April 22, 2008, - 9:48 am
Introducing the Katrina Defense
By Debbie Schlussel
You’ve heard of the Twinkie Defense, the PMS Defense, and other absurd defenses which defense attorneys have successfully used to get their murderer clients acquitted of the charges.
Now, meet the Hurricane Katrina Defense. It’s the latest rage at the criminal defense bar:
If Gregory Christopher Decay is convicted of capital murder this week, his attorneys plan to argue that the former New Orleans resident pulled the trigger on a Fayetteville couple while traumatized from Hurricane Katrina.
The capital murder trial for Decay, 24, begins today in Washington County. He is accused in the April 2007 slayings of Kevin Barkley Jones and Kendall Rachell Rice, both 24.
Jones and Rice were shot in the head in a drug dispute, court records show. Their bodies were found in their Fayetteville apartment.
Deputy public defender Julie Tolleson said that if Decay is convicted, she will argue that trauma caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 will be part of mitigating evidence in the sentencing phase.
“We’ll want to tell as much of his life story as we can,” Tolleson said. “And Katrina is part of what got him here today.” Decay’s isn’t the first case where the deadly hurricane and its aftermath have been part of court strategy. The Katrina angle has been an element in other criminal cases in Arkansas and Texas – states that saw an influx of refugees when the storm slammed the Gulf Coast.
Little Rock lawyer John Wesley Hall Jr. planned to use the defense in the case of a Katrina refugee charged in Arkansas with a felony drug crime. The case, however, never went to trial because the man disappeared, and he’s believed to have committed suicide in New Orleans, Hall said.
“We planned to put on evidence showing the true horrors of what Katrina was, with bodies floating by in high water and people trapped in their homes without anything for a week,” said Hall, who is president-elect of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
“These people were uprooted and separated from family and friends and everything they knew, and we were going to show that this kind of psychological trauma can last for years,” he said.
Hmmm . . . Why hasn’t there been the 9/11 defense? We’ve already seen the Gitmo detainee defense–the “trauma” of listening to Christina Aguilera, reading Harry Potter on a LaZ Boy, and eating at the halal buffet.
ANOTHER TWINKIE DEFENSE. UNFORTUNATELY THIS STUFF ISN’T A JOKE. MAYBE IF THE KATRINA DEFENSE WORKS THEN ALL THE REFUGEES SHOULD BE ROUNDED UP AND GIVEN LIKE 5 YEARS OF THERAPY TO PREVENT THIS FROM HAPPENING AGAIN. IN A PRISON.
samurai on April 22, 2008 at 11:03 am