Current:Home > FinanceMissouri attorney general says not so fast on freeing woman jailed for 43 years in 1980 killing -FundGuru
Missouri attorney general says not so fast on freeing woman jailed for 43 years in 1980 killing
View
Date:2025-04-23 05:18:55
Missouri top prosecutor asked a court Tuesday to put the brakes on releasing a woman from prison in a 1980 killing that her attorneys allege was committed by a now-discredited police officer.
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey also said his office will ask the state appeals court to review a judge’s ruling last week that found Sandra Hemme’s attorneys had established evidence of actual innocence. In that decision, Judge Ryan Horsman wrote that Hemme, who has been imprisoned for 43 years for the murder of library worker Patricia Jeschke, must be freed within 30 days unless prosecutors retry her.
Hemme’s legal team at the Innocence Project says she is the longest-known wrongly incarcerated woman in the U.S. They have asked that she be released immediately, saying she poses no danger.
“Ms. Hemme is a sixty-four year old woman whose family is desperate to reunite with her,” her attorneys said in an email to The Associated Press on Tuesday. “She is entitled to be released pending further proceedings and we will continue to fight until she is home.”
But Bailey’s office argued in its motion Tuesday that Hemme has made statements about enjoying violence and that she attacked a prison worker with a razor blade. Hemme pleaded guilty in that attack in 1996.
Horsman found that she was in a “malleable mental state” and under heavy medication when investigators questioned her in a psychiatric hospital about Jeschke’s death. The judge also found that prosecutors withheld evidence about Michael Holman, the discredited St. Joseph police officer who was investigated for insurance fraud and burglaries. He later went to prison and died in 2015.
It started on Nov. 13, 1980, when Jeschke, 31, missed work. Her worried mother climbed through a window at her St. Joseph apartment and discovered her daughter’s nude body on the floor, surrounded by blood. Her hands were tied behind her back with a telephone cord. A pair of pantyhose was wrapped around her throat. A knife was under her head.
Hemme wasn’t on the radar of police until she showed up nearly two weeks later at the home of a nurse who once treated her, carrying a knife and refusing to leave.
Police took her back to St. Joseph’s Hospital, the latest in a string of hospitalizations that began when she started hearing voices at the age of 12.
She had been discharged from that very hospital the day before Jeschke’s body was found, showing up at her parents house later that night after hitchhiking more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) to Concordia.
The timing seemed suspicious to law enforcement. As the interrogations began, Hemme was being treated with antipsychotic drugs that triggered involuntary muscle spasms. She complained that her eyes were rolling back in her head, her attorneys wrote in a petition seeking her release.
Detectives noted that Hemme seemed “mentally confused” and not fully able to comprehend their questions.
At one point she blamed the killing on a man whom she met in a detoxification unit. But prosecutors dropped their case against him upon learning he was at an alcohol treatment center in Topeka, Kansas, at the time of the killing.
Ultimately, she pleaded guilty to capital murder in exchange for the death penalty being taken off the table. That plea was thrown out on appeal. But she was convicted again in 1985 after a one-day trial in which jurors weren’t told about what her current attorneys describe as “grotesquely coercive” interrogations.
Horsman found the only evidence tying Hemme to the killing was her “unreliable statements.” There was, however, evidence that “directly ties Holman to this crime and murder scene,” he wrote.
A pickup truck that Holman falsely reported stolen was spotted near the crime scene, and the officer’s alibi that he spent the night with a woman at a nearby motel couldn’t be confirmed.
Furthermore, he had tried to use Jeschke’s credit card at a camera store in Kansas City, Missouri, on the same day her body was found. Holman, who ultimately was fired, said he found the card in a purse that had been discarded in a ditch.
During a search of Holman’s home, police found a pair of gold horseshoe-shaped earrings that Jeschke’s father said he had bought for his daughter.
But then the four-day investigation into Holman’s role in the killing ended abruptly, and many of the details were never given to Hemme’s attorneys.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Tiger Woods' partnership with Nike is over. Here are 5 iconic ads we'll never forget
- Dua Lipa Hilariously Struggles to Sit in Her Viral Bone Dress at the Golden Globes
- NASA set to unveil experimental X-59 aircraft aimed at commercial supersonic travel
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Kenyan court: Charge doomsday cult leader within 2 weeks or we release him on our terms
- How Texas officials stymied nonprofits' efforts to help migrants they bused to northern cities
- 'Poor Things' director praises Bruce Springsteen during Golden Globes acceptance speech: Watch
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- 'The Mandalorian' is coming to theaters: What we know about new 'Star Wars' movie
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Nearly a third of Americans expect mortgage rates to fall in 2024
- Margot Robbie wears pink Golden Globes dress inspired by Barbie Signature 1977 Superstar doll
- Indiana man serving 20-year sentence dies at federal prison in Michigan
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Michigan's Jim Harbaugh has a title, seat at the 'big person's table.' So is this goodbye?
- Iowa school shooter's parents say they had 'no inkling of horrible violence'
- Sinéad O'Connor died of natural causes, coroner says
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Melanie Mel B Brown Reveals Victoria Beckham Is Designing Her Wedding Dress
'Poor Things' director praises Bruce Springsteen during Golden Globes acceptance speech: Watch
National title puts Michigan at No. 1 in college football's final NCAA Re-Rank 1-133
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Red Cross declares an emergency blood shortage, as number of donors hits 20-year low
Natalie Portman, Julianne Moore respond to 'May December' inspiration Vili Fualaau's criticism
'The impacts are real': New satellite images show East Coast sinking faster than we thought