider the credibility of the
witness. United States v. Bagley, supra; Laumer v. United States,
409 A.2d 190 (D.C. 1979); contra United States v. Atkins, 558 F.2d
133 (3rd Cir.1977) (inquiry into trustworthiness of the declarant,
not of the witness). It has been noted that a test for
admissibility of hearsay statements based on the credibility of
the testifying witness is unrelated to the purpose of the general
rule against hearsay. United States v. Satterfield, 572 F.2d 687,
691-692
(9th Cir.1978). This observation notwithstanding, the Satterfield
court acknowledged that the legislative history of the rule
indicates that an inquiry into whether the statements against
penal interest were actually made is proper when the statements
are offered to exculpate an accused and that the credibility of
the witness is one of the factors the court should consider. Id.
The district court's primary reason for excluding Murnighan's
testimony was that it did not consider her to be a credible
witness. The trial judge made this determination in spite of the
fact that he had presided over Raye Wood's trial at which
Murnighan, as witness for the prosecution, testified about her
conversations with Raye Wood. Raye Wood's statements about the
Davis slaying and her statements about the Mitchell slaying were
interwoven in the same series of conversations in the same
surroundings during the same period of time. It is absurd to
contend that Murnighan was credible when she related Raye Wood's
statements about the Davis slaying but not credible when she
related Raye Wood's statements about the Mitchell slaying. Cf.
United States v. Benveniste, 564 F.2d 335 (9th Cir.1977) (when
evidence of accusatory statements admitted, error to exclude at
same trial evidence of exculpatory statements made by same
declarant regarding same subject matter).
We recognize that Murnighan's testimony at Raye Wood's trial was
admitted under a different hearsay exception and that the Evidence
Code did not require, or indeed authorize, the district court to
inquire into Murnighan's credibility prior to letting her testify.
However, Murnighan either was or was not a credible witness as to
her conversations with Raye Wood. The failings which were
mentioned by the district court her emotional instability, her
criminal record were equally present when she testified at Raye
Wood's trial. If they were not fatal to her credibility at that
trial, they should not have precluded her from telling her story
to the jury at appellant's trial. The State demonstrated its
belief that Murnighan was a credible witness when it put her on
the stand in Raye Wood's trial. Indeed, the State demonstrated
that belief when it employed Murnighan as an informant and
facilitated her access to Raye Wood in prison so that Murnighan
could obtain information from her. During that period of time
Murnighan provided information about two murders: police officers
testified that most of the verifiable information had been proved
accurate. The State cannot be allowed to use Murnighan as a
prosecution witness to obtain a conviction on one murder and then
to claim that she is not sufficiently credible to testify
regarding the same conversations as a defense witness in the trial
of a third party for the second murder.
Furthermore, there is sufficient corroboration of the proffered
statements to afford a basis for believing in the truth of their
contents. See United States v. Bagley, 537 F.2d at 167. A maroon
Monte Carlo was seen near the scene of the crime on the night of
the murder. Lima traded in his car, a maroon Monte Carlo, soon
after Mitchell was killed. A footprint in the garage matched
Lima's shoe size. Murnighan said that Lima lost something in the
garage; a blue cigarette lighter was found on the scene. Most
strikingly, Murnighan stated that Lima had said that Mitchell was
having her menstrual period when he killed her. Lima was trying to
excuse himself for not having stabbed Mitchell in the vagina as
Davis had been stabbed, because Raye Wood berated him for not
having killed Mitchell the same way that Davis had been killed.
Mitchell's autopsy had disclosed that she had been having her
menstrual period prior to her death. This fact was not mentioned
in any of the numerous news accounts of the crime, and the State
has been unable to proffer an alternative explanation of how
Murnighan could have learned of it.
The inquiry into whether the proffered statement is trustworthy
has led a number of courts to focus on the relationship of the
declarant and the witness. Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284,
93 S.Ct. 1038,
35 L.Ed.2d 297 (1973); United States v. Guillette, 547 F.2d 743
(2nd Cir.1976); Laumer v. United States, 409 A.2d 190 (D.C. 1979).
For instance, a statement against interest made to a close friend
or relative is considered to be more reliable than a statement
made to a stranger. No such relationship existed between Raye Wood
and Murnighan. However, Raye Wood had confessed to Murnighan that
she had committed one murder. She had been convicted of that
murder, and during the offer of proof she admitted that she had
committed it. The fact that Raye Wood confessed to Murnighan that
she had committed one murder makes it more probable that she would
confess to her, during the same period of time, that she had
committed another murder.
These corroborating circumstances seem to us ample to support a
finding of trustworthiness under NRS 51.345. The quantum of
corroboration demanded by the district court was particularly
inappropriate in light of the paucity of corroboration provided by
the State for appellant's confession, itself given under
circumstances not conducive to reliability. Cf. People v. Lettrich,
413 Ill. 172, 108 N.E.2d 488 (1952) (improper to exclude
confession of third party on hearsay grounds when defendant's
conviction rested on his repudiated confession obtained under
duress.)
Additionally, we are guided by our decision in Johnstone v. State,
92 Nev. 241, 548 P.2d 1362 (1976). In Johnstone appellant and two
companions were convicted of committing a murder in the motel
where they were staying. To show that he was not even in the motel
when his companions killed the victims, appellant wished to have a
police officer testify regarding statements made to him by a
couple staying at the motel. The couple had related that on the
evening of the murder they had met two men asking directions to
the room appellant shared with his companions. The district court,
finding no applicable hearsay exception, refused to allow the
testimony to come before the jury. We reversed and remanded for a
new trial. We pointed out that the Evidence Code itself declares
that the expressly stated hearsay exceptions are illustrative and
not restrictive; the general rule is that a statement is
admissible if its nature and the circumstances under which it is
made offer assurances of accuracy. NRS 51.075; NRS 51.315. The
couple's statements fit into just such a category and should have
been admitted.
Many of the factors which we found persuasive in Johnstone are
also present in this case. Like the couple in Johnstone, Murnighan
was not involved in any way with appellant Cathy Woods. She had
never met Tony Lima and her acquaintance with Raye Wood dated only
from her time in jail. No advantage accrued to her from either the
prosecution or the prison authorities for making her statements
about Mitchell's murder. There is no suggestion of bias on her
part or of any motive either to inculpate Raye Wood or to
exculpate appellant. Indeed, at the time that Murnighan first
related Raye Wood's statements she could not have known what would
aid appellant, for appellant had not yet implicated herself in the
Mitchell murder.
In Johnstone we relied on NRS 51.315, which renders admissible
statements offering strong assurances of accuracy if the declarant
is unavailable. The statute declares that NRS 51.345 is
illustrative of the general exception provided by NRS 51.315. The
"assurances of trustworthiness" required by NRS 51.345, the more
specific statute, should not be measured by a more restrictive
standard than the "assurances of accuracy" necessary to fall
within the general exception of NRS 51.315.
Consequently, we hold that the district court erred in not
permitting Murnighan to testify before the jury regarding Raye
Wood's statements. Both the contents of the statements and the
circumstances surrounding their making offer persuasive assurances
that Raye Wood did in fact make the statements attributed to her
and that there is a basis for believing in the truth of their
contents. It was for the jury to evaluate Murnighan's story and to
decide how much credence it should be
given. Furthermore, the district court's ruling was clearly
prejudicial. Without Murnighan's testimony, appellant was unable
to properly present her version of the events, without which her
defense was undoubtedly "far less persuasive than it might have
been." Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. at 294, 93 S.Ct. at 1045.
Appellant also attacks the district court's refusal to admit a set
of newspaper articles concerning Mitchell's death. The State
argued in its opening and closing statements that appellant's
confession had contained information which only the murderer could
have known. The defense wished to introduce the newspaper articles
to show that all the details provided by appellant could have been
gleaned from news accounts of the murder. The district court ruled
that the articles were not relevant and further were inadmissible
hearsay evidence.
Newspaper articles are not inadmissible under the hearsay rule if
they are offered not for the truth of their contents but for the
fact of their publication. United States v. Halifax County Board
of Education, 314 F.Supp. 65, 75 (E.D.N.C. 1970). Nor could the
articles be properly excluded as irrelevant. The determination of
whether evidence is relevant lies within the sound discretion of
the trial judge. Lamborn v. Phillips Pacific Chemical Co., 575
P.2d 215 (Wash. 1978). However, the record shows that the district
court based its ruling on the fact that there was no evidence that
appellant, who did not testify, had read any of the news accounts.
This factor need not have been determinative. Since the State
argued that information provided by appellant could have been
known only by the murderer, the newspaper articles could have been
properly used to show that the details provided by appellant were
public knowledge.
Appellant also contends that the district court improperly
admitted certain testimony regarding her personal life. Since we
have already concluded that appellant was prejudiced by the
improper exclusion of evidence, we do not find it necessary to
decide this issue. Errors, if any, that may have occurred will not
necessarily recur on retrial.
Appellant was charged with a serious crime carrying a severe
penalty. She was entitled to a trial at which she could defend
herself against these charges. The evidentiary rulings of the
district court, taken cumulatively, denied appellant a fair
opportunity to present her defense. Accordingly, we are compelled
to reverse appellant's conviction and to remand for a new trial.
SPRINGER, MOWBRAY and STEFFEN, JJ., concur.
FootNotes
1. See Kaplan v. State, 99 Nev. 449, 663 P.2d 1190 (1983). Lima,
who had been convicted of being an accessory after the fact, was
out on parole by the time appellant's trial began. Wood and Carter
were serving their sentences for first and second degree murder
respectively.