The
person once erroneously branded as the "snaggletooth killer," convicted
of the murder of a Phoenix cocktail waitress in 1991 and sentenced to
death, was proved innocent of the crime in the same test that not only
established that he was not involved in the fatal stabbing, but that
also identified the true perpetrator – a person already incarcerated on
another unrelated offense. After being cleared by DNA, Ray Krone walked
out of the Arizona State Prison at Yuma on Monday, April 8, 2002, a
free man.
The
murdered waitress, Kim Ancona, had been cleaning the men's room at the
CBS Lounge in Phoenix on the evening of December 28, 1991. Her naked
body was found in the restroom the following morning. She had been
stabbed eleven times. An examination of the body also revealed that she
had been bitten on the left breast through the tank top she was wearing
and on her neck. There were no fingerprints, and there was no semen
although other evidence indicated she had been sexually assaulted.
There was blood, lots of it, but it was typed as being Type O, the same
as Ancona, Krone, and some 43% of the population. Forensic DNA
technology was not generally available at the time of the prosecution.
Krone,
who was a former letter carrier without a criminal record, and
honorably discharged from the U.S. Air Force, knew the victim, had
socialized with her and he had been a customer of the ABC Lounge to
play darts. He also lived close to the bar. Suspicion focused on him
and within two days of the commission of the crime, he was arrested.
From then on, he was on the fast track to conviction. Yet, there was
little evidence that tied Krone to the killing except for evidence of
the bite mark on the victim's breast, which a state forensic
odontologist said matched the dentition of Krone. Krone had maintained
his innocence from the day of his arrest.
Despite
strong evidence of his innocence presented at trial, the circumstantial
evidence used by the State was very weak. It was bolstered, however, by
a type of forensic evidence that still remains highly controversial in
its reliability - personal identification by a bite mark inflicted by
an assailant upon a victim. In fact, the Arizona Supreme Court's en banc
decision said that the physical evidence could neither exclude not
include Krone as the perpetrator, and without the bite mark evidence
the State had no case. See, State v. Krone, 182 Ariz. 319, 897 P.2d 621 (en banc, 1995).
It
was indeed the bite mark testimony of Dr. Raymond Rawson, the State's
dental expert, that convinced the jury that Krone was the killer.
According to the Arizona Supreme Court's opinion, defense attorneys
were not informed until the day before the trial started that the
prosecution intended to use a videotape labeled "Bite Mark Evidence Ray
Krone." The court said, "The tape attempted to show a match between
Krone's teeth and Ancona's wounds by overlaying the two. It took the
dental casts, styrofoam impressions, and CAT scans of the casts and
overlaid them on the actual wounds. The tape presented evidence in ways
that would have been impossible using static exhibits." Dr. Rawson also
used the tape "extensively" during his testimony.
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| Fig.1: photo of a human bite mark |
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Slide photos:American Academy of Pediatrics, The C. Henry Kemp National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect ©1994 (UMKC School of Medicine/Medical Education Media Center)
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| Fig.2: same wound ten days later. |
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After
the defense's unsuccessful attempt to exclude the videotape or to
obtain a continuance, and its decision not to call a defense expert as
a witness, the jury convicted Krone of first degree murder and
kidnaping, but acquitted him of sexual assault. The judge sentenced
Krone to death, after finding that the murder was committed in an
especially "heinous and depraved manner." Krone spent almost three
years on death row, watching other condemned inmates being moved out of
the cellblock in which the condemned-to-death persons were being held
before being conducted to their execution.
Christopher
Plourd, a San Diego attorney who is a member of the prestigious
American Academy of Forensic Science's Jurisprudence Section and who
specializes in crimes that involve complicated forensic issues,
appealed on the ground that prosecutors had not only failed to turn
over exculpatory evidence – a test done by Forensic Odontologist Dr.
Homer Campbell, also an Academy Fellow, who had concluded that Krone's
dentition was inconsistent with the bite marks found on Kim Ancona. but
they had also violated the rule requiring them to disclose the State's
evidence of Dr. Rawson in a timely manner.
The
conviction was reversed and remanded for a new trial on June 22, 1995,
but not because of the failure to disclose the exculpatory evidence.
Rather, the court reversed because of the importance of the State's
expert's video evidence on the bite mark and the tardiness in its
disclosure to the defense. The Supreme Court said, "The State's
discovery violation related to critical evidence. We cannot say it did
not affect the verdict."
On
retrial, Ray Krone's hopes that the justice system would prevail where
dashed when he was convicted again, despite the fact he presented
exculpatory bite mark specialists testimony. The second jury also
believed the State's expert, Dr. Rawson. This time, Krone was given a
life sentence.
Some
time ago, Krone's family, who had continued to believe in his innocence
through all of his ordeals, retained another lawyer, Alan M. Simpson of
Phoenix, to work with Plourd. By that time DNA testing was being done
routinely on behalf of the prosecution. Krone's lawyers asked that the
tank top, through which one of the bites had been inflicted, be
examined for saliva. Not only was saliva found, but the results showed
that Krone could not have been the source of the saliva. Seeking
further testing against the DNA database that the State was now
maintaining of its inmates, the results were astonishing: the DNA
strongly associated the evidence with a 36 year-old inmate of the
Florence, Ariz., prison, Kenneth Phillips, who had been convicted of
attempted child molestation.
This case is clear proof, again, of the power of DNA. Not only did the DNA test show that Ray Krone was excluded as the perpetrator, it also identified a different individual who was already incarcerated in the penitentiary for an unrelated sex crime.
On Monday, April 8, 2002, the Maricopa County attorney's office
revealed that the odds were 1.3 quadrillion to 1 that Phillips was the
contributor of the DNA found on Kim Ancona's tank top. And, by the way,
Phillips, too, had Type O blood. What's more, a state dental expert now
also opined that Phillips "could not be excluded" as the person who
left the bite marks.
To
the credit of the local authorities, Maricopa County Attorney Rick
Romley, at a news conference, publicly admitted that a mistake had been
made and apologized. He, and Phoenix Police Chief Harold Hurtt
announced they would ask for Krone's release pending a hearing to
vacate Krone's murder conviction. Superior Court Judge Alfred Fenzel
ruled that it would be an injustice to keep Krone in custody any longer
and ordered his immediate release, pending the evidentiary hearing
scheduled for April 29.
Krone
was a proponent of the death penalty before he was sent to prison. He
thinks differently now after having lost ten years of his life and
sentenced to death as an innocent person, while the guilty perpetrator
was at the loose during that decade, free to prey on more victims.
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