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Through the Darkness
By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ
MIAMI--On the morning of March 26, promptly at 11, former Miami
police officer Grant Snowden strode through the doors of the sprawling
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, surrounded
by federal marshals and state guards. As he came into view, the
crowd of family members and friends pacing outside Courtroom 10
surged forward, his youngest brother clenching hands to his temple,
his sister calling his name. Looking straight ahead, the prisoner
joined his voice to the marshals ordering everyone to stand back,
a direction the family at once obeyed. Eyes fixed on the procession
sweeping past, they stood clumped together, breathless simply at
the sight of their brother, their son and their father, out in the
world again, for however short a time.
The last time Grant Snowden appeared in a courtroom was in April
1986, just after the Dade County state attorney's office had succeeded,
after long effort, in winning a conviction against him on child
sex assault charges. That April day, the trial judge asked if he
had anything he wished to say. He had, and what he had to say was
brief. "You are fixing to sentence an innocent man," he told Judge
Amy Lee Donner, before she sentenced him to five life terms.
In the years since, the state courts had refused all his appeals,
notwithstanding the ample record of fantastic efforts to get children
to say Grant had molested them--and notwithstanding, either, the
lack of evidence that any such crime had been committed. Finally,
this February, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned
his conviction--a decision the state announced it would fight all
the way. Further, Assistant Attorney General Michael Neimand declared,
his office would strenuously oppose any effort to release the prisoner
on bail--although, he assured New York attorney Robert Rosenthal,
who argued the successful appeal, his office had nothing personal
against Mr. Snowden.
Not Going the State's Way
Whether the state's attorneys would succeed in the effort to keep
Grant Snowden in prison while they appealed the 11th Circuit's decision
or whether the judge would defer a decision on bail--as many prognosticators
guessed he would--was the question before the court on March 26.
And the answer was not long in coming. Shortly after the crowd filed
into the courtroom, it became clear that things would not be going
the state's way. Flanked by Mr. Rosenthal, who made the argument
for bail, and his Florida lawyer, Arthur Cohen, Mr. Snowden sat
and listened, along with everyone else, as the assistant attorney
general instructed the judge in the reasons this court had no authority
to grant bail. Judge William C. Turnoff listened affably as Mr.
Neimand expatiated on his argument--after which the judge addressed
Grant Snowden.
He had never been convicted of any crime before these charges
had come along, had he? asked the judge, who was well versed in
the facts of this case. He had not. And how long had he spent in
prison? the judge asked.
"Twelve years, your honor."
The question struck a nerve, as did the answer. Up near the magistrate's
bench, tears gleamed in the eyes of a court attendant--not the only
one in the room in this condition. In short order the judge granted
bail ($50,000, secured by family property) and set some standard
restrictions governing travel and curfew. Next came the question
of what additional restrictions the state wanted the judge to impose
on Mr. Snowden, a question the assistant attorney general seemed
unprepared to answer--though in due course the state did rise to
ask for one urgent stricture. Namely that Mr. Snowden be prohibited
from talking to the press and television people when released--a
request that caused spectators to turn and stare at one another.
Judge Turnoff dryly informed the assistant attorney general that
he didn't think this encroachment on First Amendment rights would
be quite in order. The hearing over, a moderate bedlam followed
as relatives embraced or raced for phones, then settled down to
wait for the lawyers to bring Grant out.
Grant Snowden was one of six children born to a struggling mother--children
who had brought one another up in a hardscrabble early life, who
had watched over each other and forged inseparable bonds. With the
first charges, the pursuit by then-Dade County prosecutor Janet
Reno's office, and the sentence had come the agony that had settled
on all their lives--lives, like those of Fells Acres Day School
defendant Gerald Amirault's family in Massachusetts, lived under
an unrelenting weight, though seemingly normal.
Shortly after Grant was first taken off to prison, his grief-maddened
brother Terry took a plane to New York, a city in which he had never
set foot. Impelled by a force barely comprehensible to him, the
35-year-old Floridian wandered the midtown streets till he found
the CBS building. Somehow he managed to make his way to the CBS
cafeteria, where he found, miraculously, someone from "60 Minutes"--exactly
who he was looking for. Descending on Ed Bradley, he babbled the
rough details of the story, offering to deliver any documents and
proof needed. Nothing would come of this encounter, Terry quickly
learned, as nothing would come of any lawyers' efforts over the
years. Nothing, that is, until this day.
An hour after the court session ended, the released prisoner and
his lawyers came walking through the door. All that remained now
was a trip to the holding center for final paperwork. A dozen years
earlier, the once-honored police officer had been marched into the
Lake Butler reception center, where he had been forced to walk naked
to his isolation cell, a cardboard box of possessions clasped before
him: Now he stepped into the bright glare of a Miami day. On the
courthouse steps, press photographers took pictures of the freed
man--lean, with a still-quick smile and auburn hair, as his prison
ID described it: an attractive 51 all told, even in the shambling
suit someone had thought to bring on the chance things turned out
as they did.
A man away 12 years had much to catch up with. During the drive
to the holding center, the phones rang incessantly. How, he marveled
in the midst of the excitement, could a portable phone have the
range to reach New York?
At his mother's house, finally, everyone gathered, a festive assemblage
in which Mr. Snowden's small grandchildren and nieces and nephews
swarmed around talking as though he had been around every day of
their lives. Swarming around, too, were members of the press. The
assistant attorney general's worries about all the news this story
would make were now about to be borne out, as television reporters
crowded the living room, preparing broadcasts on the long-forgotten
Snowden case.
When prosecutors answer challenges to these once headline-making
cases, they invariably make the same argument: The jury heard all
the testimony and arguments, the jury had spoken, and that should
be the end of it. But the jury had little idea of the way the prosecutors
had come by the testimony dredged from four- and five-year-olds
by zealots flashing their naked dolls, by the let's-pretend games
and bribes, the lies and wheedling about how other children had
helped everyone by telling the yucky secrets.
Nor could defense lawyers raising such matters at trial have a
chance against the reigning certitude, pounded home by prosecutors'
sex-abuse experts, that little children don't lie about sex and
would never be capable of making up stories about bad touches and
the more grotesque sexual detail about what Grant, or Gerald or
Violet or Cheryl Amirault, was supposed to have done, if it had
not been part of their experience. The jurors could not know, of
course, that the children's suddenly rich vocabulary of sex reference,
their talk about bums, pee-pees and secret rooms with naked clowns,
began only after the investigators went to work on them with their
interrogations.
Convicted on such testimony from children, the doomed went off
to their prisons and there the prosecutors are determined they must
stay, though the truth about these cases and their manufactured
evidence is no longer news. In Miami Mr. Rosenthal, who handled
Mr. Snowden's appeal, recalls the conversation in which Assistant
Attorney General Neimand informed him that his office would do all
in its power to undo the circuit court's decision--and that this
had nothing to do with the merits of the case or Mr. Snowden's guilt
or innocence. Asked if there was anyone in the office of the Florida
attorney general, Robert A. Butterworth, or of the Dade County state
attorney, Katherine Rundell--anyone who might be concerned with
the question of truth and justice in this prosecution--Mr. Neimand
explained, again, that this was not the issue. And that further,
the attorney general and the state attorney were elected officials;
as such they had a duty to do the people's bidding. (Mr. Neimand
did not return repeated phone calls seeking comment.)
In Massachusetts, Gerald Amirault remains in prison, where he
has been since 1986, while his sister Cheryl faces reimprisonment,
if the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts so rules. The legal
struggle in both cases is now at the final, crucial pass--a problem,
given the fact that the Amiraults' legal defense fund is now entirely
depleted.
The prosecutors' passion to hold on to their convictions is, of
course, never depleted, as these cases so eloquently testify. In
1995, Superior Court Judge Robert A. Barton overturned the convictions
of Cheryl Amirault and her mother, Violet, freeing them from Framingham
prison, where they had served eight years. Gerald Amirault was not
so fortunate, his appeal for reversal having come before Judge Elizabeth
Dolan, who had presided over his much-publicized trial and won plaudits
for devising special seating arrangements for child witnesses--the
pinnacle of her career, by all accounts. Judge Dolan was not likely
to second-guess herself, or anything else in this important event.
Two years later, the Supreme Judicial Court reinstated Violet's
and Cheryl's convictions. Matters now became complicated as--just
before the women were to go back to prison--their convictions were
again overturned, this time by Middlesex Superior Court Judge Isaac
Borenstein.
In February--the Supreme Judicial Court having agreed to defer
ruling on the prosecutor's appeal of this second reversal--the Amiraults'
lawyers, Daniel R. Williams and James Sultan, presented two days
of detailed exhibition of the methods the commonwealth's investigators
used to gather testimony from children. This extraordinarily colorful
hearing before Judge Borenstein--who will be filing his findings
with the Supreme Judicial Court--concerned only the child witnesses
against Cheryl (Violet having died last fall). The testimony in
her case, of course, was exactly the same as in Gerald's trial--which
means that whatever results emerge from these proceedings must certainly
affect him as well.
The prosecutors' leading interviewer was Susan Kelley, whose devoted
efforts to obtain disclosures are well known to anyone acquainted
with the records. Of her many interrogations--every connoisseur
of the case has, of course his own favorite--none, perhaps, is more
characteristic of the prosecutors' search for truth than the one
involving the "elephant game." Having heard that a child--otherwise
not forthcoming with details about abuse--had mentioned an elephant
game at home, the interviewer proceeded to the hunt, evidently with
visions of disclosures about Gerald Amirault, or perhaps Violet,
in costume molesting children.
"Was this a real elephant or somebody dressed up as an elephant?"
Ms. Kelley asked the child.
Child: Somebody dressed up.
Ms. Kelley: Was it a man or lady dressed like an elephant?
Child: It was a lady dressed like an elephant.
Ms. Kelley: Was it a naked elephant did you say?
Child: No, lady.
The interviewer's deep desire to hear about nakedness had clearly
intervened here. But the elephant hunt had only just begun. "What
was the elephant doing?" Ms. Kelley wanted to know.
Child: Just standing.
Ms. Kelley: Oh, really. Were any of the private parts showing
on the elephant?
The child could not say. Next came a string of urgent questions
about a bowl of ice cream, and licking the bowl--which, the child
maintained, was in the kitchen. A disappointing answer.
Ms. Kelley: But you said it was in the secret room with the elephant.
Child: No.
It was all downhill from here as the interviewer proceeded to
ask the girl if she had seen a penis on the elephant. "He just has
a tail," came the answer.
Ms. Kelley: Did you ever see ice cream on the tail of the elephant?
Child: No.
On the basis of such evidence, the authority of such investigators,
the prosecutors built the charges that swept the Amiraults off to
prison. Later the prosecutors presided over a celebratory seminar
titled "The Fells Acres Day School Case: A Model Multidisciplinary
Response."
'Oh My God!'
In February, outside the courtroom where Mr. Williams showed videotapes
of the children being interrogated, a knot of reporters watched
the proceedings on television. "Oh my God!" one journalist howled
in disbelief, as she listened to the investigator's determined questioning
and the resulting stories about stabbing and slaughtered animals.
"Oh my God!" a Miami-based reporter similarly exclaimed recently,
when confronted with the Snowden story and the way the child witnesses
had come to produce their accusations. It is a common response as
the facts about these prosecutions emerge. There will be much more
to say when the history of these cases is studied, as it surely
will be, along with the activities of the prosecutors--still busy,
in Massachusetts as elsewhere, proclaiming that the jury had heard
all the arguments, and the jury had spoken.
The future will have something to say, too, about the judges who
lent themselves to the mania of the times--inventing new rules of
evidence, crediting the incredible--and about those, too, who valued
the machinery of procedure more than the claims of justice.
Not all did, which is, of course, why Grant Snowden walked out
of the darkness of 12 years imprisonment. The same amount of time
an impoverished and innocent Gerald Amirault has endured behind
bars.
Ms. Rabinowitz is a member of the Journal editorial board.
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