Bill Text: FL S0036 | 2014 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Relief of James Joseph Richardson by the Department of Corrections

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2014-05-02 - Died in Judiciary [S0036 Detail]

Download: Florida-2014-S0036-Introduced.html
       Florida Senate - 2014                              (NP)    SB 36
       
       
        
       By Senator Thompson
       
       
       
       
       
       12-00092-14                                             201436__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act for the relief of James Joseph Richardson by
    3         the State of Florida; providing for an appropriation
    4         to compensate James Joseph Richardson for the length
    5         of time he was incarcerated as a result of his
    6         wrongful conviction by the state; providing an
    7         effective date.
    8  
    9         WHEREAS, on or about October 25, 1967, the seven children
   10  of Annie Mae and James Joseph Richardson died of food poisoning
   11  in Arcadia, and the cause of death was the consumption of food
   12  laced with an insecticide called parathion, and
   13         WHEREAS, James Joseph Richardson, a migrant farm worker,
   14  was arrested on or about October 31, 1967, indicted by a grand
   15  jury in December 1967, and found guilty of first-degree felony
   16  murder in May 1968, and
   17         WHEREAS, James Joseph Richardson was sentenced to death and
   18  spent four years of his original prison term on death row, until
   19  the Florida Supreme Court declared the death penalty
   20  unconstitutional and commuted his sentence to life in prison,
   21  and
   22         WHEREAS, in August 1988, the Richardsons’ babysitter, Betsy
   23  Reese, admitted to two of her nursing assistants that she killed
   24  the seven Richardson children, and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune
   25  subsequently exposed her admissions in a published story, and
   26         WHEREAS, Ms. Reese confessed on numerous occasions that she
   27  had poisoned the Richardson children, as she had been angry over
   28  Mr. Richardson’s introduction of her husband to another woman in
   29  Jacksonville, and
   30         WHEREAS, in October 1988, Governor Bob Martinez received a
   31  box of materials that had been stolen from the Office of the
   32  State Attorney, and the contents of the box indicated that there
   33  was exculpatory evidence not provided to Mr. Richardson’s
   34  attorney before the trial, and
   35         WHEREAS, the Governor issued executive orders assigning
   36  Attorney General Bob Butterworth and Janet Reno, State Attorney
   37  for the 11th Judicial Circuit, to investigate the murder of the
   38  Richardson children, and
   39         WHEREAS, the attorney general concluded that James Joseph
   40  Richardson had not received a fair trial, and
   41         WHEREAS, James Joseph Richardson was released from prison
   42  in April 1989, pending issuance of the final investigative
   43  report and conclusions by the state attorney, and
   44         WHEREAS, on May 5, 1989, the state attorney filed a
   45  Memorandum of Nolle Prosequi, and the same year the court
   46  vacated James Joseph Richardson’s judgment, conviction, and
   47  sentence, and
   48         WHEREAS, on July 1, 2008, the Legislature enacted the
   49  Victims of Wrongful Incarceration Compensation Act, after which
   50  James Joseph Richardson timely filed a petition with the Twelfth
   51  Judicial Circuit in DeSoto County seeking status as a wrongfully
   52  incarcerated person eligible under the law for compensation, and
   53         WHEREAS, although James Joseph Richardson initially settled
   54  a lawsuit with DeSoto County over his wrongful prosecution, the
   55  state contested his claim under the Victims of Wrongful
   56  Incarceration Act, and an administrative law judge found that
   57  although there was an absence of evidence proving Mr. Richardson
   58  guilty, there was insufficient evidence to prove his innocence,
   59  which is a requirement under the act, and
   60         WHEREAS, the trial court denied James Joseph Richardson’s
   61  wrongful prosecution incarceration claim, and
   62         WHEREAS, despite substantial evidence that James Joseph
   63  Richardson was innocent, the state argued that he poisoned his
   64  children’s food with parathion to recover their life insurance
   65  proceeds, and
   66         WHEREAS, Gerald Purvis, the insurance agent who attempted
   67  to sell insurance policies to James Joseph Richardson, told
   68  investigators that he had informed Mr. Richardson on two
   69  separate occasions that the policies were not in effect due to
   70  his nonpayment of insurance premiums, and
   71         WHEREAS, Mr. Purvis’s transcribed statements indicate that
   72  the policies had never taken effect and that James Joseph
   73  Richardson had understood them to be invalid, but these
   74  statements were not provided to Mr. Richardson or his attorney,
   75  and
   76         WHEREAS, a pastor who spoke with James Joseph Richardson at
   77  the hospital while he was waiting for information on the
   78  condition of his children provided a statement to authorities
   79  that Mr. Richardson told him that the children were not insured
   80  and that statement was not disclosed to Mr. Richardson’s
   81  attorney, and
   82         WHEREAS, Ms. Reese was evidently a jealous woman, as there
   83  were handwritten notes of assistant state attorney John
   84  Treadwell demonstrating that she had shot and killed her second
   85  husband over a woman, and
   86         WHEREAS, Ms. Reese was on parole at the time of the
   87  Richardson children’s death for the 1956 murder of her second
   88  husband, and her first husband had also mysteriously died after
   89  eating a meal she had prepared for him, and
   90         WHEREAS, on October 26, 1967, after a number of
   91  unproductive searches of the Richardsons’ home and the
   92  surrounding area, Ms. Reese, who lived in an apartment adjacent
   93  to the Richardson’s home, assisted authorities in uncovering a
   94  bag of parathion in a nearby shed, which had been searched the
   95  previous night without event, and
   96         WHEREAS, Ms. Reese’s apartment was not searched on October
   97  25, 1967, or in the days immediately thereafter, and
   98         WHEREAS, numerous witnesses, including James Joseph
   99  Richardson, indicated that Ms. Reese had a motive to harm the
  100  Richardson family, and the state disregarded its constitutional
  101  obligation in failing to provide all of these statements to
  102  James Joseph Richardson’s attorney, and
  103         WHEREAS, apart from the investigation by the DeSoto County
  104  Sheriff’s Office, inconsistent information was presented at the
  105  trial, and
  106         WHEREAS, the state, knowingly and without the knowledge of
  107  the defense, used the perjured testimony of one of its principal
  108  witnesses and,
  109         WHEREAS, despite the state’s legal and constitutional
  110  obligation, did not inform the court that this witness had
  111  perjured himself to the court, and
  112         WHEREAS, after James Joseph Richardson’s 1967 indictment by
  113  the grand jury of first-degree murder, but prior to his trial,
  114  State Prosecutor Frank Schaub and agents of the Florida
  115  Department of Law Enforcement acknowledged that the state had a
  116  weak case, and
  117         WHEREAS, in a memorandum dated January 1968, the department
  118  concluded that the investigation failed to produce sufficient
  119  evidence to justify a court action, and, without additional
  120  information, the case would be nolle prosequi, and
  121         WHEREAS, the memorandum also stated that press accounts
  122  were leading the public to believe that Mr. Richardson was
  123  guilty and that there was sufficient evidence to convict him,
  124  and that the state should be cautious in making its final
  125  decision on prosecution, and
  126         WHEREAS, in a letter dated January 30, 1968, that the state
  127  prosecutor wrote to an assistant state attorney, the state
  128  prosecutor stated that if no progress was made the charges would
  129  have to be dismissed a reasonable time before the case went to
  130  trial, and
  131         WHEREAS, on February 6, 1968, just three months before Mr.
  132  Richardson was found guilty, a letter from assistant state
  133  attorney Treadwell to the state prosecutor indicated that he
  134  planned to meet again with agents from the Florida Department of
  135  Law Enforcement to determine whether there was sufficient
  136  evidence to take the case to trial, and
  137         WHEREAS, on May 5, 1989, about 21.5 years after Mr.
  138  Richardson’s conviction, the state attorney’s Memorandum of
  139  Nolle Prosequi concluded that the investigation into the
  140  Richardson children’s deaths was inadequate and incomplete, and
  141         WHEREAS, the memorandum stated that [obvious] leads were
  142  never pursued; critical questions were never answered; glaring
  143  inconsistencies were never questioned or resolved, and standard
  144  investigative procedures were not followed. . . [T]he State did
  145  not have sufficient evidence to charge James Joseph Richardson
  146  and to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. . . It is
  147  apparent, after a review of all evidence obtained in the
  148  original investigation and ensuing investigations, that not only
  149  couldn’t the State prove [Mr.] Richardson was guilty beyond a
  150  reasonable doubt, but [Mr.] Richardson was probably wrongfully
  151  accused],” and
  152         WHEREAS, because James Joseph Richardson was precluded from
  153  proving his innocence in a court of law after the filing of the
  154  Memorandum of Nolle Prosequi, and
  155         WHEREAS, in providing compensation to James Joseph
  156  Richardson, the Legislature acknowledges the fact that Mr.
  157  Richardson suffered significant damages that are unique to his
  158  case resulting from his wrongful prosecution and conviction, the
  159  resulting deprivation of freedom, and the psychological and
  160  physical toll of the time spent on death row, and
  161         WHEREAS, we find that James Joseph Richardson is entitled
  162  to a sum of $3 million in compensation for the injuries and
  163  damages sustained during his wrongful imprisonment, and
  164         WHEREAS, the Legislature apologizes to James Joseph
  165  Richardson on behalf of the state, NOW, THEREFORE,
  166  
  167  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  168  
  169         Section 1. The facts stated in the preamble to this act are
  170  found and declared to be true.
  171         Section 2. There is appropriated from the General Revenue
  172  Fund to the Department of Corrections the sum of $3 million for
  173  the relief of James Joseph Richardson for injuries and damages
  174  sustained due to his incarceration for his wrongful prosecution
  175  and conviction for first degree murder in connection with the
  176  death of his seven children.
  177         Section 3. The Chief Financial Officer is directed to draw
  178  a warrant in favor of James Joseph Richardson in the sum of $3
  179  million upon funds of the Department of Corrections in the State
  180  Treasury, and the Chief Financial Officer is directed to pay the
  181  same out of such funds in the State Treasury.
  182         Section 4. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.

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