Showing posts with label injustice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label injustice. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Re-Examining Lucasville: Essay 6

This is the sixth essay in Staughton Lynd's new Lucasville Re-Examined Essays series, leading up to the 20th Aniversary Conference of the Lucasville Uprising in April of 2013.

By Staughton Lynd, November 2012

Let’s try to visualize the most unfair criminal trial we can imagine.  Let’s make a list of elements that might be part of such an unjust proceeding.

The list might include the following elements:

1. The judge excuses one potential jury member after another who states that he or she could not in good conscience recommend the death penalty.

2. The evidence in support of convicting the defendant consists entirely of testimony by other prisoners.

Each of these elements was present in the trial of George Skatzes, who was found guilty and sentenced to death for the aggravated murder of prisoners Earl Elder and David Sommers. 

In addition, in the portion of the trial concerning Mr. Elder’s death:

3. Skatzes was sentenced to death for allegedly ordering prisoner Rodger Snodgrass to murder Earl Elder. But Snodgrass, a prosecution witness, testified that Elder was still alive when he left Elder’s cell.

4. The medical examiner testified that Elder’s fatal wounds were caused by a broad blade. However, Snodgrass himself as well as another prosecution witness, Tim Williams, testified that the weapon supposedly carried by Snodgrass was a thin, icepick-like shank that made small, round holes.

5. Tim Williams was himself named by two other prisoners as one of the three men who actually killed Elder.  Williams is now on the street.

6. Another prisoner, Eric Girdy, has confessed to being one of those three men. Girdy has repeatedly stated under oath that Skatzes was nowhere around at the time and had nothing to do with what happened.

7. Girdy testified that the weapon he used was a piece of broken glass from an officers’ restroom. The medical examiner testified that he found a shard of glass in one of the potentially lethal wounds made by a broad blade.

8. Girdy’s belated confession was accepted as true by the special prosecutor and Girdy was duly sentenced in the Scioto County Court of Common Pleas.
In the portion of the trial concerning the murder of David Sommers:

9. Several weeks after Skatzes was convicted and sentenced to death for Sommers’ homicide, prisoner Aaron Jefferson, in a separate trial, was found guilty of allegedly committing the same murder.

10. As in the trial of Skatzes, when Jefferson was tried for killing Sommers the medical examiner testified once again that Sommers had died as the result of a single, fatal blow by an instrument like a baseball bat.  Thus two men were found guilty of striking the same lethal blow.

11. An Ohio Court of Appeals determined that there was no way to prove which man had struck the fatal blow, but Skatzes was guilty anyway because of his “complicity” in the murder and his sentence of death should be affirmed.

Nothing has been done to vacate George Skatzes’ death sentence for the aggravated murders of Elder and Sommers.

What Skatzes Says

George Skatzes has written a statement from which the following are excerpts:

Twenty eight years and counting!  I am totally at my wits’ end!  Please let me explain!  Please hear me out!

The testimony by the inmates in the Earl Elder murder was contradicted and undermined by the testimony of the forensic pathologist.  Yet all this means nothing to the courts!  George Skatzes was found guilty and that is that! Justice?

Ohio Jury Instructions 409.56, Other Causes, Intervening Causes, states:

“If the defendant inflicted an injury not likely to produce death, and if the sole and only cause of death was a fatal injury inflicted by another person, the defendant who inflicted the original injury is not responsible for the death.”

[George adds: There is nothing true about Snodgrass’ testimony.  But if, for the sake of argument, we assumed that Snodgrass was telling the truth, since Snodgrass said Elder was alive when Snodgrass left his cell, under Jury Instruction 409.56 Skatzes could only have been guilty of attempted murder.]

In the case of David Sommers, there is no physical evidence to link George Skatzes to the crime.  The inmates who testified against George Skatzes are self-admitted participants in the murder!

We have two people convicted for causing the death of David Sommers by dealing a single massive blow to the head. Two people convicted for the very same act? The object is, of course, to convict at any cost!

Summing up his trial and convictions, Skatzes declares:

"We have a man convicted and sentenced to death only on the word of jailhouse snitches.  It was their word alone without any independent objective and corroborating evidence."

Law Versus Justice

In three aspects of the courts’ proceedings concerning Mr. Skatzes and others of the Lucasville Five, prosecutors have been able to cite and rely on the law as pronounced by state and federal courts.  But that doesn’t mean that these convictions and sentencse are just! It only means that Skatzes, like other Lucasville defendants, is a victim of what he calls “the criminal injustice system.”

Let’s consider three of the judicial doctrines that stand between Lucasville defendants and light at the end of the tunnel.

The Death Qualified Jury
         
A jury’s recommendation of the death penalty must be unanimous. It takes only one juror in twelve to prevent a recommendation for death.

But under current law in state and federal courts, any potential juror who states that he or she opposes the death penalty under all circumstances will almost surely be “excused,” that is, excluded, from jury service in a capital case.

In contrast, a juror who indicates support for the death penalty is asked another question, namely, "Would you follow the instructions of the judge about the law?"  If the juror answers, Yes, then that juror may be seated even though he or she favors the death penalty just as strongly as opponents of the death penalty oppose it.

The following extracts show the doctrine of the “death qualified jury” at work during the “voir dire” (jury selection process) in the case of George Skatzes.

Juror #1

THE COURT: . . . I have a question I want to ask you. . . . [I]n a proper case where the facts warrant it and the law permits it, could you join in with others in signing a verdict form which might recommend to the Court the imposition of the death penalty?

A:  No, sir.

THE COURT:  You don’t believe you could do so?

A:  I don’t believe so.

THE COURT:  Under any circumstances?

A:  No.

THE COURT:  Could you tell me why?

A:  I had a brother who was murdered and I found it in my heart to forgive that man. I would not have found him guilty to the extent that his life would be taken.

THE COURT:  In other words, you feel that if you didn’t do it in your brother’s case, you wouldn’t do it in any other case, right?

A:  Right. . . .

[DEFENSE ATTORNEY]: . . . Do you feel that this is a teaching of your church?

A:  Not so much a teaching of my church as it is an understanding of mine that I do not create life.  I am not giver of life, so I feel that it’s not my responsibility or within reason to expect me to take a life. . . .

THE COURT:  You may step down.


Juror #8

THE COURT:  . . . In a proper case, where the facts warrant it and the law permits it, could you join in with the other jurors in signing a verdict form which would recommend to the Court the death penalty?

A:  Yes, your Honor.

 [PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]:  . . . We brought you here because we want to discuss with you your views on capital punishment. Can you share them with us, please?

A:  I strongly believe in them. I wish they were enforced more often.

[PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]:  . . . Do you believe the death penalty is the only appropriate penalty in all cases of an intentional killing?

A:  Pretty much.

[PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]:  Does that mean?

A:  Yes.

[PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]:  . . . You can think of the wors[t] crime that comes to your mind and if you find that person guilty at the first phase, we don’t go straight to death.  We have the second hearing at which point you would get additional evidence to consider in making your decision as to what punishment is appropriate. . . .
What we need to know is whether you could set aside your thoughts as to what you think the law should be and follow the law that the Judge gives you?

A:  Yes.

[PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: If you found someone guilty of a horrible, horrible crime, as bad as you can think of, would you be willing to keep an open mind and listen to the evidence at the second phase before making a decision as to which penalty is appropriate?         

A:  Yes.

[PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: No matter how bad the crime?

A:  Yes.

....           

THE COURT:  . . . We want you back [to serve as a juror in the case].

With the doctrine of the death-qualified jury before us, there should be no difficulty in understanding why, in such a high percentage of  cases, Lucasville
prosecutors either won a favorable jury decision or entered into a favorable plea agreement.  At one public forum concerning George Skatzes, known to fellow prisoners as “Big George,” an attender who had read the dialogue between the judge and potential jurors  commented:  “Big George is in Big Trouble.”

Studies cited by the American Bar Association and the American Law Institute indicate that the process of selecting a death-qualified jury produces juries that are more likely to convict the defendant during the guilt phase of the trial, and more likely to impose the death penalty during the sentencing phase.  John Paul Stevens, retired Justice of the United States Supreme Court, stated when he was on the bench that this rule “deprive[s] the defendant of a trial by jurors representing a fair cross-section of the community.”  He is convinced that “the process of obtaining a ‘death qualified jury’ is really a procedure that has the purpose and effect of obtaining a jury that is biased in favor of conviction.”

The Doctrine of Complicity

A familiar hypothetical presents the problem of a group of bank robbers.

Robber A is the driver of the getaway car.  While his companions enter the bank, he stays at the wheel of their vehicle, perhaps listening to the car radio or reading the newspaper.  Meantime, the men actually in the bank encounter difficulties, there is a  scuffle, robber B uses his gun, and a bank teller falls to the floor, dead.

What should be the punishment of robber A?  Under Ohio law he can be found to be “complicit” in the entire criminal course of conduct, and presumed to be just as guilty as the man who pulled the trigger.  Moreover, whereas under Ohio law someone guilty of “conspiracy” to rob the bank would not be eligible for the death penalty, under the Ohio law of “complicity” every one in the group would be exposed to the possibility of execution.

After Aaron Jefferson was convicted of striking the same fatal blow for which George Skatzes had been convicted, an Ohio Court of Appeals considered the case.  

The court began its explanation by stating:  “Skatzes contends that his due process rights were violated because the state charged and convicted two inmates—Skatzes and Aaron Jefferson—with the murder of David Sommers, when the evidence suggested only one fatal blow. He argues that these [were] ‘inherently factually contradictory theories’.”

Not so, the court continued.  “The state’s theory was that both Skatzes and Jefferson were complicit in the crime; there was no way to prove who had inflicted the fatal head injury. . . .  A defendant charged with an offense may be convicted of that offense upon proof that he was complicit in its commission.”

The court may not have read the transcript of the Skatzes and Jefferson trials. In closing argument in the Skatzes trial, Prosecutor Daniel Hogan did not say, “there was no way to prove who had inflicted the fatal head injury.”  Rather, Hogan asked the jury to think “about David Sommers, . . . the one where [Skatzes] wielded a bat and literally beat the brains out of this man’s head.”  State v. Skatzes, p. 6108.  And in the Jefferson trial, Prosecutor Crowe told the jury:

If there was only one blow to the head of David Sommers, the strongest evidence you have [is that] this is the individual—I won’t call him a human—this is the individual that administered that blow. . . .  If there was only one blow, he’s the one that gave it.  He’s the one that hit him like a steer going through the stockyard, the executioner with the pick axe, trying to put the pick through the brain.

State v. Jefferson, Tr. at 656-57.

The court also failed to mention that whereas Jefferson was sentenced to many years behind bars, Skatzes was sentenced to death.
         
Jason Robb was the victim of a prosecution theory about Sommers’ murder that was equally bizarre.  According to prosecution witnesses, Sommers chased Robb from L-2 to L-7, where Sommers was beaten to death by prisoners other than Robb.  Yet Robb was convicted and sentenced to death for Sommers’ murder! 

Ineffective Prohibition of Snitch Testimony

Heightened reliability is required in capital cases.  Convictions based on the testimony of  informants, who are offered reduced charges, parole, or other benefits in exchange for their testimony, are inherently unreliable in the absence of independent and objective corroborating evidence connecting the defendant to the crime.

In recognition of the unreliability of informant testimony, the House of Delegates of the American Bar Association resolved on February 14, 2005, that the ABA

“urges federal, state, local, and territorial governments to reduce the risk of convicting the innocent, while increasing the likelihood of convicting the guilty, by ensuring that no prosecution should occur based solely upon uncorroborated jailhouse informant testimony.” 

Likewise, the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice declared in 2006:

"A conviction can not be had upon the testimony of an in-custody informant unless it shall be corroborated by such other evidence as shall independently tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense . . . .  Corroboration of an in-custody informant cannot be provided by the testimony of another in-custody informant."

The Lucasville prosecutions ignored the necessity for objective corroboration of informant testimony.  The uncorroborated testimony of prisoner informants, so-called “snitch” testimony, was the principal basis for every Lucasville capital conviction.

One way in which Ohio seeks to guard against the perjury of snitches is by requiring the judge to give the following instruction to the jury.
The testimony of an accomplice does not become inadmissible because of his complicity, moral turpitude, or self-interest, but the admitted or claimed complicity of a witness may affect his credibility and make his testimony subject to grave suspicion, and require that it be weighed with great caution.

However, common sense suggests that reading to a jury a long sentence that begins with a double negative and is made up of polysyllabic and unfamiliar words is unlikely to protect a defendant.  Prosecutors have many ways to make perjured testimony appear convincing to a jury. For example, an informer may describe the scene of a crime with seeming truthfulness since,  after all, often the witness was actually there and simply ascribes to others the actions he himself committed.

The Lucasville prosecutors used a variety of techniques to procure compliant prisoner informants and prepare them for trial.  In Skatzes’ trial, prosecutor (now Ohio judge) Daniel Hogan admitted that Daniel Stead, who prosecuted  the trial with him, had told a wavering prisoner, “you are either going to be my witness, or I’m going to come back and try to kill you.”  In preparing prisoner Robert Brookover as a witness,  prosecutors hit him with a rolled-up newspaper until he stopped beginning each sentence of his testimony with the words, “I’m not going  to lie to you.”  And by bringing potential prosecution witnesses together at the so-called “snitch academy” in Lima, Ohio,prosecutors sought to ensure that their witnesses at trial would tell consistent stories.

Ohio court opinions also emphasize, as a second shield against unreliable snitch testimony, the right of the defense to cross-examine prosecution witnesses.  But this right was systematically obstructed by Lucasville prosecutors. 
Typically, officers of the Ohio State Highway Patrol interviewed potential prosecution witnesses as many as half a dozen times before trial. Summaries of these interviews were then entered into a computer database.  But only when the witness began to provide the narrative that the prosecution desired were his remarks likely to be preserved in the form of a tape-recorded interview or deposition.  This prosecution-friendly final product could then be provided  to the defense in “discovery.”  The database entries might have revealed how much the testimony of the witness had changed over time as it was shaped by interviewers from the state. These entries were often not produced.  But in Keith LaMar’s case, prosecutors successfully impeached the testimony of defense witness Gino Washington by using interview records that had not been produced in discovery.

Defense Alternatives
         
Lucasville capital defendants were faced with an excruciating choice.

If they had not killed anyone during the eleven days, they had the right to go to trial and try to convince a jury of their innocence.  But their juries would be made up of men and women willing to recommend the death penalty; their trials would be governed by the doctrine of complicity;  and their trial court judges would have no way to assure defendants of the good faith and credibility of prosecution witnesses.

However if, recognizing that the dice were loaded, the defendant elected to pleabargain, the best possible outcome was likely to be imprisonment for life.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

A Rude Awakening as to How the Justice System Really Works (2007)

I was convicted of three murders during the eleven-day rebellion at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, Ohio in April 1993. When I tell people I was not guilty of any of them, they say: But weren't you at SOCF because you were already found to be guilty of a murder? So let me begin with that earlier conviction.

In the city of Bellefontaine, Ohio, in October of 1979, the manager of Rinks Department store was murdered. It would appear that this may have been an armed robbery gone bad. There is more than one theory as to what really happened in this case.

This case went unsolved for nearly three (3) years. Then in mid to late 1982 some inmates wanted to cut a deal to get out of the trouble they were in.

In the summer of 1982 a good snitching inmate doing time in London Ohio Correctional Institution called the Bellefontaine authorities and told them he had information concerning the murder that happened in their town in 1979.

The price for this information would be his freedom, which he gained. Plus other perks.

The next thing that happened, in October 1982 I was indicted for this robbery/murder.

There was no physical evidence whatsoever to link me to this crime.

Mr. Prosecutor used this inmate, one that was doing 37 to 130 years in Lucasville, Ohio's maximum security prison, and his wife to convict me.
Both of these people were indicted for this murder and several other crimes, but they cut a deal. They received immunity for all their crimes for testifying against me. The following questions and answers when Mr. Rogers testified against me are reported on page 1366 of the transcript:

Q. What would you do to keep from going to jail? Would you lie under oath? A. To --

Q. To prevent yourself from being convicted, punished, going to prison, would you lie under oath?

A. I certainly would. I have before.

Of course this is only a very short version of the deals, the injustice in my original conviction. My case is by no means unique or rare. The system is full of cases like mine.

To sum it up, I started out doing a life sentence, convicted of murder on the word of two (2) lying snitches! A good, honest review of the record of case number 83-CR-3, Logan County, Ohio would prove I am telling the truth!

In my opinion these convictions should not be able to stand. Inmate testimony alone put me on Death Row. These convictions were obtained by the use of bribery and intimidation of the inmate witnesses. A review of the record will prove this.

Inmate Lavelle turned state's evidence and testified against other convicts. Mr. Prosecutor told Lavelle, "You are either going to be my witness, or I'm going to try to kill you" (Transcript, p. 4047).


Transcript, p. 4047

How can this type of testimony be enough to convict anybody? 

The prosecutor also told the jury that if I had agreed to snitch, I would have been the witness and Lavelle would have been the defendant. These were his words: 


Transcript, p. 5751.
"Mr.Skatzes had his opportunity and he chose not to take it. Had Mr. Skatzes taken it, they're right. Mr.Skatzes, assuming he would tell us the truth, would be up there on the witness stand testifying and Mr.Lavelle could be sitting over there. I make no apologies for that." Transcript, p. 5751.

























Ohio Revised Code 2923.03(D) states in part that:


"...the admitted or claimed complicity of a witness may affect his credibility and make his testimony subject to grave suspicion, and require that it be weighed with great caution."

One would think the above statement makes good common sense, but that is not so. When an inmate testifies for Mr. Prosecutor his word becomes the gospel.

Think about it: Should snitch testimony, uncorroborated by any physical evidence, be strong enough to send a person to his death?

Even before I was indicted for the murder of Earl Elder, statements were made as to who really murdered this man. The powers that be very well know I had nothing to do with the murder of Earl Elder, but since I would not snitch, I got charged and convicted, and sentenced to death.

One of the inmates who was involved in the Elder murder came to my trial and testified against me. This man is walking the streets free now.

Another inmate who was involved in the Elder murder was man enough to step up and confess to his crime. He got a life sentence this past June 6, 2006. Still I sit on Death Row as if this confession never took place.

I was also tried, convicted and sentenced to death for the alleged murder of inmate David Sommers. The cause of death, according to the coroner, was one (1) massive blow to the head.

In my trial I was the one who dealt the one massive blow that killed Mr. Sommers.

In another convict's trial for the murder of Mr. Sommers,

the prosecutor told the jury that he was the one who dealt that fatal blow.

The State's own evidence proves that I am not responsible for the murder of Mr.Sommers.

There is just so much to all this. I don't want to go overboard in trying to explain everything. All I can ask is that you please read about this case.

If you feel the evidence is there to convict and sentence me to death, so be it.

On the other hand, if you believe I am innocent, please help me. These courts will not do their job unless they are made to do so. People power, you getting behind me and making some noise, is the only way justice will be served.

I need the State of Ohio to look at my case with honesty and justice.

Please help me to achieve this.

With utmost Respect

George Skatzes
----
Published here and here.

Friday, February 13, 1998

George's letter to his attorney (1994)

The following was typed 2/13/98 by Ann Louck from George Skatzes' 16 Pages of handwritten notes (and taken over from here):

George W. Skatzes A-173-501
P. O. Box 5500, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601

LETTER TO: Jeffrey F. Kelleher, Attorney At Law

The Leader Building -Suite 410 Cleveland, Ohio 44114

April 14, 1994

RE: Visits From The Highway Patrol -(Plot)
Dear Mr. Kelleher,

I would like to take the time to write about the actions of the Highway Patrol and to give my opinion on the plot to pressure me into turning States evidence against the alleged key figures in the Lucasville riot. My first meeting with the Highway Patrol -one Sgt. Howard W. Hudson and another trooper - (name unknown) -came about on 10-19-1993.

On said date -10-19-1993 -Captain Adams - a Captain with the Chillicothe Correctional Institution -came to my cell and told me that I had an Attorney Visit.

Even though at this time I did not have an Attorney, I didn't think Captain Adams would lie to me. I went on the visit fully expecting to meet an Attorney!

Captain Adams took me to a room upstairs. Upon entering the room Sgt. Hudson introduced himself and identified himself as one representing the State of Ohio. Sgt. Hudson made the statement about the other trooper and himself- "Obviously we are not Lawyers -we want to talk to you about the riot -give you the chance to roll -etc."
I understand they have a job to do -but why do they feel it is so necessary to keep the fact that they came to see me so quiet? I didn't tell them anything and I have nothing to hide! Sgt. Hudson further stated that they didn't tell anybody about coming to see me. Why are they so deceitful? They make it appear that I have something to hide right off. Was it their plan to use me -to set me up from the very start? After the visit and upon returning to the north hole -I immediately [told?] the two (2) inmates I'm back here with, that I had a visit from the Highway Patrol.

Referring to the visit of 10-19-1993 -I feel they really tried to pressure me into making a statement about the riot and the alleged key figures. To cut a long story short -they told me how they were in the process of getting all of their people (snitches) on this side -(their side) -and the ones that would not help them -they would be on the other side and left to fight for themselves.

On the visit of 10-19-1993 Sgt. Hudson and the other trooper straight out told me if I did Not help them they would see to it that I would spend the rest of my life in prison -no matter if I went to trial on riot related charges or not. Of course they reminded me how they can keep me in prison with no problem since I am doing a life sentence for aggravated murder to begin with. They went on to tell me if I helped them -they could help me. I told them that there is no way I could do anything to help them -and with that the visit ended and I was returned to the north hole.

At this point I didn't figure the Highway Patrol would ever attempt to talk to me again. Knowing how the system works -and being an obvious target for retaliation -I set my mind to doing the rest of my life in prison!

Moving on to 3-31-1994- Sgt. Fouty- a sergeant at Chillicothe Correctional Institution -came and told me I had a visit. I didn't ask him what kind of a visit -family member -friend or lawyer. Figuring it was a regular visit -I went through the strip search procedure. Sgt. Fouty cuffed me up and he took me out to the visit. Upon leaving the north hole -walking up the steps and into the hallway -I started to turn left and go to the regular visiting area. At this point Sgt. Fouty directed me to this office off to my right -Not the regular visiting area!

The Visit on 3-31-1994 -upon entering the room I noticed a few members of the Staff from here -Chillicothe. At this point I couldn't figure out what the visit was all about.

Then to my surprise I became aware of Sgt. Hudson's presence! This is another visit with the Highway Patrol. Everybody cleared out -then I found myself in this room with Sgt. Hudson and some other trooper (name unknown). Also the Prosecutor handling the Lucasville riot -I don't know his name either.

So in the room -three (3) State Officials and myself. Sgt. Hudson read me my rights and he told me anything I say can and will be used against me. Sgt. Hudson went on to tell me how they are there to see me one last time. If I do not help them Now -the next time they come they will have some indictments for me. He then informed me that I would be charged with Three (3) Capital Murder cases! At this point I told Sgt Hudson I could not make such a serious decision without first talking to my Investigator, whom I fully trust. They have been keeping her from visiting me - so Sgt. Hudson or somebody would have to make special arrangements to get her Approved for a visit. When I stated that I really needed to talk with my Investigator, Sgt. Hudson picked up the phone as if he would call her for me. I then told him a phone call would not do. I would have to talk with my Investigator face to face and (4 to 5 words at bottom of Page 4 not printed out by Copier).

At this point I had nothing more to say to these people. The one trooper did ask me how they would know what my decision would be once I talked to my Investigator. I then told this trooper that after our visit -if they would in fact set the visit up for us -I would have my Investigator call them to inform them as to what the decision would be. That was about all that was said at this point. I was taken back to the north hole.

Here is something worth making a note of. After requesting the visit with my Investigator, Sgt. Hudson didn't outright agree to setting the visit up, but I figured he would. Keep in mind also that I had [to] ask to talk to anybody from the Highway Patrol or the Prosecutor's Office. I ask them to set up a visit for me with my Investigator. This visit was to be between [her] and [me] only!

At this point there was no way for me to know just how Sgt. Hudson would handle the setting up of the visit. Later I found out that Sgt. Hudson called my Investigator on 3-31-1994, right after our visit. I was told that Sgt. Hudson told the Investigator that I agreed to talk to them -but wanted her there to make sure everything went alright. This is a Falsehood! Seems to me that Sgt. Hudson lied to my Investigator! Again -after requesting to see my Investigator on a visit face to face -I [do not?] have to talk with anybody from the Highway Patrol or the Prosecutor's Office. I clearly stated that my Investigator would call them after our visit with my decision. I feel strongly that Sgt. Hudson [did not] have to deceive my Investigator by telling her I agreed to make a Statement and I wanted to have her there to ensure things would go right! That was wrong on his part!

Now let me make a note on what took place Tues. evening 4-5-1994. This does play a part in this Plot the Highway Patrol is acting out.

At this point a Mr. Coyle, the Deputy Warden here, enters the room. He ask me if I felt it would be wise for me to go back to the north hole. This shocked me! I surely wasn't expecting such a move from these people! I told Mr. Coyle that I have done nothing wrong and there is nothing for me to hide!

I further stated that if I [did] go back to the north hole, this would make me look like a snitch! Mr. Coyle asked me if the other inmates here in the north hole would think of me as a snitch anyway. I asked him why should they even have such a thought in their mind. At this point I told Mr. Coyle that I would not go to any other lock other than the north hole! Period! At this time Mr. Coyle left the room. I have no idea where he went or what was going on. I just sat there waiting for them to take me back to the north hole.

Something worth make a note of: Every time I talked to the Highway Patrol, which was twice as I described in this writing, I always told the other inmates I am in the north hole with. Twice before this visit of Wed. 4-6-1994. I should say, to keep the record straight. It is my policy to be as up and [?] as possible with the other inmates here in the north hole. I have nothing to hide. However, I [did not?] tell them about my Investigator coming to visit me on Wed. 4-6-1994. I kept that hush hush and to myself to ensure the fact that I would have the visit with no problems. On my word, just as soon as I came off the visit that day I had every intention of telling the other inmates about my visit and how I went about getting it. I play it straight with these people. Never have I lied to them about anything!

As far as the other inmates of the north hole knew, I was going to visit my Lawyer on that Wed. 4-6-1994. This is not what I told them. In fact, I didn't tell them anything. They just took it for granted that I was going to visit my lawyer.

Back to the room upstairs. After the visit Sgt. Wilson, Sgt. Fouty and C.O. Ackley were present of course. I was still cuffed to the table. We were just waiting to see what they were going to do with me since I told them I wanted to go back to the north hole.

All in all, I spent about three (3) hours cuffed to that table. Cutting a long story short, Mr. Coyle finally came in the room and told me it was the decision of Central Office that I [not] go back to the north hole and said decision was Non-negotiable! So the truth is these people created a very serious situation for me -then they made me run and hide from the problem they created! I was made to look like a [?] put the lives of my love ones on the line, as well as my life, and they didn't think anything of it!

At this point I was forced to move to three (3) house. Three (3) house is another lock up block for the inmates at Chillicothe. The north hole is used at this time for three (3) inmates from Lucasville only.

When I left the room I had the visit in, I was confronted by several Correction Officers, exact number unknown. They had the video camera. They must have expected some trouble out of me. Keep in mind, I went to three (3) house under a very strong objection! I wanted to be brought back to the north hole! I have done nothing to run and hide from! No way did I give the Highway Patrol or the Prosecutor any info, statement or anything! There was no reason for me to leave the north hole! They only forced this move upon me so I would look like a snitch!

Let me back up to the conversation with Mr. Coyle for just a minute. Mr. Coyle told me that he would see to it that I would be transferred out of Chillicothe within the next couple of days. Being very honest about it, I have no doubt been treated the very worst while being locked in this north hole. Out of the three (3) of us back here, I am the most disrespected. It is a long story, but I do receive the worst treatment, so I would sure welcome a transfer out of Chillicothe!

I'm sitting in three (3) house Wed. night 4-6-1994 knowing very well that the other two (2) inmates in the north hole figured I turned State's evidence since I did not come back. This whole sleazy set up sure caused all of us to go through a lot of head changes and it could have put a lot of lives on the line! That is had this not been cleared up. This sleazy move was set up and carried out in an effort to defame me also!

Going to Thurs. morning 4-7-1994. I was called back up to the room in which I had the visit in. At this point in time the Warden Mr. Coyle and a Gary Moore talked to me. I voiced my very strong objection to these people for the way I was forced to move out of the north hole! Not that I care so much about liking the north hole. but the way they forced me to move. I was made to look like a snitch! I talked with the above mentioned people for a while. I expressed my views as to how they cut the lives of my love ones in danger. That fact didn't seem to matter at all! To cut a long story short, at this time, again I was told that I would be transferred out of Chillicothe within the next few days. At this point these people told me they would be getting back to me no later than Monday 4-11-1994. to let me know where they would be transferring me. Soon I left the room, went to rec., shower and to get my property. So all in all I figured I would be leaving Chillicothe soon. That was that.

Now Phase Two (2) of the Plot:

Thurs. afternoon 4-7-1994. Sanders is scheduled to go to Scioto County to answer the last Indictment he received. It is my strong belief that they had this whole thing planned. The Highway Patrol and the Prosecutors! By no means are these events any sort of coincidence! In my opinion. what they done was very sleazy and evil! They should not be allow to get away with this!

So Sanders goes out to the Scioto County Jail. Strange as it may seem. but this time not like the other time he was placed in the Scioto County Jail, he was locked on a range with several other inmates from Mansfield and Lucasville. So here we have Sanders armed with the knowledge that I went out on a visit the day before and I [did not] return! Since he is so conveniently placed on this range with the other inmates from the other prisons. Also for some reason he was left on this range for 45 minutes to one (1) hour. He was able to talk to everybody and pass on the info as he knew it. I went out on a visit and [did not] return. Anybody that has any knowledge of prison life understands how the inmates will take that info and run with it! So there is no doubt that I am labeled as a snitch now! This was their evil plan! It is up to me to clean up what they have done to me! The damage has been done !

Another point -of course Thurs. 4-7-1994 I did not have this info. but I found out later. Somehow Sanders’ lawyer heard about the Indictment he received Tues. 4-5-1994. so to keep Sanders from going to Court alone on Thurs. 4-7-1994, he faxed a Motion to Scioto County on Wed. 4-6- 1994 in an effort to have Sanders' Arraignment postponed. They had the Motion in plenty of time. so it would have been no problem for them to postpone the Arraignment. but doing so would have messed up their plot to have the word put out that it looks as if I turned snitch! One hell of a Plot!

Well, as it was, I was sitting in three (3) house waiting to get transferred out of Chillicothe. All the while a lot of damage, serious damage was being done to my character! Because I won't help these people by snitching, they put me through all this! It is not right!

Moving along to Friday 4-8-1994 about noon or so. C.O. Ackley came to three (3) house and told me I had a visit. I ask him who the visitor might be. He did not know but he said he would find out for me. I told him if it was somebody from the Highway Patrol or the Prosecutor's Office, I would not talk to them! I would refuse the visit! Mr. Ackley then left to go find out who was here.

It wasn't long after Mr. Ackley left, Mr. Coyle came to talk to me. He told me that Gary Moore was here to see me. Mr. Coyle further stated that they might move me back to the north hole. First off I would have no problem talking to Gary Moore, he treated me very fair and with the utmost respect. So I went with Mr Coyle to talk to Gary Moore.

They took me to the room that I had the visit in on Wed. 4-6-1994. The Warden, Mr. Coyle and Gary Moore were present.

Cutting a long story short, they told me I would be moving back to the north hole that day! I can't believe this! First I am told how I can't go back to the north hole after my visit, then I'm told I will be transferred out of Chillicothe. Now on Friday, for some reason, I can return to the north hole! Well, they were able to carry out their Plan -the damage has already been done -I was made to look like a snitch, so it no longer matters where I am housed! One hell of a head game!

Making a Note of this, both Wed. 4-6-1994 and Thurs. 4-7-1994 when I talked to the Warden Mr. Coyle and Gary Moore, I really tried my very best to make these people understand the very serious position I was put in. I begged them to at least let me come down here to the north hole and face these inmates. I wanted to explain to them that I [didn’t] roll or snitch on anybody! They would not let me do this, so I had to ride it out! In prison a man's name and his word means everything and when these people set out to destroy a man like this, it is not easy to take!

Friday afternoon 4-8-1994 around 3:00 p.m. or so I moved back to the north hole, but they have yet another Phase to the head game they are playing!

Before I moved back into the north hole, for no visible reason they [?] one of the other inmates housed in the north hole to move. They moved him down to three (3) house and as of the date of this writing, he is still down there! There was really no reason for this move.

I had a visit with my Lawyer on Sunday 4-10-1994 and he informed me that phone calls were made to Chillicothe to make sure I was still here. This was done on Friday 4-8-1994 and these people wouldn't even tell the caller I was here! They play a mean game when one will not cooperate with them.

At a later date I plan to expand on this writing and go into full detail about the treatment I have received in this north hole and everything. This is just a brief writing to expose the plot and have it notorized before the three (3) Capital Murder Indictments are served on me. I feel they are coming Very Soon!

After being duly sworn -on my word I swear that the statements in this writing are true and correct to the very best of my knowledge. I swear to the truthfulness of this writing as I shall answer unto My God.

Notorized on the 15th day of April 15, 1994

Signed by: George W. Skatzes

Notary: Angelina J. Remy, State of Ohio

Commission Expires March 21 , 1996
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Republished on the website for LucasvilleAmnesty,org