The Arizona Republic

Court frees former officer again in ex-wife’s killing

- By John Coyne and Kantele Franko

AKRON, Ohio — A former police captain released after nearly 15 years in prison for his exwife’s slaying landed back in custody for a few hours Thursday after an appeals court ruled a judge was wrong to free him based on bite-mark DNA testing.

A county judge ordered former Akron officer Douglas Prade taken into custody at a morning hearing, but Prade left the county jail in the afternoon because the Ohio Supreme Court granted his request to temporaril­y block the appeals court ruling.

“This has been a crazy day, but you guys seem to forget I spent 15 years in hell,” Prade told reporters as he left the jail.

Prosecutor­s wanted Prade sent back to prison. But his attorneys are fighting to keep him free while he tries to appeal to the high court, which hasn’t said whether it would hear the case.

Prade was freed from prison in January 2013 when now-retired Judge Judy Hunter decided there was convincing evidence of his innocence based on DNA tests. The tests of the bite mark on Dr. Margo Prade’s lab coat showed the DNA did not match that of her former husband.

On Wednesday, Ohio’s 9th District Court of Appeals said the DNA testing raised more questions than answers and that Prade’s original conviction was based on overwhelmi­ng circumstan­tial evidence.

“Without a doubt, Prade was excluded as a contributo­r of the DNA that was found in the bite mark section of Margo’s lab coat,” the ruling said. “The DNAtesting, however, produced exceedingl­y odd results.”

Each sample produced completely different results, the appeals court said. “While it is indisputab­le that there was only one killer, at least two partial male profiles were uncovered within the bite mark,” the ruling said.

Prade, who maintains his innocence, had asked the Supreme Court to block the appeals court judgment, citing his intended appeal and an earlier alternativ­e order granting him a new trial, which his attorneys say “provides a strong basis for allowing Mr. Prade to remain released.”

Prade had been living in Akron, bought a home and has been getting to know his grandchild­ren, his attorneys said in the filing as they explained why they don’t consider him likely to flee.

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