The Morning Call
By Debbie Garlicki
October 19, 2006

The plea: Entered an Alford plea to three counts of third-degree mur­der on Wednesday.

The rever­sal: Judge grants new tri­al in August 2001, say­ing pros­e­cu­tion hid evi­dence from public defenders.

Dennis Counterman, who spent more than 18 years in prison some on death row after being charged with set­ting a fire that killed his three chil­dren, was released Wednesday as a result of a rare plea agreement.

Today, Mr. Counterman, you are a free man,” Lehigh County Judge Lawrence J. Brenner said after a 45-minute hear­ing in the case, which stemmed from a July 25, 1988, fire that raged through the Counterman fam­i­ly home at 4361/​2 Chestnut St., Allentown.

Still dressed in dark blue prison-issue shirt and pants, Counterman walked to the court­room’s gallery and embraced two nieces, who wept on his shoul­ders. For the first time since he was charged in August 1988, he left the court­room with­out hand­cuffs and leg shackles.

I’m glad to be with fam­i­ly,” he said. It’s been a long time.”

Outside the court­room, he hugged one of his broth­ers, Russell Danner, who came from Omaha, Neb., for the hear­ing. Oh, man,” Counterman said, almost breath­less as he clung to Danner and closed his eyes. Long time.”

He held his broth­er for a few min­utes before let­ting go, and said, It’s gonna be all right.”

Counterman, 46, entered a plea to three counts each of third-degree mur­der and endan­ger­ing the wel­fare of chil­dren and was sen­tenced to nine to 18 years in prison and five years of pro­ba­tion. Brenner ordered him imme­di­ate­ly released because he already has served more than the maximum sentence.

Counterman did not admit he killed his chil­dren. He main­tained he was inno­cent but acknowl­edged the pros­e­cu­tion had strong evi­dence from which a jury could find him guilty.

He entered what’s called an Alford plea, after the 1970 U.S. Supreme Court case of Alford v. North Carolina. The case allows defen­dants to enter such a plea when they do not admit guilt but want to accept a plea bar­gain because it’s in their best interest.

I’m more frus­trat­ed than angry,” Counterman said as he stood out­side the cour­t­house with his fam­i­ly. I spent all this time for some­thing I did­n’t even do.”

In 1990, a jury con­vict­ed Counterman of first-degree mur­der and sen­tenced him to death. The jury believed he start­ed the fire that killed his chil­dren, Christopher, 6; James, 4; and Scott, 10 weeks, who were trapped inside the house, and seri­ous­ly injured his wife, Janet, who escaped out a window.

Eleven years lat­er, Brenner grant­ed a new tri­al and set aside the death sen­tence. He ruled Counterman did­n’t get a fair tri­al because a for­mer pros­e­cu­tor, Richard Tomsho, with­held evi­dence from the defense.

The case wend­ed its way through appel­late courts for years and end­ed with the pros­e­cu­tion recent­ly propos­ing a plea and the defense accept­ing the deal, which both sides saw as fair and appro­pri­ate. A retri­al would have been risky for Counterman, who could have been sen­tenced to death again, and for the pros­e­cu­tion, which could have been hand­ed an acquittal.

Defense lawyer Peter Rossi of Philadelphia said he told Counterman he believed there was a very sig­nif­i­cant like­li­hood that we could win this case.” But Rossi explained there were no guarantees.

This is a win,” said James Moreno, one of two lawyers with the Defender Association of Philadelphia who pur­sued a retri­al for Counterman and uncov­ered evi­dence favor­able to the defense that the pros­e­cu­tion had not divulged in Counterman’s first trial.

That evi­dence showed the old­est child had a his­to­ry of fire-set­ting, which could have strength­ened the defense argu­ment that one of the chil­dren, and not Counterman, start­ed the fire.

We firm­ly believe he is inno­cent, but this is the right thing to do,” Moreno said.

Counterman, who quit school in the ninth grade and worked for a slate quar­ry, a waste man­age­ment com­pa­ny and a fac­to­ry that inspect­ed dyed mate­ri­als, will still have a criminal record.

District Attorney James Martin said the pros­e­cu­tion still believes the fire was intentionally set.

We believe that the jury could have found from the evi­dence that the fire was inten­tion­al­ly set by Dennis Counterman,” Martin said. But we also acknowl­edge that they very well may have made anoth­er find­ing of not guilty.”

Martin said there were two main rea­sons the pros­e­cu­tion did­n’t pro­ceed with a retri­al. A jury, he said, may not have believed tes­ti­mo­ny of Counterman’s wife. And because fire inves­ti­ga­tion stan­dards have changed since 1988, experts would not have been able to say the fire was arson, he said.

First Assistant District Attorney Maria Dantos said one wit­ness from the first tri­al died and oth­ers were unavail­able because they have left the area.

Under the cir­cum­stances,” Martin said, we achieved the best result that we could.” He said the plea should not be discounted.’

In the first tri­al, pros­e­cu­tion experts said a burn pat­tern was dis­cov­ered, which showed an accel­er­ant was used, even though no accel­er­ant was found. However, dur­ing post-con­vic­tion pro­ceed­ings, an expert hired by the pros­e­cu­tion said the pros­e­cu­tion’s the­o­ry of how the fire start­ed is not prop­er­ly sup­port­ed by today’s standards.”

George Umberger, a retired state police fire mar­shal, wrote in a report that burn pat­terns might indi­cate an ignitable liq­uid was used. It just is not a prov­able hypoth­e­sis with the evi­dence avail­able,” he said.

There is insuf­fi­cient tech­ni­cal basis to sup­port an incen­di­ary ori­gin for the fire, he added. If a the­o­ry can’t be proved and is only pos­si­ble, and oth­er fea­si­ble expla­na­tions for a fire can­not be elim­i­nat­ed, the fire cause should be unde­ter­mined,” Umberger said.

Rossi said the defense had a renowned expert who was going to tes­ti­fy the fire was not arson, there was no evi­dence of a flam­ma­ble liq­uid and the fire could have been start­ed by one of the children.

Janet Counterman gave dif­fer­ent ver­sions of what hap­pened. At first, she agreed with her hus­band’s account that two of their sons woke them and said there was a fire downstairs.

She then told police the chil­dren woke her and said, Daddy is down­stairs start­ing a fire.” She said she saw her hus­band hold­ing a buck­et and a lighter. She told pros­e­cu­tors her hus­band became abu­sive when he smoked mar­i­jua­na and threat­ened to stab her if she told the truth.

During post-con­vic­tion hear­ings many years lat­er, Janet Counterman said she had no rec­ol­lec­tion of the fire and could­n’t remem­ber the names of her chil­dren. The pros­e­cu­tion and defense agreed she was unavail­able” as a witness.

The pros­e­cu­tion not only lost its key wit­ness but was not allowed to use her tes­ti­mo­ny from the first tri­al in a retri­al because Brenner prohibited it.

If the case had been retried, Dantos said, Janet Counterman would have been called as a wit­ness. Janet Counterman ear­li­er claimed she could­n’t remem­ber any­thing because she was afraid of her hus­band, accord­ing to Dantos.

Janet Counterman regained her mem­o­ry,” Rossi said dur­ing the hear­ing Wednesday. He said he would have attacked her tes­ti­mo­ny in a retrial.

As a con­di­tion of pro­ba­tion, Counterman is to have no con­tact with Janet Counterman.

After he left the cour­t­house, the fam­i­ly planned to go to lunch and then to the Allentown home of his niece, Melissa Borrero, with whom he will live.

He’s free, and we’re going to do every­thing we can to catch him up with the 18 years,” Borrero said as Counterman mar­veled at a cell phone and said he knows noth­ing about the Internet.

There’s a lot of work ahead,” Borrero added. We have so much to share. We have so much to learn from each other.”

She is plan­ning a par­ty to wel­come Counterman home and cel­e­brate his new­found free­dom. Her three chil­dren made cards for him.

Borrero, anoth­er niece, Marcia Wingler, and oth­er fam­i­ly mem­bers said they want to sit down with Counterman and show him pho­to albums of all he missed when he was incar­cer­at­ed births of chil­dren, hol­i­days and sig­nif­i­cant fam­i­ly gath­er­ings. Counterman will be intro­duced to chil­dren he has nev­er seen, Borrero said.

During the hear­ing, Brenner told Counterman he did­n’t believe he would be a threat to society.

Dantos and Martin said they want­ed a peri­od of pro­ba­tion for Counterman because they did­n’t want him re-enter­ing soci­ety with­out some super­vi­sion and coun­sel­ing. We felt that was impor­tant for his tran­si­tion back into the com­mu­ni­ty,” Martin said.

Moreno said a social work­er and The Caring Place in Allentown will help Counterman adapt to the world outside prison.

After the hear­ing, Counterman ran into pub­lic defend­er Karen Schular, one of the lawyers who rep­re­sent­ed him in his first tri­al. He hugged her and stepped into an ele­va­tor the main pub­lic ele­va­tor, not the one used by deputy sher­iffs to transport inmates.

Going down the right way,” he said, smiling.

The sen­tence: Death for three counts of first-degree mur­der and one count of attempt­ed homi­cide in February 1990.

The result: Sentenced to nine to 18 years in prison, then set free because of time served.

HOW THE CASE UNFOLDED Main charges: Three counts of crim­i­nal homi­cide, one count attempt­ed homi­cide in deaths of three sons and severe burns to his wife on July 251988.

I’m more frus­trat­ed than angry. I spent all this time for some­thing I did­n’t even do.”

DENNIS COUNTERMAN