
NY investigating DA's handling of 1988 murder
By KAREN MATTHEWS
Associated Press Writer
December 31, 2007
NEW YORK
New York state investigators are probing how police and prosecutors
handled the 1988 bludgeoning and stabbing deaths of a couple whose son
served 17 years in prison for their murders before being released last
week.
The state Commission on Investigation will take a broad look at the
police investigation that led to Martin Tankleff's 1990 conviction and
how Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota's office dealt with
the emergence of new witnesses in 2003 who supported his claims of
innocence, commission Chairman Alfred Lerner said.
"We're going to look at the whole thing," Lerner told Newsday in
Sunday's editions.
He said the commission has been gathering evidence for a year and will
issue a report in the next five to six months.
Tankleff was released on $1 million bond after an appeals court ordered
a new trial on Dec. 21.
Spota has not decided whether to retry the case and has not been
contacted by the commission, a spokesman said Monday.
Tankleff, 36, was freed at a bail hearing Thursday in Riverhead, 75
miles east of Manhattan. Since then he has been spending quiet time
with the relatives who supported him throughout his imprisonment, said
Lonnie Soury, a family spokesman.
"He's learning to use a computer and a cell phone and he's beginning to
work on his case for complete exoneration," Soury said.
In throwing out his conviction, the Appellate Division said new
evidence suggested someone else might have killed Seymour and Arlene
Tankleff in their Long Island home.
Tankleff's supporters have long accused the police of coercive
interrogation tactics, and they accused prosecutors of ignoring and
suppressing evidence.
The state commission is taking a special interest in the case as a
follow-up to its investigation into Suffolk County law enforcement in
the 1980s, which found widespread misconduct among police and
prosecutors.
One officer named in the panel's 1989 report, K. James McCready, became
the lead detective in the Tankleff case. The report cited him as having
lied as a witness at another trial.
Spota, the current district attorney, represented McCready both as a
private lawyer and as an attorney for the police union. Spota has said
his representation of McCready was not a conflict of interest.
Tankleff was 17 when his parents were bludgeoned and stabbed on Sept.
7, 1988. His mother was dead; his father was wounded and died weeks
later.
Detectives falsely told the teen that his father had awoken from a coma
and named him as the killer. At that point Tankleff wondered aloud
whether he might have "blacked out" and committed the crimes.
Police said Tankleff confessed to attacking his parents, but he quickly
withdrew the confession and refused to sign a statement they had
prepared.
The teenager suggested that a partner in his father's bagel business
could be the killer. He noted that the partner owed Seymour Tankleff
hundreds of thousands of dollars and had been the last guest at the
Tankleff home for a poker game the night before.
The business partner, Jerry Steuerman, was never charged and has denied
involvement in the crimes.
Tankleff was convicted and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison.
Over the years, private detectives working on Tankleff's behalf turned
up witnesses who implicated Steuerman and others.
Jay Salpeter, a retired NYPD detective who has worked as an
investigator for Tankleff, said Monday that he has met with staff
members from the commission and discussed his findings with them.
"Until the case is finalized with a new trial or some sort of agreement
with the district attorney's office I'm still proceeding with my
investigation," he said.
The commission has no enforcement powers but can subpoena witnesses and
can recommend the appointment of a special prosecutor, something
Tankleff's supporters have pressed for.
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