Marsha Mills listens during a June 20, 2007, court appearance at the Tuscarawas County Courthouse at New Philadelphia.
Lee Morrison Mar 24, 2011
Marsha Mills is appealing to federal court her conviction in the 2006 death of a 2-year-old New Philadelphia boy whom she was babysitting.
The 44-page appeal has been filed in Ohio Northern District Court in Akron.
Judge Sara Lioi has referred the case to Magistrate Judge Vernelis K. Armstrong in Toledo. Armstrong will review the case and make a recommendation to set the case for trial or dismiss it. Lioi can accept the recommendation and act on it or deny it.
The case was filed in federal court after all appeal options at the state level had been exhausted.
Ohio’s Fifth District Court of Appeals upheld rulings in the case by Tuscarawas County Common Pleas Court Judge Elizabeth Lehigh Thomakos. The Ohio Supreme Court refused to hear the case because it does not involve any substantial constitutional question.
Mills, 60, was convicted and sentenced in June 2007 after a jury found her guilty of two counts of murder, felonious assault and child endangering in the death of Noah A. Shoup. She was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after 15 years. She is serving her sentence in the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville. The prosecution maintains Shoup died a violent death, while the defense contends he died after falling down a short flight of outside steps onto concrete.
Mills is being represented in the federal appeal by attorneys David L. Doughten of Cleveland and Jeffrey Helmick of Toledo. Doughten is a New Philadelphia native. The Ohio Attorney General’s office represents the prison warden in all such cases.
Current Tuscarawas County Prosecutor Ryan Styer said Tuesday, “Although I was not in office when that case was prosecuted, I always respect verdicts of juries. I do not believe it is appropriate for further comment, because we are no longer involved in the case.”
While in the appeals process at the state level, Styer sought and was granted permission to transfer the case to the Ohio Attorney General’s office. That was to avoid any conflict of interest as Styer’s staff includes Assistant Prosecutor Michael Ernest, who helped prosecute Mills, and Assistant Prosecutor Amanda Miller, who was second chair on Mills’ defense team.
The appeal asks the judge for a new trial and to conduct a hearing so that proof can be offered concerning the allegations of the appeal and to permit Mills civil discovery of all information “as is necessary to develop the factual basis for her claims.”
Her attorneys contend Mills was wrongfully convicted based on the improper admission of “junk science” by a prosecution witness; improper restriction on the presentation of the defense’s case; and prosecutor misconduct regarding “improper comments (that) deprived Mills of her right to a fair trial.”
Another contention is that Mills received ineffective assistance from trial counsel, Public Defender Gerald Latanich, who allegedly failed to object to “irrelevant and prejudicial” autopsy photos that had little relevance to the boy’s cause of death. The appeal further contends that Latanich was ineffective in his direct examination of Dr. John Plunkett, who testified for the defense.
The appeals attorneys contend that ineffective counsel allowed hearsay materials into evidence and “admission of these documents denied Mills her right to confrontation” of witnesses or those making the statements.
Several aspects of the appeal involve testimony by the prosecution’s expert pathologist, Dr. Daryl Steiner of Akron Children’s Hospital.
Over two months prior to the trial, it was reported that Dr. Steiner erroneously had determined that two other children had suffered injuries as a result of shaken baby syndrome, according to the appeal.
The appeal also contends information that would have impacted Mills’ sentencing was withheld, and that Latanich failed to fully investigate Steiner’s background. The appeal also claims that Latanich allegedly failed to confront Steiner “with evidence that he had given erroneous medical opinions in the past.”
http://www.timesreporter.com/news/x1777827712/Woman-convicted-in-babysitting-death-seeks-federal-appeal
The 44-page appeal has been filed in Ohio Northern District Court in Akron.
Judge Sara Lioi has referred the case to Magistrate Judge Vernelis K. Armstrong in Toledo. Armstrong will review the case and make a recommendation to set the case for trial or dismiss it. Lioi can accept the recommendation and act on it or deny it.
The case was filed in federal court after all appeal options at the state level had been exhausted.
Ohio’s Fifth District Court of Appeals upheld rulings in the case by Tuscarawas County Common Pleas Court Judge Elizabeth Lehigh Thomakos. The Ohio Supreme Court refused to hear the case because it does not involve any substantial constitutional question.
Mills, 60, was convicted and sentenced in June 2007 after a jury found her guilty of two counts of murder, felonious assault and child endangering in the death of Noah A. Shoup. She was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after 15 years. She is serving her sentence in the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville. The prosecution maintains Shoup died a violent death, while the defense contends he died after falling down a short flight of outside steps onto concrete.
Mills is being represented in the federal appeal by attorneys David L. Doughten of Cleveland and Jeffrey Helmick of Toledo. Doughten is a New Philadelphia native. The Ohio Attorney General’s office represents the prison warden in all such cases.
Current Tuscarawas County Prosecutor Ryan Styer said Tuesday, “Although I was not in office when that case was prosecuted, I always respect verdicts of juries. I do not believe it is appropriate for further comment, because we are no longer involved in the case.”
While in the appeals process at the state level, Styer sought and was granted permission to transfer the case to the Ohio Attorney General’s office. That was to avoid any conflict of interest as Styer’s staff includes Assistant Prosecutor Michael Ernest, who helped prosecute Mills, and Assistant Prosecutor Amanda Miller, who was second chair on Mills’ defense team.
The appeal asks the judge for a new trial and to conduct a hearing so that proof can be offered concerning the allegations of the appeal and to permit Mills civil discovery of all information “as is necessary to develop the factual basis for her claims.”
Her attorneys contend Mills was wrongfully convicted based on the improper admission of “junk science” by a prosecution witness; improper restriction on the presentation of the defense’s case; and prosecutor misconduct regarding “improper comments (that) deprived Mills of her right to a fair trial.”
Another contention is that Mills received ineffective assistance from trial counsel, Public Defender Gerald Latanich, who allegedly failed to object to “irrelevant and prejudicial” autopsy photos that had little relevance to the boy’s cause of death. The appeal further contends that Latanich was ineffective in his direct examination of Dr. John Plunkett, who testified for the defense.
The appeals attorneys contend that ineffective counsel allowed hearsay materials into evidence and “admission of these documents denied Mills her right to confrontation” of witnesses or those making the statements.
Several aspects of the appeal involve testimony by the prosecution’s expert pathologist, Dr. Daryl Steiner of Akron Children’s Hospital.
Over two months prior to the trial, it was reported that Dr. Steiner erroneously had determined that two other children had suffered injuries as a result of shaken baby syndrome, according to the appeal.
The appeal also contends information that would have impacted Mills’ sentencing was withheld, and that Latanich failed to fully investigate Steiner’s background. The appeal also claims that Latanich allegedly failed to confront Steiner “with evidence that he had given erroneous medical opinions in the past.”
http://www.timesreporter.com/news/x1777827712/Woman-convicted-in-babysitting-death-seeks-federal-appeal
If Mills is granted a new trial the truths will come out about this railroading trial and the evil of the coroner and ACH doctors in this case. Charges may and should be brought against them.
ReplyDeleteThis is an unfolding, case of what happens when an innocent grandmother is accused of a heinous crime THAT NEVER HAPPENED!
ReplyDeleteThis travesty of justice came on the heels of the successful federal lawsuit brought against the same county prosecutor for prosecutorial misconduct in the previous Tuscarawas County wrongful conviction of Anthony Harris.
The guilty prosecutor’s husband was the chief witness for the prosecution; a city cop who wanted to pick up a little overtime and reversed the initial investigating officer’s conclusion that the child died from a fall off the back porch, “a freak accident”.
He (the city cop) was also, the only other person present at the autopsy, conducted in concert with an insufficiently credentialed medical examiner and in violation of legal ethical standards.
In this case, the accusing Dr. Steiner has been proven to be wrong on similar accusations in at least three (3) other legal rulings on charges against other innocent people in Ohio. Why does he keep getting away with it?
In the face of case after case of so-called Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) across the nation and around world being overturned; FIVE YEARS of an innocent person waiting for justice has been plenty of time for the SUPREMES to act.
It is far past time time to debunk this JUNK SCIENCE; again and for always.
Tuscarwas county is very corrupt,someone needs to take a stand!!!! Something very horrible is going on. Even the way JFS steals children away and never gives the parents a fair chance to be reunited. Tuscarawas county needs so be STOPPED and SOON!!!!!
ReplyDeleteMills was convicted only on the opinion / theory of Dr Daryl Steiner of Akron Children's Hospital, who has recently stated that "he will no longer pursue SBS convictions without a witness," as he had with Mills and many others in the past. I have to wonder why? The detective found no other evidence at all in Mill's case. Also the staff at Akron Children's gave the toddler the wrong blood in a transfusion upon arrival to the hospital. It is well documented that the child had no bruises when he arrived at ACH. Why the coroner, Dr. George Sterbenz, kept this information, them giving him the wrong blood, from the jury and court is a mystery unless he was covering up for his own mistake of letting the tainted organs harvested be used before he caught it and the implications of such a huge mistake. Steiner and Dr. Emily Scott, attending intern at the emergency room, didn't bring it up in court for obvious reasons.People make mistakes, we are all human but to let an innocent go to prison for life rather than admit your own mistake is unforgivable and they should go to prison for it. It is time for the Supreme Court to take a serious look at this and other questionable SBS cases by Dr. Steiner and get the innocent people out of prison.
ReplyDeleteThis is the future of Dr. Daryl Steiner: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/12/07/f-charles-smith-goudge-inquiry.html
ReplyDelete