Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Even Ted Bundy Had Friends

In my previous posts, as I have taken on this blog adventure, I have talked about some of the cases I have seen that have been humorous to me.  As I mentioned in my first post, I am doing this in part to vent, in part as a survival mechanism and because it is required for my class (smiley face emoji that I do not know how to add).  The reality of it is much of my job is not only difficult to deal with but can take its toll.  I literally witnessed a three year old little girl that had been murdered by her step farther and buried in the back yard removed from the ground more than two years after her death.  While I am not comparing my position as witness to the poor officers who had to dig her up, this type of work can take its toll.  I can only pray that one day I will forget her autopsy that I had to witness.  

Anyway, my point is this, not every aspect of my job is light hearted and sometimes it can be hard.  No one wants to hear about the hard times, so I am going to blog about them so it does not bottle up.  Hence you are not getting a funny and light hearted post today.   
One of the challenges that I face is that in every prosecution is that while much of the community
sees me as the hero of the story, the one fighting for truth justice and to keep the streets safe; the rest of the community sees me as the evil corrupt overzealous prosecutor with a personal agenda.  In other words, the people love me until I start prosecuting one of their family members or friends.  Little known fact, after joining a church group in Salt Lake City, many of Ted Bundy’s friends from
church protested his arrest.  They made appearances and wrote letters in his support because he was their friend and Ted just would not do such a thing.  Even murders have friends who want to believe they are innocent.     

To illustrate this, I share an experience I had when I was a prosecutor at the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office in Mesa, Arizona.  I was assigned a child abuse case where the mother of the three year old victim filled a bathtub with scalding hot water and then held her little boys feet where they cooked in the water.  Once his feet were done, she did the same to his penis.  This was a punishment for wetting his pants.  The boy learned his lesson as he had third degree burns covering his feet and up past the ankles as well as second degree burns on his penis.  The injuries were so severe that doctors has to filet the feet open so the infection and swelling would not tear his feet apart.  He will never recover from the disfigurement associated with the injuries to the more sensitive part of his body.  The level of depravity associated with this crime goes beyond my comprehension.  

While I was not the original prosecutor on the case, I was assigned the case a few years after the crime to defend a request by the defendant to be excused from probation.  
Now the reason that I am sharing this is because of a conversation I had with my sister regarding that case.  Shortly before Christmas my sister and I went to go do a little Christmas shopping.  While in the car, and making casual conversation my sister brought up this case, well at least the version of the case that she heard.  Purely by chance, the monster that inflicted this abuse upon her son attended the same church as my sister.  
Not knowing that I was involved with the case, my sister started telling me of the atrocity’s being perpetrated by the County Attorney’s Office on this lady that she knew and asking if there was anything I could do to stop it.  As she explained to me “There is a lady in my ward that is being prosecuted by your office and they won’t let her see her kids or be with her family just because her little boy turned on the hot water in the bathtub when she was not looking and got a little burned.  What are you guys doing over there?”  
I explained that her story did not sound right and that we would not be prosecuting a case with those facts.  I did not even recognize the case that she was describing was my case until she told me the defendant’s name.   Once she mentioned the name and I made the connection I about flipped my lid, I was so angry.  That this woman would have the audacity to do what she did and then attempt to paint a picture for her friends as if she were the victim was beyond my comprehension at that time. 
I quickly explained the real facts of the case and offered to show my sister the pictures of the little boys feet, which she declined.  She, of course agreed with me that prosecution was not only appropriate but that this woman should not see the light of day.  
My take away from this experience is that almost everyone charged with a crime claims to be innocent and tells people that they are being railroaded and that the system is rigged.  Their friends then believe them… regardless of the facts.  Again, look at Ted Bundy, he convinced hundreds.  
There have been innocent people accused of crimes, and my worst nightmare is that I would somehow ever convict one, but those are very few and far in between.  Just keep in mind that before you jump on the police and prosecutors are corrupt bandwagon when you see a Facebook story that the writer has an agenda. 
I learned that I had to grow a thick skin, heck even my own sister was ripping me and my office for prosecuting this case.  It is just too bad she did not have the real facts of the case initially.  
So, what’s my point to this whole blog, you know besides the school credit?   The simple answer is that there are two sides to every story, every author, including me in this post, has an agenda.  Just remember that when reading posts on Facebook or in the news to be objective and notice the biases of the authors, and before you repost that story on the corrupt cops, or the overzealous prosecutors make sure that the atrocities that you are now sharing with your family and friends are actually true.       

10 comments:

  1. I still have trauma from the first case you mention and I wasnt even in the scene. I just listened to the interviews and helped with discovery and motions. I still get upset thinking about it and it's probably been 5 years since I had anything to do with it and I did far less than the rest of our office or the PD did.

    So yes, it's a hard job. That others may be harder doesn't diminish that. And I think most people fail to understand just how horrific some of the things we deal with are. Either you harden yourself to it or you let it wreck you.

    What I tell people is "You ever get depressed or angry at the local news for all the trageic stuff they report? Well 95% of even tragic cases never make the news. But we still have to deal with them."

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  2. Great post. I can completely relate. What is also frustrating is that when you do a good job and convict the guilty party, often, the victim or victim’s family are not happy with the amount of punishment meeted out. It often can feel like a lose/lose. Keep up the awesome work! I’ll keep reading

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  3. Truly a hard job and explained so well. I know I could not handle the jobs all people involved in these cases do. I can imagine the stress of your job.

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  4. At probation, I always did it strange that when a person claims a drug test has a “false positive” result it is always for their historic drug of choice and never for a substance they have limited or no history with.

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  6. I remember a sex offense case, several years ago where a local man had molested several children. When he was caught, he mentally shut down and went into complete denial, so far, that he believed it himself and some of the community believed him as well. The rest of the community wanted to hang him.

    As part of his shut down, he went out and engaged in community service with those who believed him. Sadly, some of that gullible group included extended family. While his case worked its way through the courts, I was privvy to details, but couldn't say anything.

    After sentencing, extended family was furious. "What if he was innocent"? "What if the kids lied"? they said, notwithstanding the absolute mountain of evidence against him. At that point, I did manage to state that if they could read the case file, they would throw up. That had no effect on these brainwashed individuals. They believed him hook, line and sinker.

    About a year into prison, this man started attending treatment and as part of the process, he wrote apology letters to many people and admitted his crimes.

    That case taught me a valuable lesson about life. Some people only hear WHAT they want to hear from WHO they want to hear it from....

    I am sure that is why our country is becoming divided.

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  7. Great post. I am very thankful there are people like you willing to do the job you do everyday. I like closing my eyes at night not having to see horrific images such as the ones you’ve had to see which I imagine are burned in your mind. Thank you, keep fighting the good fight!

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  8. That is such a horrible case, Scott! It’s a small glimpse into the world that you have to deal with every day. I have stated many times the last year that in this time with social media we are, more than ever, swayed one way or another emotionally. So many sides of one story can be authored with strong persuasion that in one setting I can be convinced I I agree with a particular party and a few scrolls and clicks later, I’ve changed my mind. But that has also caused me to evolve in my ability to not take things at face value and make sure I have the facts straight. I do hope that the majority of people having an awaking during this time of information are also becoming more discerning in there quest for truth.

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  9. Finding truth is getting harder and harder. I don't want to believe all the horrible things I read about daily but I am grateful to you and others in fields that fight against such horrific crimes committed against children.

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  10. Don't forget your defense days either. Most people who commit crimes are likable people. There are exceptions of course . . .

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