there are serious problems with Tim’s conviction

See the factual timeline of the case.

 

Tulare Police mishandled evidence, ignored exculpatory witnesses, and disregarded evidence of third party culpability, All to frame a black man for murder.

 

Evidence mishandling, chain of custody issues, and brady violations

A MONTH BEFORE THE END OF TRIAL, THE DEFENSE DISCOVERED THAT THE PROSECUTION HAD NOT TURNED OVER ALL THE CASE EVIDENCE. THIS ISSUE WAS REVEALED WHEN THE PROSECUTOR REFERENCED AN UPDATED EVIDENCE LOG THAT THE DEFENSE DID NOT HAVE. WHEN THE EVIDENCE LOGS WERE FINALLY HANDED OVER, THE DEFENSE REALIZED THAT KEY DATES AND OTHER INFORMATION HAD BEEN altered from the only versions the defense had in their possession.

THE OFFICIAL EVIDENCE LOGS FROM THE TULARE PROPERTY ROOM WERE COVERED IN WHITE-OUT, WITH KEY DATES CHANGED AND IMPORTANT INFORMATION ALTERED.

MOST IMPORTANTLY, THE RECORDS KEEPER TESTIFIED AT TRIAL THAT THE EVIDENCE LOGS DID NOT SHOW ANY INDICATION OF WHERE A SHOE FOUND ALONG THE ESCAPE ROUTE WAS sitting for an entire year. THIS IS THE ONLY PIECE OF EVIDENCE THAT HAD ANY OF TIM’S DNA ON IT.

THE DATES SHOWING WHEN EVIDENCE WAS IN TESTING OR IN POLICE CUSTODY WERE CHANGED. THERE WERE PERIODS OF time, sometimes as long as several YEARS, where KEY PIECES OF EVIDENCE WERE COMPLETELY UNACCOUNTED FOR OR IN THE HANDS OF THE POLICE WHILE THEY WERE COLLECTING REFERENCE SAMPLES FROM TIM.

I have discussed with the DA, Herman Martinez, on different occasions that we did not document as well as we should have or could have some of the movement of evidence.
— TPD Officer Brian Haney

scans of the evidence logs with white out changing the dates.

We got about midway through the trial, the Tulare Police Department had the…now don’t tell anybody else this, be careful with my quote here, they had the most God-awful evidence room.
— Trial Judge Ronn Couillard

In 2016, an audit conducted on the Tulare Evidence Room was released, revealing a lack of protection of evidence and a lack of professionalism from the technicians who ran it.

 

Later in 2016, TPD Technician Gary Coffman, one of the evidence technicians who processed evidence throughout the case’s investigation, was arrested for stealing from the evidence room, tampering with evidence, embezzlement, drug and weapons possession, and human trafficking

 

The evidence in the Pato’s Place investigation was shaky against Tim to begin with – DNA that could have been linked to Tim was only found in a small complex mixture sample on a tennis shoe recovered from the crime.

Since chain of custody was broken and improperly maintained, the evidence could have been contaminated or tampered with and should never have been admissible in trial.

evidence that should have been inadmissible was USED TO SEND TWO MEN TO DEATH ROW.

THIRD PARTY CULPABILITY

4 people were named in the investigation as suspects, 2 by confession and 2 by a woman named Virginia Walker.

Virginia Walker came to the courthouse at the end of the sentencing phase of Tim’s trial because the police and the prosecutor had refused to respond to her earlier attempts to tell them who was responsible for the murders.

WHY DID TULARE POLICE IGNORE A WOMAN WILLING TO PUT HER LIFE ON THE LINE TO SAVE TIM’S?

HERE’S WHAT WE KNOW.

 

A MAN CONFESSED TO POLICE about his involvement.

 

A man by the name Frost confessed to the police about his involvement in the murders, saying that he was ‘doing something’ for Angulo, the business partner of the bartender who was shot.

Many suspect that Angulo was the intended target of the shooting, because of his involvement with organized crime and drug use and distribution.

 

A WOMAN CONFESSED TO POLICE after being implicated.

 

A woman named Contreras was implicated by Frost. She confessed to the crime, but during her testimony she later recanted her statement.

Witnesses and others who have testified stated that a woman drove the car in the crime.

 

WALKER implicated a different man by the name nicks.

 

Nicks told Walker about a man named Edwards, who confessed to Walker.

 

Walker came to the courthouse on the last day of the trial, desperate to talk to the defense counsel. A member of the defense team spoke with her. Read her statement here.

 

Nicks told Walker of Edwards, who confessed to her. Edwards forced Walker to collect the weapons used in the crime from his home so that they would not be found by law enforcement.

Nicks and Edwards told Walker that a woman was involved in the murders with them.

unreliable witnesses

The only survivor of the Pato’s murders gave a description of the killers that did not match Tim. The informant, the only person who claims to have witnesses the crime, has a biased motive to lie.

 

Transcript of cross examination of Anthony Wolfe.

 
  • Anthony Wolfe testified that he was the third gunman at the Pato’s Place homicides along with Tim. Anthony Wolfe didn’t come forward until 1997, and Tim wasn’t even a person of interest in the investigation until Wolfe started talking to the police. 

    Wolfe’s story constantly changed. He could never keep track of who entered the bar first, who shot first, and if he got a change of clothes in a house or a car. One day he testified he walked in the bar first, the next day he walked in third. One day he suddenly remembered he might have driven Tim to a doctor’s appointment on the day of the murders. One day he leaves out a detail about the murder scene that he had been sure of the day before. 

    Wolfe’s stories were inconsistent, and he had strong motive to lie.

    Wolfe met with police and prosecutors for hours and hours leading up to the trial as they helped him craft his story, but to this day, no physical evidence was ever found that tied Wolfe to the crime scene.

    At trial when, after a ten minute recess, Wolfe realized that he had changed his story regarding which victim was killed first, he informed the court that he wanted to amend his most recent statement.

  • Guadalupe Cantu was the surviving victim to the crime, but his description of the shooters changed during the course of the investigation.

    Cantu said the shooters were 5’8”, skinny Hispanic men. Later, Cantu said they may have been Black. At the time of the murders, Tim was 6’3” and 320 pounds.

    Even the police were skeptical of Cantu’s reliability. They were so unsure of Cantu’s reliability that they released Cantu’s nephew from jail, set up a meeting between him and Cantu and wired him in order to get him to find out what Cantu really saw that night.

    Cantu told his nephew that he would not tell the police anything and, when it came time for retribution, they could be a team. Cantu also stated that one of the victim’s might have known the murderers.

The snitch testimony

Anthony Wolfe sold Tim’s freedom in exchange for his own.

Officers were known to be hostile to Black residents in Kings County and Tulare County. Kings County police officer Benny Velo asked Wolfe for information on the Young family. He told him there was good money for those in the area who snitched, even if was all lies.

Years later, facing a heavy sentencing for forgery, Wolfe begged enforcement to spare him. He offered a narrative where he claimed to have information on Pato’s and the Young brothers.

Wolfe knew Tim. Wolfe was in a relationship with Tim’s family member, and she had asked that Tim help Wolfe out. Wolfe was homeless, just released from prison, and had nowhere to go in 1997.

Tim gave Wolfe money, clothes, and a car. Wolfe in turn gave Tim a death sentence.

On the day of the crime, Wolfe said that he spent all day with Tim until Wolfe was arrested later that night.

But Tim has multiple alibis through witness statements, doctor’s notes and visits, and workplace paperwork that counter Wolfe’s story and the story of the other key witnesses.

Not only this…

Sergeant Garcia, Wolfe’s arresting officer, did not see Tim with Wolfe during the arrest, and testified to this under oath.

 
Almost a decade ago, Northwestern University Law School issued a report finding that over 45% of all wrongful capital convictions, that is all the innocent people who ended up on death row about whom we know, were there because of a lying, compensated informant.
— Professor Alexandra Natapoff, Harvard Law

After he testified against Tim and Donald Young, Wolfe walked free

racial bias

 

Tulare County has a high hispanic population, and a small black population.

Tim and other black Tulare residents were often harassed by the police due to their race. those in power often tried to turn marginalized communities against each other.

 

“People often try to fragment or alienate people of color. But this is a unified front.” -Timothy James Young

 
 

What is the demographic makeup of the people called to jury in tim’s case?

 How many black jurors made it to trial?

 
 

This was no coincidence.

While being questioned by the jury box, the prosecutor in Tim’s case asserted unsubstantiated claims about a Black juror.

After the judge ruled in favor of the defense’s motions that the strike was discriminatory, the prosecutor made a last-ditch effort to have the Black woman removed from jury pool. The prosecutor then gave a story of conflict due to the woman working in a clerical position in the District Attorney’s office and having previously had a workplace dispute with the prosecutor.

Despite the juror having no memory of this event, the prosecutor admitting her memory was “shaky,” and no formal complaints ever filed, the judge accepted the prosecution’s strike – removing the only Black person from serving on the jury.

 

The Supreme Court has upheld rulings that removing jury members from a panel based solely on their race being the same as the defendant’s is unconstitutional and a direct violation of the 6th and 14th amendment.

Tim has been incarcerated for 23 years and still maintains his innocence.

Tim and Lauren, a student at Georgetown University working on his exoneration as part of the course Making an Exoneree.

he’s fought to prove it too.

 

Tim’s conviction relied solely on the false testimony of a snitch and faulty DNA evidence that never should have been admitted at trial. However, Anthony Wolfe’s plea deal, witness coercion, and the prosecution withholding key exculpatory evidence shows the lengths officials were willing to go to conceal the truth

Tim is a victim to a deeply racist judicial system that valued a conviction over fairness and due process. Every part of the criminal legal system has failed him every step of the way.

23 years later, it is time for true justice and Tim’s exoneration.