In the Unites States each morning
for 5,546 days, Jabbar Collins knew exactly what he'd wear when he awoke: a
dark-green shirt with matching dark-green pants.
The prison
greenies of a convicted murderer, he says, were "overly starched in the
beginning, but as time wore on, and after repeated washes, they were worn and
dull, like so many other things on the inside.
For most of
those 15 years, Mr. Collins, who maintained his innocence, knew the only way
his wardrobe would change was if he did something that's indescribably rare.
He'd have to lawyer himself out of jail.
There was no
crusading journalist, no nonprofit group taking up his cause, just Inmate
95A2646, a high-school dropout from Brooklyn, alone in a computerless prison
law library.
"'Needle
in a haystack' doesn't communicate it exactly. Is it more like lightning
striking your house?" says Adele Bernard, who runs the Post-Conviction
Project at Pace Law School in New York, which investigates claims of wrongful
conviction. "It's so unbelievably hard…that it's almost impossible to come
up with something that captures that."
Mr. Collins
pried documents from wary prosecutors, tracked down reluctant witnesses and
persuaded them, at least once through trickery, to reveal what allegedly went
on before and at the trial where he was convicted of the high-profile 1994
murder of Rabbi Abraham Pollack.
The improbable
result of that decade-and-a-half struggle was evident on a recent morning in a
Midtown Manhattan skyscraper. Mr. Collins sat in a small office he now shares,
wearing one of the eight dark suits he owns, a white shirt with French cuffs, a
blue-and-gray striped tie and a pair of expensive wingtips. "Every day is
beautiful" now, he said, smiling. "I don't have a bad day anymore. I
think that my worst bad day out of prison will be better than my greatest good
day in prison."
On March 13,
1995, as Mr. Collins was led by officers through a side door of a Brooklyn
courtroom to a holding cell, his mother let loose a wailing sound that he'd
"never heard before or since." Her son had just been convicted of
murder.
He was 22, a
father of three and facing at least 34 2/3 years behind bars. Three witnesses
had implicated him in the midday shooting of Mr. Pollack as the rabbi collected
rent in a building at 126 Graham Avenue in the Williamsburg section of
Brooklyn. Mr. Collins said he was home getting a haircut at the time.
To that point
in his life, Mr. Collins had been drifting. His father died when he was 12 and
his mother worked two jobs while also studying nursing. Under-supervised, he
skipped school often, smoked a lot of pot and fathered the first of his
children when he was 15.
When he was 16,
he was arrested for a robbery. He says he was just waiting outside the store
where a robbery took place. Mr. Collins accepted a youthful-offender
adjudication under which he got probation and the arrest could eventually be
purged.
Mr. Collins
later obtained a general-equivalency diploma and took some classes at Long
Island University. He was trying to transfer to John Jay College of Criminal
Justice when he was arrested for Mr. Pollack's murder.
During his
trial, Mr. Collins recalls being mystified. "I felt like a child," he
says, "everyone talking over my head." But hearing his mother wailing
as he was taken away suddenly cleared his head. "You have a life of misery
ahead of you," he remembers telling himself. "The only way you're
going to get out is to become your own lawyer."
On returning to
Rikers Island, the city jail complex, Mr. Collins headed to the law library.
There and later at Green Haven prison north of the city, he spent most of his
free time in law libraries, pouring himself into legal books: "Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure," "McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New
York," "The Legal Research Manual."
A thick text
for paralegals called "Case Analysis and Fundamentals of Legal
Writing" became his bible. He devoted two months to mastering the intricacies
of federal and state law on access to public records.
Who Did What
Jabbar Collins
achieved the rare feat of lawyering himself out of prison, 15 years after he
was convicted of murdering a rabbi in Brooklyn, N.Y. Here are some of those
involved.
PROSECUTOR: Michael
Vecchione denied any witnesses were rewarded
or pressured.
JUDGES: Robert Holdman rejected appeal at state level.
Dora Irizarry heard federal appeal where conviction was
overturned.
WITNESSES: Adrian Diaz testified at trial he saw Collins with a
gun. When Collins much later called him, posing as a D.A. investigator, Diaz
talked about his route to becoming a witness.
Edwin Oliva testified at trial that Collins had said
he planned to rob the rabbi. When Collins wrote to Oliva years later, Oliva
wrote back describing what lay behind his testimony.
Angel Santos testified at trial he had called 911 and
said he saw Collins run past. His voice didn't seem to Collins to match any
voices on the 911 tape.
LAWYER: Joel Rudin helped Collins after his own 10-year legal
effort.
His first
request for trial records under New York's Freedom of Information Law, in July
1995, was denied. He would go on to file six more requests, five more appeals
and a lawsuit before a judge gave him some of the records over two years later.
Finally
succeeding in a request, gaining 239 pages of documents and 94 audio tapes,
emboldened him. "It kind of refilled the tanks," he says, "gave
me the confidence to fight on."
Over time, Mr.
Collins would file a dizzying number of records requests. If they were denied,
he appealed. If he lost, he'd add his requests to those he prepared for other
inmates.
"The
mosaic of intelligence gathering," Mr. Collins calls this. "You
collect one item at a time and you add to the picture piece by piece until you
create what is a stunning mosaic of what really happened."
He picked away
at his case for eight years, but by the fall of 2003 he had hit a wall. That's
when he carried out a ruse to trick Adrian Diaz, who had testified to seeing
Mr. Collins tuck a gun in his waistband after the murder, into talking to him.
"I became
Kevin Beekman, district attorney's investigator, for about 25 minutes,"
Mr. Collins says. The fictitious Mr. Beekman said he needed to recreate
documents lost in the Sept. 11, 2001, World Trade Center attack. When Mr. Diaz
agreed to talk about his testimony, Mr. Collins routed the call through a phone
in his mother's home so it could be recorded.
Mr. Diaz said
that before the trial, he had gone to Puerto Rico, in violation of his
probation for marijuana possession. He agreed to return and testify against Mr.
Collins, he said, only after prosecutors promised they would make sure his
probation wasn't revoked.
That account,
which Mr. Diaz later attested to in a signed affidavit, wasn't provided by
prosecutors to Mr. Collins's defense counsel, who could have used it to
undermine the witness by showing he was given an incentive to testify.
In 2005 Mr.
Collins wrote to another witness, Edwin Oliva, who had testified that before
the murder, Mr. Collins said he was going to rob the rabbi. "I really need
to know what happened between you and the District Attorney's Office," Mr.
Collins wrote.
"I always
knew I was going to hear from you sooner or later," Mr. Oliva wrote back.
"And to tell you the truth, I am glad you wrote, now once and for all I
can settle the record."
Mr. Oliva wrote
that he had been arrested a few weeks after the Pollack murder for a robbery he
pulled in the building. He said the police asked about the rabbi's killing and
he told them all he knew was that Mr. Collins had been arrested.
Detectives
threatened to charge Mr. Oliva as an accessory, he wrote, and then made up a
statement implicating Mr. Collins. Mr. Oliva wrote that he was so strung out
and sleepy from a month-long run of "smoking & sniffin' dope"
that he signed the statement, adding he "didn't even know what...I was
signing."
But now, Mr.
Oliva added, he wanted to help Mr. Collins, "because I know you got a
rotten deal."
Mr. Oliva
granted access to his records. They included a Legal Aid document that
referenced, without elaborating, a "deal" being discussed between the
judge, a prosecutor and Mr. Oliva's attorney. Mr. Oliva was allowed to plead to
a lesser felony than he had been indicted for. He received a sentence of up to
three years. The other charge could have kept him in prison longer.
At the trial,
lead prosecutor Michael Vecchione stated that no key witnesses had received
anything for testifying. "Oliva's motive is simple," the prosecutor
said. "Just like all the rest of the witnesses, he saw something, he heard
something, someone asked him about it, and he is telling what he saw and he is
telling what he heard. Nothing else." Mr. Vecchione declined requests for
comment.
Mr. Collins, though
a skilled jailhouse lawyer who helped many other inmates, could take his own
appeal only so far without help. In late 2005, after 10 years working alone, he
contacted Joel Rudin, a civil-rights attorney known for winning what was then
the largest wrongful-conviction settlement in New York, $5 million.
"I was
amazed" at Mr. Collins's file, Mr. Rudin says. "I've never seen
anything like this. There was so much documentation."
As the lawyer
began reworking the appeal, Mr. Collins gathered another piece of his mosaic.
He obtained a tape of calls to 911 after the killing.
A witness had
testified he called 911 and told of seeing Mr. Collins run past. But when Mr.
Collins listened to the tape of 911 calls, none of the voices sounded like what
he recalled this witness sounding like at the trial.
Mr. Collins
obtained a tape of a prosecution interview with this witness, Angel Santos. He
hired a voice expert to compare the interview tape with the tape of people
calling 911. No matches.
Mr. Santos and
the other two main witnesses, Messrs. Diaz and Oliva, couldn't be reached for
comment. Michael Harrison, Mr. Collins's court-appointed trial lawyer, said he
couldn't remember whether he ever received the 911 tape because it was so long
ago.
In March 2006,
Mr. Rudin asked a state judge to overturn Mr. Collins's murder conviction on
the grounds of newly discovered information the defense should have been given.
Mr. Vecchione,
the prosecutor, swore that claims authorities had either coerced witnesses or
failed to turn over potentially exculpatory information "are, without
exception, untrue."
Then the roof
crashed down. Learning of Mr. Collins's impersonation of an investigator, state
Justice Robert Holdman dismissed the appeal, declaring it to be "wholly
without merit, conclusory, incredible, unsubstantiated, and, in significant
part, to be predicated on a foundation of fraud." For good measure, he
barred Mr. Collins from filing future requests for information.
"Just
devastating," Mr. Collins says. "This had been my life's work for the
last 10 years."
He didn't have
the luxury of wallowing. State law allows only 30 days to appeal such a ruling.
As he wrote his appeal, he couldn't keep out his bitterness, and Mr. Rudin had
to redo it. The state appeal failed.
In what
amounted to their last shot, they filed a motion in federal court in Brooklyn
seeking to overturn the conviction based on prosecutors' "knowing
presentation, at trial, of false or misleading testimony" and withholding
of evidence that might have been used to discredit the main witnesses.
This March,
after two years of legal wrangling, federal Judge Dora Irizarry approved Mr.
Rudin's request for additional material from prosecutors. Information Mr. Collins
had spent more than a decade trying to get his hands on suddenly began pouring
in.
One document
concerned Mr. Oliva, the witness who wrote that under police pressure he signed
a statement implicating Mr. Collins in the murder, even though he knew nothing
about it. The document suggested that as the murder trial neared, Mr. Oliva had
balked at cooperating. It said his work release for a robbery conviction was
revoked "after he failed to cooperate with D.A.'s office regarding a
homicide."
Other newly
discovered information suggested Mr. Oliva had briefly recanted his statement
implicating Mr. Collins. A prosecutor preparing to fight Mr. Collins's appeal
learned this from a retired detective, who said that Mr. Oliva recanted, then
changed his mind again and stuck to his statement after the detective and
several prosecutors spoke with him at the Brooklyn D.A.'s office.
This prosecutor
turned that information over to Judge Irizarry, acknowledging it should have
been provided to Mr. Collins's murder-trial defense. (Mr. Vecchione had denied
at Mr. Collins's state appeal that any witness ever recanted or "had to be
threatened or forced to testify.")
Four days
before a scheduled hearing in Judge Irizarry's federal court, the D.A.'s office
offered to reduce the charge against Mr. Collins to manslaughter, allowing his
immediate release.
Mr. Collins
rejected the offer.
Later the same
day, prosecutors informed the court that they wouldn't fight Mr. Collins's
effort to overturn his conviction, but said they planned to retry him.
A retrial would
move the case back to state court, a venue where prosecutors had known nothing
but success against Mr. Collins.
Mr. Rudin,
desperate to keep the case in federal court, persuaded Judge Irizarry to hold a
rare hearing on whether the D.A. should be barred from retrying Mr. Collins
because its misconduct had been so pervasive.
The hearing's
first witness was Mr. Santos, the man who had testified about making a 911 call
after the murder, but whose voice didn't seem to match any of the voices on the
911 tape.
Mr. Santos told
the hearing that in the period when the murder occurred, he was using drugs
"every day. Twenty-four hours."
He said that as
the murder trial neared a year later, he told Mr. Vecchione he didn't want to
testify, but Mr. Vecchione began "yelling at me and telling me he was
going to hit me over the head with some coffee table."
He said he was
threatened with prosecution, then locked up for a week as a material witness.
When he agreed to testify, he said, he was taken from jail to a Holiday Inn,
which he described as "paradise."
The federal
hearing was due to resume a week later with testimony from Mr. Vecchione and
other prosecutors. Instead, the D.A.'s office gave up. It said its decision was
"based upon the weaknesses that now exist with the witnesses," but
added that its "position, then and now, was that we believe in this
defendant's guilt."
Judge Irizarry
was not pleased. "It's really sad that the D.A.'s office persists in
standing firm and saying they did nothing wrong here," she said. "It
is, indeed, sad." Judge Irizarry declined to be interviewed; the judge who
turned down Mr. Collins's state appeal didn't return a call seeking comment,
Brooklyn D.A.
Charles Hynes stood firm. "Michael Vecchione is not guilty of any misconduct,"
Mr. Hynes said at the time. He, Mr. Vecchione—who is now chief of the rackets
division—and a spokesman for the D.A.'s office all declined to comment, citing
likely litigation by Mr. Collins.
Mr. Collins
walked out of prison on June 9, to an emotional welcome from his family. He has
had many Rip Van Winkle moments. Swipe cards have replaced tokens on the
subway; coffee shops called Starbucks are everywhere; there are these devices
called iPhones.
But some things
haven't changed. Mr. Collins is back in a law library. His attorney, Mr. Rudin,
has hired him as a paralegal.
Mr. Collins is
first concentrating on his own case. He has filed "notices of claim"
announcing an intention to sue the city and state for $60 million.
As a paralegal, he can't give legal
advice to the many inmates who have written seeking it. He hopes one day to
change that, by becoming an attorney.
Sean Gardiner
Sean Gardiner
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