RA Trial, Advocate TV Interview

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RA Trial, Advocate TV Interview

Postby Project Willow » Fri Apr 28, 2006 3:57 pm

Wanda Karriker, author of Morning Come Quickly <!--EZCODE LINK START--><a href="http://www.morningcomequickly.com">www.morningcomequickly.com</a><!--EZCODE LINK END--> and cowriter of Angel of Life Screenplay <!--EZCODE LINK START--><a href="http://my.dmci.net/~casey/"> http://my.dmci.net/~casey/</a><!--EZCODE LINK END--> <!--EZCODE LINK START--><a href="http://www.white-orchid-agency.com/writers.html">www.white-orchid-agency.com/writers.html</a><!--EZCODE LINK END--> will be on a live phone interview between 10 and 11 est on Monday, May 1st for a five to ten minute interview on Court T.V. Currently they are covering live the murder trial of Father Gerald Robinson from Toledo, OH who is on trial for the murder of an 82 year old nun in the sacristy of the chapel in Mercy Hospital where they both worked. <br><br><br>Wanda's professional expertise surrounding perpetrators and survivors of ritual abuse and her belief that there is a ritual aspect to the murder of the nun will hopefully enable her to advocate and educate a new audience. Please feel free to forward to any interested parties. Hopefully survivors will feel validated by hearing their side of the story told by a dedicated advocate.<br><br><br>Carol Rutz<br><br><br>SRA cult murder of nun by priest, Toledo<br><!--EZCODE LINK START--><a href="http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060207/NEWS02/602070407/-1/NEWS">www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060207/NEWS02/602070407/-1/NEWS</a><!--EZCODE LINK END--><br>February 7, 2006<br><br><br>Witnesses revealed for homicide trial<br>Priest's case includes forensic experts<br><br>A nationally known forensic expert and a forensic anthropologist who inspired the FOX television show Bones are among the witnesses who could testify in the homicide trial of the Rev. Gerald Robinson. With the trial nearly two months away, prosecutors and defense attorneys yesterday revealed in court documents the names of more than 100 potential witnesses, giving the two sides notice about who may appear as witnesses. Father Robinson, 67, is accused in the 1980 slaying of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl. The murder, which occurred in the chapel at the former Mercy Hospital near downtown Toledo, has attracted national attention. <br><br>The prosecution list of witnesses includes renowned forensic expert Henry Lee, who has assisted police around the country in more than 6,000 investigations and has testified in several high-profile cases, including the O.J. Simpson murder trial in 1995. In December, 2004, Mr. Lee visited Toledo and examined evidence in the case. He visited the sacristy where the 71-year-old nun was stabbed and he studied the letter opener believed to be the murder weapon. A list provided to the court by the defense includes Kathleen Reichs, a forensic anthropologist for the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in North Carolina. She is a frequent witness in criminal trials around the country. She is the best-selling author of four mystery novels, and Bones, an investigative drama on the FOX network, is based on the characters and criminal investigations in her books.<br><br><br>Additional witnesses include other forensic experts, retired police officers who were involved in the original investigation, state Bureau of Identification and Investigation specialists, clerics, and nuns who are members of Sister Margaret Ann's order, including her own sister, Sister Laura Marie Pahl. The prosecution's list of 96 witnesses also includes Sister Ann-Marie Borgess, a Notre Dame nun who has accused a former priest of sexually assaulting her when she was a young girl at St. Pius X Church in West Toledo. She has spoken in support of victims of priest abuse. <br><br><br>The defrocked priest, Chet Warren, who was never charged, also is among the people who was identified by prosecutors as a possible witness. The list filed by Father Robinson's attorneys contained fewer names, and more than a dozen of the witnesses were also identified as prosecution witnesses. L.J. Dragovic, Oakland County, Michigan medical examiner, is listed among the defense witnesses. Judge Thomas Osowik ordered the attorneys to file the witness lists during a hearing Friday on unrelated pending motions in the case. He gave them until yesterday to file the information. <br><br><br><br>Did Diocese Handle Nun's Death?<br><br><br>April 27, 2004 <br>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> Sister Margaret Ann Pahl (AP)<br><br><br> <br> <br>(CBS/AP) One of the first police officers at the scene of the 1980 killing of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl in Toledo, Ohio, told CBS News Tuesday that he believed the slaying was not investigated as vigorously as it should have been. <br><br><br>The Rev. Gerald Robinson, a Roman Cathloc priest who worked at the same hospital as the 71-year-old nun, was charged this weekend with the bizarre, ritualistic slaying. He is being held on $200,000 bond. <br><br><br>In an interview on The Early Show, retired Toledo police officer Dave Davison said Robinson's was the only name ever mentioned as a suspect when the crime was first investigated in 1980. <br><br><br>"Everybody I talked to - and I talked to dozens - said either Father Robinson or that they didn't know his name, they said it was a priest," Davison told co-anchor Harry Smith. "I mean, there was no other name mentioned." <br><br><br>Davison, a patrolman at the time, was not involved in the investigation. He happened to be among the first at the scene because he was having breakfast in the hospital cafeteria when the nun's body was found in the chapel. <br><br><br>"A nurse ran down, told us that we should get up to the chapel, that there was a nun dead," Davison recalls. "We ran up. We got there before the call came into the police department, because everybody at the hospital knew us." <br><br><br>The investigation that followed "seemed to go nowhere," the retired officer said. "I mean, you talk to the guys, ask what progress. And basically they would toss you off. So it didn't go anywhere." <br><br><br>One of the police investigators at the time now says that he thought that the case had not been thoroughly investigated, and Davison agrees, suggesting that authorities may have been pressured to keep the investigation stalled. <br><br><br>"You really don't want to call it a coverup," Davison said, noting "I think the diocese took control of him." The priest was removed from Mercy Hospital, where he was practicing, but stayed in Toledo. <br><br><br>"You have to remember on our department, the people in the upper command levels that had control on this are good Catholics. And I'm sure that some kind of friendly deal was cut. I think basically he was under house arrest under the church care." <br><br><br>After he retired, Davison petitioned to get information on the case, but the status of the case was changed. "They started giving me the information," he said. "They reread what they were giving me. It was a cold case, inactive. They put it in active status, which under the Freedom of Information Act, they don't have to give you anything. It stopped. It dried up." <br><br><br>Although Father Robinson officiated at the nun's funeral, he remained a suspect, but time passed without anyone being charged. <br><br><br>Then just last year, police got a break. A Toledo woman came forward claiming she'd been sexually abused as a child by Catholic priests during Satanic rituals. Although her claims haven't been proven, her mention of Father Robinson convinced detectives to re-open the murder case. <br><br><br>Robinson made an initial appearance Monday in Toledo Municipal Court. Judge Mary Trimboli set bail at $200,000 and scheduled a preliminary hearing for next Monday. <br><br><br>No plea was entered and Robinson did not speak during the brief court session. <br><br><br>After the hearing, friends and supporters of the priest were trying to raise bail money, said Robinson's attorney, John Thebes. <br><br><br>"I think he's over the initial shock," Thebes said. He said he expects the case to be presented to a grand jury this week. <br><br><br>He said the case would be difficult to prosecute. <br><br><br>"Witnesses die, witnesses' memories become faded over time," he said. "Twenty-four years is a heck of a long time. It's difficult to ascertain who was where, who said what. There are many, many issues that have to be delved into." <br><br><br>Police detective Steve Forrester and Tom Ross, an investigator with the Lucas County prosecutor's office, told The Blade newspaper that the nun's killing was part of a "ceremony" in the chapel. They would not elaborate. <br><br><br>In December, authorities re-examined old evidence and concluded that the murder weapon, which they did not identify, was "in the control of the suspect." They used "blood transfer patterns," a rarely used technique that analyzes the patterns made when an item is laid down. DNA evidence was not a factor, Forrester said. <br><br><br>A message seeking additional comment was left with Ross on Sunday. <br><br><br>The woman whose allegations led to the reopening of the case testified before the Diocesan Review Board on June 11 and wrote a detailed statement alleging years of abuse by priests during her childhood. <br><br><br>"She did mention Father Robinson and that he was involved in the ritualistic abuse of her," said Claudia Vercelloti, a director of the Toledo office for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and has been in contact with the woman. <br><br><br>The woman, now in her 40s, described satanic ceremonies in which priests placed her in a coffin filled with cockroaches, forced her to ingest what she believed to be a human eyeball and penetrated her with a snake "to consecrate these orifices to Satan." <br><br><br>She also alleged that the clerics killed an infant and a 3-year-old child, performed an abortion on her and mutilated dogs during the rituals, according to a copy of her statement. <br><br><br>Before his arrest, Robinson was performing pastoral care at nursing homes and hospitals in the Toledo area, the Toledo diocese said. <br><br><br>Vercelloti said on Sunday that the woman did not know that Robinson had been a suspect in Sister Pahl's killing. "I don't know if she knew what she was setting in motion," she said. <br><br><br>The woman's allegations were brought to the attention of prosecutors in a letter received in December, assistant prosecutor Gary Cook said Monday. He would not say who sent the letter. <br><br><br>The diocese had decided against giving the allegations to authorities, said Sally Oberski, a diocese spokeswoman. <br><br><br>"They were found to be non-credible," she said Sunday. The allegations were against several priests and Robinson's "name was mentioned among several others." <br><br><br>Vercelloti said the diocese should have given the information to police and prosecutors because Robinson had been a suspect in the nun's death. <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=projectwillow@rigorousintuition>Project Willow</A> at: 4/28/06 2:00 pm<br></i>
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Re: RA Trial, Advocate TV Interview

Postby sw » Fri Apr 28, 2006 6:48 pm

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Re: RA Trial, Advocate TV Interview

Postby Project Willow » Sat Apr 29, 2006 2:03 am

Hi sw!<br><br>The connections are very creepy.<br><br>I'm going to try to catch this interview somehow. I'm excited that such a strong advocate will have the opportunity to speak. <p></p><i></i>
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RA trial, Advocate TV Interview

Postby mother » Sat Apr 29, 2006 2:36 pm

I am so tempted to get a TV for this trial. I need to see it for myself, and transcripts never give the non-verbal info. <p></p><i></i>
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hi

Postby sw » Sat Apr 29, 2006 7:26 pm

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