Wednesday, September 26, 2012

379 Days

Why Karl Thompson remains out of prison and defended with public money

Heidi Groover
Convicted last November, Karl Thompson remains free.
Convicted last November, Karl Thompson remains free.
Convicted last November, Karl Thompson remains free.

When a federal judge, a handful of lawyers and convicted felon Karl Thompson file into a federal courtroom in November, it will have been 2,432 days since Otto Zehm lay beaten, hogtied and dying on the floor of a north Spokane convenience store. A full 379 days will have passed since Thompson was convicted in Yakima, and the former cop will have spent only one weekend in a jail cell.

“Folks are concerned and frustrated that justice is being delayed. Inevitably people say, ‘If this was me, I’d be in jail,’” says Tim Connor, communications director at the nonprofit Center for Justice. Connor says that because of the center’s work on police reform, he hears about this issue “constantly.”

Zehm was a mentally ill janitor who died after a violent confrontation with Spokane Police in 2006. Thompson was convicted of violating Zehm’s civil rights by using excessive force against him, and of lying about the incident to federal investigators. Federal Judge Fred Van Sickle put off sentencing Thompson as he heard continuous motions and appeals from the defense. Finally this month, he denied Thompson a new trial and set a Nov. 15 sentencing hearing.

Perceived special treatment of Thompson — from a salute from fellow officers after his conviction last year to the creeping pace of sentencing — has bred some community confusion and anger.

“It certainly doesn’t send the message that people who abuse their position as officers of the law will experience significant and quick consequences,” says Liz Moore, director of the Peace and Justice Action League of Spokane.

But two attorneys close to the case, including one of the Spokane Police Department’s most outspoken critics, say the situation isn’t as unusual as it may seem.

“This is boilerplate, standard post-trial maneuvering,” says Jeffry Finer, who, along with Breean Beggs, represents the Zehm family. “Remember this was six years to get to trial. A year to get to sentencing is a shame, but it’s not a travesty. It’s not a scandal.”

Finer says Thompson isn’t in jail because he’s not considered a flight risk or a threat to the general public now that he’s no longer an officer. In putting off sentencing, judges are also often gauging the potential for a successful appeal. If Thompson had been sent to jail, but his lawyers had succeeded at a new trial, Thompson’s days behind bars would have been proven undue. Former cops also face serious danger in jail, Beggs says, and the county jail, where Thompson would have awaited sentencing, likely wasn’t prepared to protect him.

“I’m glad [members of the public] are impatient,” Beggs says, “but they’re more impatient than is realistic.”

Other accusations of special treatment are rooted in the people who represent Thompson in the courtroom.

Back in 2009, Thompson was provided publicly funded defense when U.S. Magistrate Judge Cynthia Imbrogno ruled he was indigent, despite his $73,000-a-year salary and a $675,000 home he owned with his ex-wife. Soon after the Zehm family filed a civil suit, Thompson’s wife of 38 years filed for divorce requesting all property, including their house and car. Thompson didn’t contest her claim, and a year and a half later they were still living together. Still, the split was cited as part of his inability to afford defense.

Unless prosecutors prove that new factors have changed his financial situation, Thompson is entitled to public defense throughout the appeals process. (With the loss of his job, Thompson’s financial outlook isn’t looking any better now than it was when he was deemed in need, Beggs points out.)

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Harrington declined to comment on the case. Thompson’s primary lawyer, Carl Oreskovich, is out of town and unreachable, according to his paralegal. The attorney who filled in for Oreskovich last week when the judge set the sentencing date, Courtney Garcea, did not return calls seeking comment.

The severity of Thompson’s sentence will ultimately be up to Van Sickle. He’ll consider each side’s witnesses and certain subtleties of the crime. Finer says he expects Thompson to be sentenced to between three and five years.

Thompson’s history as an officer may have kept him out of jail thus far, but it could be played against him at sentencing. Among the factors the judge will consider at sentencing is the abuse of a position of trust, the victim’s vulnerability (and whether Thompson knew about it), and whether the offender accepted responsibility before his conviction.

Beggs says the process, while frustratingly slow for some, is what will guarantee Thompson has no chance of a successful appeal left once he starts his time in prison.

“In a sense, we’re proving what Karl Thompson should have done. We’re giving him plenty of time to defend himself, to state his case,” Beggs says. “If he had given Otto Zehm just a fraction of a minute to do the same, we wouldn’t be here.” 

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Yeah, the Bill of Rights and its protections for criminally accused are a real nuisance, until you or a family member are fighting for your life against the government with its nearly unlimited resources. Sep 30, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

Yeah, the Bill of Rights and its protections for criminally accused are a real nuisance, until you or a family member are fighting for your life (after being falsely accused, beaten, hogtied & suffocated) against a government employee with nearly unlimited resources at his disposal after blatantly misrepresenting & manipulating his own so that on paper he would appear qualified for public legal defense welfare. Yeah, you killer-saluting troll, you're absolutely correct. Oct 01, 2012

 

Yeah, let´s just incarcerate the bastard without a trial or due process, and save ourselves the expense and the trouble. Never mind all that nonsense about innoncent until proven guilty, the state´s obligation to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the right to counsel, or the right to a trial by a jury of your peers. Your arguments are a lot more compelling in the original German translation, you goose-stepping ingoramus. Oct 01, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

Muddy - You must have missed the part where the jury said "We the jury find the defendant guilty." Oct 01, 2012

 

@ Muddydog FYI the 379 which the story refers to are the number of days it will have been that this convicted felon will have remained free from incarceration since - ready for it -
HIS FINDING OF GUILTY BY A JURY OF HIS PEERS !!!!!
This was after receiving the most expensive defense counsel ever offered, at taxpayer expense since his "SHAM" divorce made him indigent, and the extra trouble of having to move they trial across the state!
2,012 are the number of days we presumed this gentleman as innocent regardless of the videos which showed the public a different story than the SPD´S ever-changing lies.
IMHO your lack of knowledge on the subject shows in your ignorant comments. This alone considerably devalues your argument and consequently results in your looking like an ignoramus DUDE! Oct 01, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

DUDE! Put down the blunt, turn your ball cap back around and hike up your pants. And then re-read the article. Thompson had a lawyer at tax payer expense before he filed for divorce. The divorce was a ploy to insulate himself from civil liability, not the expense of his criminal defense lawyer. And it was a U.S. Magistrate who granted the motion for a lawyer at tax payer expense. It was the federal district court judge who moved the trial to be sure that prospective jurors were unbiased by media coverage. The same judge decided to let him stay in the community and not in jail while his motion for a new trial was pending. The same judge will also decide whether Thompson stays out of mail while his inevitable appeal is pending. If there´s an issue here, it´s your total misunderstanding of the legal system. Do you know what that is? It´s ignorance. Oct 06, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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