Archive for the ‘Sex Panic’ Category

Joseph Allen Still in Desperate Need of Help

Monday, May 13th, 2013

Twenty years ago, Joseph Allen and his co-defendant Nancy Smith were accused of terrible crimes that never happened. They were convicted in August of 1994. Joseph was sentenced to five consecutive life sentences.

Due to a sentencing error, they were released on bond in early 2009. In June of 2009, a judge who reviewed the evidence (more properly the lack of evidence) acquitted them both. Their long terrible nightmare was over.

Or so they thought. Relentless District Attorney Dennis Will filed an appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court, claiming the judge lacked the authority to acquit. Disgracefully, the Court, with the support of Will and Attorney General Richard Cordray, reinstated the convictions in 2010. (Cordray was later made head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau by Obama.)

I know of no other case where acquitted persons have had their convictions reinstated. So much for double jeopardy.

Smith and Allen have remained free but in legal limbo for nearly three years. The judge who acquitted them recused himself. (I suspect under pressure.) Joseph Allen will be back in court on June 5th for resentencing.

Smith and Allen have filed petitions for clemency. Joseph’s lawyer will ask the new judge to let Joseph remain free on bail while the clemency petition is pending. If the amount is again set for $100,000 the bond fee will be $10,000.

The National Center for Reason and Justice has a Prisoner Relief Fund, but we can’t spare $10,000. Recently I made an appeal here for donations to the fund. Thus far we have received over half of the amount needed. But if we don’t meet our goal, Joseph will go back to prison on June 5th — less than a month away.

Joseph became a good friend many years ago. We enjoy spending time with him when he is in Boston visiting family. I spoke with him this evening. He was encouraged by the progress we have made. He asked me to say to his supporters: “I appreciate everything you are doing from the bottom of my heart. You will never be forgotten.”

If you have not already done so, I hope you will find it in your heart to make a donation to the NCRJ’s Prisoner Relief Fund. You can send a check (indicate Prisoner Relief Fund) to:

NCRJ
POB 191101
Roxbury MA 02119

You can make a credit-card donation via PayPal or Google here.

I have frequently posted about this case.

This is a brief summary.

-Bob

 

 

 

Dorothy Rabinbowitz: The Trials of Father MacRae

Saturday, May 11th, 2013

“Here once more, in the MacRae case, was a set of charges built by a determined sex-abuse investigator and an atmosphere in which accusation was, in effect, all the proof required to bring a guilty verdict. But now there was another factor: huge financial payouts for victims’ claims.”

The case of Father Gordon MacRae has long bee sponsored by the National Center for Reason and Justice. Read this article, by Dorothy Rabinowitz, in the Wall Street Journal (May 11, 2013)

Watch this interview with Rabinowitz.

The NCRJ Needs Your Help

Thursday, April 25th, 2013

Mos of you are familiar with my organization, the National Center for Reason and Justice

.We are looking for volunteers to help us in our work. Please visit this page to see the kind of help we are seeking.

http://ncrj.org/volunteers/

St. Francis professor fights to overturn Jesse Friedman’s conviction

Thursday, April 4th, 2013

“Now, Professor [and National Center for Reason and Justice Director Emily] Horowitz brings back [Jesse] Friedman and [Ron] Kuby to answer questions and show new evidence that contradicts the claims made in the original case on Tuesday, April 9 at 4 p.m. in Room 4202 of St. Francis College located at 180 Remsen St. in Brooklyn Heights. The event is free and open to the public.”

http://www.brooklyneagle.com/articles/st-francis-professor-fights-overturn-friedmans-conviction-2013-04-03-142000

Two Articles About Baran’s Fight to Clear His Name

Wednesday, March 20th, 2013

http://www.edgeonthenet.com/news/crime/features/142643/wrongly_jailed_for_21_years,_bernard_baran_demands_his_records_be_expunged

http://maggiemcneill.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/absolute-corruption/

The NCRJ Issues a White Paper on the Jesse Friedman Case

Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

The National Center For Reason and Justice has published this paper on the Friedman case.

New Evidence in the Jesse Friedman Case

Tuesday, March 5th, 2013

Jesse Friedman, of “Capturing the Friedmans,” whose case National Center for Reason and Justice  sponsors: Look at the new evidence. Sign the petition. http://www.justiceforjesse.com/

Innocent Woman Struggles With Sex-Offender Restrictions

Sunday, March 3rd, 2013

The National Center for Reason and Justice is delighted that the press is focusing on our innocent defendant Anna Vasquez‘s problems as a registered sex offender, talking in depth about the injustice of these policies even for those who, unlike Anna, have broken the law but deserve the right to put their lives in order after duly serving their time.

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_news/article/Sex-offender-status-imposes-harsh-limits-on-4324001.php

Bernard Baran Radio Interview This Evening

Wednesday, February 27th, 2013

Bernard Baran will be interviewed this evening, February 27th, by TRadioV in San Francisco.

The interview will take place at 6 p.m. pst and 9 p.m. est.

Here is the link: http://tradiov.com/sf/

You can review the history of the case here.

I am so sorry this battle is still going on. The Massachusetts Attorney General’s office can be very cruel.

-Bob Chatelle

 

 

 

 

 

Bernard Baran, Exonerated and Compensated, Fights to Clear His Name

Sunday, February 17th, 2013

National Center for Reason and Justice — NCRJ

For immediate release: February 17, 2013

Contact:  Bob Chatelle, press@ncrj.org

Victim of false conviction and imprisonment,

already exonerated and awarded monetary damges,

still fighting in Massachusetts courts to clear his name

WHEN: 2pm, February 26, 2013

WHERE:  Suffolk Superior Court, Courtroom 1006, before Superior Court Justice Mary         K. Ames

As a teenager, Bernard Baran was falsely convicted of child sexual abuse in Massachusetts. This happened in 1985,  and 21 years later, with support from the National Center for Reason and Justice, he finally gained his freedom. Since then he has successfully fought to be compensated monetarily for the grave injustice he suffered.

Nevertheless, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley still refuses to expunge Baran’s record.

At 2 p.m. on February 26, Bernard Baran, represented by attorney John Swomley, will ask a Massachusetts judge to expunge all records of his arrest and conviction.  Baran wants to go on with his life with a completely clean slate.

Baran was an openly gay 19-year-old working in a day care center when he was sent to Massachusetts prison for a crime he did not commit, for a crime that no one committed, for a crime that adults created in young children’s minds.  Homophobia played a prominent role in the case.  Baran was convicted in 1985, at the height of the national hysteria over alleged sex abuse in day care centers. He was, in fact, the first daycare employee convicted in America during this panic.  Finally, when the videotaped interviews with the children were dragged out of the Berkshire County prosecutor’s office, they showed the incredibly leading questions used on the children.

Interviewer: “Tell me a little more about what Bernie did to you?

Child: “He didn’t do nothing.”

Interviewer (ignoring child’s answer):“Did Bernie touch you while in the bathroom? I know you are scared….Did it hurt you when Bernie touched you?”

Child: “He didn’t.”

Interviewer grabs doll’s penis to demonstrate: “Did he pull it? Did he twist it around?”

Massachusetts activist and writer Bob Chatelle wrote to Baran in prison to offer help.  On March 3, 1999, Baran wrote back:  “I was talking to my mother last night and as we talked I started to cry. I just told her I don’t know how much longer I can hold on for. I have spent 15 years of my life locked away for something I never did and after a while you start to lose all hope. I tell you this because when I see your letter that’s what I start feeling is hope and it scares me.”

In 2002, several writers, human and civil rights advocates, and attorneys, founded the National Center for Reason and Justice (NCRJ) to support Baran and others falsely accused of child abuse.

Finally, thanks in large part to the NCRJ’s work and that of lawyer John Swomley, Baran was released from prison in June 2006, under strict restrictions including a GPS ankle bracelet. In June 2009 he was fully exonerated. In August 2012 he was granted $400,000 in compensation for his wrongful imprisonment.

The State of Massachusetts, however, is inexplicably fighting to keep Baran from expunging the records of his case.  NCRJ calls on the State to serve justice by immediately processing the expungment.

“Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley in the past has had a troubling record with these cases,” says John Swomley, the lawyer for Bernard Baran.  “Now is her chance finally to do something right, something no reasonable person could possibly think unwise.  We were surprised that the State opposed the expungement of Baran’s records.  We are seeking it as the final logical step, and for Bernard Baran’s peace of mind.  On some level, if they want to fight it, it gives him his day in court.  We are looking forward to it.”

Bob Chatelle, founder and executive director of the National Center for Reason and Justice, is available for comment, as are Bernard Baran and his lawyer John Swomley, 617-227-9443, jswomley@swomleyandtennen.com.