| `COWBOY
BOB'
ROPES WINS-BUT AT CONSIDERABLE COST
By Ken Armstrong
Tribune Staff Writer
January 10, 1999
Robert Macy is America's prosecutor.
An Oklahoma lawman known for roping calves,
talking
tough and
wearing a string tie, Macy has won consistent praise for protecting his
county and his country.
As Oklahoma County's district attorney, he has
personally put
53 defendants
on Death Row, quite possibly a record. While president of the National
District Attorneys Association, he helped shape federal law, urging
Congress
to restrict inmate appeals. "A true patriot," is what former U.S. Atty.
Gen. William Barr called him.
To avenge one of this century's most infamous
crimes,
Macy has
vowed to try Oklahoma City bombers Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols
160
times--once for each victim not covered by the federal prosecution--if
that's what it takes to get the death penalty against both.
But while Macy's plaques and press clippings
speak of a
hero,
the often obscure records of state and federal appellate courts offer a
different description. Here's what they have found:
Macy has cheated. He has lied. He has bullied.
Even when
a man's
life is at stake, Macy has spurned the rules of a fair trial,
concealing
evidence, misrepresenting evidence, or launching into abusive, improper
arguments that had nothing to do with the evidence, according to
appellate
rulings condemning his tactics.
In the court of law, Macy meets with constant and
sometimes severe
criticism. But in the court of public opinion he consistently wins
re-election--usually
with more than 70 percent of the vote.
In the first capital case he ever prosecuted,
Macy
blamed a triple
murder on Clifford Henry Bowen, a 50-year-old professional poker player
with a history of burglary.
Macy contended that at about 2 a.m. on July 6,
1980,
Bowen, a
potbellied man with salt-and-pepper hair, drew a .45-caliber automatic
loaded with silver-tipped, hollow-point bullets and shot and killed
three
men sharing a poolside table at an Oklahoma City motel.
But 12 alibi witnesses testified that Bowen was
at a
rodeo 300
miles away in Tyler, Texas, until about midnight on July 5. The family
that owned the rodeo said he was there. So did the cowboy who rode Hook
'em Henry, a bull named for Bowen.
The prosecution's case relied upon two
eyewitnesses who
identified
Bowen as a red-capped stranger they saw loitering around the pool area
sometime between 12:15 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. One witness saw him through a
window more than 85 feet away. The other had undergone hypnosis to
sharpen
her memory--though prosecutors kept that to themselves.
Macy waited until his final argument--after the
defense
could
speak no more--to offer jurors a theory: Maybe Bowen took a private jet
from the rodeo grounds to the Downtown Airpark in Oklahoma City. But
Macy
had offered no such evidence. And expert testimony later indicated the
airstrip in Texas was abandoned and that neither airport could
accommodate
the kind of jet needed for such a rapid flight.
Bowen was convicted and sentenced to death. Two
years
passed,
then a South Carolina police detective told Bowen's lawyer something
startling:
Powerful evidence suggested the killer was not Bowen, but a small-town
South Carolina police lieutenant.
A federal appeals court later described that
evidence:
The lieutenant, a potbellied man with
salt-and-pepper
hair, matched
the killer's physical description. He habitually carried a .45 with
unusual
silver-tipped, hollow-point bullets. The lieutenant's fiance had been
married
to Ray Peters, one of the three men who were killed. Peters had slapped
his ex-wife and made recent threats against her.
For a year, the lieutenant had been under
investigation
by South
Carolina police as a suspected hit man. He had been in Oklahoma when
the
three men were shot and had returned to South Carolina later that day.
And the lieutenant had once before dated a woman who was being pestered
by an old flame. Her ex-boyfriend got shot five times in the head.
Oklahoma authorities had collected all that
evidence and
more
before Bowen was ever tried. But the prosecutors had not disclosed it
to
Bowen's lawyers. Five years after Bowen was placed on Death Row, a
federal
appeals court threw out his conviction, saying prosecutors violated the
U.S. Constitution by concealing evidence so powerful it cast "grave
doubt"
on Bowen's guilt. Bowen was not retried.
"There is no conceivable way that I could even
try to
conjure
up a basis for holding that evidence from a defense lawyer," says Tulsa
attorney Patrick Williams, who helped represent Bowen on appeal. "It's
inexcusable."
Five months after Bowen's conviction was
reversed, Macy
won re-election
with 80 percent of the vote. The next year, in 1987, he was named the
state's
outstanding district attorney, honored for his "exemplary
professionalism
in the exercise of prosecutorial duties." And a few years after that,
Macy's
fellow prosecutors elected him president of the National District
Attorneys
Association.
Bowen died in 1996, 10 years after being freed.
He is
one of at
least 381 people nationally who have had a homicide conviction reversed
because prosecutors failed to disclose evidence suggesting innocence or
presented evidence they knew to be false, according to a Tribune
analysis
spanning four decades.
In a recent interview, Macy said he believed the
Oklahoma City
police investigation had eliminated the South Carolina officer as a
suspect
and that he would have turned over the evidence against him had Bowen's
attorney formally requested it. The federal appeals court said the
evidence
was so compelling that Macy should have disclosed it regardless.
Macy, 68, is nicknamed "Cowboy Bob." Western
memorabilia
adorns
his office, and on the wall are the handcuffs he used when he was a
police
officer some 40 years ago.
Macy, who's been district attorney since 1980,
bristles
at court
opinions that conclude he hid evidence or engaged in any kind of
deception.
"I may not be very smart," Macy said, "but I'm
honest."
At least four men convicted of murder have
received new
trials
or sentencing hearings based upon an appellate finding that Macy broke
the rules of a fair trial--although Bowen's was the only case reversed
because of withheld evidence, and the only one to end in acquittal. In
addition, at least 17 other defendants had trials where reviewing
courts
said Macy or his trial partners did something improper such as making
prohibited
comments during argument. But in those cases, the courts either upheld
the conviction anyway or ordered a new trial on some other basis.
"It's my obligation as district attorney to
present the
evidence
in the light most favorable to the state," Macy said. "The people are
entitled
to have a D.A. who argues their position very vigorously."
Macy said that in some cases, the Oklahoma
attorney
general's
office, which represents the state in criminal appeals, has failed to
show
the reviewing courts that he was simply responding to unfair attacks
from
the defense attorney. In other cases, Macy attributes criticism to
philosophical
differences with a former judge on the Oklahoma Court of Criminal
Appeals.
But the Oklahoma court continued to fault Macy
even
after that
judge died five years ago. And federal courts have upbraided Macy as
well.
Last year tells the story:
In March, a federal judge ordered a new
sentencing
hearing for
Death Row inmate Kenneth Paxton, saying Macy engaged in "blatant
misrepresentation"
while convincing the jury to sentence Paxton to death.
In June, the Oklahoma appeals court upheld the
conviction of Death
Row inmate Osbaldo Torres but upbraided Macy for a host of "improper
tactics"
he employed while arguing to the jury. The court noted that it had
condemned
Macy for the same tactics before.
In November, Macy was re-elected to his fifth
full term.
He ran
unopposed.
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