By SYDNEY P. FREEDBERG

July 41999

© St. Petersburg Times

Main sto­ry

We’d rather have died than to stay in that place for some­thing we didn’t do’

I had noth­ing … The world I left no longer existed’

We don’t look back’

Yes, I’m angry.… Yes, I’m bit­ter. I’m frustrated’

The stig­ma is always there’

The 13 oth­er sur­vivors and their stories

Wilbert Lee, 64, and Freddie Pitts, 55
Convicted 1963; RELEASED 1975

THE CRIME: Juries twice con­vict­ed Lee and Pitts of killing two gas sta­tion atten­dants at Port St. Joe in the Florida Panhandle. The case was built on con­fes­sions, which Pitts and Lee said were beat­en out of them. No phys­i­cal evi­dence linked them to the crime. Joe Townsend, the poly­graph oper­a­tor who extract­ed the con­fes­sions, lat­er came under fire for coerc­ing con­fes­sions from sus­pects in oth­er cas­es.
HOW THEY GOT OUT: Another man — sen­tenced to life for anoth­er homi­cide — con­fessed to the mur­ders. Polygraph oper­a­tor Warren Holmes report­ed the con­fes­sion to Miami Herald reporter Gene Miller, whose sto­ries helped prompt a sec­ond tri­al. Again, the jury con­vict­ed Pitts and Lee. In 1975, then-Gov. Reubin Askew par­doned the two. I am suf­fi­cient­ly con­vinced that they are inno­cent,” Askew said.
WHERE THEY ARE NOW: Lee and Pitts, who met at a moon­shine par­ty at Lee’s house the night of the crime, became like broth­ers. After mov­ing to Miami, they found a net­work of friends and lawyers to help them adjust. When you step into a free soci­ety, it’s like step­ping on a mer­ry-go-round,” says Lee, whose fam­i­ly left him while he was on death row. He start­ed work­ing for the state, coun­sel­ing trou­bled juve­niles, a job he lat­er lost because of his felony con­vic­tion. He was then hired to coun­sel inmates in Miami-Dade’s jails. Pitts, who hasn’t seen his two daugh­ters since prison, worked for a while in secu­ri­ty but pre­ferred the out­doors. Now a truck dri­ver, he is mar­ried and lives in Miami Shores. Last year, the Legislature award­ed each man $500,000 — the first time it has ordered resti­tu­tion for per­sons wrong­ly sen­tenced to death. Both men, fre­quent lec­tur­ers against the death penal­ty, say the mon­ey won’t buy back the lost time. It’s like giv­ing the mon­key some peanuts,” Lee scoffs.


Delbert Lee Tibbs, 58
Convicted 1974; released (on bond) 1977, released (from charges) 1982

THE CRIME: A Lee County jury con­vict­ed Tibbs of shoot­ing to death hitch­hik­er Terry Milroy, 27, and rap­ing his 16-year-old trav­el­ing com­pan­ion, Cynthia Nadeau, near Fort Myers. Tibbs, a one­time the­ol­o­gy stu­dent, was arrest­ed in Mississippi after Nadeau picked him out of a line­up, despite dis­crep­an­cies between him and her orig­i­nal descrip­tion of the killer. Her tes­ti­mo­ny was enough to con­vict him. Tibbs tes­ti­fied that he was in Daytona Beach when the crimes occurred.
HOW HE GOT OUT: In 1976, the Florida Supreme Court ordered a retri­al, say­ing the vic­tim was an unre­li­able wit­ness and express­ing con­sid­er­able doubt” that Tibbs was the killer. The case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, which said that retry­ing Tibbs would not con­sti­tute dou­ble jeop­ardy. Still, the state decid­ed to drop the charges in 1982, and the pros­e­cu­tor who con­vict­ed Tibbs lat­er expressed doubts about his guilt.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Tibbs became a cause cele­bre, attract­ing sup­port­ers such as Joan Baez, Angela Davis and Pete Seeger, who wrote a bal­lad enti­tled Ode to Delbert Tibbs. Tibbs lives alone in a stu­dio apart­ment in Chicago, works in a pack­ag­ing ware­house and is active in cam­paigns against the death penal­ty. The jobs I’ve got­ten have been out of the benev­o­lence of friends,” he says. Jobs in main­stream America I don’t even try for any­more.” Off death row for years, Tibbs remem­bers wak­ing up one night after a friend was elec­tro­cut­ed and feel­ing as if some­one stabbed me in the rear.” Tibbs has writ­ten sev­er­al poems about exe­cut­ed bud­dies and is work­ing on a book. I should have lost hope,” he says, but I didn’t.”


Anibal Jaramillo-Restrepo, deceased
Convicted 1981; released from death row 1982

THE CRIME: A Dade County jury con­vict­ed Jaramillo, an ille­gal Colombian immi­grant, for the mur­ders of Gilberto Caicedo and Candellario Castellanos in their south­west Dade town­house. Each was shot three times in the head. Dade Circuit Judge Ellen Morphonios-Gable over­ruled the jury’s rec­om­men­da­tion of life in prison. The prosecution’s case hinged on Jaramillo’s fin­ger­prints, which were found on a knife cas­ing, a table and a gro­cery bag in the vic­tims’ home. The mur­der weapon, a machine gun equipped with a silencer, was nev­er found. At the tri­al, evi­dence emerged that tend­ed to incrim­i­nate the vic­tims’ room­mate. Jaramillo, 26 at the time of his arrest, tes­ti­fied he had been in the home ear­li­er that day and helped the vic­tims’ nephew clean out the garage. He said he used the knife, rope and paper dur­ing the cleanup.
HOW HE GOT OUT: In 1982 the Florida Supreme Court freed Jaramillo because of insuf­fi­cient evi­dence. The proof is not incon­sis­tent with Jaramillo’s rea­son­able expla­na­tion as to how his fin­ger­prints came to be on these items at the victim’s home,” the court said.
AFTER HE GOT OUT: Jaramillo lit­er­al­ly jumped for joy” when he learned he would be freed, says his lawyer, Louis Casuso. But the day Jaramillo left death row, the fed­er­al Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms arrest­ed him for lying on a form when he bought a .45-cal­iber pis­tol from a gun shop in 1980. In 1983, a fed­er­al judge sen­tenced him to four years in prison. According to his lawyer, Jaramillo was even­tu­al­ly deport­ed to Colombia, where he was mur­dered in Medellin.


Anthony S. Brown, 43
Convicted 1983; released 1986

THE CRIME: An Escambia County jury con­vict­ed Brown of the 1982 shot­gun mur­der of James Dasinger, a gas com­pa­ny deliv­ery man, north of Pensacola. Wydell D. Rogers, who claimed to be an accom­plice, plead­ed guilty to sec­ond-degree mur­der and tes­ti­fied that he and Brown plot­ted the entire inci­dent. Circuit Judge Joseph Q. Tarbuck reject­ed the jury’s rec­om­mend­ed life sen­tence and imposed the death penal­ty.
HOW HE GOT OUT: The Florida Supreme Court over­turned Brown’s con­vic­tion in 1985, rul­ing the pros­e­cu­tion erred when it took a pre­tri­al depo­si­tion from a sheriff’s deputy with­out noti­fy­ing Brown. At the retri­al in 1986, Rogers, the state’s star wit­ness, said he lied at the first tri­al. Brown, a tat­tooed high-school dropout with a 14-page rap sheet, was acquit­ted.
WHERE HE IS NOW: After a year of free­dom, Brown was arrest­ed on rob­bery charges, which pros­e­cu­tors even­tu­al­ly dropped. Hoping to start over, Brown moved to Detroit and got a job in a nurs­ing home. Soon he was back in Escambia County and in trou­ble. You just don’t walk off death row and pick up,” says Brown. In February 1990, he squared off with a man wield­ing a bot­tle in a bar and stabbed him with a pock­etknife. Brown was arrest­ed and plead­ed guilty. The same judge who sen­tenced him to death in 1983 sen­tenced him to 30 years for aggra­vat­ed bat­tery. Brown, a father of two, says 100 years at Union Correctional Institution, where he is now, is bet­ter than death row. I tried to do every­thing dif­fer­ent­ly,” he says, get­ting emo­tion­al. Still, I feel safe here, safer than the street. I could have been killed in a dri­ve-by. If I hadn’t have been on death row, who knows if I’d be dead or alive?”


Anthony Ray Peek, 41
Convicted 1978; released from death row 1987

THE CRIME: Polk County juries twice con­vict­ed Peek, a New York drifter on pro­ba­tion for bur­glary, of beat­ing and stran­gling Erma Carlson, a 65-year-old nurse, in her Winter Haven home. Just before the mur­der tri­al, Peek was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to life for an unre­lat­ed rape. The mur­der con­vic­tion hinged on Peek’s fin­ger­print, which was found on the dead woman’s car. Peek tes­ti­fied that on the night of the mur­der he nev­er left the Winter Haven halfway house where he was serv­ing his bur­glary pro­ba­tion. He said he was at a park the next day when he saw the unlocked car and opened the door.
HOW HE GOT OUT: Polk Circuit Judge John Dewell over­turned the first con­vic­tion in 1983, rul­ing that a hair ana­lyst gave erro­neous tes­ti­mo­ny. The Florida Supreme Court over­turned his sec­ond con­vic­tion in 1986 because the judge inap­pro­pri­ate­ly allowed evi­dence about the unre­lat­ed rape. Acquittal at a third tri­al in 1987 brought an end to Peek’s 10-year death row ordeal.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Peek sweeps the prison grounds at Everglades Correctional Institution, where he is serv­ing a life sen­tence for rape. In 1993, his death row mar­riage to a Tennessee pen pal fell apart. Two years lat­er, Peek, then 37, exchanged wed­ding vows with anoth­er prison vis­i­tor, Helen Hope. A 52-year-old British emi­gre, she left her home­land, hus­band and chil­dren and moved to Gainesville to be near Peek. All he’s got is God and me,” she says. The parole board recent­ly tacked five years onto Peek’s release date, now sched­uled for 2010. But a decade on death row has taught him to han­dle any­thing. He points to a garbage bin in the prison vis­it­ing area. If you put a human being in there,” he says, he’s gonna find a way to sur­vive.”

Willie Albert Brown, 49, and Larry Troy, 48
Convicted 1983; released from death row 1988

THE CRIME: Brown and Troy were already in prison when they were con­vict­ed of the 1981 stab­bing death of Earl Owens, a fel­low inmate at Union Correctional Institution. Prison offi­cials held the pair in soli­tary for 17 months before arrest­ing them. Their con­vic­tion rest­ed large­ly on the tes­ti­mo­ny of Frank Wise, a fel­low inmate who said he saw Brown and Troy leave the homi­cide scene.
HOW THEY GOT OUT: In 1987, the Florida Supreme Court reversed the con­vic­tions. The court said pros­e­cu­tors flubbed the case by not giv­ing defense lawyers state­ments of prison inter­views with the defen­dants. On death row, Brown fell in love with Esther Lichtenfels, a prison vis­i­tor who end­ed up help­ing to free the pair. Wearing a legal­ly autho­rized hid­den tape recorder, she record­ed Wise, the prosecution’s key wit­ness, say­ing he had lied and offer­ing to tell the truth for $2,000. Prosecutors dis­missed the charges against Brown and Troy.
WHERE THEY ARE NOW: Brown, a Clearwater res­i­dent who had been serv­ing 20 years for a Pinellas County rob­bery, left prison in 1988. About an hour lat­er, he mar­ried Lichtenfels at the Clay County Courthouse. Troy, serv­ing a 25-year sen­tence for mur­der, left in 1990. Both are back in prison. Troy, arrest­ed for sell­ing cocaine sev­en months after his release, is serv­ing time at Charlotte Correctional Institution. Brown’s life has been a cycle of drugs and rob­beries. He went to prison for rob­bing a bank in Springfield, Mass. Then, in April, Pinellas sheriff’s deputies arrest­ed him after he alleged­ly robbed a bank in Dunedin with a bro­ken broom stick, stole a car and led police on a high-speed chase. Brown says pros­e­cu­tors are hold­ing his time on death row against him. In their eyes, I was nev­er exon­er­at­ed,” he says from the Pinellas County Jail. There’s enough pain in this stuff to last a life­time.”

James Joseph Richardson, 63
Convicted 1968; released 1989

THE CRIME: A DeSoto County jury con­vict­ed Richardson, an Arcadia migrant work­er with no crim­i­nal record, of poi­son­ing his step­daugh­ter, Betty Jean. She died along with five sis­ters and one broth­er in 1967 after eat­ing a lunch laced with a pes­ti­cide. Prosecutors said he killed them to col­lect on $7,000 in life insur­ance. Richardson denied it. He said the children’s babysit­ter, Betsy Reese, poi­soned their last meal of rice and beans with pes­ti­cide.
HOW HE GOT OUT: Washington lawyer Mark Lane, who gained atten­tion because of his John F. Kennedy con­spir­a­cy the­o­ry, wrote a book about the case, Arcadia. Among oth­er things, he said Richardson nev­er bought insur­ance. After the U.S. Supreme Court out­lawed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1972, Richardson’s sen­tence was com­mut­ed to life. In 1989, the gov­er­nor named then-Dade State Attorney Janet Reno to re-exam­ine the case. She con­clud­ed that pros­e­cu­tors con­vict­ed Richardson with per­jured tes­ti­mo­ny and ignored the babysit­ter as a pos­si­ble sus­pect. Based on her report, DeSoto Circuit Judge Clifton Kelly ordered Richardson freed. The enor­mi­ty of the crime,” the judge said, is matched only by the enor­mi­ty of the injus­tice to this man.” The babysit­ter died of Alzheimer’s dis­ease in 1992.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Richardson, who learned to read and write in prison and was ordained a min­is­ter, became an instant celebri­ty. Hollywood pro­duc­ers talked about a movie deal, and come­di­an Dick Gregory offered him a $100,000-a-year job at a nutri­tion clin­ic. The job didn’t pan out, the movie hasn’t mate­ri­al­ized and Richardson suf­fered a series of set­backs. The less than $20,000 he got for the rights to his sto­ry was gone after four or five years. His heart prob­lems — which he attrib­ut­es to prison food, poor med­ical care and con­stant stress — wors­ened. He and his wife, who stuck by him through­out his impris­on­ment, were divorced. And most of the $150,000 Richardson got in an out-of-court set­tle­ment with DeSoto County went to his lawyers. Richardson, who spent too much of his life in prison to be enti­tled to Social Security, now lives at the ranch of his car­di­ol­o­gist in Wichita, Kan., and does light work to pay for room and board. His last­ing mem­o­ry of death row is the sound of keys rat­tling. When I hear a bunch of keys shak­ing, I think they are com­ing to get me and put me in the elec­tric chair,” he says. I’m try­ing to get over it, but it’s some­thing a man can nev­er for­get.”


Robert Craig Cox, 39
Convicted 1988; released from death row 1990

THE CRIME: An Orange County jury con­vict­ed Cox, a one­time Army Ranger, of the 1978 beat­ing death of Sharon Zellers, 19, a Walt Disney World clerk. The case was weak, and Cox was not charged until eight years after the mur­der. Cox and his fam­i­ly were stay­ing at a motel in Orlando where the victim’s body was found. He had a cut on his tongue, and hair and blood sam­ples found near the vic­tim were com­pat­i­ble with his. Cox tes­ti­fied he bit through his tongue dur­ing a fight.
HOW HE GOT OUT: The Florida Supreme Court reversed Cox’s con­vic­tion, rul­ing that, at best, the evi­dence cre­at­ed only a sus­pi­cion” of guilt. The court ordered his acquit­tal and release.
WHERE HE IS NOW: For Cox, there was no cel­e­bra­tion. He was imme­di­ate­ly tak­en into cus­tody to com­plete a prison sen­tence in California for an unre­lat­ed 1985 kid­nap­ping. Then he returned to his boy­hood home of Springfield, Mo., where he came under sus­pi­cion — but was nev­er charged — in the 1992 dis­ap­pear­ance of a moth­er and two teenage girls. Texas police also ques­tioned him about an abduc­tion in Plano. In 1995, Cox was arrest­ed for hold­ing a gun on a 12-year-old girl dur­ing a rob­bery in Decatur, Texas. He is serv­ing a life sen­tence for that rob­bery and is not eli­gi­ble for parole until 2025. He declines to com­ment.


Andrew Lee Golden, 55
Convicted in 1989; released in 1993

THE CRIME: A Polk County jury con­vict­ed Golden, a one­time high school teacher, of drown­ing his wife, Ardelle, in a lake near the family’s home in Winter Haven. Her body was found float­ing near a boat dock, just a few feet from a par­tial­ly sub­merged Pontiac Grand Am that her hus­band had rent­ed. The med­ical exam­in­er ruled the death an acci­dent and said there were no signs of foul play. But the jury believed the prosecutor’s ver­sion — that Golden, fac­ing debts of more than $200,000, pushed his wife off the boat dock and then drove the car into the lake to make the drown­ing look acci­den­tal. He hoped to col­lect on more than $350,000 in life insur­ance poli­cies tak­en out in the year before her death, pros­e­cu­tors said.
HOW HE GOT OUT: The Florida Supreme Court over­turned the con­vic­tion and ordered Golden’s release, say­ing the pros­e­cu­tion failed to prove Ardelle Golden’s death was any­thing but an acci­dent. It may have occurred after she drove down the unmarked, unlit boat dock at night.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Golden lived for a while with his old­est son, Darin, then with son Chip, who was 13 when his father was arrest­ed. Chip noticed his father had changed. He was more eas­i­ly agi­tat­ed,” Chip says. He had a worse tem­per. He had a hard time adjust­ing to the idea that you got to get a job … got to pay bills.” Unable to stay in one place, Golden moved to Texas, where he was arrest­ed in 1996 for molest­ing two girls, ages 8 and 9. Then in April he plead­ed guilty in neigh­bor­ing Denton County to a new charge of inde­cen­cy with a child. His lawyer, John Giofreddi, says the death of Golden’s wife, cou­pled with the trau­ma of death row,” con­tributed to his trans­for­ma­tion into a regressed pedophile.” Golden plead­ed guilty and began a 15-year prison term in May.


Robert Hayes, 35
Convicted 1991; released 1997

THE CRIME: A Broward County jury con­vict­ed Hayes, a groom at the Pompano Harness Track, of the 1990 rape and stran­gling death of fel­low groom Pamela Albertson. Prosecutors intro­duced DNA evi­dence that they said linked him to the homi­cide. Hayes’ lawyers pre­sent­ed expert tes­ti­mo­ny sug­gest­ing the DNA results were con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed.
HOW HE GOT OUT: The Florida Supreme Court ordered a new tri­al because of faulty DNA analy­sis. The record con­tains evi­dence sug­gest­ing that Hayes com­mit­ted the homi­cide,” the court said, but it also con­tains objec­tive phys­i­cal evi­dence sug­gest­ing that some­one oth­er than Hayes was respon­si­ble.” At a retri­al, Hayes’ lawyers showed that hairs used to con­vict him the first time most like­ly came from a white per­son. Hayes, who is black, was acquit­ted.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Hayes, who is nick­named Mississippi,” left prison with a plas­tic bag of socks and sneak­ers but no mon­ey. His lawyer paid for a bus tick­et to his home­town of Canton, Miss., where he moved in with his grand­moth­er. Hayes tried to get a job as a jan­i­tor but was reject­ed because of the sev­en-year gap on his resume. Eventually, the town hired him to dri­ve dump trucks and clean sew­ers. Hayes also helps care for hors­es at an amuse­ment park owned by his uncle. Recently, he mar­ried Georgia Brown, 22, a nurs­ing home employ­ee. I’m try­ing to build my life back up,” says Hayes, a two-pack-a-day smok­er. He says he gets angry eas­i­ly and has mood swings and night­mares. I might get 30 min­utes of sleep every hour every night,” he says. I don’t know who’s gonna come down the hall­way.”


Joseph Robert Spaziano, 53
Convicted 1976; released from death row 1998

THE CRIME: A Seminole County jury con­vict­ed Spaziano, an Outlaws motor­cy­cle gang mem­ber from Rochester, N.Y., of the 1973 mur­der of Laura Harberts, an Orlando hos­pi­tal clerk. The ver­dict hinged on the tes­ti­mo­ny of a teenage drug user, Anthony DiLisio, who remem­bered key facts about the mur­der only after he was hyp­no­tized. Circuit Judge Robert McGregor over­rode the jury’s rec­om­men­da­tion and sen­tenced Spaziano to death.
HOW HE GOT OUT: Spaziano, who got the nick­name Crazy Joe” after a truck ran over his head, sur­vived five death war­rants. In 1995, 16 days before his sched­uled exe­cu­tion, the state’s star wit­ness recant­ed his tes­ti­mo­ny, which prompt­ed an order for a new tri­al. On the eve of the retri­al, in November 1998, Spaziano plead­ed no con­test to sec­ond-degree mur­der while swear­ing he did not kill Laura Harberts. Under the plea agree­ment, he did not have to admit guilt, was sen­tenced to time served and released from death row.
WHERE HE IS NOW: Spaziano is in prison, serv­ing a life sen­tence for the 1974 rape of a 16-year-old Orlando girl. He says he is inno­cent and is appeal­ing. For Spaziano, the deci­sion to accept the plea deal in the mur­der case was stark real­i­ty.… I have come with­in days of being elec­tro­cut­ed … nev­er know­ing when I would be put to death by elec­tro­cu­tion,” he wrote in an affi­davit. I do not want my daugh­ter and three grand­chil­dren to live under the threat and fear (and) … expe­ri­ence the hurt and dam­age of my death in the elec­tric chair.” These days, Spaziano moves around with­out hand­cuffs at Florida State Prison, jok­ing with rob­bers, rapists and killers in the gen­er­al pop­u­la­tion. Some cheer and call his name. Still, Spaziano feels low some­times. I’m tired of every­body,” he said recent­ly. I want peo­ple to go away.”


SOURCES: Michael L. Radelet, co-author of In Spite of Innocence and chair­man of the University of Florida Department of Sociology; Death Penalty Information Center; National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the Death Penalty.