Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Cathy Woods appears in Washoe District court in Reno. Andy Barron/The Reno Gazette-Journal via AP.
Reno

Woman who wrongfully spent 35 years in prison for murder to sue

Woods was diagnosed as schizophrenic and was “floridly psychotic and hearing voices” at the time she gave her alleged confession.

A WOMAN WHO spent 35 years in prison for a 1976 Reno, Nevada killing before being exonerated by DNA evidence has sued officials in Nevada and Louisiana, alleging civil rights violations and malicious prosecution.

Lawyers for Cathy Woods, 66, say she was deprived of almost her entire adult life based on a confession authorities got while questioning her without a lawyer at a psychiatric hospital in Shreveport, Louisiana.

“She was an extremely vulnerable person at that time and today,” Elizabeth Wang, one of Woods’ lawyers, said.

“Anyone who sees her would see what 35 years in prison did to her.”

Woods, who also used the name Anita Carter, was freed in September 2014 and cleared last year in the stabbing death of 19-year-old Michelle Mitchell near the University of Nevada, Reno.

A National Registry of Exonerations’ database lists Woods as the longest-ever wrongfully incarcerated woman in US history.

Officials say DNA linked an Oregon prisoner, Rodney Halbower, to the stabbing, which drew intense media attention during the three years it went unsolved.

Halbower also is suspected in several Northern California deaths in early 1976, which were dubbed the Gypsy Hill killings. Now 68, he faces a court hearing on Friday in San Mateo County, California, to determine if he should stand trial in the slayings of two teenage girls from the San Francisco Bay Area.

Authorities say Halbower’s DNA on a Marlboro cigarette puts him at the scene of Mitchell’s slaying.

Police and prosecutors in Nevada thought they had their break in the case when Shreveport police reported that Woods told a counselor in a psychiatric hospital in early 1979 that she recalled something about a woman being stabbed in Reno, according to Woods’ lawsuit.

Moving

Woods had moved to Shreveport about a year after Mitchell’s killing, and she had been committed to the hospital by her mother.

Her lawyers say Woods was diagnosed as schizophrenic and was “floridly psychotic and hearing voices” at the time she gave her alleged confession.

Woods only talked about “vague information about the crime that had been publicly reported,” the lawsuit said, and she was denied a lawyer by detectives who “promised that things would go ‘quicker’ and easier if she did not have an attorney.”

Woods was convicted in Nevada based largely on the confession and sentenced in 1980 to life in prison without parole. She won a new trial on an appeal to the state Supreme Court but was convicted again in 1985.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in US District Court in Reno, names the city of Reno, two former Reno officers, former Washoe County District Attorney Cal Dunlap, two former Shreveport officers and a doctor who treated Woods at the Louisiana State University Medical Center.

The lawsuit alleges malicious prosecution, multiple violations of Woods’ constitutional rights to due process, and civil conspiracy. It seeks unspecified damages.

It accuses the doctor, Douglas Matthew Burks, of doing nothing to stop Woods’ interrogation.

Read: Child pornography: 75 people arrested in Europe-wide crackdown

Author
Associated Foreign Press
Your Voice
Readers Comments
26
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.