
DNA Evidence Frees a Woman
Convicted of Killing Her Daughter
November
29, 2007
by David Staba
BUFFALO, Nov. 28, 2007
In 1994, Lynn DeJac was found guilty of strangling her 13-year-old
daughter during a night of drinking and bar hopping. On Wednesday, Ms.
DeJac walked out of the Erie County courthouse free, and the first
woman in the United States to have her conviction for killing someone
overturned based on DNA evidence.
The 44-year-old Ms. DeJac whose husband and twin sons were seated
behind her in the courtroom began weeping after Judge John L.
Michalski ordered her released on her own recognizance.
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Photo:
Don Heupel/Associated Press
Lynn DeJac and her lawyer, Andrew C. LoTempio, at a
hearing Wednesday in Buffalo. A judge set aside her murder conviction
in her daughter’s death.
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After her
release, Ms. DeJac left the courthouse with her husband, Chuck Peters,
whom she married while in prison, and their sons, who were born during
her first year in prison. She did not speak to reporters.
“The first thing she wanted to do was go to my sister’s
grave, then reunite with everybody -- it’s been so long,” said Ms.
DeJac’s 22-year-old son, Edward Girard, an Army sergeant stationed in
Fort Bragg, N.C. “She hasn’t met my wife yet; she hasn’t met her
grandkids.”
Yet despite Ms. DeJac’s legal victory, she faces another legal hurdle.
Frank Clark, the Erie County district attorney, said he planned to
retry her on a charge of second-degree manslaughter because, since her
conviction, the legal definition of murder due to depraved indifference
had changed.
As a result, Mr. Clark said, even if Ms. DeJac was found guilty at a
second trial, she would probably not return to prison because she had
already served nearly the maximum sentence possible for the lesser
charge.
Explaining why he planned to proceed with the case, Mr. Clark said:
“The question of guilt or innocence still has not been determined.
That’s why we have every trial.”
Earlier in the day, Judge Michael L. D’Amico, who presided over her
trial and sentenced her to 25 years to life, set aside Ms. DeJac’s
murder conviction. He ruled that new tests showing that bloodstains in
the room where the body of her 13-year-old daughter, Crystallynn
Girard, was found on the afternoon of Feb. 14, 1993, contained DNA
belonging to a former boyfriend of Ms. DeJac’s, Dennis P. Donahue.
But Mr. Donahue will never be tried for Crystallynn’s murder, even
though members of the Buffalo Police Department’s cold case squad
suspect him of committing the crime. Mr. Donahue, a 55-year-old former
bartender, who was charged in September with the 1993 murder of another
Buffalo woman he had dated, cannot be charged in Crystallynn’s death
because prosecutors granted him immunity in exchange for his testimony
before a grand jury and at Ms. DeJac’s trial.
Ms. DeJac’s lawyer, Andrew C. LoTempio, urged the police to re-examine
evidence found at the crime scene after Mr. Donahue’s arrest. Later,
tests not available at the time of the trial indicated that a man’s DNA
was present in skin cells found in a smear of blood on a wall, on
bedding and in the vaginal cavity of Crystallynn, who was menstruating
at the time.
Eric Ferraro, a spokesman for the Innocence Project, a legal clinic
based at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York, said Ms.
DeJac was the first woman to be exonerated of murdering someone among
the 209 people cleared through DNA evidence since 1989.
An Illinois woman, Paula Gray, was exonerated along with four men in
2002 after DNA testing cleared them in a 1978 double murder, but she
had been charged as an accomplice, rather than someone who played a
direct role in the crime.
“More often than not, DNA cases involve sexual assaults, so the
defendants are most often men,” Mr. Ferraro said.
At Ms. DeJac’s trial, prosecutors said she had strangled her daughter
during an all-night drinking binge that took her and Mr. Donahue to a
wedding, back to her home, and to several local taverns. At the trial,
Mr. Donahue admitted having confronted Ms. DeJac and another man that
night, and that at one point he put a knife to the man’s throat.
Although prosecutors said there was no physical evidence connecting Ms.
DeJac to her daughter’s murder, they relied on the testimony of a man
convicted of forging checks, who said she confessed to the killing in a
bar several months later.
The circumstantial case also hinged on Ms. DeJac’s behavior on the
night of her daughter’s death: she made a 911 call shortly before
midnight, then did not answer the door when the police responded about
15 minutes later.
Several witnesses from the working-class neighborhood of Buffalo where
Ms. DeJac lived and her mother owned a tavern described her as a
troubled woman, a heavy drinker and erratic mother. They said she
frequently left the girl and her 8-year-old brother alone while she
stayed out all night. Crystallynn’s stepfather was convicted of
sexually abusing her before she was 10 years old.
“I think about 80 percent of the jury’s verdict was based on innuendo
created by neighbors who didn’t like her,” said Mr. LoTempio, a former
Buffalo city court judge.
Mr. LoTempio said the new DNA tests provided more evidence implicating
Mr. Donahue than prosecutors had presented in the case against Ms.
DeJac.
“Throughout the night, he had the opportunity to be in the house, and
throughout the night, he had the motive,” Mr. LoTempio said at a
hearing last week on the motion to dismiss the verdict, suggesting that
Mr. Donahue killed Crystallynn because he was angry at her mother.
“He’s not only in her room, he’s in her blood.”
For now, he said he hoped that the attention did not hamper her in
rebuilding her life.
“She’s got no money, she’s got no clothes, she’s never seen the house
where her husband and children live,” Mr. LoTempio said. “Think about
being taken away from the world for 13 years and then being dropped
back in. Hopefully, she won’t slip back into that neighborhood and the
things that caused the problems in the first place.”
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