State again tries Alan Gell for 1995 slay­ing. Gell’s lawyers will use evi­dence with­held by pros­e­cu­tors in his first trial.

Joseph Neff, Staff Writer

December 82002

The News and Observer

WINDSOR — On Monday, Alan Gell will go on tri­al a sec­ond time for the 1995 mur­der of retired truck dri­ver Allen Ray Jenkins. 

More Alan Gell Chapter 1: Who killed Allen Ray Jenkins?

As in his first tri­al, Gell will be pros­e­cut­ed by the state Attorney General’s Office. The tri­al will take place in the same court­room in Bertie County, and on the same date — Feb. 2, six years after his first trial started.

The sim­i­lar­i­ties end there.

This time, Gell and his lawyers will use evi­dence ille­gal­ly with­held by pros­e­cu­tors at the first tri­al: state­ments indi­cat­ing that Jenkins was killed while Gell was in jail, and a tape record­ing of the state’s star wit­ness say­ing she had to make up a sto­ry” for police about the slaying.

And Gell and his lawyers will deploy a small army of expert wit­ness­es to build a case around Jenkins’ time of death; sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence at the scene sup­ports the argu­ment that Gell could­n’t have com­mit­ted the killing. Among the sched­uled wit­ness­es is a state med­ical exam­in­er whose tes­ti­mo­ny at the first tri­al helped put Gell on death row. The pathol­o­gist, Dr. M.G.F. Gilliland, now believes Gell is innocent.

The tri­al will show­case an unusu­al amount of legal fire­pow­er for a Bertie County case. Jim Coman, the for­mer head of the State Bureau of Investigation and one of state’s top pros­e­cu­tors, is expect­ed to face off against Joseph Cheshire V of Raleigh, one of the state’s top defense lawyers.

Cheshire, who joined Gell’s defense team last year, said the two tri­als will be as dif­fer­ent as night and day.

The tri­al that hap­pened before was orches­trat­ed and improp­er­ly manip­u­lat­ed by the pros­e­cu­tion against a scram­bling defense,” Cheshire said. It was­n’t a fair fight.”

Attorney General Roy Cooper and his pros­e­cu­tors have declined to dis­cuss the case. Cooper will not seek the death penalty.

A man was mur­dered in cold blood in his own home,” Cooper said in December 2002, days after Gell won a new tri­al. We want jus­tice. We want the killer brought to justice.”

A ver­dict, and more

Beyond the ques­tion of Gell’s guilt or inno­cence, there’s more at stake: the pub­lic per­cep­tion of the Attorney General’s Office, which decid­ed to pur­sue a sec­ond tri­al, and the rep­u­ta­tions of David Hoke and Debra Graves, the pros­e­cu­tors who with­held evi­dence at Gell’s first trial.

Outside the Attorney General’s Office, most who have exam­ined the case think the state is going to court with a weak hand.

There is very lit­tle evi­dence of guilt, and what there is is ques­tion­able,” said Rich Rosen, a law pro­fes­sor at UNC-Chapel Hill and direc­tor of the N.C. Center on Actual Innocence. The real issue is, are they going to keep Gell in jail despite all the evi­dence of his inno­cence? They are try­ing to put an inno­cent man in prison.”

Gell’s case res­onates far beyond Bertie County, a rur­al coun­ty about 100 miles east of Raleigh that is one of the state’s poorest.

Death penal­ty oppo­nents use the case to argue for a death penal­ty mora­to­ri­um. Defense lawyers cite Gell’s case as proof that state law should force pros­e­cu­tors to share all their evi­dence before tri­al, a process known as open file dis­cov­ery,” and that the N.C. State Bar should crack down on pros­e­cu­tors who ille­gal­ly withhold evidence.

Hoke is now the No. 2 admin­is­tra­tor of the state court sys­tem. Graves is a fed­er­al pub­lic defend­er in Raleigh.

Time of death

In 1998, the pros­e­cu­tion’s case rest­ed on the premise that Gell killed Jenkins dur­ing a rob­bery in Jenkins’ home in the town of Aulander on April 31995.

The date is crit­i­cal. Gell was out of state April 4 and 5 on a botched drug-buy­ing trip to Maryland. On April 6, he was jailed for car theft, and he was still behind bars April 14, when a neigh­bor found Jenkins’ decomposing body.

The state had no phys­i­cal evi­dence against Gell: no fin­ger­prints, no foot­prints, no fibers, no DNA. Other than two teenage girls, no one had ever seen Gell at Jenkins’ house.

The state’s case is built around those two eye­wit­ness­es, Crystal Morris and Shanna Hall. The two were 15 at the time, best friends and tru­ants who hung out with Gell, drink­ing and using drugs. Hall was the girl­friend of Gell, who was then 20.

The two girls admit­ted their involve­ment, plead­ing guilty to sec­ond-degree mur­der; they agreed to tes­ti­fy against Gell and received 10-year sen­tences. Morris is sched­uled to be released in June, Hall in February 2005.

The star wit­ness, Morris, was a friend of Jenkins, a hard-par­ty­ing 56-year-old with a record of hav­ing sex with under­age girls. Morris had been vis­it­ing Jenkins to drink and do drugs since she was 12.

Morris tes­ti­fied that Gell sneaked into Jenkins’ bed­room and ambushed him, jump­ing out from behind a bed­room door to blast Jenkins twice with a shot­gun. Hall tes­ti­fied that she was out­side the house at the time.

Morris and Hall, who weren’t aggres­sive­ly ques­tioned by defense lawyers at the first tri­al, are like­ly to face with­er­ing cross-exam­i­na­tion from Cheshire. Both have changed their sto­ries repeat­ed­ly. And Gell’s lawyers now have a secret­ly made record­ing of Morris and her then-boyfriend, in which Morris rehears­es their sto­ry and talks about how she had to lie to police.

At the first tri­al, pros­e­cu­tors did not pro­vide the tape to Gell’s lawyers, Maynard Harrell and Chuck Moore.

The only thing the state has is a pair of lying girls,” Harrell said in a recent interview.

But Perry Martin, an Ahoskie lawyer who rep­re­sents Hall, said the state’s case will be stronger this time.

Martin said that Hall and Morris are truth­ful wit­ness­es. And Martin said that the state will present evi­dence of no tele­phone usage at Jenkins’ home after April 3.

Cooper has declined to answer spe­cif­ic ques­tions about the case. However, in a meet­ing with death penal­ty oppo­nents in 2003, Cooper said his staff had turned up new evidence.

Cooper said the state had some sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that had not been report­ed,” said Marshall Dayan, a law pro­fes­sor at N.C. Central University.

More help for Gell

Cheshire said he finds the talk of new evi­dence puz­zling, con­sid­er­ing that the Attorney General’s Office has told him he has been giv­en the state’s entire file. He said he has found lit­tle new to help the state: a jail­house snitch who was­n’t used at the first tri­al because he was­n’t cred­i­ble; and a woman who said she received a let­ter from Gell admit­ting his guilt, but tore up the letter.

Jurors at the retri­al will see evi­dence on Gell’s behalf that was not pre­sent­ed before. At Gell’s first tri­al, pros­e­cu­tors had state­ments from 17 peo­ple who saw Jenkins alive after April 3. At the start of the tri­al, Harrell asked for all such state­ments. The pros­e­cu­tors gave him only nine.

Those wit­ness­es had been re-inter­viewed by SBI Special Agent Dwight Ransome, who said each wit­ness had revised the date they last saw Jenkins alive. Two have since sworn that they did­n’t change their initial stories.

Hoke and Graves, the pros­e­cu­tors, did not hand over state­ments from peo­ple whom Ransome did not re-inter­view. Taken in the first hours after Jenkins’ body was found, those state­ments were made by the vic­tim’s broth­er, his across-the-street neigh­bor, a life­long friend, and five oth­ers, all of whom said they saw Jenkins alive April 7, 8 or 9 — when Gell was in jail.

You are going to see the peo­ple who saw Allen Ray Jenkins alive while Alan was in jail,” Cheshire said. You are going to see some amaz­ing sci­ence made very understandable.”

Gell’s lawyers pre­sent­ed no expert wit­ness­es at his first trial.

This time, Gell’s lawyers will put on a foren­sic ento­mol­o­gist to date the time of death by the age of the mag­gots found on Jenkins’ corpse. A foren­sic anthro­pol­o­gist will use his research on decom­pos­ing corpses at the University of Tennessee’s Body Farm” to date Jenkins’ time of death.

A crime scene expert will argue that the blood spat­ter and shot­gun pel­lets found in the room con­tra­dict Morris’ ver­sion of how Jenkins was killed.

And the jury will hear from Gilliland, the med­ical exam­in­er who tes­ti­fied that Jenkins could have been killed as ear­ly as April 3.

Prosecutors had not giv­en her the state­ments of 17 peo­ple who said they saw Jenkins alive after April 3. Based on those state­ments and new data on the tem­per­a­ture in Jenkins’ house, Gilliland is now cer­tain that Jenkins was killed days after April 3.

For Cheshire, Gilliland’s switch from a star pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness to star defense wit­ness shows how mis­con­duct seeped through the entire Gell case.

The pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct issue will be all through this case,” he said, all over it, from the begin­ning to the end.”

Staff writer Joseph Neff can be reached at 8294516 or jneff@​newsobserver.​com.