
After 14 years in jail, man walks free
May 29, 2009
CARLYN RAY MITCHELL
THE GAZETTE
Tim Kennedy walked away from jail Friday night after spending 14 years
behind bars for what he maintains was a wrongful conviction in a 1991
execution-style shooting death of a Colorado Springs couple.
It might not be for long.
Kennedy posted the $250,000 bond set Tuesday by Judge Thomas Kane, who
granted Kennedy a retrial April 21 after being presented with new
evidence, including DNA tests that showed that another man's DNA was on
the sponge used as a gun silencer and also on the two bodies. Kennedy's
DNA was not present in either sample.
"Tim's a free man," Kennedy attorney John Dicke said after his client
walked out of the El Paso County jail. Kennedy was taken to Denver on
Friday night.
A jury convicted Kennedy in 1997 on charges that he killed 15-year-old
runaway Jennifer Carpenter and her boyfriend and legal guardian, Steve
Staskiewicz, in 1991.
Kennedy was sentenced to two life terms in prison. The Colorado Court
of Appeals later upheld the conviction.
The retrial is scheduled to begin Sept. 21.
Prosecutors maintain that despite the new DNA evidence, Kennedy was
linked to the scene of the crime by DNA found on a cigarette butt
inside a beer can that had been crumpled several hours before the
murders. Prosecutors also say that evidence proved that Kennedy's gun
and ammunition were used to kill the couple.
Kennedy has said that he loaned his gun to Carpenter and Staskiewicz
for their protection.
Carpenter had been kidnapped and raped four months before the killings.
Dicke has said that Charles Stoud and Rebecca Corkins tried to
intimidate Carpenter into not testifying at the rape trial, which was
set to begin a month after her death.
Stoud is serving a 50-year prison sentence for Carpenter's kidnapping
and rape. Corkins was released after 10 years.
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