Nelson Mail

Lucy the lab’s alive and Joshua is mighty happy about it United States

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The discovery of a black lab named Lucy led to the unravellin­g of a criminal case yesterday against an Oregon man who had begun serving a 50-year prison sentence.

Joshua Horner, a plumber from the central Oregon town of Redmond, was convicted on April 12, 2017, of sexual abuse of a minor.

In the trial, the complainan­t testified Horner had threatened to shoot her animals if she went to the police about the alleged molestatio­n, and said she saw him shoot her dog, killing it, to make his point.

Six months after a jury convicted Horner in a verdict that was not unanimous, he asked the Oregon Innocence Project for help.

The group took up his case. When the group raised concerns in April about the case with Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel, he agreed to work with them.

Horner had insisted he never shot the dog.

Finding the dog would show the complainan­t had lied under oath. But if it was alive, where was it?

An Oregon Innocence Project volunteer and an official from Hummel’s office searched for it. The black lab had reportedly had been given away. The investigat­ors were sniffing on the trail, but they had trouble tracking down the purported dog’s owner.

‘‘They made a couple trips around Deschutes County; he was not there,’’ said Steve Wax, legal director of the Oregon Innocence Project. ‘‘We heard he was in Seattle. Then we learned he had a place on the Oregon Coast.’’

It was there, in the town of Gearhart northwest of Portland, that the pair finally found Lucy. That key evidence showed the complainan­t had not been truthful when testifying, the district attorney said.

‘‘Lucy the dog was not shot. Lucy the dog is alive and well,’’ Hummel’s office said in a statement.

Hummel told the court Monday he’s not certain that Horner did not sexually abuse the complainan­t, but that he’s now not convinced he did.

The Associated Press is not naming her because it doesn’t identify alleged victims of sexual abuse.

Deschutes County Judge Michael Adler dismissed the case.

Horner, in a statement released by the Oregon Innocence Project, thanked the group, his family, friends and Hummel.

‘‘Kelli and I are ready to pick up the pieces of our lives,’’ Horner said, referring to his wife. The couple came out of the courthouse Monday holding hands and smiling.

Horner had walked out of a state prison in Pendleton on August 3 after the Oregon Court of Appeals reversed his conviction and ordered a new trial. The appeals court said the defence had not been allowed to present certain evidence that was unrelated to the dog.

Now, Horner no longer faces that second trial. He declined a request for an interview.

After Lucy was found, the complainan­t failed to attend a meeting in August to discuss her testimony, Hummel said. Last Wednesday, one of his investigat­ors heard she was at a home near Redmond. When he pulled up to the driveway, she ran away.

Horner had been indicted under a previous district attorney, but the trial and conviction came under Hummel’s watch.

Hummel said in an email the issue of the dog being shot was raised for the first time during the trial, so there was no investigat­ion to be done regarding it prior to trial, ‘‘and we had no credible reason to question the statement after it was made.’’

He said exoneratio­ns are a reminder that while America has ‘‘the best system of justice in the world it is not perfect. Mistakes will be made and we should be judged by how we respond to them.’’

 ??  ?? Joshua Horner will not face another trial on a charge of sexual abuse of a minor after campaigner­s found Lucy the black lab. The complainan­t in the case had claimed Horner shot the dog dead as a threat.
Joshua Horner will not face another trial on a charge of sexual abuse of a minor after campaigner­s found Lucy the black lab. The complainan­t in the case had claimed Horner shot the dog dead as a threat.
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