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Gaia- 11-29-2005
Brian Dugan indicted in Jeanine Nicarico murder
Brian Dugan indicted in Nicarico case November 29, 2005 (WHEATON, Ill.) - The DuPage County state's attorney says convicted murderer Brian Dugan has been indicted for the 1983 abduction, rape and murder of 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico (pictured) of Naperville. The ten-year-old was abducted from her Naperville home, raped and murdered. Two young men -- Rolando Cruz and Alejandro Hernandez -- were convicted and condemned to death. But over the next decade appeals courts twice reversed the convictions. Cruz was acquitted during a third trial in 1995 after spending almost a decade on death row. The case put Illinois' death penalty system into the national spotlight. Prosecutors since then have focused on Brian Dugan, who confessed to the murder years ago but was never charged. DuPage County State's Attorney Joe Birkett plans to announce the grand jury's findings at a news conference this evening. ABC 7 Chicago

Gaia- 11-29-2005

November 29, 2005 (WHEATON, Ill.) - Convicted murderer Brian Dugan was indicted Tuesday for the 1983 abduction, rape and murder of 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico of Naperville. The 15-count indictment against Dugan, 49, is the latest development in a 22-year-old case that put Illinois' capital punishment system under a national spotlight after two men who were convicted of the crime and sent to death row were freed years later. "This is the result of a full and open minded investigation of the facts and circumstances of this case," Birkett said at a press conference to announce the indictment. Nicarico was home alone from school recovering from the flu on Feb. 25, 1983, when she was abducted, leaving no sign but fingernail scratches on the wall near the kicked-in front door. Birkett said Tuesday that Dugan raped and bludgeoned the girl to death. Her body was later found in a nature preserve. Rolando Cruz and Alejandro Hernandez were convicted of the crime and condemned to death in 1985, but appeals courts over the following decade twice reversed the convictions. Cruz was acquitted during a third trial in 1995 after spending almost a decade on death row, and prosecutors later dropped the charges against Hernandez. ABC 7 Chicago

Gaia- 12-05-2005

Dec 2, 1:57 PM EST Ill. Death Penalty Case Back in Court By DON BABWIN Associated Press Writer CHICAGO (AP) -- A 10-year-old girl by the name of Jeanine Nicarico helped to transform the debate over the death penalty in America. In 1983, Jeanine was kidnapped from her home outside Chicago, raped and murdered. During the two decades that followed, two men were tried over and over amid allegations that sheriff's deputies and prosecutors concealed and fabricated evidence and put lying jailhouse snitches on the stand. Ultimately, Rolando Cruz was acquitted at his third trial in 1995, and the charges against Alejandro Hernandez were dropped the same year after his conviction was overturned for the second time. The furor over the case set in motion a chain of events: It led to other investigations in Illinois that freed prisoners wrongfully convicted of murder. It played a key role in then-Gov. George Ryan's decision to suspend all executions and clear out the state's death row in 2003 of all 167 inmates. And it helped change the terms of the death penalty debate in the United States. Instead of arguing over the morality of capital punishment or whether it deters crime, politicians and activists found themselves questioning the reliability of the criminal justice system and contemplating the risk that an innocent person might be put to death. "This case helped break the myth that the system is infallible," said Diann Rust-Tierney, executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. Rob Warden, director of Northwestern University's Center on Wrongful Convictions, said: "I do not believe any of this would have happened without the Cruz case." Both sides of the death penalty debate were reminded of that this week when 49-year-old Brian Dugan, who implicated himself in the crime a full decade ago, was finally charged in Jeanine's slaying. Dugan is already serving two life sentences for the murder of a little girl and a woman. "The thing that is so important here is that if (prosecutors) had had their way, Rolando Cruz and Alejandro Hernandez would be dead today," Warden said. The case against the two men had more twists than a Scott Turow novel. They were originally found guilty and sentenced to death, but one conviction after another was thrown out by the state Supreme Court. The case came roaring back in 1996 when former prosecutors and DuPage County sheriff's officers were charged with lying and concealing evidence. They were later acquitted. The furor played a major role in Ryan's decision to assemble a Commission on Capital Punishment in 2000 to determine what was wrong with the state's death penalty system, which had wrongfully convicted 13 men since Illinois reinstated capital punishment in the 1970s. Ultimately, Ryan concluded that the system was "haunted by the demon of error" and that the risk was too high that an innocent person might be executed. Also, the Jeanine Nicarico murder was "sort of the really big case that drove the media to look at others" around the country, said Illinois defense attorney Theodore Gottfried, a commission member. Locke Bowman, legal director of the MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Chicago, said the case was instrumental in changing the discussion of the death penalty. "The unraveling of the case was so dramatic and so fraught with problems that I think that in Illinois the case began to focus attention away from the topics that had dominated the death penalty debate and toward the question of innocence and systemic error and wrongful convictions," he said. The commission made two major recommendations that were prompted in part by the Jeanine Nicarico case, urging that interrogations of murder suspects be recorded and that a judge determine the reliability of jailhouse informants before they testify. Both of those were adopted by the Legislature. In the past few years, the state has also given the Illinois Supreme Court greater power to throw out unjust verdicts, offered defendants more access to evidence and barred the death penalty in cases that depend on a single witness. Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich has kept the moratorium on executions in place while he sees how the changes work. Times Dispatch

Gaia- 05-22-2006

This case is now in Awaiting Trials.

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