T U C S O N W E E K L Y
December 8 — December 14, 1993
by Beth Hawkins and Kristin Solheim

- Arizona Plans To Execute Paris Carriger For Shattering Another
Man’s Skull With A Cast-Iron Skillet. Never Mind That Someone
Else Confessed To The Crime. — 
Fifteen years ago, when Paris Carriger first was locked away in a 6‑by‑9
cell on death row at the Arizona State Prison, he, like most con­demned
men, claimed to be inno­cent. Of course, no one lis­tened. His lawyer had
bare­ly paid atten­tion dur­ing the tri­al, had­n’t even cross-exam­ined the man who accused Carriger of mur­der. Later, police shrugged off evi­dence sug­gest­ing some­one else was respon­si­ble for the bloody slay­ing of a Phoenix jew­el­ry store own­er.
Only a mir­a­cle would keep Carriger from the gas cham­ber. The kind of mir­a­cle that seems like a cliche’ — such as some­one step­ping for­ward and reveal­ing that he, not Carriger, is the real killer.

Unbelievably, 10 years after the crime the man who turned Carriger over to Phoenix police con­fessed to blud­geon­ing the jew­el­ry store own­er and fram­ing Carriger. He thought he was dying and said he want­ed to clear the slate. He did­n’t want to add Carriger’s exe­cu­tion to the list of sins he’d car­ry into the after­life.

But more unbe­liev­ably, Robert Dunbar’s con­fes­sion was­n’t enough to free Carriger, or even to earn him a new tri­al. In 1978, the state had found
the snitch’s words believ­able enough to jus­ti­fy Carriger’s exe­cu­tion, but
not believ­able enough in 1987 to free Carriger.

Carriger was sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed December 1. Because of a last minute stay, lat­er this month state courts will decide whether he deserves one more hear­ing to con­sid­er new evi­dence, claims his attor­neys were incom­pe­tent and changes in state law.

But giv­en that at least a dozen appeals — most of them fought on tech­ni­cal grounds — haven’t won Carriger a new tri­al, his exe­cu­tion is like­ly to be resched­uled for ear­ly 1994.

My mind tells me that the sys­tem has no inten­tion of hon­or­ing all their
fine speech­es about truth, jus­tice and the American Way,” he writes from
death row. I am expend­able in their eyes and they have gone to a lot of
trou­ble to make sure I under­stood it.

I did not stop hop­ing. Hope was stolen from me in a hun­dred lit­tle
adjust­ments to the law. Hope was stolen by two pres­i­dents who stacked the courts with jus­tices less intent on the Constitution than they were on the pol­i­tics of fear and the manip­u­la­tion of rage seek­ing pow­er.”

On the morn­ing of March 13, 1978, Carriger called in sick to his job at B&B Construction in Phoenix. He had recent­ly fin­ished serv­ing an 11-year sen­tence for aggra­vat­ed bat­tery.

Instead of going to work, the 32-year-old spent the day with one of his
for­mer cell­mates, Robert Dunbar. Carriger had been camp­ing in his van
in Dunbar’s back­yard for the pre­vi­ous two days.

The two went to an elec­tron­ics store, some pawn shops and depart­ment stores, and final­ly to Smitty’s, where Dunbar bought a gun using an assumed name.
Later that after­noon, the two stopped at Shaw’s Jewelry Store on North
Central Avenue in search of a new crys­tal for Dunbar’s watch.

Robert Shaw, 55, told the men he did­n’t have a replace­ment crys­tal but
vol­un­teered to pol­ish the scratch­es out of the old one. Shaw charged
Dunbar a dol­lar for the one-minute job. As Dunbar and Carriger left, one
of them turned to the oth­er and remarked that the small store would be
an easy place to rob.

The two men went back to the Dunbar home six blocks away at the Royal Palms Trailer Court. One of them then took a nap. The oth­er one returned to the jew­el­ry store, picked the lock and stuffed a brief­case full of rings and watch­es.

Shaw must have sur­prised the intrud­er in the act. The bur­glar hog-tied
the jew­el­er with first-aid tape and pushed him into a bath­room at the back of the store.

The intrud­er beat him over the head with a cast iron skil­let — so bru­tal­ly
the han­dle snapped off the pan along with a tri­an­gu­lar chunk of iron from
the base. Next, the mur­der­er bashed the mid­dle-aged man with a heavy
stain­less steel ring-siz­er, splat­ter­ing blood five feet up the walls.

His skull gross­ly dis­fig­ured, Shaw was still breath­ing. So the mur­der­er
stran­gled him with his blue-and-white striped neck­tie.

Shaw was due home late in the after­noon. When he did­n’t arrive, his wife
Lillian called the store sev­er­al times but got no answer. Panicked, at
6:40 she drove to the store and found her hus­band’s life­less body.

By then, Shaw’s mur­der­er was already well into the process of cov­er­ing his tracks. Although offi­cials and lawyers have spent years try­ing to piece
togeth­er exact­ly what unfold­ed at Shaw’s store and Dunbar’s house on
March 13, 1978, dozens of ques­tions remain unan­swered.

Dunbar’s and Carriger’s rec­ol­lec­tions of the night of the mur­der are near­ly iden­ti­cal, with the excep­tion of one vital­ly impor­tant detail: who killed Shaw.

The for­mer cell­mates agree that some­time between 5:30 and 6:10 p.m. —
after the mur­der — they re-encoun­tered each oth­er in the back­yard of the Dunbar house. They spent the rest of the evening togeth­er.

Carriger says he met up with Dunbar while sit­ting in his van lis­ten­ing to the radio after vis­it­ing the neigh­bor­hood con­ve­nience store. Dunbar, car­ry­ing a paper bag con­tain­ing five new watch­es and Carriger’s shoes, seemed sur­prised to see him there. He says Dunbar hand­ed him the shoes, claim­ing he bor­rowed them for a chore.

Next, Carriger says Dunbar offered him the watch­es as repay­ment of a loan. Suspicious, Carriger asked what Dunbar had been up to.

Carriger says Dunbar would­n’t go into detail, but final­ly admit­ted he used the shoes in some activ­i­ty that the law would not approve of.” He sug­gest­ed Carriger get rid of them and agreed to buy Carriger new shoes. Dunbar also vol­un­teered to take Carriger to a mas­sage par­lor to make it up to him.

On their way to the mas­sage par­lor, Dunbar insist­ed on stop­ping at his
step-daugh­ter’s apart­ment to drop off two brief­cas­es.

Next, they drove north on Interstate 17 to a strip of sex shops then locat­ed there. When Carriger returned from hav­ing sex with one of the women, he found Dunbar try­ing to sell a dia­mond to anoth­er woman at the estab­lish­ment. He was try­ing to make some quick cash by pawn­ing his wife’s engage­ment ring, he said.

Later, after Carriger picked out new boots at a near­by mall, Metro Center,
Dunbar browsed through sev­er­al jew­el­ry stores. By 11 p.m., the two were home hav­ing cof­fee with Dunbar’s wife, Joyce, while she got ready to start work on the night shift across town at Airesearch.

About 20 min­utes after she left, Carriger says Dunbar asked him to watch the kids for a while and left. When he went to bed at 2:30 a.m., Carriger says Dunbar was still not home. At 4:30 a.m., Joyce called and asked Carriger, asleep on the liv­ing-room couch, to wake up Dunbar and his step­son for their paper route. All three of them then deliv­ered news­pa­pers.

Next, Carriger called work com­plain­ing of the stom­ach flu again, but did go out for a hair­cut. Later that morn­ing, Dunbar called home and asked
Carriger to meet him at Guggy’s Restaurant at Metro Center.

Not more than 200 yards from the Dunbar house, Carriger was sur­round­ed by cops tot­ing auto­mat­ic weapons and riot gear. He was arrest­ed for the bru­tal mur­der of Robert Gibson Shaw.

The cops’ first lead in the killing came when a man iden­ti­fy­ing him­self only as Bob” called from a phone booth. Bob promised to give the police a detailed account of the Shaw mur­der, exact loca­tions of evi­dence and the killer’s where­abouts in exchange for immu­ni­ty from pros­e­cu­tion for anoth­er rob­ber he had com­mit­ted two days ear­li­er.

Phoenix offi­cers quick­ly agreed to Dunbar’s terms. When they met him at
Guggy’s, Dunbar told the cops Carriger had come to him at about 6:00 the night before, con­fessed to the mur­der and begged Dunbar to help get rid of the jew­els and oth­er evi­dence of the crime. As extra proof, Dunbar pulled a hand­ful of jew­el­ry out of his pants pock­ets and turned it over.

Dunbar also con­fessed to hav­ing ille­gal­ly bought a gun the pre­vi­ous day,
claim­ing he bought it for Carriger.

Investigators would lat­er dis­cov­er that police were well acquaint­ed with
Dunbar. In addi­tion to hav­ing hauled him in as a sus­pect in more than 92
bur­glar­ies, Dunbar had twice threat­ened to kill his father and sev­er­al times was com­mit­ted to men­tal insti­tu­tions.

Many years after the mur­der, Dunbar also would con­fess he worked as a paid police and FBI infor­mant.

After Carriger was arrest­ed, Dunbar led police to evi­dence tying Carriger to the crime. Dunbar took them to an irri­ga­tion canal, sev­er­al road­side bush­es and a cat­tle guard. There they recov­ered clothes Dunbar said Carriger wore dur­ing the killing. With the excep­tion of a pair of gloves, the clothes were Carriger’s.

Among the things police found were cred­it and busi­ness cards pulled from Shaw’s wal­let. Officials nev­er ques­tioned how Dunbar was able to retrace a trip he and Carriger sup­pos­ed­ly took the night before, while it was dark, and find bits of paper still lying along­side the road where he said they were flung from a mov­ing car.

He also led police to his step­daugh­ter’s house where he pro­duced two locked cas­es, one con­tain­ing loot from the store and the oth­er Dunbar’s .22 pis­tol. Police did­n’t spend much more time build­ing their case against Carriger. They had no oth­er sus­pects.

The state’s case rest­ed on Dunbar’s tes­ti­mo­ny and on a sin­gle fin­ger­print
found at the crime scene. Because no prints were found in the jew­el­ry
store or on the mur­der weapons, police believe Shaw’s killer wore gloves.

The sin­gle print found at the scene, part of Carriger’s thumb, was cut
from the first aid tape used to bind Shaw’s wrists. At the tri­al, Arizona
Department of Public Safety fin­ger­print expert Steven Anderson tes­ti­fied
that he had no idea where on the tape he found the print. It was on the
end of a piece of tape, he said, but by the time it was cut from Shaw’s
inert hands the bloody wad had sev­er­al ends.

Carriger rec­og­nized the incrim­i­nat­ing tape as part of a roll that was miss­ing from his van. If the thumbprint was on the very end of a length of tape, he argued, would­n’t it make sense that his print end­ed up there when he stuck the tape back on the roll after some pre­vi­ous use?

The thumbprint issue was nev­er set­tled. In the end, what con­vict­ed Carriger was Robert Dunbar’s tale of Carriger’s sup­pos­ed­ly pan­icked con­fes­sion that con­vinced the jury. Dunbar described help­ing Carriger get rid of evi­dence, say­ing the episode fright­ened him so bad­ly he turned his friend in to the police.

I don’t believe in mur­der,” he said on the stand. I mean he did total­ly
some­thing out­side of any­thing that I can com­pre­hend or under­stand. I don’t under­stand why some­one would beat some­one to death when they have got them tied up and got every­thing that they already have.”

When the state pre­sent­ed its case against Carriger, his court-appoint­ed
defend­er declined to cross-exam­ine Dunbar. Carriger was out­raged. It would have been so easy to prove Dunbar was a prac­ticed liar with a his­to­ry of try­ing to shift the blame for his own crimes onto oth­ers. His attor­ney, Thurman Gay, told him not to wor­ry. He would try to impeach Dunbar when the defense pre­sent­ed its case.

When Gay tried to recall Dunbar to the stand, both the judge and the
pros­e­cu­tor act­ed as if Gay were crazy. Even a first-year law stu­dent should known the defense had waived its right to inter­ro­gate Dunbar.

Whether Gay was capa­ble of dis­cred­it­ing Dunbar is ques­tion­able. His office spent almost no time inves­ti­gat­ing the state’s star wit­ness, so Gay nev­er brought up Dunbar’s his­to­ry of psy­cho­log­i­cal prob­lems, nev­er brought up his exten­sive rap sheet.

If Gay had checked, he would have found at least a dozen crim­i­nal con­vic­tions and police inter­ro­ga­tions about 92 oth­er bur­glar­ies. Also, he would have learned that sev­er­al times Dunbar had threat­ened to kill rel­a­tives, threats that land­ed him in pub­lic psy­chi­atric facil­i­ties. Despite all of which, he appar­ent­ly was a long­time paid police and FBI infor­mant.

Worse, no one ever men­tioned Dunbar’s near bank­rupt sta­tus at the time of the killing, or the fact that just two days before the jew­el­ry sto­ry bur­glary Dunbar robbed a Phoenix tile store but came away emp­ty-hand­ed.

The July, 1978 tri­al last­ed two weeks. The jury took just 45 min­utes to find Carriger guilty of first degree mur­der and rob­bery. Three months lat­er, not­ing Carriger had a crim­i­nal record and giv­en the heinous nature of the mur­der, the judge sen­tenced him to death.

Carriger claims Gay spent just 45 min­utes with him before the tri­al began. Bills the con­tract defend­er sub­mit­ted to the Maricopa County Superior Courts indi­cate he spent three hours with his client and 11 hours with the case file before tri­al. In either case, nowhere near enough time to build an argu­ment to exon­er­ate Carriger. And a piti­ful­ly small amount of time to try to pro­tect a poten­tial­ly inno­cent man from the gas cham­ber.

Three months after Carriger was found guilty, Dunbar’s neigh­bor unearthed a cache of bloody clothes buried on the prop­er­ty line. Jennie Thompson turned the clothes over to Phoenix police who checked them over, claimed to have found noth­ing con­nect­ing them with the crime, and gave them back to Thompson. She threw them away.

Even though the dis­cov­ery bol­stered his clien­t’s claims of inno­cence, Gay too ignored the dis­cov­ery.

For the next nine years, Carriger’s case wend­ed its way through a series of appeals. In 1982, the Arizona Supreme Court found that Gay’s con­duct was so sub­stan­dard at Carriger’s sen­tenc­ing that a tri­al court would have to hold a new hear­ing about whether to exe­cute him. In October of that year, he was resen­tenced to death.

In lat­er hear­ings, Gay tes­ti­fied that when he pre­pared for the 1978 tri­al
he did­n’t con­sid­er that Carriger could get the death penal­ty. Also in 1982,
Gay told an appeals court that he did lit­tle research into Dunbar’s back­ground.

After his defense failed, Carriger took mat­ters into his own hands. He
became a com­pe­tent jail­house attor­ney and indulged his secret desire to be a writer. He wrote fic­tion, legal arti­cles and dark, bit­ter poems. He wrote to peo­ple in Amnesty International and to aca­d­e­mics.

Like oth­er con­demned men, from time to time he’d fan­ta­size about a par­don. With an I.Q. of 160 Carriger says if he were freed tomor­row, he’d study Latin and cul­tur­al anthro­pol­o­gy.

In prison, he with­drew into a dai­ly rou­tine of work. Rising at dawn after
three hours sleep, Carriger says he plans his day while pac­ing up and down his cell for exer­cise. By break­fast time, he starts writ­ing. Later he naps, walks, and writes again.

In 1979, he began work­ing on a sur­vey of death row inmates. He hoped to dis­cov­er what dri­ves an indi­vid­ual turn to vio­lence. As the years wore on, he began writ­ing let­ters on behalf of oth­er con­victs.

He won’t accept vis­its from fam­i­ly, say­ing he thinks it’s too stress­ful for
them to see him on death row. Instead, he keeps in touch by writ­ing and
mak­ing cas­sette tapes.

The only vis­i­tors I allow are attor­neys and the defense team or the press,” he says. I won’t indulge emo­tion when I need a clear head to fight, and to allow loved ones to see me like this is an invi­ta­tion to emo­tion that I can’t afford if I want to sur­vive.”

His moth­er writes to him once a week. Carriger has said that while he was grow­ing up the two of them got along well. Of his nat­ur­al father Carriger knows lit­tle. He con­sid­ers his moth­er’s hus­band his father and has fond mem­o­ries of fish­ing trips with him.

Like Dunbar, Carriger has a record of juve­nile delin­quen­cy, twice end­ing up in state facil­i­ties. As a youth, he says his response to major prob­lems
was to with­draw.

My high­est ambi­tion as a youth was to ride hors­es and train dogs and get to camp out all the time,” he says. As a vision of life it has mer­it even if it is non­sense.”

It was­n’t until he was asked to select the indi­vid­u­als he want­ed to wit­ness his exe­cu­tion that the enor­mi­ty of his sen­tence came home to Carriger. Like oth­er death row inmates he some­times har­bored out­landish hope some­one would come for­ward and con­fess to his crime.

The appear­ance of the real killer would wrap up the loose ends left­over from the tri­al: Why was a fry­ing pan at the mur­der scene? Why did­n’t the bur­glar, assum­ing it was either Carriger or Dunbar, kill Shaw with the gun Dunbar bought? Where did Dunbar get the dia­monds he tried to sell at the mas­sage par­lor?

Carriger felt sure Dunbar could answer all these ques­tions. Nonetheless, when the snitch stepped for­ward in 1987 and con­fessed to beat­ing Shaw to death, Carriger had a hunch the worst was yet to come.

When Dunbar tes­ti­fied, I kept wait­ing for the trap,” says Carriger. I
hoped it was not there. I lis­tened to him con­fess and I did not look at him
for fear that he would see some­thing in my eyes that would shut him up before he said it all or maybe he would see what I felt and just top and tell the court that some­how I forced him to con­fess or God only knows what com­bi­na­tion of sto­ries.

He was capa­ble of any­thing and by that time I knew it.”

Dunbar’s ex-wife, Joyce, was the first to take back the sto­ry she told at
Carriger’s 1978 tri­al. At the time of the killing she said Dunbar was at
home with her and her four chil­dren tak­ing a nap. In August 1987, she
with­drew that ali­bi.

Joyce Stevens (the cou­ple divorced in 1983) now says that on the day of the killing her hus­band came home, hid some bloody cloth­ing in a clos­et and told her she had to lie and say he was tak­ing a nap or he would kill her and her chil­dren.

Stevens told the court she and her kids always fol­lowed Dunbar’s orders
because of his vio­lent tem­per. He reg­u­lar­ly molest­ed one of his
step­daugh­ters and beat his step­son, she said.

A few weeks after hear­ing Stevens’ sto­ry, Dunbar draft­ed a con­fes­sion of his own. His eight-page hand-writ­ten account said he and Stevens togeth­er com­mit­ted the bur­glary. Carriger was in no way involved, he swore.

When Shaw sur­prised the cou­ple in the act, Stevens began blud­geon­ing the jew­el­er with a fry­ing pan, he wrote. Eventually he took the skil­let from
his wife and fin­ished the job him­self.

I took the skil­let and I hit Mr. Shaw some more and blood went every­where or so it seemed to me,” Dunbar wrote. Mr. Shaw was still breath­ing so I took his tie and start­ed to choke him with it. I think he final­ly stopped breath­ing.”

Dunbar, who claimed to be dying, said he con­fessed even though he could have been pros­e­cut­ed for Shaw’s killing because he start­ed wor­ry­ing about mak­ing my peace with God.”

In October 1987, Dunbar told his sto­ry dur­ing a hear­ing in which Carriger
peti­tioned the court for post-con­vic­tion relief. Stevens was grant­ed
immu­ni­ty for her new tes­ti­mo­ny, as were here chil­dren.

Not only did his ex-wife and her chil­dren give tes­ti­mo­ny that Dunbar was the mur­der­er, the one-time infor­mant appar­ent­ly bragged about the killing to oth­ers. Several came forth to sup­port his con­fes­sion.

Dunbar claimed he had con­fessed to a min­is­ter who vis­it­ed him in prison
and to sev­er­al friends. He claimed to have told his par­ents and mem­bers of the North Phoenix Baptist Church that he com­mit­ted the mur­der.

Also, after watch­ing a Home Box Office tele­vi­sion spe­cial about Carriger
and oth­er death row inmates, one of Dunbar’s friends con­tact­ed Carriger’s attor­neys and claimed Dunbar had bragged to him about the mur­der.

Carriger’s attor­neys note that there is plen­ty of mate­r­i­al evi­dence sup­port­ing the the­o­ry that Dunbar was the real killer. His fin­ger­prints were found on the stolen jew­el­ry and the brief­case in which it was car­ried. Carriger’s prints were found only on the out­side of the brief­case.

Dunbar had orig­i­nal­ly explained the fin­ger­print as the result of his hav­ing
helped Carriger remove price tags from the stolen jew­el­ry. Carriger’s
attor­neys note that Dunbar’s prints on the evi­dence should link Dunbar to the crime at least as strong­ly as the sin­gle thumb print impli­cates Carriger.

In addi­tion to the jew­el­ry Dunbar was try­ing to sell on the night of the
killing, Joyce Stevens said she and her kids found jew­el­ry around the house in the days fol­low­ing the bur­glary. Stevens also claimed that the bro­ken skil­let found at the mur­der scene was an exact match to one miss­ing from a nest­ing set of cast iron fry­ing pans she owned.

Although Dunbar’s con­fes­sion shed lit­tle light on the ques­tion of why the
fry­ing pan was at the scene, Stevens said Dunbar took it with him to smash open jew­el­ry dis­play cas­es.

Shaw’s wid­ow Lillian also tes­ti­fied that the fry­ing pan was hers, and that
she kept it in the back of the store for heat­ing up snacks on a hot plate.
Dunbar said he and Stevens did­n’t take a skil­let to the store, but that
he remem­bers see­ing a hot plate in the back room.

Finally, Dunbar was able to sketch the insides of the jew­el­ry store in detail. He had not seen police sketch­es or any oth­er doc­u­ments con­nect­ed with Carriger’s case before mak­ing his draw­ing, he tes­ti­fied.

At the time, ques­tions about his cred­i­bil­i­ty posed by pros­e­cu­tors angered
Dunbar.

If they want to believe me, fine,” Dunbar told _​The Arizona Republic_​.
I’ve told the truth. I’ve made my peace with God, and they can do as they please in the court­room.

In my per­son­al opin­ion, the courts, the judges and the pros­e­cu­tors do not care one way or the oth­er if they have the guilty par­ty, just so they have some­body to main­tain their sta­tis­tics of solved crimes.

Right now, they’ve got Paris Carriger on death row. They firm­ly believe
he’s guilty because if they admit that he is not guilty, then they are
admit­ting they made a mis­take.”

Less than three weeks after his dra­mat­ic court­room rever­sal, Dunbar retract­ed his con­fes­sion. He lied, he wrote in a let­ter to Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Michael Ryan, because he was angry with his ex-wife and with pub­lic offi­cials.

I lied to screw every­thing up because I hate the state of Arizona so bad­ly and I want­ed to get even with every­one,” Dunbar wrote. He said he was able to draw the jew­el­ry store lay­out because Carriger’s attor­ney, Bob Hirsh, had shown him police dia­grams of the crime scene. He also accused his own attor­ney, Jess Lorona, of know­ing he was lying. Lorona, Dunbar claimed, was plan­ning to find some­one to buy the movie and book rights to the sto­ry of the crime.

Lastly, Dunbar pled with the judge not to make him tes­ti­fy about his his­to­ry of work­ing as a paid infor­mant to the Phoenix Police Department and the FBI.

I helped to bust and arrest at least six to 10 drug deal­ers in Phoenix,
and my life won’t be worth any­thing at all if this gets out because no one
knows I’m the one who turned them in,” he wrote. I was kept very secret.”

The court quick­ly denied Carriger’s peti­tion for relief. Dunbar, the judge
argued, was an habit­u­al liar whose word could not be trust­ed. Although both Hirsh and his legal assis­tant swore they had­n’t shown doc­u­ments relat­ed to the case to Dunbar, the judge ruled that Dunbar’s draw­ing of the jew­el­ry store inte­ri­or was too detailed to have been drawn from mem­o­ry.

The court also reject­ed Joyce Stevens’ tes­ti­mo­ny, say­ing that even if her
sto­ry was believed in its entire­ty” it was more like­ly that Dunbar and
Carriger togeth­er car­ried out the rob­bery and mur­der.

Carriger and his attor­neys agree that Dunbar was a sea­soned liar. But, they rea­son, if Dunbar’s sec­ond account of the mur­der was­n’t cred­i­ble enough to earn a new tri­al, Dunbar’s first sto­ry can’t be reli­able enough to jus­ti­fy Carriger’s exe­cu­tion.

After learn­ing Dunbar had con­fessed, the state Attorney General’s office
returned to the one piece of evi­dence firm­ly sug­gest­ing Carriger was involved in the crime. The snipped of first aid tape cut from Shaw’s corpse and bear­ing Carriger’s thumbprint acquired new sig­nif­i­cance.

Prosecutors asked a DPS crime lab work­er, William Morris, to exam­ine the wad of tape cut from Shaw’s wrists after the mur­der. They want­ed to know where Carriger’s print was locat­ed.

In order to do that, Morris unrolled the tape. After the sliced bits of
tape were unrav­eled, he matched” them back togeth­er, sup­pos­ed­ly
recon­struct­ing one long strip of first aid tape. After piec­ing togeth­er
near­ly 9 feet of tape, Morris con­clud­ed Carriger’s print was locat­ed 21
inch­es from the end of the roll.

In sub­se­quent descrip­tions of the crime, the Attorney General’s Office
has claimed the fin­ger­print was locat­ed 6‑feet-11 and one-half inch­es from the end of the roll of tape.

Carriger’s attor­neys charge the state did not noti­fy them that it planned to destroy and recon­struct this key piece of evi­dence. They also com­plain that no record exists of Morris’ exam­i­na­tion of the 10-year-old tape. The result is that for all prac­ti­cal pur­pos­es no one will ever know whether Carriger made the thumbprint at home the last time he used the tape or at the jew­el­ry store before blud­geon­ing Shaw.

Who ever did it appar­ent­ly wore gloves,” says Lois Yankowski, one of
Carriger’s attor­neys. Why would you take off the gloves to leave one print? It does­n’t make sense.” But the fin­ger­print is the hard­est evi­dence the pros­e­cu­tion has tying Carriger to the crime.

Nowadays the state does­n’t even try to argue that Dunbar told the truth
in my tri­al,” Carriger com­plains. Now they point to my thumbprint on
the tape bind­ing the wrists of Mr. Shaw and try to pre­tend that a new
lab­o­ra­to­ry test means that Dunbar’s tes­ti­mo­ny is not impor­tant.

Dunbar was an expert at fram­ing peo­ple. He spent his prison time think­ing
of ways to do it.”

Four times Carriger has been told what day he will die in the gas cham­ber in Florence. Each time he won a last-minute stay so the state can con­sid­er an appeal or peti­tion for relief.

The ten­sion, he com­plains, is prob­a­bly worse than dying itself.

Compared to most of the last 15 years, fight­ing through the ups and downs of hope and despair, dying seems almost easy,” he says. If i were not so stub­born and angry about the injus­tice of it all I might have con­sid­ered let­ting the state have my life since they have destroyed the time (I) need­ed to do/​be any­thing else. But I am that stub­born. I want a record that will endure just in case proof comes lat­er.”

Most recent­ly, Carriger won a stay from his December 1, 1993 exe­cu­tion date so that a team of attor­neys vol­un­teer­ing their ser­vices could file a last minute peti­tion to keep him out of the gas cham­ber. In addi­tion to Flagstaff, lawyer Don Bayles, who has been work­ing on the case since 1981, Carriger is rep­re­sent­ed by Tucson attor­neys Bob Hirsh and Lois Yankowski and Denise Young of the Arizona Capital Representation Project in Tempe.

To date, much of the work done on Carriger’s behalf has cen­tered on argu­ments that his tri­al attor­ney was incom­pe­tent. In order to win relief for poor rep­re­sen­ta­tion, a defen­dant must be able to prove two things: first, that his attor­ney failed to meet min­i­mum stan­dards; and sec­ond, that hav­ing an effec­tive attor­ney would have made a dif­fer­ence.

In this case, that means prov­ing an inves­ti­ga­tion of Dunbar’s back­ground
would have dis­cred­it­ed him bad­ly enough to ruin the state’s case against
Carriger.

And what about Dunbar’s con­fes­sion? At this point, say Carriger’s attor­neys, it should be suf­fi­cient to note that it dra­mat­i­cal­ly con­tra­dicts what he said on the wit­ness stand in 1978.

Whether Dunbar killed Shaw, it should now be obvi­ous that Dunbar is an
accom­plished liar, they add. Unfortunately, it’s an aca­d­e­m­ic argu­ment:
Dunbar died last December.

One of the main prob­lems plagu­ing Carriger’s defense is that fed­er­al courts are increas­ing­ly strict about what grounds can be used to appeal a case. This means it’s more like­ly the state can be forced to spare Carriger for tech­ni­cal rea­sons than because there is evi­dence sug­gest­ing he was nowhere near Shaw’s jew­el­ry store the night of the mur­der.

The only court offi­cial who has con­sis­tent­ly argued that Carriger deserves a retri­al both because his attor­ney was lax and because of the weak­ness of the evi­dence against him is Arizona Supreme Court Chief Justice Stanley Feldman. In both 1984 and 1988, Feldman, not then head of the court, filed minor­i­ty opin­ions favor­ing Carriger.

The case was tried, there­fore, on a sim­ple basic issue: Did Dunbar tell
the truth when he blamed the rob­ber and mur­der on Carriger, or was Carriger’s con­tention that the rob­ber and mur­der were com­mit­ted by Dunbar to be believed?” he wrote. All oth­er issues were periph­er­al. To cor­rob­o­rate his sto­ry and his cred­i­bil­i­ty, and to rebut Carriger’s charges against him, Dunbar tes­ti­fied that he could not have com­mit­ted the rob­bery and mur­der because by both his­to­ry and nature he was nei­ther a rob­ber nor a killer; his long crim­i­nal his­to­ry showed only par­tic­i­pa­tion in non­vi­o­lent crimes.

While Dunbar was impeached in many ways, none of them addressed these fun­da­men­tal con­tentions. Impeachment on these issues was avail­able,” Feldman con­tin­ued. Carriger, who had known Dunbar in prison, specif­i­cal­ly asked tri­al coun­sel to obtain Dunbar’s prison records and inspect them for impeach­ment infor­ma­tion…

While Dunbar claimed inno­cence because he could nei­ther kill nor com­pre­hend the act of killing, there was evi­dence in the file that he had twice attempt­ed to carve his father and moth­er with a butch­er knife. While Dunbar claimed he would not lie and impli­cate a bud­dy,’ there was evi­dence in the file that over a peri­od of years he had sev­er­al times com­mit­ted a crime and then called police to turn in his bud­dy.‘

While Dunbar was por­trayed by the state as a peace­ful per­son and a cred­i­ble wit­ness, there was evi­dence in the file that he was in fact a vio­lent, habit­u­al crim­i­nal, ready to lie for any rea­son or sim­ply as a mat­ter of habit. While the state por­trayed Dunbar as a accu­rate observ­er and reporter of events, the file indi­cat­ed that he had been com­mit­ted twice to the state hos­pi­tal for the insane.”

By mid-December, Carriger’s attor­neys will have filed a peti­tion ask­ing for a hear­ing so that they can try to per­suade a judge to recon­sid­er grant­i­ng Carriger a new tri­al.

If the courts won’t sched­ule a new hear­ing, Carriger’s attor­neys can appeal their deci­sion. If no court will hear the issue, a new write of exe­cu­tion will be hand­ed down. Once the write is issued, Carriger has 60 – 90 days to seek a new stay or plead for clemen­cy from the Governor.

Given that he would be ask­ing an embat­tled Republican gov­er­nor in a state with numer­ous pro-death penal­ty vot­ers, its unlike­ly Carriger’s sen­tence would be reduced to life in prison.

Carriger says the pol­i­tics of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment anger him the most. He has come to see crim­i­nal exe­cu­tions not as crime con­trol nor state-sanc­tioned revenge. Rather, he calls the death penal­ty mur­der both sim­ple and absolute.”

Execution is noth­ing more than the exer­cise of pow­er,” he says. I have
nev­er heard of a man so dan­ger­ous that killing him was the only way to
con­trol him. More to the point, if you the pub­lic own the right to kill
this man, who owns your life?”

Carriger’s feel­ings have dri­ven him to try to leave as detailed a record
of his case as pos­si­ble.

Living or dead, I want the state to be forced to face col­lec­tive­ly what
they have done by invest­ing the pow­er of the death penal­ty in the hands
of peo­ple who view it as a tool for elec­tions to high­er office and who admit that it is like­ly that a few inno­cent peo­ple will die to gain the greater good for the soci­ety of mak­ing sure that the guilty are pun­ished to their sat­is­fac­tion.

I seem to be the inno­cent one they were talk­ing about and I don’t think
much of their plans.”