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   rec.knives      Anything that goes cut or has an edge      28,028 messages   

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   Message 27,903 of 28,028   
   killer ho's to All   
   She killed her husband 14 years ago. In    
   07 Nov 23 23:48:38   
   
   XPost: co.politics, soc.women, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: killer-hos@now.org   
      
   Traci Housman picked glass from her hair as she told a Boulder police   
   detective that she’d just stabbed her husband, sticking him once with a   
   knife in their kitchen after he’d slammed her head into the wall, into a   
   picture frame that shattered and showered glass.   
      
   Officers took her to the hospital before they transported her to jail on   
   that August night 14 years ago, said Chuck Heidel, then the Boulder police   
   detective on the case and now a senior investigator at the Boulder County   
   District Attorney’s Office.   
      
   She was charged with the second-degree murder of her husband, John   
   Housman, a count that carried between 16 and 48 years in prison. But   
   prosecutors, recognizing her self-defense claim, went on to offer her a   
   deal: She could plead guilty to criminally negligent homicide, a low-level   
   felony, and serve only probation.   
      
   “It still felt like an impossible choice,” Traci Housman said during a   
   court hearing in Boulder last week. “If I went to trial, my lawyers were   
   clear, we would have to bring out every negative thing about John, and I   
   didn’t want to make a monster out of him. But I was also looking at   
   decades of prison… I struggled with actually taking it. Because it wasn’t   
   the truth. I wasn’t wrong. I saved my life that night.”   
      
   Traci Housman spent eight months in jail after the Aug. 2, 2009, killing,   
   then pleaded guilty and was sentenced to seven years probation, of which   
   she served three before she was granted an early release. But the   
   conviction followed her everywhere after that: blocking her from job   
   opportunities, from her chosen career.   
      
   Until Tuesday.   
      
   In a 35-minute hearing, Boulder County District Court Judge Patrick Butler   
   vacated the conviction and exonerated Traci Housman, ruling that she had a   
   valid self-defense claim in her husband’s killing. He did so at the   
   request of the Boulder County district attorney’s Conviction Integrity   
   Unit, which reviews cases of wrongful conviction.   
      
   “We’re not here today because we believe the wrong person was arrested,”   
   District Attorney Michael Dougherty said in court. “Ms. Housman will   
   readily admit she was ultimately responsible for the death of Mr. Housman,   
   but that it was in an act of self-defense. That claim is true. That claim   
   is accurate. That claim is valid.”   
      
   John Housman’s family opposed the exoneration. The violence in John and   
   Traci’s relationship was mutual, said his daughter, Hope Scalcini, who was   
   11 when her father was killed.   
      
   “Frankly, I am fairly horrified that Traci’s conviction has been vacated,”   
   she said in an email. “I do not feel that justice has been served; but   
   that in fact a further injustice has occurred… No one but my dad and Traci   
   will ever know what really and fully happened that night, and it feels   
   really unfair that she is the only one around to tell their side of the   
   story. It’s easy to fight against a dead man when you get to create the   
   scenario and story.”   
      
   The exoneration is unusual in several ways, experts told The Denver Post.   
   The case deals with a claim of legal innocence, not factual innocence, and   
   the process was driven by the Boulder DA’s internal Conviction Integrity   
   Unit, rather than by an outside entity or Housman’s defense attorneys.   
      
   “It’s not unprecedented, but it is somewhat unusual,” said Marissa   
   Bluestine, assistant director at the Quattrone Center for the Fair   
   Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law   
   School.   
      
   https://www.denverpost.com/2023/11/06/traci-housman-exoneration-boulder-   
   conviction-review-unit/?itm_source=parsely-api   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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