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Gerald Amirault on WEEI (yes Coakley came up)

"When you're accused of something as heinous as child molestation, people are very reluctant to do anything.

And it takes years and years and years for the media to catch up with something like this. And once they did and once the Wall Street Journal starting taking an interest in my case, which is a very conservative law and order type of a newspaper, it kind of put up the antennas for everyone else ...

We always felt that if they would look at this, they would see the injustice that happened to my family."- Gerald Amirault, January 14, 2010

Give it a listen. They talk about the case, the evidence, how Gerald coped with being found guilty and a prison sentence, the prisons he spent time in, his efforts to regain his freedom and Martha Coakley's role in that history.

Gerald was found guilty and incarcerated in July 1986 with a 20 year sentence. He had a wife and kids and therefore a lot to live for, "I loved my family, I love my kids," he said this morning on the radio. When asked what was going through his mind at the time of his incarceration he said, "I've got to find a way to get used to it and be able to live in the environment."

If you're not familiar with the Fells Acres child rape case, here's brief summary:

Starting in 1984, the office of Middlesex County DA Scott Harshbarger announced that Violet Amirault, her daughter Cheryl Amirault LeFave, and her son Gerald Amirault, owners of the successful 20-year-old Fells Acres day-care center in Malden MA, had suddenly converted it into a factory of child pornography and the most horrifying ritual abuse of helpless toddlers. Juries were persuaded to convict the Amiraults in 1986 (Gerald) and 1987 (Violet and Cheryl), due exclusively to the coached testimony of 3- and 4-year old children. No physical evidence or adult witness for any of the charges was ever found, despite the fact that the day-care center had always been open to a steady stream of unannounced parents and tradesmen. Starting in 1991, psychologists demonstrated how the leading questions used in cases like Fells Acres can brainwash child witnesses, but the Massachusetts legal establishment has, despite the valiant efforts of three Middlesex County trial judges, refused to correct a scandal.

After nine years in prison, during 1995, Gerald said he saw some news coverage of a day care center child molestation case in New Jersey, and wrote the reporter who covered the case, and asked her to look at his case too. She did. The reporter was Dorothy Rabinowitz of the Wall Street Journal and her coverage of Gerald's case was part of the work cited when she won the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.

After twelve years in prison, during 1998, Gerald's mothers Violet and sister Cheryl were released having won a new trial. Martha Coakley decided to not retry Cheryl. So the case was back in the news at that time and Gerald hears "Governor Celluci make a comment in the media saying he thought Fells Acres was a very serious injustice." So Gerald suggested to his lawyer they go for a commutation request before the parole board because he believes if the parole board will grant a commutation recommendation, the Governor will too.

After fifteen years of incarceration, in July of 2001, the Massachusetts Parole Board unanimously recommends Gerald's sentence be commuted to time served, saying that "...clear and convincing evidence that his further incarceration would constitute gross unfairness."

But then Gerald explains,

"Gov Celluci decided to become the ambassador to Canada and Jane Swift takes over. I knew I was going to have problem... And Martha Coakley was the DA at the time, and she rallied the parents and got them to go up to the state house and try to effect Gov. Swift's decision, which she did."

In August 2001, DA Martha Coakley recruited some accusers to campaign with her on local talk-shows against Gerald Amirault. Subsequently, Jane Swift decided to not grant the commutation of Gerald Amirault's prison sentence.

Gerald goes on to make some harsh judgments about Martha and Harshbarger and Reilly.

"You've got to remember that Martha Coakley, Scott Harshbarger and Tom Reilly were all in the same district attorney's office. They're all friends. They don't have the courage to say they made a mistake in this case."

Dennis or Callahan ask Gerald, "Did she know you were innocent, did she know you were railroaded?"

"I don't think she would ever say that in public but I'll tell you, as a lawyer, and knowing the facts in this case, if she didn't know it after she saw what happened, and the things she knows they had to change, since my case. (They don't do things...) They use my case and the interviewing techniques that were used in my case as a tool to teach people in college how not to do an investigation."

So what Gerald is saying is that if Martha is worth her salt as an attorney, and she is reported to be an excellent attorney, she would have to know that Gerald did not get a fair trial because of the interviewing techniques that were used during the investigation are now taught in law school as how NOT to do an investigation.

On Friday, April 30 2004, after eighteen years of incarceration, Gerald Amirault was released on parole.

Three months ago, during the primary David Kravitz of Blue Mass Group contacted Martha Coakley to ask if she stood by her 2001 decision to oppose the Massachusetts Parole Board's 5-0 recommendation that Gerald Amirault's sentence be commuted to time served.

Kravitz, a former Supreme Court justice clerk for Sandra Day O'Conner, gave Martha Coakley an opportunity to express what every other person in the Commonwealth who has looked at the facts in the case knows, Gerald Amirault was not guilt of child molestation and child rape, instead he was wrongly convicted and wrongly incarcerated for almost two decades.

Here's how Kravitz frames the question to Coakley: "I asked her campaign whether Coakley stands by her decision in 2001 to oppose the Massachusetts Parole Board's 5-0 recommendation that Gerald Amirault's sentence be commuted to time served, and if she would do anything differently if she had it to do over again." And here's how Martha Coakley responded:

"Gerald Amirault, after a three month trial that included extensive victim testimony, physical evidence, and expert witness testimony, was convicted by a jury of his peers on all counts in 1986.


In the years that followed, Mr. Amirault appealed his convictions to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) three times, and to the First Circuit Court of Appeals once.


On each occasion, after a careful review of the law and facts, including all of the investigative and interview techniques employed by the Commonwealth, the courts determined that Mr. Amirault's convictions were sound and that he received a fair trial.


To this day, all of Mr. Amirault's victims steadfastly maintain his guilt, and in fact came forward to publicly identify themselves in opposing his commutation. It is also important to note that to date, three Massachusetts Governors have each reviewed Mr. Amirault's case and each denied commuting his sentence.


Based on my own extensive experience with child abuse investigations and cases, and my thorough review of all the evidence, including that which is often taken out of context and deemed "exculpatory," I also believe the convictions were sound, and that he received a fair trial. It is for all of the above reasons that I, as Middlesex District Attorney, opposed his commutation, and I stand by that decision to this day."

Martha may be the only person in the state who thinks Gerald Amirault raped and molested little kids wearing a clown suit and using long knives. Either that or she is committed to Gerald's guilt because of her position in 2001 or because of her former boss Scott Harshbarger's position in 1985 or both. Either way, what is the merit is promoting a person from Attorney General to US Senate when they can't or wont recognize injustice before their very eyes?

Dorothy Rabinowitz cannot let it lie either. She writes in today Wall Street Journal:

Attorney General Martha Coakley—who had proven so dedicated a representative of the system that had brought the Amirault family to ruin, and who had fought so relentlessly to preserve their case—has recently expressed her view of this episode. Questioned about the Amiraults in the course of her current race for the U.S. Senate, she told reporters of her firm belief that the evidence against the Amiraults was "formidable" and that she was entirely convinced "those children were abused at day care center by the three defendants."

What does this say about her candidacy? (Ms. Coakley declined to be interviewed.) If the current attorney general of Massachusetts actually believes, as no serious citizen does, the preposterous charges that caused the Amiraults to be thrown into prison—the butcher knife rape with no blood, the public tree-tying episode, the mutilated squirrel and the rest—that is powerful testimony to the mind and capacities of this aspirant to a Senate seat. It is little short of wonderful to hear now of Ms. Coakley's concern for the rights of terror suspects at Guantanamo—her urgent call for the protection of the right to the presumption of innocence.

If the sound of ghostly laughter is heard in Massachusetts these days as this campaign rolls on, with Martha Coakley self-portrayed as the guardian of justice and civil liberties, there is good reason.

Don't promote Martha Coakley to US Senate or she'll be in the job for life. Vote for Scott or Joe if they are your cup of tea; they are not mine; but don't stay home. If you don't like the candidates, write-in the name of a candidate from the primary that you do like. That's what I'm doing. I liked Capuano and Kahzei. I'll decide before Tuesday. On Monday think about judging Martha Coakley not by the color of her skin but by the content of her character.

If you're not compelled by this argument, read this one "Is Martha Coakley committed to justice?" by RADLEY BALKO, senior editor for Reason magazine published Wednesday January 13.


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Comments

Nope, I will not write in one of the primary losers and help Scott Brown win the seat. Additionally, WEEI has become conservatism central during this election, except for Dale and Holley. They are Brown's key demographic - older white men who are upset about taxes and perceived slights or whatever. I'm a SportsHub guy now, never going back to EEI. I'm a long time listener too, but if I want conservative political talk, I'll go to Howie Carr.

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And it is Scott Brown for the win! It can't be just old white men that voted him in. Come on. Seriously?

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... between not getting a fair trial and actually being innocent. Gerald Amirault may not have received a fair trial. But is he actually innocent?

At this point, it's clear that the interviewing techniques used with child witnesses in the Amirault case were pretty bad, even if they were used in good faith at the time. But there was physical evidence in the Amirault case, and several of the victims in that case -- now fully grown adults, some now married with their own children -- have publicly reaffirmed their testimony against Gerald Amirault. Maybe those witnesses are mistaken. And maybe they aren't.

If Coakley believed Gerald Amirault to be innocent, but pushed for him to remain in jail, shame on her. But if she really believed him to be guilty, it's not a prosecutor's job to say "well, he molested a bunch of kids but he didn't get a fair trial, so I won't stand in the way -- go ahead and let him out." The appeals courts make that call, and every one of them has upheld Gerald Amirault's conviction.

I wish Coakley would talk more directly about this case, because there are troubling things about it. (Unfortunately, that almost certainly won't happen in an election campaign.) I am not familiar enough with the evidentiary record in the case to express a view of whether Gerald Amirault is innocent or guilty, but I wouldn't let him alone with my kids.

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The case was picked up by those on the right who wanted to reverse what they saw as the very permissive use of sexual abuse testimony especially in divorce cases. Janet Reno also was involved in several prosecutions that used questionable methods of getting kids to recall sexual abuse by their fathers.

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Yes, the Amiraults were and are totally innocent. The most superficial examination of the evidence would tell you that. Their case was identical to a series of cases from across the country that took place during those years, and all of them, without exception, are now recognized as being classic witch-hunt persecutions. The only people familiar with the these cases who now defend them are the people who prosecuted them.

During that time, the Amiraults are accused of having raped children by the dozens. Many people worked in the Amirault's day care center over the time in question. Not one of them saw anything unusual. Parents came in and out all the time without warning. Before the first accusation became public, not a single parent noticed anything wrong with their children. After the first complaint, the police chief called the parents in and told them to question their children about sexual abuse, and if they didn't get a positive answer, keep trying.

As in the cases in California, New Jersey, North Carolina and Florida, the parents in this case were scared witless b police and prosecutors, and the children were subject to psychological torture to get them to invent stories supporting the prosecutors. Books have been written giving the grotesque details that are common to all these cases.

I assume you're noticed that these day care sex cases have disappeared. Now that the light of day has been shined on how the cases were developed, prosecutors no longer dare to attempt them. Every rule of evidence gathering was violated in the most extreme way. This is not a question of whether the Amiraulta got a fair trial. This is a classic witch hunt story. This is not a casual use of the term - it is a perfect analogy to actual witch hunt frenzies. The truth is that there was never a shred of evidence to support the prosecution of the Amiraults or anyone else caught up in the bizarre day care prosecutions of those years.

These cases occurred during the same time that Congress was told that 50,000 children per year were being kidnapped. There was a concern for child safety that went off the rails to irrational extremes, for reasons not yet explained. Bizarre claims were accepted at face value, and the government jumped into action. Now, you will not find a prosecutor in the country who would defend these cases. They are an embarrassement to the profession, and no one wants to talk about them.

Gerald Amirault is innocent because there was never any reason to believe otherwise. The fact that his family's prosecution was successfully carried out does not weight against him. And innocent man does not have to explain his own persection.

Martha Coakley's decision to support the office she worked for and not speak out against the heinous crime perpetrated by them against Gerald Amirault is probably the worst thing she has ever done in her life. It is a moral stain that cannot be ignored. Voting for Martha Coakley is only different in degrees from voting for a Holocaust denier. She didn't work in the office at the time, but she refused to speak out out of loyalty for the people who preceeded her. How she lives with herself, I have no idea.

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He was convicted by a jury, and she is right that the victims have reaffirmed their testimony.

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I didn't say Martha Coakley was involved in the prosecution. Martha Coakley's role was subsequent. Unlike prosecutors around the country, she has refused to accept the gross injustice perpetrated against the Amiraults.

The fact that they were found guilty by a jury does not prove that they actually did what they were accused of. That's the whole point - a bad prosecution does not justify the prosecution. The mistake does not justify itself. The jury saw the evidence presented to it, at a time when such evidence had not been challenged nationally. No one justifies the use of such tainted, invented evidence now. No one.

Maybe you think all those black men who were lynched in the South really were guilty. That is who you are aligning yourself with, when you attempt to defend Martha Coakley and the Amirault case. Good luck with that.

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Well, thanks for pointing out you can't argue with stupid.

Wouldn't it be nice if we had the death penalty and just killed him before all this messiness turned up? You know, back when everyone knew he was guilty?

I’m sorry, but the process worked. He’s accusers haven’t recanted, the evidence still stands, and his appeals were heard and stuck down. He might have gathered some good will on his side, but from I’ve read it was good police work and not worth attacking Coakley over.

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I’m sorry, but the process worked. He’s accusers haven’t recanted, the evidence still stands, and his appeals were heard and stuck down. He might have gathered some good will on his side, but from I’ve read it was good police work and not worth attacking Coakley over.

I'm sorry anon2, but this is crazy.

I can't believe that any significant number of people are really going to pretend that Amirault was actually guilty in those infamous just because Martha Coakley is running for office and has a (D) after her name. As I recall, part of the reason that the techniques in this case are so evil is that when you convince a 4-6 year old to "remember" something which never happened, they will KEEP remembering it! It should not be a surprise that some of the victims stand by their stories 20 years later. I thought that this was a well-publicized aspect of the case, with literature showing that you could "implant" memories of all sorts of crazy things in 4-6 year olds using the techniques that were employed here.

Could one of our unabashedly left-leaning Democrats here (Swirrly?) please step in here? Hell, I'll create a poll. I need to know if this is a widespread phenomenon? I had been under the impression that there weren't any defenders left of the day-care child abuse witch hunts of the 80's. I guess I was wrong.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Amirault
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527487042...
http://www.truthinjustice.org/amirault.htm

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Maybe I'm missing something, I didn't hear it, read it, see him come within 100 miles of it. What is this issue, I've already been compared to the KKK and Hitler, and Scott Brown, the newest hero of AM radio won't touch it.

Why not? Because he'd lose tomorrow if he did. Why isn't he Hitler?

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But just because the states lawyers used bad or even illegal tecniques to get statements or whatever, it doesn't mean someone is or isn't guity. All it means is that the process is unfair.

Lets say a person murders someone. Then the cops arrest that person and put a gun to his head and say that if he didn't sign a confession or admit to the murder, then they would shot him.

Either way the guy still murdered someone. The illegal interrogation doesn't make the guy innocent of a crime.

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and so it is not up to an investigator, lawyer or the DA to determine if someone is guilty of a crime. It is decided by a legal process in which a jury of one's peers decides the truth subject to appeal on matters of law and always subject to the right to receive a fair trial. In this country, there is no prison sentence or finding of 'guilty' (or 'not guilty') without due process.

If the police or DA violate a suspects Constitutional rights, the evidence procured in the violation of those rights must be excluded to protect those fundamental rights. Rights. Remember rights. Without rights we have no protections from the government (yes, policemen) of our liberty.

Many policemen don't seem to be able to get passed their own assessment of whether the suspect is guilty, which is to say, based on probable cause for an arrest (and their vaunted instinct to intuit whether they are being lied to and whether the suspect is guilty.) I don't mean to minimize the value of these instincts. They are important in law enforcement and working a case to determine probable cause for arrest but they are not to be confused with being found guilty or not guilty in our justice system or the notion of guilt and innocence from an objective view.

Sure there exists the concept of guilt or innocence outside of the judicial system but our government does not and cannot operate on that basis. And so guilt (or innocence, which exists in our legal system as "not guilty" for a variety of reasons such as compelling alibi, or not guilty because not proven beyond a reasonable doubt) is adjudicated and exists only as adjudicated apart from some objective reality.

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Hi Pete, Normally I tend to agree with you, but please just read what you wrote one more time. Substitute "lets say person DIDN'T murder someone" and go from there.
I have to admit, I am one of those people who prior to this election cycle had somehow assumed that he (Amirault) had been released or had his sentence commuted or whatever. I do wonder what people who read Universal Hub think about the Alfred Trenkler case. To me, this seems like a case where an innocent man IS in prison. This case has no obvious political implications so it does not garner a lot of attention, but I would be interested in the opinions of this group.
--Regards
John (whose middle initial does NOT stand for Peltier)

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Dear johnmc333,
Thank you for your reference to Alfred Trenkler's case. It would be very helpful to bring his case to the wider attention of "Universal Hub." Any suggestions you might have in this regard would be appreciated. Alfred is "perfectly innocent," as states the title of my 727 page manuscript about the case. His website is www.alfredtrenklerinnocent.org. Currently, he is in transit to a Federal prison in Tucson, Arizona after being in Devens, Mass. for almost two years. His appeal, of a denial of a retrial, is now before the First Circuit Court of Appeals. The U.S. Attorney's office has asked for several extensions of its due date for reply, which is now 25 January.
Please contact me by email at morrison (at) Alfred's website, or by phone to 207-449-8909.
Sincerely,
Morrison Bonpasse

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If a person didn't murder someone, then he didn't murder him. Its not that complicated. Even if he confesses to it, or a jury or judge convicts him of it, he is still not a murderer.

Now the person that does murder someone is always a murderer whether a jury convicts him, or he if found not guity, or there isn't enough evidence to try him in the first place etc etc.

That was my only point. The crime is a crime. And murder, or child molestation is black and white. There is no maybe, only a yes or no. It doesn't matter what you say or who forced you to say it. You either did the crime or didnt do it.

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is that there is an objective reality whether or not law enforcement and our judicial system finds the truth.

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I just happend to use the words "guilty" and "innocent" and they kind of bring their own meaning to the discussion.

But my other point was that even if you point a gun to someones head and make them give you the answer you want to hear, that answer still could be true.

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I agree but I think there are much more effective ways to get to the truth than to coerce with the treat of death. As you mention, you're more likely to get what they think you want than they know is true.

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That was the dumbest statement ever! Instead of saying person (and I am sure you are referring to the person as an adult) try using a child! If the child killed someone and the cops put a gun to their head to get them to sign a confession with crayon or they woul shoot him.............either way the child still murdered someone!

Either way it still sounds stupid!! Your an idiot!

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"No one justifies the use of such tainted, invented evidence now. No one."

Two things happened during the investigation that would never happen today.

The Malden police called all the parents in and told them to ask there kids about being touched, clown suits, secret rooms and knives thus giving the script for the complaint by the original complainant, the mother of a kid who had been there at Fells Acres about two weeks.

The investigators also gave the children the script using the same specific in their questions.

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I really, really, hate to write this because I may be misinformed (by WEEI), but don't the victims:
1) tend to continue to believe what may have been a implanted memory?
2) have a financial incentive (via a financial settlement?) to reaffirm their testimony ?

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Why is he on SPORTS radio WEEI?

Did they at least ask him if he thought Welker would make a speedy recovery? Or his thoughts on Matsuzaka's injury admission?

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Dennis & Callahan talk about a variety of issues, not just sports.

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I've followed this case when I became interested in the mass hysteria in the late 80's and early 90's that destroyed hundreds of lives of completely innocent people in similar cases all over the country. It's nice to see people just make stuff about "physical evidence" which never existed in this case or in just about ANY of these cases. I would suggest the people intentionally lying about this case here, who know NOTHING about it, actually go and read the "testimony" of these children against the Fells day Care Center "molesters". It reads like Stephen King wrote it and was drinking again while doing so.

And by the way- these prosecutions were not done in "Good Faith". I defy anyone with the least drop of a human soul in their blood to review that "evidence" and tell me to my face or to the face of the people whose lives were destroyed by years in our horrendous and violent prison system on the basis of such "evidence" how anyone prosecuting that case could have EVER believed in the guilt of those suspects or at the VERY LEAST not be physically repulsed by themselves for doing so.

Almost everything in life is a shade of grey. However- in the course of one's life- there are a very few things that are indeed "black and white" and where "good" is against "evil". And this is one of them. The Amiraults were innocent victims of EVIL people who KNEW EXACTLY WHAT THEY WERE DOING.

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