201812.24
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Gov. Brown orders new DNA tests in 1983 Kevin Cooper murder case

by in News

By KATHLEEN RONAYNE AND DON THOMPSON

The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday ordered new DNA tests that a condemned inmate says could clear him in a San Bernardino County 35-year-old quadruple murder case, which has drawn national attention.

Brown ordered tests of four pieces of evidence that Kevin Cooper and his attorneys say will show he was framed for the 1983 Chino Hills hatchet and knife killings of four people. The items that will be tested are a tan T-shirt and orange towel found near the scene and the hatchet handle and sheath.

Cooper was convicted in 1985 of killing Doug and Peggy Ryen, their 10-year-old daughter Jessica and 11-year-old neighbor Christopher Hughes. Prosecutors say Cooper’s claims of innocence have been disproven multiple times, including by prior DNA testing, but Cooper and his attorney argue evidence against him was planted.

 

  • Prison escapee Kevin Cooper, center, escorted by law enforcement officers, is seen in this 1983 file photo shortly after his arrest in Santa Barbara, Calif. Cooper, who was convicted in 1985 for the murders of F. Douglas Ryen and his wife, Peggy Ann, along with their 10-year-old daughter, Jessica, and an 11-year-old family friend, is scheduled to die by lethal injection Tuesday, Feb. 10 at California’s San Quentin prison for the crimes. (APPhoto/File)

  • California Assemblyman Miguel Santiago, D-Los Angeles, second from right, speaks at a news conference at the state Capitol as Assemblyman Rob Bonta, D-Oakland, from left, Sen. Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, and Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, listen in Sacramento, Calif., on Thursday, July 5, 2018. The lawmakers announced they’ve reached a deal on legislation to enshrine net neutrality provisions in state law after the Federal Communications Commission dumped rules requiring an equal playing field on the internet. (AP Photo/Jonathan J. Cooper)

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  • Kevin Cooper listens during his preliminary hearing in Ontario in November 1983 for the murders in Chino Hills in June of 1983.
    (File photo by Walter Richard Weis / Staff Photographer)

  • The Rev. Jesse Jackson, middle, addresses protesters at the California State Penitentiary at San Quentin in San Quentin, Calif. on Monday, Feb. 9, 2003. A stay of execution was issued for death row inmate Kevin Cooper who was scheduled for execution at midnight on Feb 10. (Ross Cameron / Associated Press)

  • Ten-year-old murder victim Jessica Ryen, seen here in a 1981 file photo, and her wounded 8-year-old brother, Joshua, seen here in a 1982 file photo, were victims of a 1983 stabbing attack in their Chino Hills, Calif., home. Prison escapee Kevin Cooper was convicted of capital murder in 1985 in the deaths of Jessica, her parents and an 11-year-old family friend. Cooper is scheduled to die by lethal injection at California’s San Quentin prison Tuesday, Feb. 10.
    (AP Photo/Files)

  • Kevin Cooper listens as a judge sentences him to the death penalty in 1985. Cooper was convicted of murdering the Ryen family and a neighbor and attempted murder of the Ryen son in Chino Hills in 1983. (Staff file photo by Walter Richard Weis, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • F. Douglas Ryen and his wife, Peggy Ann, seen here in 1983 file photos, were murdered in 1983 in their Chino Hills, Calif., home, along with their 10-year-old daughter Jessica, and an 11-year-old family friend. Prison escapee Kevin Cooper, who was convicted for the murders in 1985, is slated for execution Feb. 10, 2004. (AP Photo/File)

  • Family members follow the casket of Christopher Hughes out of Our Lady of Assumption in Claremont, June of 1983. Hughes was a house guest who was killed along with Doug, Peggy and Jessica Ryen in their Chino Hills home earlier that year. (Staff file photo by Walter Richard Weis, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Portrait of Christopher Hughes who was murdered along with the Ryen family in Chino Hills in 1983. The Ryen family son, Joshua, survived the attack. Kevin Cooper received the death penalty for the murders and is set to be executed Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2004. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • This is the Ryen family house in Chino Hills. Kevin Cooper is accused of murdering Doug and Peggy Ryen, Jessica Ryen and Christopher Hughes inside with a hatchet in 1983. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • This photo shows the house in which Kevin Cooper hid out before the murders and the Ryen family home, where the 1983 Chino Hills murders took place. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • This photo shows the the two Chino Hills houses involved in the 1983 murders for which Kevin is on Death Row. The murders occurred in the Ryen home. Cooper admitted to hiding out in the next door house. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Family photo of Chino Hills family Doug, Peggy and Jessica Ryen and eight-year-old Joshua Ryen, (sitting on horse), who was the lone survivor of hatchet the attack. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • This photo shows a bloody shoe print found in a sheet in Doug and
    Peggy Ryen’s bedroom. Prosecutors say the print matches the size and
    type of shoes Kevin Cooper received at the California Institution for
    Men state prison before he escaped. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Mug photo of Kevin Cooper who is convicted of murdering a Chino Hills family and neighbor with a hatchet in 1983. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell holds press conference June 9, 2003 at the West End Substation to identify suspect in Chino Hills murders as Kevin Cooper. (Staff file photo by Walter Richard Weis, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell examines blood stains found on the doorway leading into the master bedroom in the Ryen family house, 1983.
    (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Investigators stand outside the master bedroom of the Ryen’s Chino Hills home June 6, 2003 as they gather evidence at the scene of the murders.
    (Staff file photo by Walter Richard Weis, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Portrait of Doug and Peggy Ryen with their daughter Jessica, 10, and son Joshua, then 8-years-old. Joshua was the only survivor of the 1983 incident.
    (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • The Chino Hills family home where Doug, Peggy and Jessica Ryen were attacked and murdered in 1983. Eight-year-old Joshua Ryen survived the attack, but a neighbor sleeping over at the Ryen house, Christopher Hughes, was also killed. Kevin Cooper, an escapee from California Institute for Men at Chino, was convicted and received the death penalty for the murders. He is scheduled for execution Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2004. (Staff file photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • The hatchet investigators say Kevin Cooper used. Cooper was convicted in the killing of Chino Hills family Doug, Peggy and Jessica Ryen and neighbor sleeping over, Christopher Hughes. Eight-year-old Joshua Ryen survived the attack. (File courtesy photo, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Protesters march along St. Francis Drake Blvd. near San Quentin State Penitentiary. (Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press)

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“I take no position as to Mr. Cooper’s guilt or innocence at this time, but colorable factual questions have been raised about whether advances in DNA technology warrant limited retesting of certain physical evidence in this case,” Brown wrote in his executive order.

Brown also appointed retired Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Daniel Pratt to serve as a special master overseeing the case.

New York Times’ columnist Nicholas Kristof, U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris, state Treasurer John Chiang and reality television star Kim Kardashian are among people who called for Brown to order new DNA tests.

Brown’s Christmas Eve order came alongside 143 pardons and 131 commutations, in keeping with Brown’s tradition of granting clemency on or near major holidays.

Among Brown’s pardons are five refugees from Cambodia and an immigrant from Honduras all facing the possibility of deportation because of criminal convictions, two people who lost their homes in a recent wildfire and a former state official. His commutations included several former gang members who have renounced their former ties and will now have an opportunity to petition the parole board for early release.

The brother of San Francisco Mayor London Breed was not pardoned despite the family’s request. Napoleon Brown is serving a 44-year sentence for manslaughter.

Gov. Brown has now granted 283 commutations and 1,332 pardons since returning to office in 2011, far more than any California governor since at least the 1940s. The governor needs approval from the state Supreme Court to pardon or commute the sentence of anyone twice convicted of a felony. The court in recent weeks has rejected seven clemency requests by the governor, including one Monday.

In the Cooper case, the purpose of the new testing is to determine whether DNA of any other identifiable suspect is on the items. If the tests reveal no new DNA or some that cannot be traced to a person, “this matter should be closed,” Brown wrote.

Two previous tests showed Cooper, 60, was the killer, argued San Bernardino County District Attorney Mike Ramos. He previously said the tests proved Cooper had been in the home of the Ryens, smoked cigarettes in their stolen station wagon, and that Cooper’s blood and the blood of at least one victim was on a T-shirt found by the side of a road leading away from the murders.

“We’ve gone through every court and appellate court and even the California Supreme court and retested DNA over and over again,” Ramos said Monday.

Cooper’s attorney, Norman Hile, said his client’s blood was planted on the T-shirt, and that more sensitive DNA testing would show who wore it. He contends that investigators also planted other evidence to frame his client, a young black man who escaped from a nearby prison east of Los Angeles two days before the murders.

Ramos said that Brown ordering additional DNA tests will make the holidays even harder for family members of the victims.

“For the executive branch of government to make a decision like this is really unjust and unfair,” Ramos said. “The courts have heard all the arguments for years. We have done everything we can to make sure justice was done in a judicious and fair manner.”

“This is a delay tactic by a very manipulative murderer,” he added.

Other evidence points to the killers being white or Hispanic, Cooper’s supporters say. A San Diego judge in 2011 blocked Cooper’s request for a third round of DNA testing.

Cooper’s scheduled execution in 2004 was stayed when a federal appellate court in San Francisco called for further review of the scientific evidence, but his appeals have been rejected by both the California and U.S. supreme courts. Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger twice denied Cooper’s clemency petitions.

“I am very pleased that Gov. Brown has granted our clemency request,” Hile said. “On behalf of Kevin Cooper, I am looking forward to getting the testing done and grateful to Gov. Brown and his staff for allowing this investigation.”

California hasn’t executed anyone since 2006.

Among the people granted clemency by Brown on Monday were:

— Sophanareth Sok, a Cambodian refugee convicted of voluntary manslaughter after he participated in a drive-by gang shooting that killed one at the age of 14, according to Brown’s office. He was sentenced in 1997 and discharged in 2012. Brown said Sok now serves as a volunteer to help ex-convicts re-enter the community.

— Kyle Hathaway and Dee Heather Steels Burnett, both of whom lost their homes in Paradise during the November wildfire, according to the governor’s office. Both were convicted of drug crimes and finished their sentences more than 10 years ago, and Burnett is now an addiction counselor. Her husband, Jason James Burnett, also had a drug conviction and was pardoned by Brown last month.

— Louis Honig, a former state superintendent of public instruction who was convicted in the 1990s for steering government contracts to a nonprofit run by his wife.