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Thread: Eric Matthew Frein - Pennsylvania Death Row

  1. #51
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    Jury just reached a verdict in less than five hours of deliberation. If it's not death, I'll be absolutely shocked.

  2. #52
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    TROOPER AMBUSH KILLER ERIC FREIN SENTENCED TO DEATH

    MILFORD, Pa. (WPVI) -- A bell tolled the fate of a gunman after a jury on Wednesday condemned him to die for shooting two Pennsylvania troopers at their barracks in a late-night ambush, killing one and leaving a second with devastating injuries.

    Eric Frein, 33, was sentenced by a jury to death by lethal injection a week after his conviction on charges including murder of a law enforcement officer and terrorism.

    "Jurors have delivered full justice in this case and issued the penalty that is so richly deserved by Eric Frein," said District Attorney Ray Tonkin.

    Prosecutors said Frein was hoping to start an uprising against the government when he opened fire with a rifle on the Blooming Grove barracks in the Pocono Mountains in 2014. Cpl. Bryon Dickson II, a Marine veteran and married father of two, was killed in the late-night ambush, and Trooper Alex Douglass was critically wounded.

    Frein showed no emotion as the decision was read, while someone on the police side of the gallery shouted "Yes!" Douglass, who has endured 18 surgeries and might lose his lower leg, couldn't stop smiling.

    Defense lawyer Bill Ruzzo told reporters he was disappointed by the sentence, and surprised the jury failed to find a single mitigating circumstance that would point to a life sentence.

    Col. Tyree Blocker, the state police commissioner, thanked the jury for delivering justice.

    "Cpl. Dickson will always remain in the hearts of all members of the Pennsylvania State Police, forever," he said outside the courthouse.

    Following a tradition that dates to the 19th century, Pike County's sheriff rang the bell atop the courthouse eight times, heralding that Frein had received a death sentence. The bell last tolled for a condemned inmate in the 1980s.

    Frein led police on a 48-day manhunt in the Poconos before U.S. marshals caught him at an abandoned airplane hangar.

    He did not take the witness stand in his own defense, nor did he ask the jury to spare his life in the penalty phase. His lawyers had argued for a sentence of life in prison without parole, presenting evidence he'd grown up in a dysfunctional home. His father told the jurors he had failed his son, and his mother said, "I want my son to be saved."

    Prosecutors portrayed Frein as a remorseless killer who randomly attacked in hopes of fomenting rebellion.

    Frein kept a journal in which he coolly described shooting Dickson twice and watching him fall "still and quiet." And in a letter to his parents, written while he was on the run but never sent, he complained about lost liberties, spoke of revolution and said, "The time seems right for a spark to ignite a fire in the hearts of men."

    Frein showed "wickedness of heart" when he "made a choice to pull that cold trigger again, again, again and again," Tonkin said in his closing argument Wednesday.

    The sentencing caps a saga that began Sept. 12, 2014, when Frein hid in the woods across the street from the barracks and targeted Dickson as he was leaving work. He then shot Douglass, who had come to the aid of his mortally wounded comrade.

    Police linked Frein to the ambush after a man walking his dog discovered his partly submerged SUV three days after the ambush in a swamp a few miles from the shooting scene. Inside, investigators found shell casings matching those found at the barracks and Frein's driver's license.

    The discovery sparked a manhunt that involved 1,000 law enforcement officials and spanned more than 300 square miles, rattling communities throughout the Poconos.

    His lawyers did not contest his guilt, focusing their efforts on trying to save his life during the penalty phase of the trial.

    The defense told jurors that Frein grew up with an angry, domineering and abusive father who imparted his anti-government and anti-police views to him. Lawyers asked the jury to consider Frein's relationship with his dad, Eugene Michael "Mike" Frein, a mitigating circumstance as it weighed a sentence of life or death.

    Tonkin ridiculed the effort to cast Frein's father as a villain, saying Frein's lawyers were trying to "deflect from the murderer over there and put Eugene Frein on trial."

    Dickson's widow, meanwhile, gave emotional testimony about how she and her two young sons have struggled since his murder, and Douglass, the injured trooper, described suffering from a range of health problems since Frein shot him through both hips.

    Though the gunman faces a bleak existence on death row, he likely won't face execution for decades, if ever. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has imposed a moratorium on the death penalty, and Pennsylvania's last execution took place in 1999. The state has executed only three people since the U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976.

    Frein's lawyers have promised to tie up his case in appeals.

    http://6abc.com/news/trooper-ambush-...death/1919536/
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  3. #53
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    Eric Frein Files Appeal to Death Penalty

    By Chelsea Titlow
    PA Homepage

    MILFORD, PIKE COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU) - Convicted murderer Eric Frein filed his first post-sentence motion after his conviction and sentencing.

    In his first appeal of his conviction and death sentence for the murder of Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Bryon Dickson during the PSP ambush at the Blooming Grove Barracks in 2014. He also critically wounded PSP Corporal Alex Douglass.

    Among the reasons cited in the appeal for overturning the sentence, Frein's lawyers criticize the trial judge for overruling their objection to the content and length of the victim impact testimony "That testimony was highly emotional, lengthy and overrode any logical reasoned moral decision the jury could make to spare the life of the defendant," they argue.

    The appeal also argues the judge did not allow the Jury the opportunity of considering mitigating circumstances in sentencing Frein to death. "This denial resulted in the Jury's finding of no mitigating circumstances since Defendant's mitigation was not a defense or an excuse.

    The errors that Frein's lawyers are saying they found in his trial and sentencing face are as follows:

    post sentence motion_1494426824002_21142224_ver1.0_640_360.jpg

    http://www.pahomepage.com/news/eric-...alty/710917433
    Don't ask questions, just consume product and then get excited for next products.

    "They will hurt you. They will hurt your grandma, these people. The root cause of this is there's no discipline in the homes, they don't go to school, you know, they live off the government, no personal accountability, and they just beat people up for no reason, and it's disgusting." - Former Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters

  4. #54
    Administrator Helen's Avatar
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    April 27, 2017

    Eric Frein formally sentenced to death


    By Michael Rubinkam
    The Morning Call

    With his victim's two young sons in court for the first time, a gunman who shot and killed a Pennsylvania trooper was formally sentenced to death Thursday, one day after a jury determined he should receive a lethal injection for the ambush at a state police barracks.

    Eric Frein
    traded a suit and tie for prison garb, and his hands and feet were shackled as a judge pronounced what he called an "entirely warranted" sentence on the convicted murderer and terrorist.

    Frein killed Cpl. Bryon Dickson, a 38-year-old Marine veteran, and left Trooper Alex Douglass permanently disabled in the Sept. 12, 2014 attack at the Blooming Grove barracks. He eluded capture for 48 days, with state police spending more than $11 million on a manhunt that spanned hundreds of square miles of the rugged Pocono Mountains.

    The jurors, who were brought in from the Philadelphia suburbs due to intensive news coverage of the case in the Poconos, attended Thursday's hearing as spectators. Douglass chatted with them privately for several minutes before Frein was sentenced, doling out handshakes and hugs.

    Dickson's sons, Bryon III, 10, and Adam, 8, were in the gallery as sheriff's deputies led Frein into court.

    "You ready?" said their mother, Tiffany Dickson. "He's right there," she said, pointing to Frein as he walked past. "That's what he looks like, OK?"

    Tiffany Dickson later showed Pike County Judge Gregory Chelak a slideshow of her life with the slain trooper, set to the couple's wedding song. Chelak also heard from Dickson's mother, Douglass and state police officials including Commissioner Tyree Blocker.

    The judge said he hoped the intensive media attention on Frein would wane.

    "It is the hope of this court that the story of Eric Frein ends today," Chelak said, going on to call Dickson a "selfless servant" and "shining example of bravery and courage." He had similarly laudatory things to say about Douglass.

    Given a chance to address the court, Frein shook his head and said nothing.

    About 20 uniformed troopers representing barracks throughout northeastern Pennsylvania stood in unison as he was led out, destined for Pennsylvania's death row.

    Prosecutors said Frein, 33, hoped to start an uprising against the government when he ambushed the two troopers during a late-night shift change.

    Prosecutors portrayed him as a remorseless killer who attacked troopers at random in hopes of fomenting rebellion. The defense had asked the jury to spare Frein's life, arguing he'd been raised in a dysfunctional home. The jurors rejected his upbringing as a mitigating factor that would point them toward a sentence of life in prison without parole.

    Frein's lawyers promised to tie up his case in appeals.

    There are 171 people on death row in Pennsylvania, which hasn't carried out an execution since 1999 and only three since the U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty more than 40 years ago. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has imposed a statewide moratorium on executions.

    Wolf's spokesman, J.J. Abbott, said the governor's decision to issue "temporary reprieves" while a state Senate task force reviews the death penalty in Pennsylvania "is in no way an expression of sympathy for the guilty on death row."

    "Governor Wolf believes Eric Frein is a monster who targeted State Police members and that justice has been served by a jury of his peers," Abbott told The Associated Press.

    http://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/m...427-story.html
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  5. #55
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    Judge refuses to overturn death sentence of police sniper

    MILFORD, Pa. (AP) – A judge has rejected a motion to overturn the death sentence of a sniper who killed a Pennsylvania state trooper and wounded another outside their barracks.

    Michael Weinstein, one of the attorneys for 34-year-old Eric Frein (FREEN), says Monday's ruling by a Pike County judge was "anticipated" and that the case will likely eventually wind up before the state Supreme Court.

    The defense motion was the first since Frein was convicted last month in the 2014 murder of Cpl. Bryon Dickson II outside the Blooming Grove barracks. Trooper Alex Douglass was also wounded by Frein, who was caught after a 48-day manhunt.

    Frein's attorneys argued that emotional testimony by Dickson's widow unfairly overrode any "logical reasoned moral decision the jury could make" to spare Frein's life.

    District Attorney Ray Tonkin has praised Monday's ruling.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/05/16...ce-sniper.html
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  6. #56
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    Frein transferred to death row in maximum security prison

    By Joseph Kohut
    The Times-Tribune

    Eric Matthew Frein — now inmate MY0275 — will spend the majority of his days in an 85-square-foot cell in a maximum security prison in the southwest corner of the state.

    The Monroe County man convicted of killing a state trooper and critically wounding another during a sniper attack at the Blooming Grove barracks arrived at death row at the State Correctional Institution at Greene on Wednesday after his intake into the state prison system, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Amy Worden said Friday.

    A Chester County jury sentenced Frein, 34, of Canadensis, to death late last month after 16 days of testimony in Pike County Court. That jury previously convicted Frein of two counts of first-degree murder and 10 other charges for killing Cpl. Bryon K. Dickson II of Dunmore and severely wounding Trooper Alex T. Douglass of Olyphant during the Sept. 12, 2014, ambush at the Pike County barracks.

    Frein hid in the treeline across from the barracks and fired four shots from a rifle before disappearing into the woods. U.S. marshals captured him 48 days later at an abandoned airport hangar he used as a hideout in Pocono Twp.

    With Frein’s transfer to the Greene County prison, his lodging is established for the rest of his life, unless his sentence is vacated or his conviction is overturned on appeal.

    A death row inmate’s day begins with the first count shortly after 6 a.m., said Patrick Felice, the capital case manager at SCI-Greene. The inmates get breakfast and spend two hours in segregated recreation. They are allowed to visit the law library once or twice a week and take a shower at some point in the day. They are allowed televisions, cable, visits and three phone calls per week. Dinner is at 4 p.m. and the final count takes place five hours later.

    Pennsylvania had a death row population of 171 inmates as of April 3. In February 2015, Gov. Tom Wolf placed a moratorium on executions until he reviews a forthcoming report from a task force commissioned to study capital punishment. Pennsylvania has not executed a death row inmate since 1999, when “House of Horrors” killer Gary Heidnik died by lethal injection for the murders of two of six women he kidnapped, tortured and raped in his North Philadelphia basement from 1986 through 1987.

    http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/news/f...ison-1.2195436
    Don't ask questions, just consume product and then get excited for next products.

    "They will hurt you. They will hurt your grandma, these people. The root cause of this is there's no discipline in the homes, they don't go to school, you know, they live off the government, no personal accountability, and they just beat people up for no reason, and it's disgusting." - Former Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters

  7. #57
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    Troopers say Gov. Wolf should sign Frein’s death warrant

    HARRISBURG — Five times a year, Pennsylvania corrections officials meet inside a white block masonry field house on the grounds of the prison near The Pennsylvania State University, and carry out a mock execution.

    They escort the “inmate” to the execution chamber. They strap that person onto the gurney. And then they simulate injecting a lethal dose of drugs into his body.

    They perform this drill even though capital punishment in the commonwealth remains indefinitely on hold while government officials await a report, now years in the making, analyzing capital punishment’s history, effectiveness and cost in Pennsylvania.

    The death sentence imposed last month on Eric Frein, the Poconos survivalist who killed a State Police trooper and injured another in September 2014, has reignited questions — and in some cases, criticism — about why the state has taken so long to decide whether to continue or stop, once and for all, executing criminals.

    Troopers say Gov. Tom Wolf should sign Frein’s death warrant.

    “For us, it’s all about justice,” said Joe Kovel, president of the Pennsylvania State Troopers Association. “It’s time for the moratorium to be lifted.”

    State Sen. Scott Wagner, a York County Republican hoping to unseat the governor next year, has signaled it’s an issue he’ll press on the campaign trail. “I can assure you, when I’m governor, within the first 48 hours, I’ll be up there reversing that moratorium,” Wagner said in an interview.

    Pennsylvania isn’t the only state in limbo over the death penalty, as debate has raged over the probability of an innocent person being executed and the propriety of lethal injection as an execution method. Capital punishment is authorized in 31 states, but only seven have carried out executions — 31 of them — since the start of 2016, according to Amber Widgery, a capital punishment policy specialist at the National Conference of State Legislatures.

    “There are people in the world who think that no one innocent has ever been executed, and others who think it happens all the time,” Widgery said. There are also some who don’t believe you have to constitutionally execute a criminal painlessly, she said, and others who classify lethal injection as cruel and unusual.

    In Pennsylvania, those and other concerns led Wolf, a Democrat, to impose a moratorium on the death penalty after taking office in early 2015. He argued the state should await the results of a long-awaited report by the Pennsylvania Task Force and Advisory Committee on Capital Punishment before putting any more criminals to death.

    The report is expected to analyze more than a dozen factors involving the death penalty, such as cost, bias and effectiveness.

    Wolf’s decision has drawn backlash from organizations like the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association, which in 2015 called it “a misuse of [the governor’s] power” that ignores the law.

    The study itself has also come under fire, particularly for how long it’s taking to complete: It was ordered up by the state Senate in 2011 and was supposed to be completed by 2013.

    “Based on the makeup of the group and how it’s operating to date, we have serious concerns about the product that’s going to be produced and it’s very likely that it’s going to be anti-death penalty,” said Richard Long, executive director of the prosecutors’ group.

    Those involved in the study defend their work.

    The initial research, conducted by Penn State’s Justice Center for Research, took years because the researchers had to physically travel to county courts and district attorneys’ and public defenders’ offices to access documents, said the center’s managing director, Gary Zajac.

    The process of obtaining this data was a “long nightmare,” Zajac said, requiring permission to access the information then “weeding through...irregularly organized files.”

    “It’s a wonder we got done at all, but we did,” he said in an email.

    The Justice Center’s report awaits a final peer review before it is complete. A scholar who had been scheduled to perform that task died, causing further delay.

    “The report is almost like it’s been cursed from the beginning,” said Glenn Pasewicz, executive director of the Joint State Government Commission, which is tasked with producing it then sending it to legislators for consideration.

    Meanwhile, tax dollars still go toward keeping prisoners on death row.

    Each of the state’s 165 death row inmates — from Frein, who was sentenced last month, to Henry Fahy, who has been awaiting his punishment since November 1983 — cost Pennsylvania $10,000 more a year to house than a convict sentenced to life in prison. This does not account for the additional legal fees associated with capital cases: Some estimate prosecuting and litigating a capital murder case can cost up to $3 million more than a non-capital murder case.

    The state is also paying to maintain the long-dormant execution facility on the grounds of State Correctional Institution Rockview. The last time it was used was in 1999, when Philadelphia “House of Horrors” murderer Gary Heidnik was executed by lethal injection.

    "We have spent billions of dollars having a death penalty — including maintaining a death facility — and we have not executed someone who did not ask to be executed” since 1962, Sen. Daylin Leach, a Montgomery County Democrat and one of four members of a Senate task force awaiting the report, said last week.

    Leach is an unapologetic opponent of the death penalty. He has introduced bills to abolish it since 2009, arguing that it is “immoral and barbaric,” and calling the cost of capital punishment “troubling” — including the cost of maintaining the execution complex.

    The “death house,” as the chamber at the Rockview prison is sometimes called, requires tax dollars to be heated, lit and maintained. “It’s literally something we are getting zero out of,” Leach said.

    The Department of Corrections was unable to provide information about the costs of maintaining the execution complex. But officials there say it has to be maintained in case an execution is suddenly scheduled.

    Corrections officials declined requests to inspect or photograph the inside of the chamber, citing security reasons. They say it contains three cinderblock holding cells, where inmates are expected to spend their final hours. Approximately 20 feet away, in the execution chamber, a window peers through to a witness room, where media, citizens and victims can watch executions from rows of metal folding chairs.The field house has upstairs offices, currently unused, and an adjacent building with a kitchen to prepare an inmate’s final meal.

    But that hasn’t been necessary since 1999.

    http://www.poconorecord.com/news/201...-death-warrant
    Don't ask questions, just consume product and then get excited for next products.

    "They will hurt you. They will hurt your grandma, these people. The root cause of this is there's no discipline in the homes, they don't go to school, you know, they live off the government, no personal accountability, and they just beat people up for no reason, and it's disgusting." - Former Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters

  8. #58
    Moderator Ryan's Avatar
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    Frein entered Pennsylvania's death row on 5/5/17.

    http://www.cor.pa.gov/General%20Info...ion%20list.pdf

  9. #59
    Senior Member CnCP Legend CharlesMartel's Avatar
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    Pa. Supreme Court to hear Frein case on May 17

    By Terrie Morgan-Besecker
    The Pocono Record

    The state Supreme Court will hear arguments on May 17 about Eric Matthew Frein’s challenge of his first-degree murder conviction and death sentence.

    Jurors convicted Frein, 34, of Canadensis, on April 19, of first-degree murder and other offenses for the Sept. 12, 2014, sniper attack outside the Blooming Grove state police barracks that killed Cpl. Bryon K. Dickson II of Dunmore and wounded Trooper Alex T. Douglass of Olyphant. Frein was sentenced to death in April.

    His attorneys, William Ruzzo and Michael Weinstein, appealed the verdict, arguing Pike County Judge Gregory Chelak erred when he denied a motion to suppress statements Frein made to police. They also claim Chelak erred in allowing excessive victim impact evidence at the death penalty portion of the trial.

    Pike County District Attorney Ray Tonkin, who prosecuted the case, said Wednesday he’s already filed a comprehensive brief addressing each of the issues Ruzzo and Weinstein raised.

    Police properly obtained statements from Frein, Tonkin said, adding that, even if the appellate court finds they didn’t, “the other evidence is overwhelming.” His brief also addresses the jury’s instructions and findings in the death penalty portion of the trial.

    When contacted Wednesday, Weinstein referred questions to Ruzzo, who did not return a phone call seeking comment.

    The hearing will be held in Harrisburg; a time was not immediately available.

    The Supreme Court justices will hear argument from the defense attorneys first and have an opportunity to ask questions from the bench, Tonkin said. Then, prosecutors will present their argument and answer questions from the justices. The court is not expected to rule immediately after the hearing.

    http://www.poconorecord.com/news/201...case-on-may-17
    In the Shadow of Your Wings
    1 A Prayer of David. Hear a just cause, O Lord; attend to my cry! Give ear to my prayer from lips free of deceit!

  10. #60
    Senior Member CnCP Legend CharlesMartel's Avatar
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    Frein appeal focuses on whether police violated his Miranda rights

    BY TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
    Citizens Voice

    An attorney for convicted cop killer Eric Matthew Frein said he believes Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court will agree state police illegally elicited a confession from his client, but that may not be enough to win a new trial.

    William Ruzzo said the justices focused questions at a hearing Thursday on whether investigators violated Frein’s Miranda right to remain silent when they interrogated him shortly after his Oct. 30, 2014, arrest.

    Frein, 35, of Canadensis, is seeking to overturn his conviction and death sentence for the Sept. 12, 2014, sniper attack outside the Blooming Grove state police barracks that killed Cpl. Bryon K. Dickson II of Dunmore and seriously wounded Trooper Alex T. Douglass of Olyphant.

    Ruzzo acknowledged Frein agreed to tell police where he hid a rifle used in the attack, but said Frein advised troopers he did not want to talk about anything else. Despite that they continued to question him for three hours.

    Speaking after Thursday’s hearing in Harrisburg, Ruzzo said even if he wins on that issue, the justices may find it was a harmless error that would not have changed the outcome of the trial because there was significant other evidence that tied Frein to the crime.

    Pike County District Attorney Ray Tonkin argued the questioning was proper. He agreed with Ruzzo that if the court finds otherwise, the issue is unlikely to win Frein a new trial.

    “The evidence in the case was overwhelming,” Tonkin said following the hearing. “If the court determined there was an error, it would be harmless.”

    Ruzzo also argued Frein was wrongly denied the right to speak to a defense attorney who came to the police barracks after the interrogation began. He also raised several issues regarding the death penalty phase.

    Under state law, jurors weigh aggravating circumstances — those that make a crime more heinous — against mitigating circumstances — those that lessen a defendant’s culpability. If the aggravating outweigh mitigating, the sentence is death.

    Ruzzo argued Frein should get a new death sentence hearing because prosecutors presented too much emotional testimony about the impact Dickson’s death had on his family. That evidence “crossed the line,” Ruzzo said in a court filing, and unfairly swayed the jury against Frein.

    The evidence included the testimony of 10 witnesses, the display of 32 photos of Dickson’s life and a 15-minute video of Dickson’s graduation from the state police academy.

    Tonkin said he believes the victim impact statements are not an issue because jurors were instructed not to consider the statements unless they found both aggravating and mitigating circumstances existed. In this case, they found no mitigating circumstances.

    Ruzzo said he believes he still has a basis to appeal the issue because the trial judge refused his request to instruct jurors that the mitigating evidence did not have to be an excuse for the crime or have any nexus to it.

    “I argued the reason they didn’t find any mitigating circumstances was because he would not give the instruction I asked for,” Ruzzo said.

    Tonkin said he believes the law is on his side regarding that matter. He said he is confident the death sentence will stand.

    “We asked for full justice at the beginning of this case and anticipate the Supreme Court with uphold the sentence of death issued by the jury,” he said.

    http://citizensvoice.com/news/frein-...ghts-1.2338562
    In the Shadow of Your Wings
    1 A Prayer of David. Hear a just cause, O Lord; attend to my cry! Give ear to my prayer from lips free of deceit!

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