Joseph N. Green Jr. is the 21st per­son con­demned to die in Florida since 1972 who was ulti­mate­ly freed from death row.

By SYDNEY P. FREEDBERG

March 172000

© St. Petersburg Times

Joseph N. Green Jr., who spent six years and sev­en months in prison for a mur­der he says he did not com­mit, walked out of the Alachua County Courthouse on Thursday after­noon wav­ing a piece of paper in his hand:

Not guilty.

I got tears and I’m jump­ing up and down for joy and I’m p — – all at the same time,” Green, 44, said before leav­ing the cour­t­house for a mar­gari­ta with his broth­er, Reginald, and his lawyer, Jeffrey Leukel.

The state of Florida took my life and crum­bled it up and destroyed it,” Green said. And now they want the whole thing to go away quietly.”

Shortly before, in his cham­bers, Circuit Judge Robert P. Cates qui­et­ly entered a three-para­graph order acquit­ting Green, a Miami labor­er, of the 1992 mur­der of Judy Miscally, the pop­u­lar soci­ety edi­tor of the Bradford County Telegraph.

Cates, who had orig­i­nal­ly sen­tenced Green to die for the mur­der, reviewed the legal evi­dence in the case and wrote, The state can pro­duce no wit­ness who is able to place Joseph N. Green Jr. at the scene of the crime at the time the crime occurred.”

The phys­i­cal evi­dence does not tie Joseph N. Green Jr. to the crime in any way,” the judge wrote. There is rea­son­able doubt” about Green’s guilt, he added, and it is pos­si­ble that the crime was com­mit­ted by someone else.

With that, Green became the 21st per­son con­demned to die in Florida since 1972 who was ulti­mate­ly released from death row after evi­dence sur­faced that they were inno­cent, or at least wrong­ly con­vict­ed because of seri­ous judi­cial errors. Florida leads the nation in wrong­ful death cases.

Mrs. Miscally, 47, was shot dead as she made a night­time tele­phone call at a con­ve­nience store in Starke, 11 miles from the death cham­ber at Florida State Prison.

A defense wit­ness tes­ti­fied there were three killers, not one, as pros­e­cu­tors assert­ed. But the Starke police dis­count­ed that wit­ness and zeroed in on Green, who had been arrest­ed 20 times over 17 years.

The case large­ly hinged on the word of a dement­ed drug user with an IQ of 67 who had giv­en con­flict­ing state­ments about the homicide.

But after a Bradford County jury con­vict­ed Green in 1993 and he went off to death row, the case slowly unraveled.

The Florida Supreme Court threw out the con­vic­tion in November 1996, cit­ing an ille­gal search war­rant and overzeal­ous ques­tion­ing by pros­e­cu­tors of a defense wit­ness. After his defense team charged that Green was a vic­tim of racism in Starke, the jus­tices also ordered the new tri­al be moved to Gainesville.

In June 1998, Judge Cates tossed out the tes­ti­mo­ny of the key wit­ness, who had admit­ted smok­ing crack and mar­i­jua­na and drink­ing beer on the night of Mrs. Miscally’s mur­der. He orig­i­nal­ly iden­ti­fied the gun­man as white. Green is black.

* * *

Thirteen months lat­er, Green was released from cus­tody to await legal devel­op­ments in his case.

For months, pros­e­cu­tors tried to orches­trate a face-sav­ing way to close the case with­out admit­ting a mis­take. Cates gave them until Wednesday to show why he should­n’t enter a not guilty verdict.

Just before that dead­line, Chief Assistant State Attorney William Cervone, the pros­e­cu­tor who sent Green to death row and now is a can­di­date for state attor­ney, sought to stop the judge from acquitting Green.

In a three-page motion, Cervone acknowl­edged that no phys­i­cal evi­dence linked Green to the mur­der, but he argued that none was needed.

Cervone said a jury could infer” Green is guilty because he matched a descrip­tion giv­en by Mrs. Miscally to a para­medic as she lay dying in the park­ing lot of the convenience store.

She told the medic a skin­ny black man tried to rob her, then shot her and fled behind a Dumpster next to a motel where Green had been living.

In the motion, Cervone said Green is a tall, skin­ny black man who lived in the motel next to the crime scene. The pros­e­cu­tor also said Green was behind on his rent and fac­ing evic­tion. He was also with­in sev­er­al blocks of the crime when Mrs. Miscally was shot.

Cervone also argued that Green, who vol­un­tar­i­ly agreed to a police inter­ro­ga­tion with­out a lawyer, made false state­ments. Cervone did not elaborate.

Green told the police he was help­ing a white man fix a muf­fler at a Pizza Hut, a few blocks away from where Mrs. Miscally was shot, about the time the crime occurred. Several wit­ness­es cor­rob­o­rat­ed the alibi.

On Thursday, Cervone said he still believes Green is guilty and denied Green’s charge that he and his boss, State Attorney Rod Smith, played pol­i­tics with the case.

Joseph Green can feel what­ev­er he wants to,” Cervone said. He’s the one who put him­self in the posi­tion he’s in. We believe the cor­rect man was arrested.”

Smith, now a can­di­date for the state Senate, did not return a tele­phone call seeking comment.

The pros­e­cu­tors have acknowl­edged that they have no other suspects.

Russ Miscally, the vic­tim’s hus­band, could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Leukel, Green’s lawyer, said he hopes his clien­t’s case will spur debate about Florida’s death penal­ty, espe­cial­ly because of new law to speed up and lim­it appeals in death cases.

The law, pushed by Gov. Jeb Bush, is under review by the Florida Supreme Court.

I think a lot of soci­ety is final­ly start­ing to real­ize that the death penal­ty does­n’t work,” Leukel said. When you see what that gov­er­nor up in Illinois did with putting a mora­to­ri­um on the death penal­ty — because they had 13 cas­es of inno­cent peo­ple up there. And here we are in Florida, releas­ing our 21st per­son. And those politi­cians sit up there in Tallahassee and say the death penal­ty is just fine.”

After Leukel received the acquit­tal order, Green, in a dark blue pin­striped suit, jumped up and down and did a lit­tle dance. I’m going to have to frame it,” he said.

They head­ed to a down­town Gainesville bar for a cel­e­bra­tion cock­tail, then off to a near­by restau­rant for shrimp pasta.

Green now lives in South Florida with his new wife, Margie, and earns $50 a day chang­ing tires. He planned to be back today so he could go to work.

I’m hap­py, but I’m p — – it took so long and I got no help and no com­pen­sa­tion from the state,” Green said. Usually, when you get out of prison, they give you $100 and a bus tick­et. All I got is a full tank of gas.

If I had­n’t have had so many good peo­ple behind me, I think I’d be just about dead by now. By 2001 or so, my first death war­rant would have been signed.”