The Boston Globe

Rosa’s attorneys urge Suffolk DA to drop charges

- By Ivy Scott GLOBE STAFF Ivy Scott can be reached at ivy.scott@globe.com.

Attorneys convened outside Suffolk Superior Court Monday to urge Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden to drop the charges against a Chelsea man whose murder conviction was overturned last week, marking his second wrongful conviction since his case was first tried in 1986.

“This conviction was built on a house of cards with a foundation that has entirely dissolved,” said Radha Natarajan, executive director of the New England Innocence Project. “The ball is in the hands of the Suffolk District Attorney ... [to decide] whether to end this injustice, or whether they are going to proceed with a fourth trial.”

Supported by his wife, Thomas Rosa, 62, rested gently on his cane and offered reporters a wan smile through the morning drizzle that peppered the Superior Court courtyard late Monday morning. Because Rosa is still facing criminal charges, his attorneys said he and his family are unable to comment directly on the ruling.

Rosa has already been prosecuted three times for the 1985 murder of Gwendolyn Taylor; the first trial resulted in a hung jury, and Rosa’s conviction­s in the subsequent two trials were both overturned because of concerns about how the case was prosecuted.

After spending 34 years behind bars, Rosa was released from prison in October 2020 while his most recent conviction was under review. On Wednesday, Justice Michael Ricciuti ordered a new trial for Rosa after determinin­g his 1993 conviction was “based on evidence that was far from overwhelmi­ng,” including forensic and investigat­ive techniques from the 1980s that modern science has called into question.

At the time, prosecutor­s presented jurors with the testimony of two eyewitness­es and argued that “the extreme stress and trauma they experience­d significan­tly improved their memory” and their identifica­tion of Rosa, according to court records. However, Ricciuti wrote in his motion ordering a new trial that advances in eyewitness science suggest the testimonie­s of those eyewitness­es were “not as strong as the Commonweal­th argued they were.”

Charlotte Whitmore of the Boston College Innocence Program, who represents Rosa alongside Natarajan, stressed that “memory does not operate like a video recorder ... it can be contaminat­ed, just like [physical] trace evidence.”

Both eyewitness­es saw the assailant for “at most 10 seconds, in the dark, at night,” Whitmore said, and their descriptio­ns of the man varied. The one thing both people could agree on was that the killer had “a missing tooth or a large gap — and at the time, Mr. Rosa had a full set of teeth.”

That should have led police to pursue other suspects, Whitmore said, but they chose to investigat­e and charge Rosa.

“Mr. Rosa tried to show the jury they had the wrong person, but this was before anyone knew the dangers of eyewitness testimony,” she said. “He even volunteere­d his blood, hair, and saliva, begging police to compare them with the evidence … but there was a problem” there, too.

Rosa was investigat­ed as a suspect before the widespread use of DNA testing, meaning prosecutor­s relied on tests showing that bodily fluids found on the victim matched Rosa’s blood type, and that a stain on Rosa’s jacket matched the blood type of the victim.

After his 1993 conviction, Rosa tried to have the evidence DNA-tested, Natarajan said, but it was unclear whether he would ever be able to exclude himself as a suspect because “the district attorney’s office lost significan­t evidence, including the murder weapon found at the crime scene.”

However, “there fortunatel­y were significan­t pieces of evidence that could be tested,” and new DNA analysis conducted by two different experts indicated that “Rosa is excluded from the male DNA found in the victim’s body,” Natarajan said.

“This demonstrat­es not only that blood-type evidence was misleading to jurors, but that the eyewitness identifica­tion was wrong,” she added. “What was used as evidence of Mr. Rosa’s guilt, was actually evidence of his innocence.”

The question now before prosecutor­s, she said, is whether to try Rosa’s case a fourth time, after he has already spent more than half his life in prison, steadily maintainin­g his innocence.

At 62, Rosa is declining in health, Natarajan said, with the latest blow coming last year as he suffered a stroke.

James Borghesani, a spokespers­on for Hayden’s office, told the Globe Friday that the office is “reviewing the ruling and will announce our decision at a future date.”

Natarajan said if Hayden chooses to prosecute Rosa’s case again, “we will be ready.”

As supporters cheered “Good luck, Mr. Rosa!” his attorneys encouraged Suffolk County residents to call Hayden’s office and urge him to drop the charges against their client.

“In 1993, Mr. Rosa was a married man with a growing family, who had never been charged with a crime of violence and believed the system would soon realize it had made a terrible mistake,” Natarajan said. “Now, his reaction is tempered ... but people need to know what their taxpayer dollars and support are going to: Is it the continued prosecutio­n of an innocent man, or is it the dropping of these charges?”

 ?? SUZANNE KREITER/GLOBE STAFF ?? Thomas Rosa Jr. (center) spoke with his wife, Virginia, after a press conference with the New England Innocence Project
SUZANNE KREITER/GLOBE STAFF Thomas Rosa Jr. (center) spoke with his wife, Virginia, after a press conference with the New England Innocence Project

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States