Southfield Michigan Teenager To Face Third Jury Trial For Lathrop Village Murder - Family Hires New Team Of Defense Lawyers

February 22, 2010
By The Reeves Law Group on February 22, 2010 4:06 PM |

Jerome Hamilton of Southfield, Michigan, age 17, faces his third consecutive Jury Trial for a single Homicide allegedly committed on October 15, 2008.

The victim, Catherine Blain, 21, was the night manager of a Lathrop Village restaurant. As she left work heading to her parked car, she was allegedly accosted by Mr. Hamilton - who attempted to rob her. Miss Blain resisted and Hamilton reportedly shot her in the head.

Neither of the first two Juries were able to reach a unanimous verdict. That forced the Judge to declare mistrials (dismissals), because jury unanimity is required in criminal cases.

The gunman was aided by two accomplices, one of whom was the getaway driver. The Circuit Court Judge in Pontiac, Michigan has already sentenced the driver to life in prison.

Pursuant to what amounts to a sentence bargain, the second accomplice has agreed to finger Hamilton as the trigger man. The deal slashes the accomplice's potential prison sentence from up to life in prison down to as few as 11 years.

Ironically, the very sentence bargain that elicited that testimony may be the very evidence that left the Juries with doubts about the case. That is because the Judge informs the Jury that they may consider "witness interest" as evidence of incredibility.

A new legal team will handle the third trial. Those lawyers will raise the defense of Alibi. Reportedly, the Defendant's uncle will testify that he was with the Defendant at the time of the homicide - in another part of Metro Detroit.

The Defense of Alibi is sometimes known as the "perfect defense". The obvious reason is that, if the jury believes that the Defendant was not present at crime scene, then his participation was impossible.

In this case, however, the perfect defense may turn out to be the perfect clincher - for the Prosecution. That is because the Defendant's uncle was present in the Court Room during the first two trials, yet the Alibi defense was never mentioned.

Facts like those can open the door to Prosecutorial questions about witness failure to come forward. The point of that questioning is to impeach the credibility of the witness.

The wild card is whether the perception of false defense-witness testimony will taint the Defendant's entire case. In a prosecution where two separate Juries have reviewed the same evidence and declined to find guilt, staying the course may be the safest bet.

Teen to be tried 3rd time in Rib Rack killing, The Detroit Free Press, February 22, 2010