gaithersblog.net

Goings on in Gaithersburg, Maryland

March 25th, 2008

More on the Gary Smith Trial (Update 2)

Update 2: Dan Morse writes in the Washington Post, Experts for Defense Raise Doubts:

Three expert witnesses testifying for the defense casts doubt yesterday on the contention that former Army Ranger Gary Smith shot his roommate 18 months ago at their apartment in Gaithersburg, and one of the experts said he believed that the roommate shot himself.

“In this case, I don’t doubt it’s a suicide, period,” Vincent Di Maio, an expert on gunshot wounds, said of the death of Michael McQueen.


Update: Two more articles:

AP writer Ben Nuckols reports, Prosecution Rests in Ranger Trial:

Prosecutors have seized on Smith’s conflicting statements and forensic evidence — including blood spatter on the floor next to McQueen and blood on Smith’s hands, pants and shoe — as proof that Smith killed his roommate.

A blood-spatter expert for the state, William T. Vosburgh, testified last week that he found the outlines of a shoe and a human hand in the pool of blood next to McQueen.

But Herbert MacDonell, director of the Laboratory for Forensic Science in Corning, N.Y., disputed Vosburgh’s conclusions Tuesday, saying a void in the bloodstain was the wrong shape to have been created by the sneaker Smith was wearing when McQueen died.

While there was blood on Smith’s shoe, MacDonell testified there wasn’t enough blood on it for it to have been in the path of gushing blood immediately after the gunshot.

Also, Meghan Tierney writes in the Gazette, Blood pattern is key in Army Ranger trial:

Jezik said that Smith’s bizarre behavior after McQueen’s death may have been caused by post-traumatic stress disorder. Smith was a sergeant when he left the Army in May 2005, according to his mother, Rosemary Smith of Derwood. Her son, who she described as a close friend of McQueen’s, suffered a kidney injury that may have been caused after being shot in the back while wearing a bullet proof vest. Her son saw a friend lose a leg in Afghanistan after their vehicle was hit with a roadside bomb, she said. He is receiving treatment for PTSD from the Department of Veterans Affairs, she said.


Dan Morse writes in the Washington Post, Video Shows Shifts in Ex-Soldier’s Story:

In an hours-long interview with detectives, a former Army Ranger accused of murdering his roommate wept as he described finding his friend’s body at their Gaithersburg apartment but later appeared composed as he explained why he then altered what would be deemed a crime scene.

Prosecutors are expected to rest their case today, the seventh day of the trial. Smith’s attorney, Andrew Jezic, is expected to call witnesses into next week to show that McQueen shot himself. Jezic also is likely to try to build on what he told jurors in his opening statement: Once Smith settled down, he stuck to his story “hour after hour.”

Jurors have watched several hours of the video recording of the Smith interrogation, which took place in a small room at a county police station. Smith gave three basic versions of what happened the night of Sept. 25 or early the next morning.

Also, AP writer Ben Nuckols reports, Videotape Shows Ranger Lying to Police:

In swearing on the graves of his Ranger buddies, he said one of them was Pat Tillman, the former NFL player who enlisted after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and was killed in Afghanistan.

After he made that oath, the detectives told him the evidence indicated he had been in the apartment when McQueen died, and finally, he admitted that he was.

Earlier Monday, Dr. Carol Allan, an assistant state medical examiner, testified that there was no way to tell from the autopsy on McQueen whether his wound was self-inflicted or not. However, she classified McQueen’s death as a homicide because of other evidence in the case, noting that there was no blood on McQueen’s right hand and that there was no indication from the position of his hand that he had been holding a gun.

Channel 7 News reports, Ranger Charged in Roommate’s Death:

Prosecutors played a taped police interview with Smith in court on Tuesday, on which Smith said he was in “panic mode” when he saw his roommate bleeding from the head. “It was dripping on the floor,” he said, “I remember hearing it go splat, splat, splat.”

Officers told the jury they found Smith crying and covered in blood. Smith’s attorney said his client was despondent over the loss of his friend and that he suffers from post traumatic stress disorder.

If convicted, Smith faces life without parole.

For more on this story, see my previous posts.

March 25th, 2008

MCPD: Former Maryland Minister Arrested for Sex Offense and Child Abuse in Gaithersburg (updated: Mann Pleads Guilty)

Update: From the Court records:

Docket Date: 07/23/2008 Docket Number: 13
Docket Description: HEARING, DEFENDANT’S ORAL PLEA
Docket Type: Docket Filed By: Defense
Ruling Judge: ROWAN, WILLIAM J III
Docket Text: DEFENDANT ENTERS A PLEA OF GUILTY TO COUNT 1 OF THE INFORMATION. COURT (ROWAN, J.) FINDS DEFENDANT GUILTY TO COUNT 1 (CHILD ABUSE) MS. FEINSTEIN, STATE’S ATTORNEY.
Audio Media: 11-072308 Start: 09:56:54 Stop: 10:16:56



Docket Date: 07/23/2008 Docket Number: 14
Docket Description: DEFENDANT’S INITIAL APPEARANCE
Docket Type: Docket Filed By: Defense
Docket Text: DEFENDANT APPEARED WITH MR. HELFAND AND MR. MARTELLA.


Docket Date: 07/23/2008 Docket Number: 15
Docket Description: COURT SETS
Docket Type: Docket
Ruling Judge: ROWAN, WILLIAM J III
Docket Text: DEFENDANT REMANDED TO CUSTODY PENDING SENTENCING ON SEPTEMBER 29, 2008 AT 9:30 A.M., FOR 2 HOURS.

From the County’s website (photo via the Frederick News-Post):

3/24/2008

Former Maryland Minister Arrested for Sex Offense and Child Abuse in Gaithersburg

Detectives from the Montgomery County Police Family Crimes Division have charged Timothy Chun-Chock Mann, age 47, currently living in Hoover, Alabama, for third-degree sex offense and child abuse involving a victim who was 14-years-old at the time of the first incident.

In December of 1991, Mann joined the First Baptist Church, located at 200 West Diamond Avenue in Gaithersburg, as an ordained minister. He was working as the Minister of Music and was directing the church’s youth choir. Between December of 1992 and the summer of 1996, Mann engaged in inappropriate sexual acts with a female youth choir member. The abuse started when the victim was 14 years old and the incidents occurred predominantly in Mann’s office at the church.

In December of 2007, the now 29-year-old victim was interviewed by detectives. On March 7, 2008, detectives contacted Mann at his home in Hoover, Alabama, where he is currently directing the choir at a Birmingham, Alabama congregation. On March 11, 2008, detectives obtained an arrest warrant for Mann charging him with third-degree sex offense and child abuse. Alabama authorities issued a warrant for Mann’s arrest as a fugitive from justice in conjunction with the Maryland arrest warrant. Mann was arrested and held at an Alabama correctional facility. He was released with the stipulation that he would turn himself in to Montgomery County Police by March 21. Mann turned himself in on March 20 and was released on a $100,000.00 bond.

Anyone who has additional information about any inappropriate sexual contact Mann may have had with juveniles is asked to call the Family Crimes Division at 240-773-5400. Callers may remain anonymous.

# # #

Contact: Media Services Division Phone: 240.773.5030

March 25th, 2008

Illegal Immigrants in the News

In Tuesday’s Washington Post, Pamela Constable and Lisa Rein write, To Illegal Immigrants, Md. Feeling Less Friendly:

Public anger against illegal immigrants, already entrenched in parts of Northern Virginia, is seeping into Maryland. With legislators facing unprecedented demands to take action, fears of a crackdown are spreading among illegal immigrants in a state that has been more tolerant of them.

A record 20 bills targeting illegal immigrants have been introduced in the state legislature this session. Although none of the bills is expected to survive, their supporters are far more vocal and organized than in the past, and the movement has gained recent support in Maryland communities that include Mount Rainier, Gaithersburg and Taneytown.

The article never explains the Gaithersburg reference, but I’ll guess that they are lumping the day laborer and anti-solicitation ordinance situation into this even though that issue is not immigration-specific.

“Everywhere you go now, the first thing they ask you for is papers,” Juan Perez, 28, a Central American construction worker, said outside a gas station in Langley Park one recent morning. “We do the work faster and cheaper, but no one wants us now. I haven’t sent any money home to my family since December, and I can barely pay to sleep in my friend’s apartment.”

Just across University Boulevard, a battered sedan with Virginia tags pulled up in front of a convenience store. The driver, a carpenter from Guatemala named Raul Romano, 40, said he and his family had recently fled Prince William County, their home for eight years, after it enacted a law allowing police to question immigrants about their legal status.

And speaking of Prince William County, N.C. Aizenman writes in the Washington Post, Immigration Agency Arrests 34 Workers At Concrete Firm:

Federal immigration authorities converged on a Prince William County construction company just before sunrise yesterday, arresting 34 Latin American nationals for being in the country illegally.