Southern Indiana
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The Tribune
March 29, 2006
Camm and family speak out at
sentencing
Prosecutor promises community "it's over"
By LISA HURT KOZAROVICH
newsroom@news-tribune.net
BOONVILLE
— Before being sentenced Tuesday for the murders of his wife and
children, former Indiana state trooper David Camm spoke publicly for
the first time in almost four years.
“I am innocent. I did not
murder my family. I did not molest my little girl. The reality is
Charles Boney murdered my family because he is a perverted monster,”
Camm said, breaking down in tears before the court.
Floyd
County Prosecutor Keith Henderson wasn’t moved, saying Camm’s
“crocodile tears” were nothing more than a show for the media and to
convince his family to continue their overwhelming support of his
innocence.
“It’s the same thing we’ve always seen from him,” Henderson said.
The
41-year-old was sentenced to life without parole for the Sept. 28,
2000, shooting deaths of his wife, Kim, and their children, 5-year-old
Jill and 7-year-old Brad. The family was murdered in the garage of
their Georgetown home.
During the eight-week-long trial,
prosecutors theorized Camm molested his daughter and then conspired
with Boney to kill the family to keep the secret. The defense believes
that Boney — whose DNA was found at the murder scene but not matched to
him until last year — attacked the family, possibly due to his violent
foot fetish.
Camm said he couldn’t understand how evidence of
Boney’s criminal history — including assaulting unknown women and
taking their shoes — could be excluded from the trial.
“This jury should have heard the whole story of Charles Boney,” he
said.
His
defense attorneys believe that is one key reason they will win an
appeal. Katharine “Kitty” Liell said the defense will file a court
motion within 30 days. If the Indiana Supreme Court refuses to hear the
case, Liell said she hopes to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court
on the basis that Camm’s Sixth Amendment right to present his defense
was violated.
“Justice has been victimized by politics. It’s
easier for the people and the politicians to believe that I am involved
than to believe the truth,” Camm said. “I will never stop trying to
find out why Charles Boney murdered my family and who was involved.
This is not over.”
Henderson isn’t worried about an appeal.
After two juries convicted Camm and the county spent an unprecedented
amount for him to receive the best defense — about $1 million for the
two trials — he doesn’t believe a higher court will even hear the case,
much less overturn it.
The final costs aren’t available yet,
but in the end the county is expected to pay out $1.5 million to $2
million for the two trials.
The court also heard from both David’s and Kim’s sisters during
Tuesday’s emotional sentencing.
Julie Hogue, Camm’s sister, criticized prosecutors and investigators
for not being objective.
“You can make that face at me Mr. Henderson, you can raise your eyebrow
at me, but that’s the truth,” she said.
Saying
her family has learned that innocent until proven guilty is only a
myth, Hogue then outlined how the state failed to prove its case. For
example, there is no evidence, no testimony, no witnesses to indicate
Camm left the gym the night of the murders, she said.
“What
happened in this courtroom and what I’m afraid happens in many
courtrooms, is that the prosecutor was perceived as the good guy
wearing the white hat of honesty. On the other hand, the defendant and
his advocates were not to be trusted.”
Debbie Karem, Kim’s
younger sister, was too ill to attend, but she was heard when Henderson
read her statement aloud. Her purpose, she said, was to let Camm know
that “now he is nothing but a distant memory.”
The sentencing
took place in Warrick County, where the trial was moved due to
excessive pretrial publicity. It was the second trial for Camm, whose
2002 conviction for the murders was overturned by the Indiana Court of
Appeals in 2004.
That reversal was based on the higher court’s
opinion that Camm did not receive a fair trial initially because the
jury was prejudiced by the several women who testified to having
affairs or flirtations with him during his 11-year marriage. That
testimony was not allowed at his recent trial.
The most
damaging evidence that was introduced at both trials was a collection
of eight blood stains found on the T-shirt Camm was wearing the night
of the murders. The blood was that of his daughter.
State
experts testified the blood was high-velocity impact spatter, which
would prove Camm was within a few feet of his daughter when she was
shot in the head.
Defense experts testified the stains were
caused by transfer, possibly by Camm brushing up against his daughter’s
hair. Although Camm said he didn’t recall touching his daughter because
he thought she was dead, he reached over her to pull his son, who he
thought was still breathing, out of the family’s Ford Bronco.
The
defense’s main evidence was the testimony of 10 basketball players, and
a bystander, who said they were playing pickup basketball with Camm at
the time of the murders.
Sam Lockhart, Camm’s maternal uncle,
testified that during the one game that Camm sat out — when police
believe the murders occurred — he played in his place and knew that his
nephew didn’t leave the gym during that time.
Later, jurors said they believed Lockhart was “mistaken” in his
recollection.
Camm
is in a correctional facility in Plainfield waiting to hear where he
will be imprisoned. He requested Tuesday to be placed in Wabash Valley
Correctional Institute, in Carlisle, to be closer to his family and
attorneys and pursue a college education. Previously, he was in
Michigan City.
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