LOVELESS Miller April January 4, 1 9 8 9

Ein junges Mädchen wird tot im Garten des elterlichen Hauses gefunden. Erschüttert berichten die Eltern der Polizei, was geschehen ist: Der Familienhund hat das Mädchen angegriffen und getötet. Die Ermittler wittern jedoch, dass die Eltern lügen, und ihre Nasen trügen sie offenbar nicht: Die Wunden sind keine Biss-, sondern eindeutig Stichwunden, die von einem Messer stammen könnten. Die Eltern werden verhaftet und wegen Mordes an ihrer Tochter zu einer lebenslangen Haftstrafe verurteilt. Fünf Jahre später entdeckt ein Forensiker auf einem Tatort-Foto jedoch ein kleines Detail, das den Fall in einem anderen Licht erscheinen lässt… (Text: VOX) https://www.fernsehserien.de/medical-detectives/folgen/77-toedliche-fehler-77008

 

DEBBIE LOVELESS
Other Texas Cases with Inadequate Legal Defense
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On January 4, 1989, paramedics in Emory, Texas, were summoned to the rural Rains County home of Debbie Tucker Loveless and her common-law husband, John Harvey Miller. They found Loveless’s four-year-old daughter, April, wrapped in a blanket on the kitchen floor.
The child had numerous wounds, the most severe on her right leg. Loveless, 31, and Miller, 42, said April had been attacked by wild dogs.
The girl was airlifted to a hospital in Tyler, Texas, but died during surgery to graft a new femoral artery, which had been severed.
When police began investigating the couple’s claim about wild dogs, they found a few pieces of clothing and small amounts of blood near the family’s barn, but little else.
On January 5, 1989, the Smith County Medical Examiner conducted an autopsy and concluded the injuries were caused by a sharp knife and a curling iron—not wild dogs.
A search warrant was executed at the couple’s home two days later and police confiscated a curling iron found in a clothes hamper and a hunting knife that Miller had received as a Christmas gift.
On January 17, 1989, Loveless and Miller were arrested on a charge of felony injury to a child. The charge was soon elevated to murder.
The couple went on trial on October 31, 1989 with the prosecution arguing that Miller had beaten and cut the child to death.
The most significant testimony came from the medical examiner, who said that the edges of the wound were cleanly cut—as if by a knife—and did not resemble the jagged edges that would be expected in an attack by a dog.
The defense did not raise the dog attack theory and only called two witnesses—Mr. Miller’s ex-wife from Kentucky and a state crime lab analyst who said no blood was found on the knife.
The couple was convicted on November 5, 1989 and both were sentenced to life in prison.
In December 1990, the 6th District Court of Appeals in Texarkana rejected their appeal.
In 1992, lawyers for the couple obtained the emergency room and autopsy photos, which had not been turned over the defense prior to the trial.
In one photo, a paw print was visible on April’s back. Several medical experts viewed the material and all concluded April was the victim of a dog attack. The wound on the thigh that was visible at the autopsy was, in fact, caused by a scalpel during the attempt to save the girl’s life. Physicians had cut away ragged skin during surgery, the experts said. Moreover, DNA tests on April’s clothing revealed the presence of canine saliva.
A state petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed and on April 3, 1993, following a four-day hearing, Loveless and Miller were granted a new trial because of the prosecution’s failure to turn over the medical records, and because of ineffective representation by their defense attorneys.
Loveless and Miller were released from prison on December 23, 1993 after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial court decision to vacate the conviction.
On May 2, 1994, the charges were dismissed. Loveless and Miller filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against Rains County prosecutors Alwin Smith and Frank Long and Rains County Sheriff Richard Wilson in 1995. The lawsuit was settled out of court in 2001 for an undisclosed amount.
– Maurice Possley
Report an error or add more information about this case.
Posting Date: Before June 2012
Last Updated: 2/11/2015
https://www.law.umich.edu/special/exoneration/Pages/casedetail.aspx?caseid=3393
Today?

April Renee Tucker death: Debbie Loveless & John Miller today

 

In 1989, 4-year-old April Loveless was found dead in the backyard of her Texas home. Her mother, Debbie Loveless, and step-father, John Miller, told police that she was attacked and killed by the family dogs. Investigators did not agree and believed that April’s wounds were not dog bites at all. Originally aired as Season 6, Episode 3. Medical Detectives, aka “Forensic Files,” is the longest-running true crime series in television history. Evidence and interviews with experts help solve real crimes, disease outbreaks and accidents around the world.

IndyCastleton Jonah in Arizona
This is one of the saddest episodes on the entire series and that’s saying a lot. A young girl mauled by a dog, lost her life, parents should be grieving over their daughter, but instead had to fight for their lives, extremely TERRIBLE police work initially! I’m absolutely in shock how awful the investigation was at the beginning!
MARIA massey
The officers, investigators & negligent pathologists should all lose their jobs & be prosecuted & forced to pay huge compensations.
Finch Gould
Five years in prison is a long time! Why didn’t they check the dogs? The dog that attacked the girl must have had dried blood on its body!
The Tall Titan
I’m so satisfied that they sued those prosecutors not too long after being released. I can’t imagine what they’ve been through behind bars for a false accusation for half a decade. All things said, I feel sympathy for them for both their false convection and their loss of April.
Steve M
Just think…..if these people were treated like this then how many others are in jail for something they didn’t do and the fact that the prosecutors as well as the police can force the evidence to fit a crime that didn’t happen is frightening. They could pin a murder on anyone.
Ashley R. Miller
The girls wounds look exactly like barbed wire cuts. That shit is sharp. I’ve had many farm animals die by getting trapped in loose wire. Wild dogs are dangerous to they don’t care to eat humans. I fell into barbed wire once and I looked like my parents beat me with a piece of it. Even had really bad gashes that about bled me to death. They should have been sued for the hurt they cause the family by accusing them of doing it.
philippealexis
If we could hear from these people today, I wonder, has there been a point in time when any of them has accepted “we were wrong. we got it wrong. we ruined the lives of people who were most in need of compassion at a time when they were grieving over the shocking, gruesome, tragic loss of a child. we failed at our job. miserably.” I wonder if any of them have admitted that to themselves, or if instead they’ve stubbornly kept trying to justify their actions, or worse, have resorted to the infamous “the parents are indeed guilty, we just haven’t had the resources to prove it yet” ?

Minder tonen

MARIA massey
 @philippealexis  that would be interesting…though it’s highly unlikely…most Nazi’s post WW2 ending took no responsibility x showed no remorse. That is probably why pride x ego are the worst vices
Kimberly Davis
unfortunately this happens too often. you get these bad “investigators” who only see what they want to see, and ignore everything else
Bob Boucher
“They didn’t buy the dog attack theory” yet they had a massive amount of photos withheld and refused to comment on it afterwards. Idk what the motivations are for a prosecution team to partake in dubious behavior for the sake of putting innocent people in prison. Money? Status for winning the case? Really fucking weird those things are valued over an innocent or guilty person. Police departments have been fucked since the beginning of time it seems like.
Amy Hall

I am the other child of this story. Amy. I know without a doubt my mother and former step-dad were innocent. To all the people watching this that think it was wrong that my family went thru 5 yrs of hell. Thank you! All these people including the DA that withheld evidence is still a lawyer and was never held accountable! My mother and step-dad received a very small amount of money from 5 yrs. I stayed in foster care for two yrs over this. One yr of which was nothing but abuse. My grandparents finally beat the state of Texas and got custody. 🙌 To all those involved in ruining my families life you will get your judgment one day.

Timothy Williams
When one of my sons was 4 years old, a neighbor’s Rottweiler got loose on our property and pulled the boy off a swing, mauling him severely. I was only ten feet away when the attack started, and before I could get the dog under control, he had caused severe injuries. It literally took only seconds for this to happen. I could not believe how much damage this dog had done in such a short time. I was able to get the child to the hospital within 15 minutes, and his life was saved. It took a year, but he made a full recovery. I still have nightmares about it occasionally, more than 25 years later.

Medical Detectives (Forensic Files) – Season 6, Episode 3 – Man’s Best Friend?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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