Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
On October twenty seventh, two thousand and eight, a pregnant
woman named Jody Lintrek answered a knot at her front
door and survived a gunshot, but tragically, her pregnancy was terminated,
and police found what they believed to be a makeshift
silencer in her home. Then theorized that one of the
(00:23):
potential bothers, a married man named Charles Brandon Martin, had
constructed the alleged silencer and arranged the attack, despite a
bunch of holes in this theory, including that this alleged
silencer may have actually been a bomb. One alleged witness
claimed that Brandon had searched the Internet for ways to
construct a silencer before disposing of the computer, sending him
(00:46):
away for life. This is wrongful conviction. You're listening to
Wrongful Conviction. You can listen to this and all the
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(01:15):
Welcome back to Wrongful Conviction, where we're going to go
to Maryland, just outside of DC, where a pregnant woman
survived a gunshot wound that ended her pregnancy and then
a tangled web of Lover's law enforcement and various ulterior
motives led to the prosecution of not one, but two
innocent men, while other compelling suspects were ignored. And one
(01:38):
of the two men caught up in that miserable web
joins us from a Maryland correction facility, Charles Brandon Martin.
But he just goes by Brandon. So Brandon, welcome to
wrongful conviction.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
I appreciate you having me.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
And joining him to help tell this harrowing story. His attorney,
Elizabeth Franzoso, who goes by Beth, and we'll represent him
along with Donna, at a new trial if the state
ever stops delaying it. So Beth, welcome, Thank you for
having us. And while this case is really more of
a Maryland story, Brandon's story began in DC and it
(02:13):
revolved heavily around basketball.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
I grew up in the DC area. I went to
Domatha High School, finished up at Saint Stephen Saint Agnes's
High School in Alexandria. Before college, I studied social science
and aff apology and sociology the University of Pittsburgh. Funished
at Johnstown and I started coaching and in basketball, and
actually when I was in college, started coaching at the
(02:35):
high school I had attended in the summers. Then I
had got a job at Allegheny College in Pittsburgh. So
I actually didn't move to Maryland until two thousand and
four with my ex wife, who was my girlfriend at
the times when I had the head coaching job at
the college and Southern Maryland. Right after my first son
was born.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
The two young parents moved back to be closer to
their support systems understandably, and then they got married and
it wasn't long before where the second child was born,
and it appears that Brandon enjoyed.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
Fatherhood with a job I had and everything I was
able to make my schedule around the kids, and so
I was basically the primary caregiver for our kids as
I was there. I mean, like I spent more hours
for day with the kids than anybody from the second
they woke up all the way through the night time.
But that's the most important thing to me with those kids.
I mean, that's the hardest part for me right now,
is being away from the kids.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
As time went by, the marital arrangement changed and Brandon
moved out, but they both remained committed to amicably co parenting.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
He and his wife had separated, pad more of just
a co parenting roommate type thing. His wife was aware
that he'd had relationships with other women. Go somewhere else
in the evening, and he'd come home, go to the kids'
sports games and participate with the kids. He was always
a really active dad to.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Try to keep everything the same for the kids since
they were still young. I would get back to the
house in the morning before they woke up so that
they didn't notice anything different, which betwain me and my
ex wife. He knew what the situation was.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
And while living within this new arrangement, Brandon had three
more kids, including another son with his wife, but staying single.
It was just a better fit for him setting a
casual expectation with any of his intimate partners, which included
three women at the time of this incident, Sherry Carter,
Maggie McFadden, and the victim in this case, Jody Lynn Torrick.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
They tried to make it sound like I was in
committed relationships with all these people. You know, with Jody,
we probably had only been around each other, probably eight times.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
She was actually dating someone else by the name of
Emmanuel and they were actually more boyfriend girlfriend. Jody became pregnant,
it was uncertain who the father was, and Brandon was
very respectful of her making whatever decision that she wanted to,
which could include either having an abortion or keeping the baby,
and he agreed that if the baby was his, he
(04:53):
would support the baby. I think Emmanuel was not thrilled
that she was pregnant and didn't know who the father was,
so the state tried to paint this out to Brandon
being angry that she was pregnant and wanting to kill
her so that way he wouldn't have to pay child support,
but it simply wasn't true. Not to mention that there
was a whole host of other people that did have
(05:14):
some type of motive.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
And this appears to have included one of Brandon's other
intimate partners, Maggie McFadden, who had allegedly threatened other women
with gun violence, including Sharry Carter, Which brings us to
October twenty seventh, two thousand and eight, when Jody Lyn
Torrik was at home talking to a friend on the phone.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
She was two months pregnant at the time, talking on
the phone to her friend Blair around three o'clock in
the afternoon and someone knocked on her front door saying
they were a salesman, and then she ended the call.
Blair tried to call her back a few times, Jody
never picked up the phone, so she got worried and
she called Jody's roommate, Jessica. Jody also worked for Jessica.
(05:54):
Blair requested that Jessica leave work and check on Jody.
So Jessica Jody lying there unconscious with a gunshot wound,
and she calls nine to one one. The police come
to the scene. At that point, Jody's lying in the doorway.
She's still breathing, and she was hospitalized for quite some
time for serious injuries.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
A three eighty caliber bullet and casing were collected from
where she was found, and then across the living room
from there, police found a curious looking gatorade bottle. The
mouth was wrapped in layers of duct tape and medical
tape which formed a rectangular opening, and then on the
bottom there was a hole covered in ashen soot, and
(06:38):
the lead detective from ann Arundel County, Richard Alman, thought
that that was a makeshift silencer.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
There was no expert testimony whatsoever about gatorade bottles or
other bottles being made into silencers. Detective Richard Alban testified
it reminded him of a makeshift silencer he'd seen in
a Stephen Sagal movie, but.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Rather than ordering chemical analysis to prove that theory, it
just became an accepted fact, and there were a few
hairs stuck in the tape and the contraption was saved
for DNA testing and hair microscopy. Meanwhile, they spoke with
Jody's roommate, Jessica Higgs.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
During the interview, Jessica used the very crass racist language.
She used the N word and stated she did not
like black people, that she didn't like that Jody had
black men in and out of the house, and that
she didn't like or didn't trust Brandon because he's black.
She basically came up with this unfounded, baseless theory that, oh,
(07:36):
it must have been Brandon because he was in some
way pissed off that she was pregnant and didn't want
to have an abortion.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
The police theorized that this married man wanted Jody dead
to hide his infidelity and potential extramarital child. So Anne
Arundel County Police coordinated with Charles County to pay a
visit to Brandon and his wife.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Oh yeah, the next day they were accusing me when
I was that holme with the kids and I see
a truck parked in front of my driveway, like blocking
my driveway, tended windows, and I actually ended up calling
the police because I'm afraid. I'm at home with the
kids and I'm thinking if somebody about to try to
rob me or something that they said they were going
to send someone over, which clearly they didn't because they
(08:18):
knew who it was. And so the original interaction with
them was when I found out that she had actually
been shot.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
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(09:19):
ways to get involved. Without knowing the time of the shooting,
Brandon told them where he was the day before, at
Maggie McFadden's house speaking with her brother Frank Bradley about
rehab from about one thirty to four thirty PM, thereby
(09:41):
making him unavailable for him to have shot Jody.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
And then in the meantime, the police were actually speaking
to my wife at the time, and they made her
meet them at like a mattress warehouse or something like
that on the way home from her job. So they
had her basically alone talking to her. And so I'm
trying to call her and can't reach her. They wouldn't
let her pick the phone up when I'm calling now.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Unaware of the marital arrangement that upended their theory, they
may have hoped to upset her with the news of
an extra marital affair and child, perhaps gaining the state's witness,
but to no avail. They were told about Brandon's other
intimate partners, which brought them to Sherry Carter, as well
as Maggie McFadden and her brothers Frank, Dennis and Michael Bradley,
all of whom corroborated Brandon's alibi. But instead of rethinking
(10:26):
their theory in the face of this new evidence, they
persisted with Brandon while trying to again aggravate his wife.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
When they had originally asked about searching the house and
searching the car and all that stuff, we didn't have
any issue with that. That was fine. But instead of
going on the schedule that we had agreed upon, they
waited until they knew I was going to be gone
from the work, and they came over the house when
she was there with the kids, and so just trying
to upset her, messing the house up, slashing bags open
that could have just been unzipped, and just making a
(10:54):
mess of the place, doing the best they could to
try to upset her in any way, hoping that I
had done something and she was going to fell on me,
but there was nothing to do.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
In addition to information, they may have been looking for
a three eighty caliber pistol or some other incriminating evidence,
but all they turned up was a text exchange between
Brandon and Jody.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
If you look at the text messages, it just says
what time do you work, to which she responded, I'm off.
Brandon said hello at five eleven, which was two hours
after the shooting. He sent another message, I got some
stuff with the kids to about seven o'clock, so any
time later, how much did you need, suggesting that they
had talked over the phone or something, So why they
(11:34):
suggested that was in some way nefarious or him trying
to ascertain if she was home alone. In fact, it
suggests one that they were just having a normal conversation
about him providing her something that she needed and scheduling it.
And the fact that he was completely clueless as to
the fact that she'd been shot because he's texting her
(11:54):
two hours after.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
Yet inexplicably, this was later present at as evidence of guilt. Meanwhile,
a month out from the shooting, Jody regained consciousness, but
she had no memory of the shooting and she couldn't
identify the shooter.
Speaker 3 (12:08):
She could remember I think what happened up to the
day of the shooting in her life generally, and she
gained her memory for future events, but did not remember
anything about being shot.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
Well, they interviewed Jody when she first got home. He
let them know that I've never asked her to get
a horse. I think she said, he never told me
to do anything associated with it. Then they come the
trial still saying that was going on when she actually
told them that before.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
So they chose to ignore the victim and Brandon's wife
about the motive or lack thereof, as well as his
corroborated alibi, and they obtained a warrant to collect strands
of Brandon's hair for comparison to the gatorade bottle. Again,
no testing was done to determine if this crazy Stephen
Sigall movie silence er theory held any water. I mean,
my first thought was that this contraption was found outside
(12:58):
of the immediate crime scene. Sounds like a let's face,
it sounds like a homemade bomb.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
I think he might be pretty spot on there.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
And that also, I guess what would explain why there
may have been some burnt residue in it. That's what
happens to marijuana when you smoke it. Also, whither it
would have been a little bit of a tape around it,
and there was a multiple DNA profile not rolling out
either Jody or Brandon, and I think the fact that
Jody's and Brandon's and who knows who else is might
(13:27):
have been on it because it was a mixed profile,
would be consistent with that being what this gatorade bottle
was used for. And so essentially that there's nothing about
the DNA that would suggest that he did anything nefarious
with this gatorade bottle. But yet, because Detective Albin had
seen this interesting Steven Siagall movie, he decided to make
that the theory of the state's case that it was a silencer, so.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
With Jessica Biggs theory which had been debunked by Jody
and Brandon's wife, followed by an innocuous text exchange, and
then Brandon's hair found on what was probably a bond.
Considering Jody wasn't excluded either. I mean, how many shooting
victims handle the silencer that's used on them. Nevertheless, they
(14:13):
arrested Brandon.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
It was a surprise. I was actually on my way
taking the kids to practice when we were heading to
the car, getting the kids in the car, and they
just pulled up with all the police and all this
stuff in arrestment.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
He was arrested on March thirtieth, two thousand and nine,
then bonded out, which started a fight over pretrialed detention
that tied up his lawyers and had Brandon in and
out of jail while they worked to build support for
the silencer theory, starting with Sherry Carter.
Speaker 3 (14:39):
Brandon had a computer because he was a coach at
the College of Southern Maryland, so he had his work
laptop at home, and she got upset with him and
made up a story that he was searching all these
things on the computer about making silencers out of bottles,
and then she testified the computer had been destroyed in
(14:59):
the police testimony was such that they did not have
the computer.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
But we later found out that they definitely fucking did,
and that a forensic search of this particular computer and
others belonging to Brandon had disproved Cherry's story. And in
light of that tidbit, do we believe that other potentially
exculpatory evidence was just simply somehow lost.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
They lost street camera footage that would have showed if
Brandon had driven towards Jodie's house that day, or for
that matter, specifically who drove toward the house that day.
They lost part of a recording of a police interview
in which Maggie's brother Michael Bradley basically endorsed brandon saalibi,
which directly conflicted with Michael Bradley's trial testimony.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
During his initial interview, Michael Bradley corroborated Brandon's alibi statement
that he was at their house on the afternoon of
the shooting, but in November two thousand and nine, in
exchange for immunity and other Favorschael Bradley changed that story,
adding in a new name, Jerry Burks.
Speaker 3 (16:05):
Bradley testified that it was him, Frank, Jerry Burks, Brandon.
They were smoking marijuana in the house. He was intoxicated.
That he saw Frank take medical tape to the kitchen.
He saw Brandon and Frank go up to Maggie McFadden's room,
Frank coming down and retrieving a gatorade bottle, and then
Brandon and Jerry Burks left the house.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
Bradley said they left around two pm, and then the
pair allegedly returned and asked Frank to discard of a bag.
But where did this Jerry Burke's guy come from?
Speaker 2 (16:39):
He was a friend of Maggie's brother, and I believe
a friend of Maggie, and just my feeling of it
is that he sort of was in the same situation
as me where they're a legend he did something that
he probably didn't actually do.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
I think that they were hoping in some way that
Jerry would turn on Brandon, but he didn't.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
And we'll get into Michael Bradley's reason for throwing Jerry
Burks under the bus in a bit. But they used
his statement and Sherry Carter's lies to bring Jerry Burkes
into the fold. But Burkes called their bluff refusing to
give a statement about how Brandon allegedly hired him to
shoot Jody using this alleged silencer.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
He maintained his innocence, He was tried by a jury,
he was acquitted, And it really does seem that after
Jerry was found not guilty, they really ramped up the
prosecution of Brandon. The judge didn't even allow the fact
that Jerry was acquitted to be heard by the jury
in Brandon's case.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
By this time, Brandon had been re arrested on a
false assault allegation, and even that same judge didn't find
the charge credible.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
They had a witness basically lie and say that I
had assaulted them. Now it came up doing a hearing
that it was a false statement, and the judge explained
that even though I don't believe that it occurred, I'm
going to hold you because trials two weeks away. Then
the trial gets postponed or a good deal of time,
and they still kept me in there.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Trial was postponed until April twenty ten. Meanwhile, the media
was regurgitating whatever the state fed them.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
They asked the possible jurors, who has read or seen
anything about this case on TV or in the newspapers
because they're trying to root out bias, and every single
person stands up, you know the right Then you're like okay.
And the issue with that is that the way the
media is used by the police and the state is
that they'll go to the media and they'll say that
(18:32):
this person was the rested goodness and this and so
on the news in the newspaper, they'll put your face
in there and said you allegedly did this, and no
one's listening to the allegedly, and no one is thinking
about the fact that it might not be true, and
so everybody stands up, and the next part of the
guavier is asking them if they can still be fair
(18:53):
and impartial, so everybody puts back down.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Trial began on April twenty seven, twenty ten, with the victim,
Jody Lynn Torok.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
She testified that she did not remember anything as far
as what happened on that day, that she and Brandon
had a sexual relationship, and that she was pregnant, and
she also had a relationship with another man named Emmanuel,
and that she was uncertain who the father was, and
that she and Brandon had some discussions about abortion, and
(19:22):
she told him that she wished to keep her baby,
and there was no testimony that he in any way
was threatening to her or anything of the like.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
But the state doesn't have to prove motive. And they
also presented the innocuous text thread with a straight bass
and said that it was evidence of guilt. And then
they moved on to the alleged silencer, you know, the
bong silencer theory, and they put on medical experts that
tied Brandon's DNA to this gatorade bottle. The first one
(19:52):
testified that one hair was human, the other was from
a cat, and then an expert in mitochondrial DNA, doctor
Terry Milton, took the stand.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
Doctor Terry Melton testified, what mitochondrial DNA could show that
someone is from the same maternal lineage, but it can
never say for sure that this hair absolutely for sure
came from this person. Doctor Melton testified she could rule
out ninety nine point ninety four percent of North Americans,
but during cross examination she acknowledged that left roughly one
(20:24):
hundred and eighty thousand Americans and thirty thousand people in
Maryland with that same mitochondrial DNA profile.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
So in plain English, it's a big fat nothing burner.
Speaker 3 (20:35):
And they called Sarah Chenoweth, the forensic chemist who testified
about DNA and said it included DNA from at least
three individuals, which also would be consistent with it being
a bong, and says at least one male and one female.
She did roll out three other people submitted for comparison,
didn't roll out Brandon, didn't rule out Jody. Plus, we're
(20:57):
not suggesting that his DNA necessarily he wasn't on the
bottle that they all used as a bong. But even
if there was a hair that could have possibly been Brandon's, well,
when people pass around a bong, their hair might get
on it. So I don't think that's really neither here
nor there. So that was it. There was no expert
testimony about silencers, how they're constructed. They could have tested
(21:19):
it trying to figure what was that little bit of
ash in the bottom was at marijuana or was it gunshot?
Resident they didn't bother to do it because they didn't
seem to think it was important.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
The state hired three biological evidence experts to testify about
a contraption that they hadn't even proved was involved with
the shooting. Instead, they relied on Sherry Carter and Michael Bradley,
the latter of whom Michael told his news story about
Jerry Burks, but he kind of fell apart on cross examination.
Speaker 3 (21:47):
On cross examination, he was questioned about the fact that
he received immunity from prosecution from Jody Turok's shooting in
exchange for his testimony, and that he also received a
benefit in his obstruction of justice charges in New Jersey,
and he admitted that those charges stemmed from him lying
to the police. So he's a person who's approven liar
(22:08):
to the point where he actually was charged with obstruction
because of it, and then he admitted he only testified
because Maggie McFadden asked him to because she was involved
in the attempted murder.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
Yes, Bradley testified that his sister directly asked him for
protection because she was involved. And then the state's other
star witness, Sherry Carter, also implicated Maggie McFadden.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Cherry testified that Maggie McFadden was threatening Sherry, among others
on social media, was emailing her employer, and that Maggie
actually made a statement that she had someone shot and
the description of that statement sounded an awful lot like
she was talking about Jodi. She also had made comments
(22:54):
that she liked to fight and beat people up, and
she had shot people before. She was so volatile the
state decided not even to call her as a witness.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
The state then found themselves trying to throw the court
off of Maggie McFadden's scent.
Speaker 3 (23:09):
It was completely just twisted. It was backwards, basically saying
that the McFadden theory was far fetched because her aggressive
behavior would draw attention to her as a suspect and
it was not logical that someone who's that flamboyantly aggressive
would have been responsible for trying to shoot someone?
Speaker 1 (23:28):
Mm hmmm, yeah, okay, but this wasn't Maggie McFadden's trial,
and that's not all that Sherry Carter said.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Cherry testified that she'd been in a relationship with Brandon
for three years, that he had a computer at his house,
and that it was his work computer from the College
of Southern Maryland and it had a lot of restrictive settings,
so he wouldn't be able to modify system files or
download software without an administrator password. And so she then
(23:57):
testifies that we did this, and he did that, he
looked up silencers, and then he said he got rid
of the computer because they looked up so many crazy
things on the internet in her apartment that if it
got searched, he didn't want it found. So she says that,
and she said she'd seen Brandon with a handgun in
September and October, and her testimony was unimpeached, and.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Had Brandon's trial attorney known that this computer was not
only in the state's possession, but also that it had
been forensically analyzed and no such searches had been detected,
then he too would have known that Sharry Carter had
perjured herself and that the state knowingly had presented false evidence.
But without that knowledge, well trial counsel they did the
(24:39):
best they could.
Speaker 3 (24:40):
A lot of the case was made on cross examination. Basically,
the argument was that the bottle was not a silencer,
but it was a boon, that the DNA did not
indicate that he had any role in constructing a silencer
or anything like that, and that Jodie's DNA was found
on it again that would corroborate the idea of it
being a bong, and that the state's theory about the
silencer failed to explain the presence of JODI's DNA. But
(25:04):
there was also a lot of references to who else
might have had a motive. Here you have Emmanuel Quarterly,
who's the other boyfriend of Jody. Then you have Maggie
McFadden who's all over the place threatening people, confessing to shootings,
alluding that it was Jody, and the fact that she's
directing her brothers what to do and how to talk
(25:25):
to the police. And then Maggie McFadden's friend Steve Burnett,
lied to the police about his whereabouts and was never
able to explain what he was doing.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Plus, Brandon's wife testified about their arrangement and how she
knew that he had children with other women, So he
would not have been motivated to kill Jody for keeping
the baby.
Speaker 3 (25:45):
Without this whole computer thing trying to tie him up
to this bong that they claim was a silencer, and
have no forensic evidence whatsoever. They really didn't have anything
of a case. The only couple witnesses they had were
really alternate suspects. Sherry, this was, I would say, the
butt four witness. That was not for this witness, he
wouldn't have been convicted. And she testified the computer had
(26:08):
been destroyed. The jury instruction, I'll read it verbatim. You
have heard evidence that the defendant removed a computer from
the house of Sherry Carter. Concealment of evidence is not
enough by itself to establish guilt, but may be considered
as evidence of guilt. Concealment of evidence may be motivated
by a variety of factors, some of which are fully
consistent with innocence. You must first decide whether the defendant
(26:31):
concealed any evidence in this case. If you find that
the defendant concealed evidence in this case, then you must
decide whether that conduct shows a consciousness of guilt. Crucially,
this instruction allowed the jury to infer guilt from Brandon's
alleged decision to get rid of the laptop due to
search history, and the only basis for the instruction was
(26:52):
Sherry Carter's testimony. So essentially the instruction was that if
he concealed every evidence that could be used as consciousness
of guilt.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
You know, I don't have a criminal record, I've never
been through anything like this, and so you still have
some faith system that if you didn't do something, you're
not going to get Even with all the stuff that
state was trying to make up, go and drown, no
one that took the stand actually said I didn't, So
I did still have hope. I didn't think that it
was going to end up the way it did. So
(27:40):
they simply a North France, which is the highest security
level prison in Maryland, which is actually I believe it
was the Ultra Max or something like that. I think
they have a superstructure show about the prison, which this
is like a one on one They would call it
twenty three and one, which you like in yourself about
twenty three hours a day, and so yeah, so I'm
up here basically. Ever since prison being what it is,
(28:04):
there's things that are normalized in here that should not
be normal. I don't even remember the amount of people
that's been killed stuff in here anymore. People being murdered
in here. It's not even spoke about it. It's like
it's something that people say in passion now because it
happened so often, Like the man who was murdered by
the Coressian authors that was caught on the body camera recently,
(28:25):
people and outrage about it, which they should be, but
that happens daily like that. It just because it finally
was one video.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
And of course he's talking about Robert Brooks, the man
who was murdered on video, brutally murdered by a group
of New York State Correction officers. Now, Robert, what can
we say? Rest in peace? And to his point, from
what we hear during these interviews, that kind of thing
(28:55):
is all too common behind the walls. And that makes
post conviction, that gation all that more urgent, because every
day is life and death. And Brandon tapped into his
scholastic background in the law library.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
The only thing I really do is read the law,
read the Bible. And once I got confident in my
legal abilities as far as filing briefs and things of
that nature, probably in the past seven years, I think
I've helped about twenty guys get positive results in cases,
regardless that that's them going home, getting admitted in the
drug program, getting time cut, finding information similar to mine.
Speaker 1 (29:33):
So let's get back to Brandon's case.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
I had filed a public information next, and once I
finally got the police file was when I found the
information about the computer. In fact, it was on page
four because I'm up all night doing legal work, and
so i had my light on and I'm flipping the
page and I saw it, and I'm just I started
talking to myself. Really, I'm like, oh, this is what
I've been talking about all along.
Speaker 3 (29:56):
The state had not only the computer, but they also
had the announcealysis of the computers that was done by
the state's computer experts, which concluded that these searches had
not been done on these computers and that was not
disclosed to the defense. So it completely proves that Sherry
was lying and they deliberately presented false evidence. Then they
(30:17):
had the jury instructed that he was the one that
hid the evidence.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
So the very next morning I called Justin Brown to
let him know what I found in there, and when
we started filing it from there, that was in twenty sixteen.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
They also discovered Michael Bradley's initial interview in which he
corroborated Brandon's alibi, as well as that they at one
point had had video of the road leading up to
JODI's home which could have identified the actual killer, but
mysteriously it somehow went missing.
Speaker 3 (30:46):
So there were so many things that were exculpatory that
the jury should have heard about but didn't hear about,
and instead were fed this false bill of lies about
silencers and computer searches and destruction of evidence that not
only wasn't true, but the opposite was true. It was
the government that was hiding the evidence and they did
(31:08):
it to secure this false conviction against Brandon, and Justin Brown,
who was Brandon's attorney at that time, did an excellent
job presenting it. At the post conviction level. Judge Silkworth
granted the post conviction relief based upon your Brady violation,
which the court concluded that it was significant enough to
vacate the conviction and remain for a new trial, and.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
Since twenty sixteen, the state has tied them up on
appeal rather than allow the new trial to go forward.
And in that time, Beth and Donna Fairman, as well
as a team from the powerhouse law firm Scadden, have
fought to maintain that twenty sixteen new trial motion all
the way to most recently the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
At that level, Brandon was represented by some excellent lawyers
from Scadden who did an outstanding job, and basically a
three judge panel concluded that he's entitled to a new trial.
And so that's where we are right now. I am
looking forward to representing him at his trial or Donald Fairman,
(32:09):
and I think that he has waited way too long
for justice to happen here.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
So here we are in February twenty twenty five, as
the state has a few more delayed tactics to still try, because,
after all, what the hell are they going to present
at a new trial? Michael Bradley, Sherry Carter, I mean,
multiple DNA profiles found on a bond. Maybe, I mean
I can't.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
With this shit.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
But before I actually lose my shit, let's go to
closing arguments, where first of all, I want to thank
both of you for joining us today. So now I'm
going to turn off my microphone, leave my headphones on
and kick back in my chair and just listen to
anything else you want to share. So Elizabeth, you go first.
(32:57):
Then just sort of hand the microphone off the rand
and he'll take us off into the sunset.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
I think that he has been the victim of a
grievous injustice, that the system has failed him time and
time again. I am, however, grateful to the courts that
saw things as they should have and granted him a
new trial, and I feel confident that Jerry, hearing actual
evidence rather than evidence that was manufactured twisted around, we'll
(33:26):
see that he's an innocent man and will find him
not guilty when he goes to trial.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
Thank you for having us on here and giving us
the opportunity to have this conversation, because with how everything
has gone here, you see that the way that things
are spoken about from one point of view are not
necessarily what it really is, and so you have so
many lies and those things that will put into the trial.
(33:52):
You know, Yeah, people I know on the street that
don't know the truth about the situation and will repeat
stuff that's on the news because they don't understand and
that the news is just getting stuff from the police,
and so you have stuff going to family members, kids,
all of that stuff that are being said that clearly
aren't true, and there's no way for these people to
get the actual information. So I do believe that this
(34:12):
is a very important outlet. And for me clearly sitting
in here, I understand that this isn't what I want
to be here, but I also know that certain positive
things still occur. What you have to look for, you
have to understand what is wanted from you, what is
needed from you, And so that's why, like I said earlier,
(34:32):
I try to help in any way I can with
anyone because you never know why God has allowed you
to be in a certain situation. But if you don't
try to do the things that He wants to do,
then there's no positive that's going to come from it,
and then you're just looking at everything from such a
negative point of view. And so I know that at
some point, when it's the proper time, I'll be out
(34:52):
of here. But while I'm in here, I'm going to
continue to try to help people because I've always done that,
and so just try to keep the positive mind say,
while continuing the fight for right, really for the justice,
for the truth. My kid, my family, They're the most
important thing to do. And so to be able to
get home to them and give the in person support
(35:13):
that I should have been able to give to them,
their whole labs up and lock up for the most
part of their whole labs. And so I'll just pray
that happened soon.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
Thank you for listening to Wrongful Conviction. You can listen
to this and all the Lava for Good podcasts one
week early and ed free by subscribing to Lava for
Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I want to thank our
production team, Connor Hall and Kathleen Fink, as well as
my fellow executive producers Jeff Kempler, Kevin Wartis, and Jeff Cliber.
The music in this production was supplied by three time
(35:45):
OSCAR nominated composer Jay Rowse. Be sure to follow us
across all social media platforms at Lava for Good and
at Wrongful Conviction. You can also follow me on Instagram
at It's Jason Flamm. Wrongful Conviction is a production of
Lava for Good Podcasts and Association, a Signal Company Number one.
We have worked hard to ensure that all facts reported
in this show are accurate. The views and opinions expressed
(36:06):
by the individuals featured in this show are their own
and do not necessarily reflect those of Love of for
Good