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Prosecution of Rodricus Crawford

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Criminal charge
  
Murder

Name
  
Prosecution Rodricus

Parent(s)
  
Mother: Abbie

Criminal penalty
  
Death


Prosecution of Rodricus Crawford imagesdailykoscomimages153650storyimageRodr

Victims
  
Roderius Lott, his infant son

Date
  
February 16, 2012 7:00 AM

Criminal status
  
Awaiting execution

Prosecution of Rodricus Crawford Top # 7 Facts


The prosecution of Rodricus Crawford attracted national media attention, because of extensive use of the death penalty in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, and comments made by the prosecutor. Rodricus Crawford, a young black man, was tried and sentenced to death in 2013 for killing his one-year-old son. The conviction greatly depended upon a disputed pathology report.

Contents

Crawford claimed his son had been sleeping next to him, and was unresponsive when Crawford awoke in the morning. When police arrived, they asked about a bruise on the infant's lip. Crawford replied that his son had fallen in the bathroom the day before. Crawford denied that he had accidentally slept on top of his son.

That same day, James Traylor, a police pathologist, determined that the bruise on the infant's lip indicated smothering and other bruises indicated child abuse. Traylor also noticed signs of pneumonia in the infant's lungs, but did not consider it serious enough to cause death. Based upon Traylor's conclusions, district attorney Dale Cox charged Crawford with homicide, and asked for the death penalty. The scientific validity of Traylor's conclusions has been questioned before, during, and after the trial. In 2016, the conviction was overturned due to additional pathology reports and allegations of prosecution misconduct.

During his conviction, Crawford was the second youngest man on death row, and was held at Louisiana State Penitentiary, commonly called Angola.

Families

At age 23, Crawford had been living with his mother, brother, sister, grandmother, and uncle, in Mooretown, a neighborhood in Shreveport. The mother of his son is Lakendra Lott, a close friend Crawford had known since childhood. Both of them have daughters from other relationships. Lott lived with her family several houses away.

Conflicting pathology reports

Crawford's defense attorney Daryl Gold hired pathologist Daniel Spitz, who co-authored a pathology text book with his father Werner Spitz. The book is widely used in medical schools. Daniel Spitz determined the infant died from pneumonia. However, Spitz was not well prepared for prosecutor Cox's cross examination, especially when Cox brought up a mistake Spitz had once made in another case. Since the trial, several other pathologists have questioned the scientific validity of the original conclusion that the infant died from suffocation. The case depends almost entirely on how to interpret complex pathology data.

Trial and conviction

Crawford was tried in Shreveport Louisiana and found guilty in November 2013. During the penalty phase of the trial, the defense called character witnesses, including his mother and brother. During cross examination, the prosecution brought up the facts that Crawford had dropped out of high school, had no job, and smoked marijuana, even though it was against the law. The same facts are also true for many of the other residents of his neighborhood.

Shreveport is the county seat for Caddo Parish, where juries have sentenced more persons to death than any other county in the United States. Prosecutor Cox, who won more than a third of death sentences in the county, has stated "I'm a believer that the death penalty serves society's interest in revenge." Cox also sent a letter to Crawford's probation officer, stating “I am sorry that Louisiana has adopted lethal injection as the form of implementing the death penalty. Mr. Crawford deserves as much physical suffering as it is humanly possible to endure before he dies.”

As Crawford's attorney expected, his first appeal was denied by the Supreme Court of Louisiana on November 14, 2014.

Release

In November 2016, Crawford's conviction was overturned by the Louisiana Supreme Court, who found that additional pathology reports indicated his son died from pneumonia, and that Prosecutor Cox may have discriminated against black jurors during jury selection. Crawford was released on bond, and his case is being re-evaluated by a new district attorney.

On April 17, 2017, the Caddo Parish District Attorney's Office formally dismissed all charges against Mr. Crawford.

References

Prosecution of Rodricus Crawford Wikipedia