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On-Scene
Detective Identifies
Cult Members
Responsible For
1970 MacDonald
'Green Beret' Murders & Army/Police
Complicity in Cover-up
By Ken Adachi
www.Educate-Yourself.org
3-28-7
Medical doctor Jeffrey R. MacDonald,
labeled by the press in the 1980's as the "Green Beret Killer," has already
spent 27 years in federal penitentiaries for murders he did not commit. To quote
Harvard legal scholar Alan Dershowitz, "Jeffrey MacDonald is the most victimized
person in the history of United States jurisprudence."
The grisly, ritualistic-style murders of
which he was convicted took place in Dr. MacDonald's home located in Ft. Bragg,
North Carolina, onFebruary 17, 1970, between 2 and 3 am in the morning. At the
time, MacDonald was a captain in the Army (Green Berets) and assigned to medical
duties at Womack Army Hospital, Ft. Bragg. Incredibly, Army investigators
decided within fifteen minutes of arriving at the crime scene, that Dr.
MacDonald had "staged" the entire massacre and then stabbed (and clubbed)
himself-repeatedly-in order to make it "appear" that he was a victim of outside
assailants who entered his home.
Ultimately, Jeffrey MacDonald was framed
and railroaded as the patsy to take the fall for the murders of his wife
(Colette) and two young daughters (Kimberly and Kristen) in order to preclude
the capture and interrogation of the true killers of MacDonald's family: a
satanic drug/cult group which included a 16 year old girl by the name of Helena
Stoeckley.
A local police detective from the
Fayetteville Police Department vice squad, Prince Everett Beasley, had been
using Helena Stoeckley as a trusted drug informant for several months prior to
the MacDonald murders. Upon learning of the description of the assailants given
to Army CID (Criminal Investigation Division) investigators by Dr. MacDonald
(who sustained 17 stab wounds and three blows to the head with a baseball bat on
the night of the murders), Prince Beasley immediately suspected that Helena
Stoeckley and her cult group may have been involved.
Beasley waited in his car for Stoeckley
and her companions to return to her home on the evening ofFebruary 18, 1970,
less than 24 hours after the murders. After Stoeckley and her friends pulled
into the driveway and got out their car, Beasley pulled up behind them and
called Stoeckley over to talk with him. She approached the car alone, telling
her nervous companions that "everything's cool" and not to worry.
Beasley confronted Stoeckley with his
suspicions that she and her group were involved in the murders and Stoeckley
admitted to him that they were in the MacDonald home on the previous night in
order "to teach him a lesson", but that things had "gone bad" (Stoeckley would
later tell Beasley that the cult members had originally planned to only "push
MacDonald around" and intimidate him into "cooperating" with them, but "things
got out of hand" (According to Stoeckley, the cult member who entered the
MacDonald home on the night of the murders were all high on an assortment of
drugs, including heroin and mescaline (the resemblance to the Charles Manson
ritualistic, satanic-style murders of Sharon Tate and her friends the previous
summer was remarkable and should have been obvious to investigators).
Since the MacDonald murders had taken
place on an Army base, Beasley radioed the Fayetteville police dispatcher to
contact the Army's CID investigators and tell them to meet him at Stoeckley's
home in order to further the interrogation of Helena and the other cult members
who were milling around the driveway, but the CID investigators never came.
After waiting for nearly an hour, Beasley finally had to leave, as the cult
group was becoming increasingly hostile to his presence and were now threatening
him. Prince Beasley would later say that if the CID had showed up that night and
interrogated Helena Stoeckley, she would have admitted everything about the
MacDonald murders and this in turn would have prevented the egregious and
barbaric injustice inflicted upon Jeffrey MacDonald.
The statement reprinted below was given
to retired FBI chief Ted L. Gunderson by Prince E. Beasley on May 5, 1986. Most
of the information presented was acquired by Beasley from Helena Stoeckley prior
to her death in January of 1983. From the information given below, we now can
understand why the CID never came to Stoeckley's home on the night of Feb. 18,
1970 to interrogate her and why the CID (and later the Department of Justice)
wanted to hang the crime on Jeffrey MacDonald. Simply stated, the cult who
murdered Jeffrey MacDonald's wife and children were part of a huge drug pipeline
operation that ran from Viet Nam straight into Ft. Bragg and other military
bases around the United States.
According to Stoeckley, many high
ranking Army officials (including two Ft. Bragg generals) were involved in the
drug running/distribution operation, along with some members of the Army's
Criminal Investigation Division (CID) and some members of the Fayetteville
Police Department. The lead CID investigator at the MacDonald crime scene, the
person who said that MacDonald had "staged" the massacre of his family, was
William Ivory, a man Helena Stoeckley identified as being involved with a
Fayetteville Police detective named Lieutenant Rudy Studer in drug dealing.
Stoeckley said she would tell all about Ivory and Studer's illicit activities if
given immunity from prosecution. She never got it.
Beyond shielding corrupt Army officials
who were involved in the Viet Nam pipeline operation, there were at least 15
teenage children of upper rank Army officers at Ft Bragg who were enmeshed in
the local drug culture, including the daughter of an Army colonel who decided to
focus the CID's investigation of the MacDonald murders exclusively on Jeffrey
MacDonald as the sole suspect. Even more telling, the daughter of that colonel
was known to be person who often associated with Helena Stoeckley and her cult
friends.
Following the Prince Beasley statement,
you will find a summary of the MacDonald case written by the late Jerry Potter
in 1997. Jerry Potter and ex-Green Beret-turned-newspaper reporter,Fred Bost,
published <http://educate-yourself.org/cn/fataljustice3chaphelenastoeckley05not05.shtml>Fatal
Justice in 1995, following ten years of rigorous investigation into the
government's own files concerning the MacDonald case. They found uncontestable
and massive evidence of collusion between the Army, the Department of Justice,
and local law enforcement to cover-up the true facts surrounding the MacDonald
murders and frame Dr. MacDonald as the patsy.
Jeffrey MacDonald has spent nearly half
of his life in prison for crimes which he did not commit-and could not commit.
Murdering anybody, least of all his wife and two small children, were (and are)
simply outside the boundaries of his character. Jeffrey MacDonald has a lifelong
track record of rock solid emotional stability, rationality, peaceful,
non-violent character, and a caring concern for others. Some people in this
world-given the right circumstances-are capable of murder. Jeffrey MacDonald is
not one of them.
The American public must help this man
gain his freedom. We cannot allow this travesty of justice to continue and those
responsible for his railroading to go unpunished.
Ken Adachi
More details about the MacDonald case
can be read here, <
http://educate-yourself.org/jm/index.shtml >
http://educate-yourself.org/jm/index.shtml and at Dr MacDonald's web
site < http://www.themacdonaldcase.org
> http://www.themacdonaldcase.org
© Copyright 2007 Educate-Yourself.org
All Rights Reserved.
Statement of
Facts Given to Ted L. Gunderson
by Prince Everett Beasley on May 5, 1986
I, Prince Everett Beasley, make the
following free and voluntary statement to Ted L.Gunderson, a private
investigator from Los Angeles. No threats or promises were made to get me to
make this statement.
I was born 6/15/25 at Maxton, N.C. I
presently reside at 104 Myra Rd., Raeford, N.C.. 28376. Phone. 919-875-3693 . I
am a retired police officer who served on the Fayetteville, N.C. Police
Department from 1953 to 1973.
Helena Stoeckley was my drug informant
from approximately 1968 until 1972. She was turned over to me by Lt. R. A.
Studer. [Lieutenant Rudy A. Studer] Fayetteville, N.C. Police Dept. He turned
her over to me because Helena's parents were mad at him for working Helena in
the drug community, and because he was made a Lieutenant and couldn't devote the
necessary time to working with her. Studer told me the reason he turned Helena
over to me was because of his promotion. Helena told me he turned her over to;
me because of the problem with her parents.
Shortly after I was assigned to the
Narcotic Squad, Helena told me that drugs, primarily heroin, were being smuggled
into this country in the body cavities of the dead soldiers being returned by
air from Viet Nam to the United States. She named Ike Atkinson as the ring
leader. Atkinson was located in Goldsboro, N.C., supposedly working out of
Johnson Air Force Base. Helena told me they were smuggling drugs in the same
manner into Johnson Air Force Base. Johnson Air Force Base is located at
Goldsboro, N.C.
She advised Atkinson was in the service,
but subsequently got out and continued his business in drugs with the same
contacts. I didn't pay much attention to Atkinson because he wasn't in our
jurisdiction.
The above information is all that Helena
told me up to the time of the MacDonald murders in 1970.
[page 2]
Helena told me after the MacDonald
murders that there were contacts in Viet Nam who put the drugs in the G.I.'s
bodies, in plastic bags after the autopsies were complete, The bodies were sewn
up and shipped to Pope Air Base, Ft. Bragg, Johnson Air Base, and other bases
which she did not name.
When the bodies arrived in the U.S.,
they were met by a contact in the United States at one of the military bases,
and after the drugs were removed by this contact, the bodies were sent to their
final destination.
The person who met the bodies at the
respective Air Bases knew which bodies to check, based on a pre-determined code.
Although I believe Helena knew their identities, she never gave me this
information. Helena told me that the people who handled the assignments in Viet
Nam. and those who met the planes in the United States, were military personnel.
She stated most of the drugs came from Thailand.
Helena stated the drugs and the pickups
were made at the base at Fort Bragg. The reason she gave me more details after
the MacDonald murders was because she wanted me to know that she knew what she
was talking about, and she stated she would give me details, including names,
dates, and places, once she was given immunity by the U.S. Government. When Ted
L. Gunderson and I initially interviewed her, we told her we would attempt to
get immunity for her on these matters.
Helena advised that Spider Newman, his
son, Red Newman, Wineford (Winnie) Cole, Tommy Hart, and June Bug Walters (I
don't know Walters' real first name) were several steps in the organization
under Atkinson. All of these individuals were civilians who operated in the
Fayetteville, N.C. area, selling drugs. None of these individuals had a business
cover, but sold drugs out of their house. Those of us in law enforcement knew
through our intelligence community that Atkinson ran the Viet Nam smuggling
operation on the Eastern Seaboard. I believe Atkinson was arrested by the
[page 3]
Federal Narcotic authorities in the
middle 1970's, and he is presently serving time. He was recently turned down on
parole.
Spider Newman was being tried for drugs
in the mid-1970's. There was a courtroom break, and he was later found in his
car behind his home, shot in the head. I later heard that Spider was getting
ready to turn states evidence when this happened. The police ruled this a
suicide. His trial was in Federal Court.
Red Newman has been tried on drugs, and
is serving time in the Federal system. Cole went to State Prison on drug charges
in Fayetteville.
Wineford Cole, Tommy Hart and June Bug
Walters were all tried and convicted of drug trafficking. I believe they were
all tried in local and Federal Court at different times. I don't know if Cole
and Walters are in jail now, but I know Hart is in the North Carolina State
Penal System.
In regard to the Viet Nam operation,
Helena told me that military, civilian, and police officers were involved in the
Viet Nam drug network. She stated there were two prominent local attorneys and
Army officers as high as Generals, who were part of the operation. She stated
she would name and identity the people if given immunity by the U.S. Government.
I believe this is part of the "bomb shell" she said she was going to drop.
Helena never named the police officers she said were involved in the Viet Nam
operation, but she did state that Studer and Sonberg were involved in drugs.
Possibly these are the individuals she was referring to in regard to the Viet
Nam drug network, who were police officers. Helena also told me after the
MacDonald murders, that Alan Mazorelle, who was in her coven Satanic Cult, was a
drug runner up and down the East Coast. Mazorelle took drugs as far away as
Florida and New York City. Mazorelle was in the Army at the time. She never said
where Mazorelle obtained his drugs.
Helena also told me that Don Harris,
also a member of her coven Satanic Cult, was a heavy user of drugs. This is all
she said about him.
[page 4]
Helena told me that Dwight Smith was a
drug dealer locally. She never said where Smith obtained his drugs. She said
Smith was an "alright guy".
Helena told me that Kathy Perry was a
user of drugs. Perry took as many drugs as she could get her hands on. Perry
dealt drugs only to maintain her habit.
Helena told me that Greg Mitchell was a
dealer and a heavy user of drugs. She never gave details regarding how he dealt,
but she stated anytime someone couldn't find drugs, they could always go to
Mitchell and he would have them. At times, he would supply the whole group.
Helena told me that Bruce Fowler was a
drug dealer and a user, and that she was his girlfriend. She never gave more
details than this.
Dwight Smith, Don Harris, Alan Mazorelle,
Bruce Fowler and Greg Mitchell were all in the same coven Satanic cult with
Helena, and were all in the military. She stated that all of the above were
dangerous, but she was the most afraid of Mazorelle. She stated Mazore1le would
kill you in a minute.
I had extensive intelligence files on
all of the above close associates of Helena's, but this information has
disappeared from the Fayetteville Police files. I learned these files
disappeared in August, 1979. During the MacDonald trial I was given a subpoena
to bring these records to the trial. It was then that I learned they were gone.
In 1981 or 1982, I talked to Mrs Greg
Mitchell, after Greg had died. She told me Greg had previously told her about
drugs being smuggled into the U.S. in the body cavities of the dead G.I.'s from
Viet Nam. She stated that Greg didn't give her the names of persons involved,
but told her about the contacts in Viet Nam who placed the drugs in plastic
bags, into the bodies, and others in the U.S. at our Air Bases who met the
planes, and took the drugs from the bodies. She stated military personnel were
involved in this operation in Viet Ham and in the U.S.
[page 5]
Lieutenant Studer told me in 1968-1969
that drugs were being brought into the U.S. from Viet Nam in the body cavities
of the dead soldiers. He said they were being flown into the United States to
the military Air Bases, and dispersed from there by contacts within the
military.
Studer subsequently was promoted to
Captain, Chief of Detectives, but was forced to resign because he
misappropriated pornographic material obtained during an investigation. Helena
told me that Studer monitored the drugs that Helena obtained, and if he didn't
like them, he had her exchange those drugs for drugs that Studer could use.
Helena told me that if the police obtained drugs on an arrest, they would often
be on the street the next day. Studer would take the drugs and give them to
Helena to sell back on the street. The only way I know that Studer could get
these drugs was from the evidence room. Studer and Detective Larry Sonberg both
had keys to the evidence room.
Helena told me that William F. Ivory,
C.I.D.. and Studer were close friends. She stated that Ivory was dealing drugs
with Studer. She stated she would give more details concerning Ivory if she was
given immunity. Ivory was involved in the crime scene search on the MacDonald
case. She also stated she would give more information on Studer if she vas given
immunity.
Joseph Bullock was an informant and
undercover operator for me and Studer from 1969 to 1971. Bullock advised me that
he saw Studer and Ivory exchange envelopes on occasion at the Dunkin' Donuts,
Bragg Blvd, Fayetteville, N.C., during this period of time. Studer dropped
Bullock shortly after this because, according to Bullock, Studer knew too much
of what was going on. Bullock was subsequently shot in the head during an ambush
when he came home from work. It was general knowledge in the community that
Bullock was an informant for me. Bullock described Studer as a "son of a bitch."
Sonberg left town unexpectedly, shortly
after the MacDonald murders. The rumor was that Sonberg had double-crossed some
drug dealers, and had to leave town. Helena told me that Sonberg was dealing
[page 6]
drugs even though he was a police
officer. I have no knowledge that Sonberg was involved with the drug operation
out of Viet Nam.
Helena once mentioned the name Proctor
to me. I don't recall what was said about him, but I knew she knew him. I assume
she was referring to James Proctor, Judge DePree's [sic] former son-in-law. I
don't recall if she referred to Proctor by his first name. She mentioned this
sometime after the MacDonald murders. She said she would talk more about Proctor
if given immunity.
Helena told me that 3 or 4 nights after
the MacDona1d murders she vas picked up by Ivory and I believe C.I.D. agent,
Shaw (I don't know his first name). She stated they talked to her about the
MacDonald murders. Helena advised she gave them a story that they didn't
believe, and they turned her 1oose.
Helena told me that Studer contacted her
shortly after the MacDona1d murders and Studer told her to get out of town
because Beasley was after her. She ultimately left, and went to Nashville,
Tennessee.
During the time I worked with He1ena
(1968 to 1972) I estimate that she was responsible, as an informant, for the
arrest of hundreds of individuals. I estimate at least 200 persons or more were
arrested as a result of information furnished by her.
She set up Mazorelle and Thomas Rizzo
for the arrest on drugs just before the MacDonald murders. When I looked for the
intelligence files on the Stretchly group in 1979, I recall also looking for the
arrest f1le on Mazorelle and Rizzo for their arrest. I recall they were arrested
in January 1970. I remember that these arrest files were intact at that time. I
have since been told that the arrest files on Mazorelle and Rizzo are now
missing.
It is 1nteresting to note that Mazorelle
claims he was in jail the night of the MacDonald murders. He claims he can prove
this from Superior Court records in Cumberland County. I have been told there is
a slip of paper in the court records that shows Mazorel1e was in jail the night
of 2/16-17/70. These records are available to the public.
[page 7]
I know Mazorelle was not in jail
2/16-17/70 because I arrested him in January 1970 and recall that the trial was
set for Mazorelle the day of 2/17/70. If Mazorelle had been in Jail that date
(2/16-17/70) he would have been available for trial on 2/17/70, and I would have
appeared in court as a witness. John De Carter of the Sheriff's office was with
me in the arrest of Rizzo and Mazorelle and he would have also had to appear in
court 2/17/70. I specifically recall that I did not appear in court on any case
at the Cumberland County Court House on 2/17/70. I was on the street all day
looking for suspects on the MacDonald murders.
I don't recall that Mazorelle was out on
bail, but I believe he was, or he would have appeared 1n court 2/17/70. Since he
didn't appear I believe he jumped ba1l, which means a bench warrant would have
been issued for him. I recall he was subsequently arrested in Waycross Georgia
for burglary, but I have been informed through my sources in law enforcement
that the Waycross arrest records are also missing.
I recall that a bondsman, C. B. Avertt,
went to Waycross to extradite Mazorelle for jumping bond on my drug arrest. I
talked to Avertt in 1979, and he told me that he didn't recall making the bond
and had no record. I talked to him a month later and he recalled that he made
bond for Mazorelle for $2500.00 after the MacDonald murders, which, according to
him, would confirm that Mazorelle was in jail the night of 2/16-17/70. Avertt is
either involved in the cover up or is mistaken. Mazorelle's bond could not have
been made after the MacDonald murders because the trial was set for 2/17/70, as
explained above.
I don't have knowledge concerning the
possible altering of Court records concerning the Mazore1le-Rizzo drug arrest,
but I recall a number of occasions when Cumberland Court House records were
altered after working hours at night. I don't believe Mazorelle was in jail the
night of the murders.
[page 8]
In addition to the above, Helena told me
that Mazorelle was out that night and involved in the MacDonald murders.
In regard to cases that Helena made for
me, I recall that she was responsible for the largest drug recovery in the
history of our police department up to the time I retired. Several months before
the MacDonald murders, she tipped us on drugs that were being transported from
Canada to Fayetteville. Seven suspects were arrested. and over $20,000.00 worth
of drugs were recovered.
Helena was also responsible for the
arrest of four suspects from Texas, who were also transporting and selling drugs
in Fayetteville. We recovered about $40,000.00 worth of drugs on this case. .
Helena told me about every instance where drugs came into Fayetteville from
other areas. At the time I didn't think about it, but I now believe she told us
about drugs coming from outside Fayetteville to eliminate competition, probably
protecting the local drug scene, i.e. the Viet Nam operation. This is my
opinion.
Judge Dupree and the U.S. Government
have attempted to discredit me, insinuating I am having, and have had mental
problems. 1 would like to point out that I have been on the Police Officers
Advisory Commission for North Carolina since before I returned ["retired" was
probably intended-Ken Adachi] from the Fayetteville Police Department 1n 1973.
I have read this 8 page statement, and
it is true and correct, to the best of my knowledge.
Prince E. Beasley
Witness: Ted L. Gunderson 5/5/86
Fayetteville, N.C.
Summary of the
MacDonald Murder Case, 1970 thru 1996
by Jerry Allen
Potter February 5, 1997
Why A Summary?
In 1985, when Fred Bost and I began
research for our book Fatal Justice: Reinvestigating the MacDonald Murders
(completed and published ten years later by W. W. Norton), our goal was to
determine whether Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald did, or did not, murder his family on a
rainy February morning at Fort Bragg, N. C. in 1970. Fred is a retired green
beret sergeant major once assigned as an investigator at the Pentagon during the
formation of the current volunteer army. He became suspicious of the army's case
against MacDonald while serving at Fort Bragg at the time of the murders. I am a
novelist and marine painter on the Monterey Peninsula. My own interest was
whetted by talks with a former FBI bureau chief whose forays into various
aspects of the case led him to believe Jeffrey MacDonald had been framed by the
army to keep the FBI from delving too deeply into the severe drug problem that
existed on Fort Bragg at that time.
What follows is covered in intricate
detail, and supported by exhaustive and unassailable documentation in our book.
Our documentation, at least, is logically unassailable because it is direct from
the government's own files and their handwritten laboratory notes withheld at
trial, and also because the handwritten bench notes differ incredibly from the
typed evidence reports that were supposed to have been based on the lab notes.
The difference beween the handwritten notes and typed reports is absolutely
crucial in understanding what happened in this case, for the handwritten notes
show evidence supporting MacDonald's story about intruders, but the official
reports, typed for the defense team, show a case against him that isn't
reflected in the handwritten notes, and do not show important finds those
handwritten bench notes contain which, if known by the defense, would have
stopped the government case in its tracks back in 1970.
Without a fact base from which to
understand this case, the concerns of interested parties can be too easily
dispelled by government generalizations about it, hence the following detailed
treatment. For instance, the government claims that they brought to trial a
massive circumstantial case showing MacDonald had committed these crimes. That
is true. They did present such evidence. But what is the nature and quality of
that evidence? And is it based on typed reports or handwritten bench notes? The
government says that investigator William Ivory said he saw signs of a "staged"
crime scene. That is also true, but sworn statements of MPs and other personnel
make it clear that the moved items were moved after the MPs arrived, and that
the items were moved by army men themselves or by curious onlookers who had come
into the crime scene unchallenged. Half truth is not the same as whole truth.
This, then, is why this case, after 27 years, like an old nagging injury, is the
case that won't go away.
The Murders
The case erupted early February 17,
1970, when MPs reported to 544 Castle Drive, an officer housing area on Ft.
Bragg, not far from Fayetteville, N. C., in response to a phone call for help
from Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald, a green beret group surgeon and drug counselor. They
found MacDonald's pregnant wife stabbed and bludgeoned to death. The condition
of her body and particularly her arms, hands, and fingernails showed she had put
up a vigorous fight. The two MacDonald daughters, Kimberly, 6, and Kristen, 2,
were also dead. Kimberly apparently died from blows with a club. Kristen was
stabbed repeatedly. Hairs found under their bloody fingernails indicated that
they, too, had fought and scratched their attacker or attackers.
Dr. MacDonald was found unconscious next
to his wife. One of the first MPs on the scene, Kenneth Mica, said he performed
mouth to mouth resuscitation on MacDonald "at least three times" before he got
him stabilized enough to talk. Suffering three head contusions, a collapsed lung
due to a knife wound into his chest, and more than 15 other stab wounds
(including one through his arm), MacDonald told MP Mica he had gone to sleep on
the sofa because the baby had wet his side of the bed. Early in the morning he
heard his wife and daughter cry out. He awakened to face three armed men and a
blond woman who stood behind them chanting, "Acid is groovy, kill the pigs." The
young woman wore a floppy "witch" hat, and go go boots. Her face was lit by a
flickering light, MacDonald said, perhaps a candle.
MP Mica's Troublesome Sighting
When MP Mica heard MacDonald's
description of the female intruder, he was astonished. He turned to his
lieutenant who had just arrived and told him that only moments earlier, at about
3:55 a.m., he had seen a suspicious young woman standing on a rainy street
corner about three blocks away. She wore a floppy hat and boots. Mica asked his
lieutenant to set up road blocks and send someone back out to find the girl he
thought might have been the one MacDonald described. After all, how many floppy
hatted young women wearing boots could there be at that hour of the morning on a
military post, especially in bad weather? But nothing was done. The MPs bosses,
who would only moments later make a decision to misrepresent the early known
facts of the case to keep the FBI from controlling the crime scene and the on
post drug investigation, told this MP to keep his mouth shut about seeing the
girl.
William Ivory, the 26 year old army
investigator, had never led a murder investigation in his life, yet he made a
quick perusal of the crime scene; and within a very few minutes decided, even
before collecting or lab testing any evidence, that Jeffrey MacDonald was guilty
of the murders. Even though the Princeton educated MacDonald had no history of
violence, was known by his in laws as a "perfect" father to the girls, and had a
flawless army record as group surgeon of his unit, and even though the army knew
the drug crowd on Bragg had a grudge against MacDonald, they told their
superiors they already had their man. Before any investigation was made, the
told their bosses no civilian intruders were involved.
But local police and an army agent, men
who had worked the drug scene and who knew the local kids well, have told us
they immediately recognized the descriptions, the racial make up, and general
dress of the group MacDonald had described. These law officers thought the young
woman carrying a candle and running with a black man wearing a fatigue jacket
could only be Helena Stoeckley, an intelligent but troubled 17 year old addict
daughter of a retired colonel. She was one of the key drug snitches for the
local police and the army. These men knew of no other white girl in 1970 who ran
around with a black man, especially a black man of a certain build and wearing
an army jacket with an outdated rank insignia on it. Yet, ignoring the MPs
sighting and MacDonald's descriptions of kids that might have been real, the
army brass continued to lie to the FBI about the likelihood of civilians being
involved in the murders. The FBI investigators sent by Hoover weren't needed.
Even though they knew Helena Stoeckley fit the description of the female
intruder and even though they knew of MP Mica's sighting, the official line was
immediate and simple: there were absolutely no civilians involved in this crime.
MacDonald's Previous Altercations
with Addicts
Besides the MP's report about seeing the
young woman, the army became aware of other sightings of a group like the one
MacDonald described who had been in the area just before and after the crimes.
For instance, a teacher said she saw members of such a group talking with
Colette at the extention university only hours before she was murdered. She said
the young people, a group of hippie types, seemed to be leaning on Colette to
convince her to agree with them about something. A private investigator later
showed this teacher an array of photos of young men. Without hesitation she
picked out Helena Stoeckley's boyfriend, the violent and disturbed heroin
addict, Greg Mitchell, who later confessed to the crimes. This teacher says she
told two army investigators about this confrontation. The army knew that Dr.
MacDonald was a drug counselor with a tough view of illegal drug use by troops,
and had gotten at odds with violent drug users. In fact, he had a serious run in
with drug addicts a month earlier, and had been physically attacked by a
screaming heroin addict in his office less than twenty four hours before the
murders. It was well known on post that this new young doctor had gained the
reputation of a hard liner when he rewrote the policies and procedurals manual
to make drug paraphernalia harder to get out of his unit's medical facilities.
In fact, MacDonald had been warned by a fellow officer to tread more easily,
that many of the heroin addicts he was dealing with were Vietnam veterans who
were disillusioned and angry, and many of them were dangerous. One of
MacDonald's fellow medical officers said he had been "worried" about MacDonald,
and had warned MacDonald that his tough reputation amongst the drug users was
going to get him into trouble with them.
Since the army knew all this about
MacDonald and his dealings with drug addicts, he would have been a likely target
for just such a group whose drug supply lines he threatened. In fact, a nurse
who had attended a tracheostomy performed by MacDonald on a soldier who had
overdosed on heroin called authorities who had two of his waiting friends picked
up. They gave up the name of their heroin dealer, a black man whose general
description matches that of the club wielding black attacker described by
MacDonald. Instead of considering MacDonald a target for unbalanced and violent
drug dealing young people on post, however, the army CID continued targeting him
for the murders. This decision to ignore young people who were known to match
MacDonald's descriptions of intruders and known to be violent drug users and
dealers seemed to Fred and me an incredibly foolhardy risk by the army brass.
We considered this risk unlikely until
many years into our investigation we learned that a large number of drug users
and dealers at Bragg in 1970 were the sons and daughters of command officers. In
fact, an investigator working for us recently interviewed an army agent who had
attended some of the periodic briefings on the MacDonald case in Washington D.
C. This man said that one particular teenager was mentioned as "a problem" in
the case. She was a problem because she was thought to have bought her drugs
from another officer's daughter, the 17 year old army snitch, Helena Stoeckley,
who matched the description of MacDoanld's female intruder to an incredible
degree. This particular teenager was a problem for the CID also because she was
the daughter of the officer who had made the most important early decisions to
turn the case forever away from drug using young people and toward Jeffrey
MacDonald even at the cost of suppressing evidence. He was the man who heard the
MPs report about seeing a woman on the street corner just after the crimes and
kept that information quiet. Was his daughter involved with this group? With
this crime? We don't know, but narcotics cop Prince Beasley told us that he,
too, believed this young woman to have been running with Stoeckley's group of
drug users. His Stoeckley notes contained the girl's name and he told a BBC
producer that she had climbed out of the window of her house to sneak away one
night to be with the Stoeckley crowd. A writer who interviewed people in the Ft.
Bragg and Fayetteville area just after the murders told us he, too, had been
told by informants that this officer's daughter was "in the drug crowd."
Nearly twenty years after the crimes the
BBC producer phoned the girl, now a mature woman, and asked her about her
relationship with Helena Stoeckley. The woman became very agitated and hung up
the phone. Learning about her possible involvement, I phoned her a few years
later. She was very friendly until I told her what I was doing. When I asked her
about Stoeckley she refused to talk with me any further. I cannot say whether
she was involved with Stoeckley, or involved in the murders. I can only say
that, in my view, because of what I've been told by law enforcement officers and
others who were on the case at the time, and because of her suspicious behavior
on the phone, she bears investigating.
I don't speak idly, or irresponsibly.
Using government documents released by the FOIA, Fred and I have established
that the officer in charge of the case, the father of this girl, did lie,
blatantly, to the FBI that morning and throughout that first week to keep FBI
agents from investigating the drug problem at Fort Bragg (as they were
specifically ordered to do by J. Edgar Hoover himself very early on the morning
of the murders.) And our recent investigations into drug users at Bragg, relying
heavily upon and backtracking some of the previous work of the BBC producer,
indicate that besides these two colonel's daughters, Stoeckley and the other
girl, more than 15 other teenaged dependants of top level officers at Bragg
(generals, majors, and colonels) were reportedly involved with drugs and drug
trafficking. Some of them were running with members of the "hippie" group who
actually confessed to these murders. The son of one very powerful colonel was
listed in an army CID investigation report as being the common law husband of
one of the young women who later confessed to being involved in the murders.
Multiple Attackers
Knowing all this, the army brass
continued to misrepresent the case to the FBI that week, and publically ignored
the likelihood of young civilians being involved in the murders. This is all the
more serious when one considers that army investigators found numerous items in
and just outside the home, that suggested multiple perpetrators. For example,
they found multiple pairs of bloody gloves, multiple weapons, and several
deposits of fresh candle wax that didn't match the candles in the MacDonald
home.
Dr. Thomas Noguchi, at the request of
MacDonald's defense team, examined the crime scene photos of the victims' wounds
and considered the number and types of weapons. He then said it would have been
"impossible" for one man to have handled all those weapons using them against
three struggling victims. Noguchi and another leading pathologist believed two
weapons had disappeared, a ligature used to tie Colette (for her arm showed
signs of ligature burn), and a scissors (for double pointed scissors marks were
found on the children). One pattern of puncture wounds forms the letter "S,"
still another reason to suspect the involvement of unbalanced, self styled
Satanists such as the Stoeckley group.
Noguchi, like another pathologist before
him, still insists there were multiple attackers, and believes the blows of the
club were made by a left handed person. Heroin addict Greg Mitchell, who later
confessed to the crimes, was left handed. MacDonald is right handed. Throughout
that first week of crime scene investigation the army also found an astounding
volume and variety of trace evidence on the bodies, as you'll soon see, which
indicated that someone else, not Jeffrey MacDonald, came into mortal contact
with each of the victims. Yet, our study of the government's own documents shows
that the army continued to "sandbag" the FBI even as they destroyed, covered up,
changed, and lied about each troublesome piece of evidence, and even as they
lied about troublesome interviews with their snitch, the colonel's daughter,
Helena Stoeckley.
The Army Hearing
The army charged MacDonald, then
released him after a six week Article 32 pre court martial proceeding in which
the hearing officer, Colonel Warren Rock, heard and examined the army's case.
There was no evidence against MacDonald, Col. Rock found, and the charges are
"not true." Rock further found ample reason to suspect the army's drug snitch,
Helena Stoeckley, and her companions. He mentioned her by name in his official
report and asked his superiors to suggest that local authorities investigate her
further. But the army proved to have no interest in conveying to local police
information that, according to Col. Rock, would present MacDonald, who was their
prey, as innocent; and Helena Stoeckley, a colonel's daughter and other local
young people heretofore protected by them, as deeply involved with triple
murder.
Helena Stoeckley, a serious heroin user,
had been forced into becoming a drug snitch not only for the local police, but
for the army, and all other police entities in the area. She was well known to
have lived with a violent group of drug dealers who were delving into
"witchcraft." The local policeman who worked her for leads believed she and her
friends were having orgies in the blood of freshly murdered cats, as Stoeckley
herself later claimed. When this local cop, Prince Beasley, heard about the
murders and the descriptions, he agreed with his captain who had phoned him
about them on the murder morning, that the MacDonald attackers sounded like the
Stoeckley group. He remembered Stoeckley's apartment was "full of candles."
"Candles everywhere," he said. She also ran around with a black man wearing a
fatigue jacket with outdated sergeant's rockers on it, he had seen her the night
before wearing go go boots, a cheap blond wig, and a floppy "witch" hat.
Sergeant Beasley had learned that MacDonald had suffered multiple ice pick
wounds, and he remembered Stoeckley carried an ice pick in her purse. He
searched for her in all her familiar haunts that next day and finally found her
that night in the presence of a group of males. "Wanta see my ice pick?" she
quipped.
Beasley called her away from the males,
one of whom was Greg Mitchell, whose attitude seemed threatening as he watched
Beasley and Stoeckley. "This is nothing to joke about, Helena," Beasley said. He
reminded her that children were killed. She began to cry and admitted she might
have been there, that she was on drugs, but keeps seeing terrible things in her
mind.
Thinking he had the MacDonald killers,
he radioed his dispatcher and asked him to call the CID and tell them he had the
group who might have done the murders. The dispatcher called the CID. Beasley
waited. They didn't come. The males were growing angry and restless, calling
threatening taunts toward him. He radioed the dispatcher again. The dispatcher
told him the CID were busy and couldn't come out. Beasley's boss, Rudy Studer, a
close friend of CID invesigator Ivory, had already ordered him not to get
involved in this case. Beasley told us he decided he would either have to use
force to arrest these kids, getting more unruly and he believed very likely
armed, or he would have to let them go. Having no civilian authority in the
murders, he obeyed orders and let them go, but not before telling his snitch,
Helena Stoeckley, to get in touch with the CID herself to clear the matter up.
At any rate, he knew who they were, and thought he knew where to find them. As
another policeman pointed out years later, Beasley had another motivation for
releasing Stoeckley and backing out of the case. She was his best snitch, and
had contributed the leads that led to "hundreds of arrests" over the past year
or so. Beasley says he made subsequent calls to the CID, but didn't know until
years later that they actually went to see her, secretly, and protected her.
Stoeckley and her group remained a
secret among CID agents and local cops until the hearing officer found that this
young woman had admitted to army investigator William Ivory that she had no
alibi for just the hours in question. Ivory had gone to see her a few days after
the murders (Ivory's partner that night tells us it was because of Beasley's
calls). To Ivory, she admitted she was on drugs that night. She admitted she
wore a blond wig, floppy hat, and go go boots the night of the murders. And she
offered no alibi. Ivory kept all this secret. This heretofore suppressed
interview only came to light after her next door neighbor, who had seen her come
home very early on the murder morning, confronted her with his suspicions that
she and her friends answered the description and might have been the killers.
Obviously shaken by this sudden and apparently unexpected accusation, she
retorted that she might have "held the light," but hadn't killed anyone herself.
After army hearing officer Col. Rock received this information from Helena
Stoeckley's neighbor, he learned the army investigators actually had conspired
to change a lab report to cloud the identity of a brown hair. The hair was found
clutched in Colette's dead hand, a hair, Col. Rock learned, that was not Jeffrey
MacDonald's hair or the hair of his family, who were all blond. Col. Rock found
MacDonald not guilty.
The army rumor mill had it afterward
that Rock had gone soft in the head, that the AMA had paid Bernard Segal to
represent Dr. MacDonald, that the MP (who had finally come forward about his
sighting of a floppy hatted female in the neighborhood) had been paid by
MacDonald to lie, that the neighbor who confronted Stoeckley was also lying.
Themselves now under accusation of framing MacDonald and suppressing evidence,
they continued to tell local cops and media people that Jeffrey MacDonald had
gotten away with murder.
Prosecutor James Proctor Keeps the
Case Alive
To pay his legal bills, MacDonald left
the army on a hardship discharge and worked as a doctor in New York state, then
embarked upon an illustrious career in emergency medicine in Long Beach,
California. But the army wasn't through with him. Army CID agents convinced a
local federal prosecutor, James C. Proctor, that MacDonald was guilty. Proctor
clamored for permission to prosecute MacDonald. He presented his evidence to his
bosses at the Department of Justice, but they refused to prosecute, the record
states, for lack of evidence. He promised a conviction, threatened to quit his
job if he couldn't prosecute, and pushed for many months without noticeable
success. Then army CID agents, after two years of wooing MacDonald's supportive
in laws and showing them selected items of evidence, finally convinced them
their son in law was guilty. Not surprisingly, the case then began to change
complexion. Even though the DOJ had repeatedly refused to prosecute MacDonald,
the in laws helped the army persuade a friendly judge to order a grand jury
hearing. The army CID agents also convinced a young army lawyer of MacDonald's
"guilt." This officer, Brian Murtagh, resigned his commission, left the army,
and joined the DOJ solely to pursue Jeffrey MacDonald. Carrying his station
wagon full of evidence he claimed would prove MacDonald guilty, Murtagh went to
the FBI lab to begin building his new case. Murtagh, like Proctor before him,
promised a conviction.
Indictment and Trial
At the grand jury hearing in 1975,
MacDonald's lawyer, Bernard Segal, realized the evidence had been drastically
changed. Back at the army hearing there had been no evidence against him. And
the DOJ had found no inculpatory merit in James Proctor's evidence two years
after the murders. Now, suddenly, items of evidence were presented as different
from what they had been back at the army hearing. A particularly damning exhibit
involved MacDonald's pajama top. It had been found covering Colette's half bare
chest. It was full of holes made with an ice pick, and the FBI lab had managed
to fold it in a way that allowed for all the fabric holes to line up with the
stab wounds in her chest. The prosecutors assured Judge Dupree and the grand
jurors that this proved MacDonald had stabbed his wife through the pajama top,
since MacDonald had said he had pulled his pajama top off when he found
Colette's body. The top had gotten ripped, he had said, in his fight with
intruders, so the prosecutors insisted that it meant that MacDonald, not
mythical intruders had killed Colette.
MacDonald was indicted. A suspicious
Segal, believing the prosecutor had used the FBI lab to falsify evidence,
insisted on having his own experts lab test the evidence. The government and the
judge blocked him. Since he couldn't lab test the evidence against his client,
he asked to see the handwritten lab notes upon which the army's original typed
lab reports were supposed to be based. The government said, "No." He asked for
the FBI's handwritten lab notes, to see how the evidence could have changed so
severely. The government refused to give him the notes. At trial, still unable
to lab test evidence and still not in possession of the lab notes, he begged
Judge Dupree to force Murtagh to hand over the lab notes. The judge (who we now
know had been James Proctor's law partner, and father in law, and even the
grandfather of Proctor's child), simply asked Murtagh if there was anything in
the notes MacDonald's attorneys needed. Murtagh said there wasn't, and Segal
listened with horror as Judge Dupree, without even looking at the notes himself,
ruled he wouldn't force Murtagh to give the notes to Segal.
Segal hoped to discredit the head of the
chemistry branch of the FBI, Paul Stombaugh, the government's key forensic
expert, by showing that he had very little formal training in chemistry, and in
fact had flunked the only chemistry course Segal's investigator could establish
the agent had taken in college. But the judge forbade Segal to so inform the
jury.
Segal also had hoped to put before the
jury the findings of the army hearing officer back in 1970, because that
information would give the jurors some clue that the government might be lying
about the evidence at trial, and it would prove that the army investigators had
tried to finess hair evidence. But the judge ruled against Segal. He would not
allow Col. Rock's official report to be seen by the jurors.
Segal had planned to bring to trial five
psychiatrists, including three government men, who had examined MacDonald and
had found him normal and sane, and unlikely to have murdered anyone, especially
his family, and especially in a fit of anger. Dupree, in a ruse set up with the
prosecutors and a psychiatric expert, a "new man," actually a former army
psychiatrist who had been secretly in the employ of the government prosecutors
on this very case for many years. This "new man" had never examined MacDonald,
but had made his feelings known back in the early 70s after a visit from William
Ivory, that MacDonald was guilty. Judge Dupree insisted that MacDonald get
examined by this "new man," who interviewed MacDonald during the trial and
promptly found him a homicidal maniac. Judge Dupree, now with an "expert" in
hand who disagreed with the five earlier experts, refused to allow any
psychiatric testimony, finding that "shrinks" had no place in trials and
congress had erred in imposing them on the courts, anyway. He ruled that
character witnesses would suffice for MacDonald. In the end, MacDonald's friends
and family would tell the jury that he was a good man, with no history of
violence, and this would be set in the jurors minds against the government
prosecutors and FBI agents talking repeatedly throughout the trial about
MacDonald's mental state while murdering his family.
The Stoeckley Issue at Trial
With most of his case blocked by Judge
Dupree, a worried Segal called Helena Stoeckley as a witness. He had learned she
had confessed to at least six friends and acquaintances that she had been in the
MacDonald home the night of the murders. She made these confessions while crying
and trembling and talking about "all that blood," and weeping about the murdered
children. Prince Beasley, the city drug cop who worked her for leads in
Fayetteville, said she'd confessed her involvement in the murders to him. She
had taken a polygraph test at the hands of the army's chief polygrapher and had
shown deception when she told him she hadn't been in the home that night. But on
the stand at MacDonald's trial, facing a murder rap herself, she said she
couldn't remember where she had been during those hours.
Having failed to get Stoeckley to
incriminate herself under oath, Segal wanted to put on the stand seven witnesses
who heard her confess to involvement in the crimes. It would have been hearsay
evidence, but Segal argued to Judge Dupree in a bench conference outside the
jurors' hearing that since Stoeckley was claiming loss of memory, this made her
an "unavailable witness," and according to the rules on hearsay testimony the
witnesses to her confessions should be allowed to tell what she had told them,
especially since what she had told them had placed her in legal jeopardy. Segal
argued further that the group Helena ran with were violent drug dealers and
users, and that two of them matched MacDonald's descriptions of two of the
intruders to an incredible degree. Helena Stoeckley wasn't blond, but had been
wearing a blond wig that night, and go go boots, and a floppy hat, and had
confessed to being at the murders. Segal also argued that one of his witnesses
was the army's chief polygrapher who had tested Helena and had found her
deceptive when she told him she wasn't in the home on the murder night. Even
though the polygraph couldn't be used as evidence against, her, her interview
with him after his polygraph examination should be used, Segal reasoned, for it
had caused the polygrapher to report that he had tripped her up on a key issue
of her story, and had found that Stoeckley, at least, believed that she was in
the home the night of the murders and believed she had witnessed them.
But Judge Dupree dismissed all these
points and ruled that the seven witnesses could testify, but they couldn't talk
about Helena's confessions. The prosecution pointed out to Judge Dupree that
they especially didn't want one of the witnesses to tell about Helena's
references to "all that blood." So, the witnesses went on the stand, but were
carefully enjoined not to tell the jurors anything about Stoeckley's
confessions. This left MacDonald, as far as the jurors knew, as the only viable
suspect, alone in his home with three corpses.
Government Tricks at Trial - The
Official Blood Chart and the Pajama Top Folding Experiment
The pajama top folding experiment was
the key exhibit of the government's case against MacDonald. Segal's cross
examination of Paul Stombaugh, the head of the Chemistry Division of the FBI
lab, produced an admission that the experiment did not prove what the
prosecutors said it did. He admitted it hadn't grown out of his own examination
of the evidence, but that Murtagh had brought it to him and asked that he do it.
Segal also got him to admit that its construction did not meet certain necessary
scientific standards. Segal thought he had made points with the jurors, but the
prosecutors continued talking about the pajama top folding experiment as if it
did prove something, and as if Stombaugh's self incriminating concessions had
never happened. As the trial neared its end, Segal feared that the science had
been too difficult for the jurors to understand.
The government's case was skillfully
driven home in closing arguments by Murtagh's fellow prosecutor, James
Blackburn, a man who has since pled guilty and served a prison term for
embezzlement, fraud, and for creating phony court documents in other cases.
Blackburn presented evidence he said was the most important proof that MacDonald
had killed his family and was lying about intruders. In one hand Blackburn held
up the wooden club found in the back yard, the club that had been used to murder
Colette and Kimberly, and with the other hand he dramatically lifted MacDonald's
pajama top. He informed the jury that investigators had found two dark fibers on
the club, fibers from MacDonald's pajama top, fibers that made him a liar,
fibers that meant that he, not intruders, had handled the club. It meant,
Blackburn insisted, that MacDonald, not marauding hippies, had murdered his
family. However, even with this circumstantial proof before their eyes, the
jurors still had trouble believing MacDonald would kill his family.
They filed into the jury deliberation
room with Judge Dupree's instructions ringing in their ears, instructions
assuring them that if they found MacDonald's story at odds with the physical
case presented by Murtagh and Blackburn and the FBI, then they could deem that
MacDonald had lied, and was therefore guilty. Soon the troubled jurors called
out from their deliberations and asked for a chart of all the blood spots found
in the home. They wanted to see if blood was found on the hallway floor where
MacDonald said he fell, stabbed and bleeding. If there was blood there, then
MacDonald hadn't lied, they reasoned. If blood was absent from this spot, then
he had lied and was surely guilty. So Brian Murtagh gave them the chart he and
the FBI lab had created, without telling them he had left off the chart the
particular blood spot they were seeking. The CID investigation report now in our
possession says a spot of blood, of MacDonald's type, was indeed found on the
hallway floor exactly where he said he fell. The jurors didn't know this most
critical chart had been finessed, but since Murtagh's official FBI chart showed
no blood there, they thought MacDonald must be lying. They voted, reluctantly,
to convict him.
MacDonald became eligible for parole ten
years later, in 1989, but he refused to apply. "I want out," he said. "But I
don't want out with this conviction still standing. I didn't kill my family and
the evidence shows it. I want an evidentiary hearing, and I want a fair trial."
"Are you willing to stay in prison
forever, then?" I asked him.
"The prison isn't the walls here," he
said. "The prison is that people still think I killed my family. The prison is
the conviction. The evidence proves I didn't do it, if only I can get it into
court."
First Steps in the Long Road Back
Soon after the conviction, MacDonald's
friends funded a reinvestigation. A retired FBI bureau chief was chosen to find
Helena Stoeckley. With the help of Prince Beasley, he did find her. She took two
additional polygraphs that indicated she was indeed in the home during the
murders. Tired, and sick from chronic liver disease, she confessed to the
crimes, to "get it off my chest." She still had nightmares and still broke into
uncontrolled sobbing when something reminded her of it. Her husband said she and
he both believed she had been in the murder apartment. She said she would
testify in open court, that MacDonald wasn't guilty.
The "Stoeckley Habeas"
MacDonald's new lawyer, Brian O'Neill,
absolutely knew this information would give him a habeas win. He had Stoeckley's
confessions and a confession of her boyfriend, Greg Mitchell, a soldier and
heroin user. He had proof, now, that the army had found a piece of skin on
Colette's hand, and instead of examining it, the army investigators "lost it."
The defense team also had filed for FOIA releases of the lab notes. Some of them
were finally turned over in 1983, but they were in such poor shape, so
cryptically written, and so incomplete that it was difficult to follow the paper
trail on any single piece of evidence. It would require hundreds of thousands of
dollars and many, many months to analyze these notes, then file FOIA requests
for the remainder of the documents still being suppressed, and then wait years
for document releases. But MacDonald was running out of money. Thinking he had a
win with the new Stoeckley material anyway, and wanting to get MacDonald out of
prison and back to his medical practice, O'Neill began preparing a habeas
petition on the Stoeckley issues. He wasn't sure she would cooperate by
testifying on the stand, for she wanted the government to give her immunity from
prosecution. He, nevertheless, possessed recordings of her accounts and was
prepared to go ahead. While O'Neill was writing the brief, Stoeckley called
Prince Beasley, her former police handler, to tell him she was fearful, that she
was being watched by two men in suits, and that she wanted to talk with him and
finally tell him everything. She had previously told him she knew something that
would, "blow the lid off Fort Bragg." He presumed it was an illegal activity on
post which involved high level army people, and he thought this was what she was
going to tell him about. But before he got there, she was found dead. Certain
other bizarre circumstances of her death seemed suspicious, so O'Neill had a
pathologist attend her autopsy, and he found no physical signs of wrongdoing.
She apparently died from liver disease brought on by years of drug use. O'Neill
was deeply concerned over the possible effect the loss of Stoeckley would have
on his case, but since he possessed her taped and written confessions, and the
polygraph information, and still had many witnesses to her confessions, he filed
the habeas petition.
The "Stoeckley" petition included
affidavits from many people who had seen suspicious groups in the MacDonald
neighborhood just before and just after the crimes, going toward the house
before the crimes, and getting into vehicles parked on the nearby highway
afterward. The university teacher told about seeing just such a group
confronting Colette MacDonald that night. A newspaper delivery woman told of
seeing Helena Stoeckley in a small grocery store later on the day of the
murders. She seemed zonked out out drugs. She was wearing go go boots splashed
with what looked like blood and smelled like blood, and she was with a black
man. When the woman asked Stoeckley about the boots, and Stoeckley began to
answer, the black man grabbed Stoeckley and pushed her out of the store and
left. The woman said she had earlier had a "run in" with this same black man
when he had deliberately used a baseball bat to strike a ball at a kid helping
her deliver the paper at a trailer now known to have been owned by one of the
Stoeckley group members. Stoeckley ran after the ball, laughing wildly. This
trailer was raided by Beasely and a team of officers looking for Stoeckley later
that day and found to have drugs in it. This trailer park is across the street
from the grocery store.
Judge Dupree heard all these things,
including Beasley's story about stopping Stoeckley the night after the killings,
and hearing about her admission that she was on drugs, and thought she was in
the murder apartment, and kept seeing terrible things. All very interesting,
Judge Dupree said afterward. You can put all the hippies in Fayeteville in the
MacDonald neighborhood, but without hard evidence that someone else was in the
murder apartment, MacDonald is still guilty. He considered Stoeckley's
confessions publicity stunts. Judge Dupree also summarily dismissed Greg
Mitchell's troubled admissions because Brian Murtagh told the judge that
Mitchell had been talking about something that happened in Vietnam. Murtagh said
he knew that Mitchell had been wounded there. This was not true, of course, for
Mitchell never saw combat in Vietnam. Nevertheless, the judge didn't ask for
proof of Murtagh's facile claim. The judge himself gave Mitchell and Stoeckley
an alibi, suggesting that they were probably "off somewhere" together during the
murders. He denied the petition, and the higher courts upheld him.
The Black Wool and Wig Hair Habeas
Petition
After fighting the government for
fifteen years, MacDonald was now completely broke, and O'Neill, sorely whipped,
stepped out of the case. MacDonald went without a lawyer for years, but a
private investigator, Ray Shedlick, and his daughter, Ellen Dannelly, began
rereading the lab notes. Fred and I began reading them as well. What was found
astounded us. I won't detail the dozens of disturbing discoveries here, but some
of the information is in our attached web page printout and most of the rest is
in our book supported by 56 pages of footnotes referencing the government's
documents. Two key items bear brief discussion here. Remember the fibers on the
murder club, which, according to the prosecution was the "most important"
evidence tying MacDonald to the murders? FBI handwritten lab notes kept from the
defense at trial show that when the FBI lab examined the debris from the murder
club, they, like the army lab, found two, and only two, dark fibers adhering to
it. Except they weren't MacDonald's pajama top fibers they were black wool! This
knowledge was not reported even though the prosecution experts tried to match it
to MacDonald's clothing and failed. This black wool became even more critical
when the FBI found that black wool fibers were collected from Colette's mouth
area where she had been sruck with the club. They also found a black wool fiber
on her pajama top, and no where else in the home. Concerned, they tried to match
it to other clothing in the MacDonald home and failed. The discovery of these
fibers that absolutely were not pajama fibers as Blackburn had claimed at trial,
helped persuade Boston attorney Harvey A. Silverglate that MacDonald was not
guilty. Even though MacDonald, by this time, had no money to pay him,
Silverglate, who on principle works about half his cases pro bono, agreed to
take the case anyway.
Another critical item found after years
of searching through the lab notes and other reports suppressed at trial, was
the chance discovery of a note about blond wig fibers. The handwritten army lab
note said that certain blond fibers found in a ladies hairbrush (near the spot
MacDonald said he saw the blond woman) were blond wig fibers. O'Neill had
earlier been given, in FOIA releases, a lab note that said something about wig
fibers, but the note was unclear, and was in fact followed by a penciled
question mark, as if the examiner wasn't sure it was wig fiber. O'Neill could
not have presented it safely without confirmation that it was, indeed, wig
fiber. At any rate, since the defense was only allowed to view the evidence in
mass, stored in boxes in a courthouse room at trial, without being allowed to
perform any lab tests on it, there was little chance of O'Neill ever proving
what the fibers actually were. He didn't present this equivocal and thus
extremely vulnerable note in his "Stoeckley based" habeas writ.
But that wasn't the last word on the
blond wig fiber. Years later, Fred Bost and John Murphy, a member of MacDonald's
new defense team were allowed into an army document depository when the
attendant grew weary of the interminable FOIA requests by the defense. Rummaging
through a box of previously unseen army files, they found a previously unseen
lab note confirming the first, equivocal lab note about the blond wig hair. This
second, confirming, note made it clear that the army investigators indeed had
found blond wig hair, and had found no MacDonald wig in the home to match it,
had found no doll large enough to have provided the 24" wig fibers, and even
though they knew Stoeckley had worn a blond wig that night and had admitted
she'd destroyed it because it tied her to the murders, they still had covered up
their knowledge of this incredible forensic find!
Harvey Silverglate reasoned that the
blond wig hair and the black wool fibers was the evidence Judge Dupree had
required back during the 1984 85 "Stoeckley" habeas proceeding to connect her
and several of her friends to the crime scene. Since Stoeckley wore a blond wig
that night and during her "witchy" phase wore only black and purple, these black
fibers might tie her to the crime scene, especially since she had confessed
repeatedly. Like O'Neill before him, Silverglate absolutely knew he had a win.
He began preparing a new habeas petition based largely on the strength of new
knowledge about the suppressed black wool fibers and the wig hair.
Meanwhile, a majority of the Supreme
Court, tired of "excessive" appeals, decided McCleskey v. Zant, which severely
limited second and subsequent habeas petitions even when government error or
wrong doing has been indicated. (Government wrongdoing in the preparation of the
key witness against McCleskey had been the central charge in the brief. The
Court ignored the obvious finessing by the McCleskey prosecution and ruled to go
ahead and execute their client, finding that if his lawyers had been more
diligent they'd have discovered the government ploy earlier. Please recall that
this decision angered and sickened Justice Thurgood Marshall.) As the untimely
death of Stoeckley worried O'Neill before him, the decision in McCleskey
troubled Silverglate as he filed his brief.
Judge Dupree, ill from cancer, came out
of semi retirement to read the new habeas petition. He listened to the oral
arguments, learned about the wig hair, learned about the black wool, learned
that both had been suppressed, and learned that the black wool had even been
placed by the prosecution in a mismarked box back in 1979 when the defense was
allowed to "look only" at pieces of the boxed up evidence. So, even if the
defense had known at that time what they were looking for among those boxes,
they would have had a hard time finding it. The government claimed in their
response that the blond wig hair was probably from a doll, anyway, and the black
wool fiber was probably "household debris," even though at trial the prosecutors
had called it pajama fiber and said it was the most important evidence against
MacDonald. Judge Dupree, incredibly, accepted the "debris" and "doll"
explanation as factual without an evidentiary hearing. Then the judge ruled,
citing the new McCleskey precedent, that MacDonald's lawyers had found the
evidence too late. It was a procedural problem. It wasn't decided on the merits
at all. The judge simply ruled that O'Neill should have presented this evdidence
with his Stoeckley material way back in 1984 even though it was suppressed at
trial and for years afterward.
A new court attitude had reared it's
head here. It didn't matter that the notes had been kept back at trial by this
same judge's own decision. The angry spirit of Court revenge against
interminable appeals and "loopholes" had taken corporeal form in McCleskey, and
it affected Jeffrey MacDonald in a disastrous way. The suppressed blond wig
hair, and the suppressed black wool fibers were now of no legal value, having
first disappeared into the bottomless pit of the government files, then being
dissolved forever by modern legal alchemists in the angry acid of current
judicial doctrine. Brian Murtagh, the prosecutor who had refused to turn over
those lab notes at trial, emerges as the proud victor in this dark new arena. It
was a miracle that MacDonald's supporters found the new evidence at all, so well
was it hidden, but because they found the evidence "too late" according to the
new rules, there would be no evidentiary hearing to see if the black wool was
cotton pajama fiber, and there would be no hearing to determine if the 24 inch
blond wig hairs were from a blond wig, and there would be no new trial to prove
that the prosecution had finessed hordes of other evidence as well. MacDonald
would be in prison for the rest of his life.
Suppressed Hairs in the Hands of Each
Victim
After eight years of research and
interviews, W. W. Norton published our book in 1995, twenty five years after the
murders, and nearly sixteen years after MacDonald's conviction. The book shows
in detail exactly how each major piece of evidence had changed during that
period between the army hearing in 1970 and the grand jury hearing in 1975, and
in whose possession it changed. Using those long hidden lab notes and other
documents, we clearly see that not a single piece of the circumstantial evidence
presented against MacDonald at trial was presented as the army found it. As
Segal had tried to show at trial, the lab notes now prove that the FBI lab had
performed the key exhibit, the pajama top experiment, only after disposing of
their own previous studies of such things as fiber directionality in the fabric
holes, width of fabric holes compared to depth of wounds in Colette's chest, and
other things. With the government's handwritten notes and other suppressed
reports now in hand, there is no doubt that the evidence had been finessed. In
fact, the documents now prove that the entire case had been, from front to back,
"jimmied" by the prosecution.
While our book was being printed, Fred
Bost decided to go back into the lab notes to prepare an easily accessible data
base of all the evidence. While reading army lab notes he had read before, he
came upon something that stunned him, something he had missed, probably during
some bleary eyed, wee hours session years earlier. Recall that the defense team
had learned that the army had found a brown hair clutched in Colette's hand, had
suppressed knowledge of it? Recall, too, that they had even changed their report
on it during the army hearing. Now, Fred Bost, going through handwritten lab
note R 11, began cataloging its cryptic reference numbers and symbols about some
evidence not matching some other evidence, and he learned that the army
investigators also had found "fine brown hairs" under the bloody fingernails of
both MacDonald children who, like their mother, had fought their attackers,
actually gouging hair from their killers' persons.
Homicide investigators know that the
most important evidence in any violent murder is usually trace evidence found on
the bodies, and especially in the hands of the victims, and even more
importantly, under the victim's fingernails when those victims have grappled
with their murderers. Whose hairs were these? For the donors of these grisly
hairs were almost certainly the killers. MacDonald was their suspect. On the day
of the crimes they had assured their bosses and the CID command in Washington
that MacDonald was guilty. So the army investigators collected hair samples from
him, and their lab tech attempted to match them to the hairs found under his
murdered children's nails. But she found no match between these brown hairs and
samples of Jeffrey MacDonald's blond hair. They weren't Jeffrey MacDonald's
hairs! Please understand, the woman actually tried to match these critical hairs
to sample hairs taken from all points of MacDonald's body. Did she then dutifuly
report her explosive new knowledge to the defense, which most certainly would
have freed MacDonald, and would have wrecked her bosses' nationally public
proclamation that MacDonald was guilty? Not only did she fail to report it, she
actually comforted her bosses at the end of the note by detailing specifically
how she would handle these finds, ". . . since they are not going to be reported
by me."
True to her promise, when the official
report was typed, there was no mention of these foreign hairs. So it happened,
that even while army investigators were charging MacDonald with three brutal
murders, even while he was recovering from wounds and two surgical procedures
for his collapsed lung in the hospital, even while they brought MacDonald into a
pre court martial hearing, they were hiding evidence of his innocence and knew
they were hiding it.
A Bloody Handprint
Fred's new evidence database helped him
to join two apparently unrelated government exhibits, a report about a handprint
on the footboard of the MacDonald bed, and a lab report on a test of some blood
stains. Fred closely examined the laboratory code on these two items and learned
they were one and the same. The adult handprint in this key location in the
bedroom had been made in blood. The army tried to match it against the palm
prints of Colette MacDonald who might have grabbed the bed as she fell, but it
wasn't hers. They tried to match it against MacDonald, who might have touched
the bed with bloody hands. It wasn't his. Even though the trial record has an
army lab man saying during his testimony that they'd found a print that might
have been in blood, that testimony had been gravely devoid of the man's
knowledge that it was indeed in blood, and that it didn't match their suspect.
So, again, government knowledge of key
evidence, in this instance a bloody palm print which matched someone else, not
Jeffrey MacDonald, was found at the crime scene and not factored into the
government case against their targeted suspect.
DOJ Responses To Our Book
Several people approached their Senators
or Congressional Representatives after reading our book and learning from our
television appearances that we'd found the hairs under the children's
fingernails. In each instance, the petitioned Congressman called upon the
Department of Justice to speak to our specific finds. In each response, however,
DOJ officials failed to address the key issues, claiming, in effect, that there
was nothing wrong in the MacDonald prosecution (just as the DOJ and FBI have
claimed in every recent investigation that later brings the roof down upon
them). The DOJ told the Congressman that their constituents' critical views on
the case are based upon erroneous media reports, or upon popular literature,
specifically citing our book. The DOJ says that the government's claims were
well grounded in the court records. They did not admit, though, that the court
record is by definition logically devoid of the suppressed evidence. That's what
"suppressed" means! And of course they didn't admit that the court record in
this case is based upon incomplete evidence. They tiptoe gingerly around the
central, dangerous truth that serious evidence of MacDonald's innocence was
indeed denied the jury and has never been examined in any evidentiary hearing.
Of course the wig hair and black wool and the hairs under the children's
fingernails aren't in the court record! The government went to great pains to
see that they weren't presented at trial.
A few readers have tried, in vain, to
reach Janet Reno herself, to ask her personally to look into this case, but each
time, someone below her has intercepted the attempt and has sent back the same
baseless claims, that this case has been up and down the court system and has
been justly handled. One of our readers actually sent a copy of our book to Ms.
Reno, but it was returned by an aid with a note to the effect that it would be
unethical for Ms. Reno to accept a "gift" of this value.
What Next?
Silverglate and his team are now trying
to find a way back into court using the unmatched brown hairs in the victims'
hands and using their new knowledge that the government misrepresented facts to
the court during the "wig hair" and "black wool" appeal, but they are not
hopeful because McCleskey is now strenghtened even further by the recent Anti
Terrorism Bill. The bars against second and subsequent habeas proceedings have
been raised even higher. Although the Court has promised that evidence of true
innocence may be allowed a hearing, it has not happened in the MacDonald case,
and the Supreme Court itself told MacDonald's lawyers after the "wig hair"
appeal not to come back to court with this case again.
This, then, is the now obvious danger of
the new status of habeas corpus. The new rules make it too easy for the court to
rule against a possibly innocent defendant without so much as an evidentiary
hearing to establish the merits of his evidence. The judges themselves, without
being held to an open exploration of the evidence, are now the final, sometimes
all too casual arbiters and sometimes in tiresome cases judges turn mean
spirited. This is why MacDonald has little chance of winning in the judicial
arena today, even though he now has this explosive new evidence, suppressed
foreign hairs in the hands of each victim.
So it was that the prosecution has been
allowed to lie repeatedly from the very first moments of the case by claiming
that no evidence existed to support MacDonald's story about intruders. They lie
in principle while presenting evidence they had whittled down to their needs;
and they continue to lie in spirit by claiming today that "the court record" is
the case. I can only conclude that when Justice doesn't want justice to work, it
simply doesn't work.
Something is very wrong here. The DOJ
told one of it's recent petitioners that all the evidence in this case has
already been adjudicated. What truly has been adjudicated is that the suppressed
evidence in this case will never be adjudicated.
After a decade in the MacDonald files,
Fred Bost and I would be hard pressed to mention a single important item that
had not been somehow manipulated to throw suspicion away from intruders who left
substantial evidence in the home, in the victims' hands, and on and around the
bodies. The army said the crime scene was well protected. It was not. They said
it was competently searched. It was not. They said they could prove the scene
could only have been staged by MacDonald, yet Colonel Rock himself proved it
need not have been. They said neighbors didn't see or hear anything suspicious
that night. They did. The army and the government said nothing was found to
support the presence of intruders at the crime scene. That was grossly false.
Now that we know about the bloody palm print, the hair in Colette's hand, the
hairs under the childrens' fingernails, the multiple bloody gloves, the "lost"
piece of skin, the blond wig hair, and the black wool fibers, this was the most
grotesque lie of all.
Like Colonel Warren Rock in 1970, Fred
Bost and I found the government's charges to be "not true." Like Colonel Rock at
the army hearing, we suggest a real investigation of the murders by examiners
who did not themselves take part in the earlier systematic whitewash of CID
wrongdoing. And we request, again echoing Colonel Rock, that the authorities
finally take the time to probe the activities of Helena Stoeckley and her
troubled young friends on the night the MacDonald family died.
Jerry Potter
http://educate-yourself.org/tg/princebeasleystatementsigned05may86.shtml
Reproduced from
www.Rense.com
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