
Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2008
The Disturbing Case of the Norfolk Four
By Brian Bennett
In 1997, four sailors confessed to the brutal rape and murder of
Michelle Moore-Bosko, the wife of a U.S. Navy man, in Norfolk, Va.
After their conviction, however, they said their confessions were
coerced and false. Now 26 former FBI agents have released the text of a
letter they wrote in July asking Virginia governor Tim Kaine to grant a
full pardon to the so-called Norfolk Four, calling the convictions a
"tragic mistake."
When veteran FBI
agent Larry Smith first heard of the case, he gave police detectives
the benefit of the doubt. Smith was skeptical that so many men would
confess to a crime they didn't commit. But after reading the case
material, Smith felt that the confessions had never been properly
checked against the evidence of the case. If they had been, says Smith,
the confessions by Joseph Dick, Derek Tice, Danial Williams and Eric
Wilson would have been immediately discounted. "The confession should
not be the end of the investigation," says Smith. "You should
corroborate the facts and circumstances of the confessions with the
crime scene."
In their letter, Smith and 25 other former FBI agents point to the fact
that physical evidence connects only one person to the crime scene, a
man named Omar Ballard, whose DNA was found in the murdered woman's
apartment. Ballard is serving prison time for this and another crime.
Ballard's confession is the only one consistent with the physical
evidence, wrote the former agents.
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Retired FBI agent Jay Cochran, at the podium, speaks during a news
conference on the rape and murder convictions of the Norfolk Four
(Steve Helber / AP)
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The agents took up the convicted sailors' cause after Frank Stokes, a
30-year veteran of the FBI who specialized in violent crimes, first
looked at the case three years ago. Stokes felt the convictions were
obviously a miscarriage of justice and asked one of the case lawyers to
speak to the Richmond chapter of the Society of Former Special Agents,
many of whom signed the letter to Governor Kaine. "It is the most
egregious thing I've seen," says Stokes.
Along with the DNA evidence connecting only Ballard to the murder, the
former FBI agents believe the autopsy report on the victim and the
physical condition of the crime scene are consistent with a
"single-offender crime." Lawyers contend that the sailors confessed
under high-pressure interrogation tactics that included lies and
threats of the death penalty. "In rare cases," wrote the retired
agents, powerful interrogation techniques "can produce false
confessions." The investigative confirmations required to ensure
confessions are reliable were not done in this case, wrote the agents.
All of these developments pain the family of Michelle Moore-Bosko. For
their part, they do not believe the men invented their involvement
under duress. For the family, every new press release about the Norfolk
Four reopens old wounds. "Let my poor baby rest," her father, John
Moore, told the Washington Post on Monday.
The case received national attention three years ago when pro bono
lawyers affiliated with the Innocence Project, a nonprofit group that
works to exonerate the wrongfully convicted, put together a petition
for clemency to present to then governor Mark Warner. The petition has
since moved to Kaine's desk. Of the four men, three are still behind
bars, having exhausted all other legal means to appeal their case. A
judge overturned the conviction of one of the sailors, Derek Tice, on
Nov. 27, 2006. But that ruling was later reversed by a higher court.
Eric Wilson served all eight and a half years of his sentence for rape
and was released in 2005 but is still seeking clemency to vacate his
conviction.
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