Why
Is Alan Yurko Still in Jail?
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
In
last week's column, the Florida judge looked over the new evidence
it turned out the autopsy used to convict Alan Yurko of killing
his sick infant son via "shaken baby syndrome" had not
even been conducted on a child of the right race and vacated
the conviction. After seven years, Alan Yurko was a free man ...
right?
Ha,
good one. You're not thinking like a government prosecutor.
"As
soon as the judge said, 'I'm vacating this sentence,' the prosecution
said, 'Your honor, we're appealing your decision,' which would have
left him sitting in jail another two to three years, which would
have come out the same way with the botched autopsy and the discredited
medical examiner," Francine Yurko told me.
"So
what they did is they offered him a plea bargain. They said, 'We
won't appeal the judge's decision if right here you are willing
to plead out to simple manslaughter, no child abuse, in which case
we'll give you immediate release.' "
A
deal which would prevent the Yurkos from suing the state of Florida
for Alan's seven years of false imprisonment, of course.
"They
cleared out the courtroom and gave me and Alan a chance to discuss
it. It came down to three more years and the amount of money it
would take to keep fighting, and he decided to take it, and he made
it known that with the plea to manslaughter, what he was willing
to work with was the fact of culpable negligence being a form of
manslaughter.
"The
way he phrased it in court was, 'I should have been a more informed
parent; I should have taken a more active role in my child's health
care, and if in fact I had been a more informed parent I would not
have let him be given those shots.' "
You
might want to make note of that. The state of Florida has now officially
accepted, as grounds for a guilty plea to the crime of manslaughter,
an admission by a grieving father that he committed a felony when
he allowed his son to be killed by allowing medical authorities
to give the infant a "standard" dose of vaccinations.
Alan
"was given immediate release on Aug. 27 (2004) and he was home
for two weeks," Francine says. Finally, a happy ending. The
innocent man at home with his wife and stepdaughter ... right?
You
are still not thinking like a government agent. Pay attention, now.
"Then
Ohio decided to reactivate an old parole violation that stemmed
back to when he was 19 years old," Francine says. "We
believe law enforcement here or even the prosecution here, because
of his being released, it was a retaliation kind of thing. ...
"When
he was 19 he had been on parole (for burglary). Because of the risk
factors with the birth, Alan left Ohio two months prior to the end
of his parole, without permission. They took him back and violated
him on leaving the state without permission and failing to report
in over that time to his parole officer ....
"So
he was home for a few weeks in August and September, and then they
came to our house and arrested him and sent him to Ohio. He was
in holding for about a month; they extradited him back to Ohio.
It took him 19 days to get him there, where he spent the entire
time on a transport bus.
"And
then of course he was there for a short period of time, he saw the
head of the parole board, who was also a former public defender,
and she looked into the case here in Florida and the information
from Ohio and believed in his innocence and was very impressed with
the Yurko Project and gave him time served, with immediate release."
OK.
Finally Alan is home with his wife and ... no? You're catching on,
aren't you?
Define
"immediate."
"But
as I said, it takes 60 days to process out. He saw the parole board
there in Ohio and they gave him 'immediate release.' Of course it
takes 60 days to process an 'immediate release,' so he will be out
as of Monday.
"But
through that experience, now I can help others, and help inform
others, and maybe scare them enough into taking their kid in to
have them checked out," Francine Yurko says.
But
I think I'll still be calling the Yurkos again, sometime after March
7 ... just to make sure.
March
10, 2005
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2005 Vin Suprynowicz
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