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News (Media Awareness Project) - US VA: Column: Frederick Is Fortunate He Wasn't In Mississippi
Title:US VA: Column: Frederick Is Fortunate He Wasn't In Mississippi
Published On:2009-05-16
Source:Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)
Fetched On:2009-05-18 15:14:46
FREDERICK IS FORTUNATE HE WASN'T IN MISSISSIPPI

Would the jurors talk now? Would the 12 people who had decided Ryan
Frederick's fate, who said he was guilty of manslaughter - but not capital
murder - finally discuss their deliberations?

In a word, no. Even though a Chesapeake Circuit Court judge had decided
last week to follow their recommended 10-year sentence against Frederick
for fatally shooting Detective Jarrod Shivers during a 2008 drug raid.

"I'd rather not comment," said one.

Goodbye, said another.

"Collectively, we didn't want to make any comments to the media out of
respect to both families," another said empathetically - and resolutely.
The trial "was very tough for the city."

I made the calls this week, searching for how the jurors weighed the
evidence; how much Frederick's admitted marijuana growing and pot smoking
contributed to the verdict; and whether they blamed the Chesapeake police
for their large show of force against someone who had no prior criminal
record, and who could have been arrested going to or from work.

Local residents, therefore, have no additional information following the
February verdict. It remains a compromise decision that didn't send
Frederick away for life, but didn't grant him freedom, either. However,
Frederick, who apologized to Shivers' family during last week's sentencing,
should consider himself very lucky.

He could be Cory Maye.

In a Mississippi case that's surprisingly similar to Frederick's, Maye had
been on death row in the December 2001 slaying of a police officer during a
drug raid. And Maye, who also had no prior criminal record, can make a
strong argument that Mississippi law enforcement officials screwed up - and
that he's now paying the price. Race hangs over the Mississippi killing:
Maye is black, and the slain officer was white.

Maye has been championed by Radley Balko, who has written extensively about
Maye's case at www.reason.com and on his own blog, www.theagitator.com .
He's also reported about the overuse of police SWAT teams.

In late 2001, authorities obtained a warrant for two apartments in a
Prentiss, Miss., duplex. A suspected drug dealer lived in one; Maye, his
girlfriend and their toddler daughter lived in the other. The suspected
dealer was arrested, and drugs were seized the night of Dec. 26. Officers
then turned to Maye's residence, though the warrant - obtained with the
help of a "confidential informant" - did not identify Maye or his
girlfriend by name.

Maye, who has said he drifted off to sleep that evening and was there with
his 18-month-old daughter, was awakened by the commotion and pounding at
his door and did not hear police announce themselves. He retreated to his
bedroom and fired three shots at a person entering the room. An officer was
killed. Only a tiny stub of a marijuana cigar was recovered from his apartment.

Plagued by tactical errors by his original attorney, who had never defended
a capital murder case before, Maye was found guilty and sentenced to death.
His trial judge later threw out the death penalty, and Maye was
re-sentenced to life in prison.

But Balko's spotlight gained the attention of gun rights activists and
other attorneys, including the Washington firm of Covington & Burling. It's
working for free on Cory Maye's appeals. The Mississippi Court of Appeals
will hear oral arguments June 4, including a request to throw out the
guilty verdict.

"It was a very troubling case," attorney Abram J. Pafford told me by phone
this week. He initially learned about it from reading Balko's updates.

Maye "had no criminal record, no history of violence," attorney Pafford
continued. "It seemed so clear to me that Cory's explanation for what
happened was so logical... and made so much more sense."

The amount of marijuana uncovered from his apartment would have led to only
a misdemeanor fine.

Like I said earlier, if you've been following Frederick's case, you'll
notice the similarities to the Maye incident. You'll recognize the strong
use of force.

And you'll probably come to the conclusion that the Chesapeake jury,
correctly, fashioned a verdict that more closely looks like justice.
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