Court To Again Review Nelson Cruz Murder Conviction, Another NYPD Det. Scarcella Case
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) - Rearguments are expected in a motion to overturn a murder conviction linked to disgraced NYPD detective Louis Scarcella.
Nelson Cruz was incarcerated 21 years ago for the murder of Trevor Vieira in East New York, Brooklyn.
His lawyers argued that Scarcella and his partner used a man who didn't witness the crime to falsely identify Cruz as the gunman.
A judge previously denied the defense's motion to overturn Cruz's conviction in August, saying no new evidence was presented.
Since 2013, more than 50 convictions linked to investigations by Scarcella were put under review. At the time, the retired Scarcella told the New York Times that he did not expect prosecutors to find anything – but the district attorney's office found otherwise.
Scarcella was the lead detective on the murder of Brooklyn Rabbi Chaskel Werzberger. The second-degree murder conviction of David Ranta was vacated after Ranta spent two decades in prison.
In the years that followed, the Brooklyn district attorney's office worked to get several convictions tied to Scarcella's investigations overturned.
In 2014, Scarcella tried to minimize his role in the conviction of Rosean Hargrave for the 1991 killing of a correction officer in Crown Heights. Hargrave claimed he was framed, and after serving 24 years in prison, he was freed.
Web Extra: Nelson Cruz Appears In Court, Part 1 - August 2019
Derrick Hamilton had served 21 years in prison before being paroled in 2011. A decision in 2015 cleared his conviction.
In 2016, the Brooklyn district attorney's office asked a judge to overturn Vanessa Gathers' manslaughter conviction, based on a confession that prosecutors saw as too vague and inaccurate to be valid beyond a reasonable doubt. She also was freed after 10 years in prison.
Web Extra: Nelson Cruz Appears In Court, Part 2 - August 2019
A year later, Sundhe Moses served 18 years for the 1995 murder of a 4-year-old Brooklyn girl. When he was paroled in 2013, he insisted he was innocent, claiming that Scarcella beat him to give a false confession.
Jabbar Washington was also freed that year after spending 21 years in prison for a 1995 robbery and deadly shooting in Brownsville, Brooklyn. One person was killed and five more were shot. One of the victims, Lisa Todd, identified Jabbar in a lineup conducted by two former detectives – one being Scarcella.
"Detective Scarcella lied on the witness stand about the sole eyewitness identifying Jabbar Washington," said defense attorney Ronald Kuby at the time. "That eyewitness never identified Jabbar Washington as the person who committed the crime, or the person who was there in the apartment that night. She did identify him, correctly, as someone who lived in the building."