http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/cyanide010606.html # # Newly Revealed Documents Prove Woman Innocent of Cyanide Killings, # PI Says # # Stella Nickell has never stopped denying she killed her husband # Bruce with cyanide in 1986. But now her defense team says they # can prove her innocence. # # Nickell, 57, is serving two 90-year prison terms after being # found guilty of putting cyanide in a pain-reliever capsule taken # by her husband and trying to hide the crime by tampering with # other bottles of the over-the-counter drug, which resulted in # a second death. # # Her case came at a time when the country was reeling from a series # of drug-tampering incidents. # # Now, two private investigators who have been digging into the # Seattle case for 14 months say they can prove her innocence with # documents the FBI never turned over to the defense at the time # of the trial. # # If the claim sounds strangely familiar, think again, says Al # Farr, one of the two sleuths who have been working on the case. # "I know when news first got out there that we were doing this, # some people assumed we were just floating on Tim McVeigh's # coattails," Farr said. "That couldn't be further from the truth." # # The FBI has admitted it failed to turn over more than 4,000 # documents in the case of McVeigh, who faces the death penalty # for the deadly Oklahoma City bombing. [snip] # Then, in October, he was contacted by former FBI lab worker # Frederic Whitehurst, who told him he had 1,000 pages of # FBI documents related to the case that were never seen during # the trial. [snip]
Someone wrote:
# Stella Nickell has never stopped denying she killed her husband # Bruce with cyanide in 1986. But now her defense team says they # can prove her innocence.
# Nickell, 57, is serving two 90-year prison terms after being # found guilty of putting cyanide in a pain-reliever capsule taken # by her husband and trying to hide the crime by tampering with # other bottles of the over-the-counter drug, which resulted in # a second death.
I followed this case pretty closely when it broke, and the weight of circumstantial evidence struck me almost entirely as wishful thinking by law enforcement, combined with public hysteria over product tampering at the time. I wouldn't be at all surprised if she just had the misfortune to buy one of several bottles tainted by someone else, and after being traumatized by having her husband die in front of her, got fucked over by the system to boot. That the feds may have withheld evidence that proved her innocence isn't particularly startling either. -- Eric Michael Cordian 0+ O:.T:.O:. Mathematical Munitions Division "Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law"
participants (2)
-
Eric Cordian
-
Georgeï¼ Orwellian.Org