Skip to content

Defense attorney floats alternative theory

on December 18, 2010

A defense attorney questioned DNA expert David Stockwell in a preliminary hearing on Friday about whether the evidence actually places John Crane Jr. at the Richmond High School courtyard where police say a student was raped and beaten in October 2009.

In Contra Costa County Superior Court on Wednesday, Stockwell testified that sperm cell DNA found on the victim and at the scene closely matched the profiles of Crane, Manuel Ortega, an unidentified male, and possibly Marcelles Peter. Non-sperm cell DNA found on a discarded condom wrapper matched the profile of Jose Montano, Stockwell said.

Crane, Ortega, Peter, and Montano are four of seven defendants charged in the case. But in the hearing’s 18 days, no witness has testified that Crane was seen in the courtyard at Richmond High School.

Stockwell conceded that of the hundreds of cases he’s been a part of, “this is the most complex case I have ever worked.” While Stockwell testified he is confident in his findings, he did agree with defense attorneys that the case presents the additional challenge of identifying people from DNA samples in which a number of profiles were mixed together and the victim had no recollection of the assault.

“It’s like going into a dark room if you will, and I’m here to provide the light that will help glean what’s in that room,” said Stockwell.

Dustin Gordon, representing Crane—the defendant most implicated by the DNA evidence—tried to float an alternative narrative by Stockwell.

Gordon raised the possibility that Crane—or someone matching his profile—had unprotected sex with the victim hours before anyone else had sexual contact with her. He asked whether it were possible that another person transferred Crane’s semen to items like the walkie-talkie. Gordon also asked if the semen matching Crane’s profile could turn up on swabs taken from the girl’s body at a later time.

Stockwell testified that both were possible but it depended on the length of time and whether the girl had cleaned herself.

As Gordon continued his line of questioning, District Attorney Dara Cashman objected and the judge quickly sustained.

“It’s a theoretical issue,” Judge Gregory Caskey told Gordon. “Absent some kind of direct testimony to support that theory it is just a theory.”

Gordon argued that since no witnesses placed his client at the scene, it was a reasonable interpretation from the evidence presented by the DA. Judge Caskey disagreed and indicated that the questioning was unfairly prejudicial.

The exchange provides insight into Gordon’s defense strategy should Crane go to trial. Gordon’s line of questioning suggests he may argue that Crane was never at Richmond High and that he had sex with the victim sometime before the assault took place.

Police testified earlier that when they showed a picture of Crane to the girl, she said she had never seen him before.

Crane was arrested after a DNA profile from the scene was entered into a database and came up as a match.

Police have described Crane as an ex-con with a record of violent crime. Attorney Collin Cooper, who has represented Crane in the past and is a law partner of Crane’s current attorney, told Richmond Confidential in October that Crane has never spent time in prison, and his only prior offense was a pleaded-out drug charge. Both accounts appear inaccurate.

A record check of Crane’s criminal history in Contra Costa County revealed Crane is indeed a convicted felon, but there is no evidence of violence.

Crane had a felony drug possession charge dismissed in 1990 after completing a diversion program. In 1994, Crane was convicted for driving recklessly while evading a peace officer. He entered a work program in lieu of serving time. In 2002, Crane was sentenced and served 365 days for four felony counts of the sale or transport of drugs.

Crane’s DNA was likely entered into the Combined DNA Index System—a database funded by the FBI—sometime after the 2002 felony conviction.

Since November 2004 authorities have been allowed to collect DNA from anyone convicted of a felony offense. State law allows authorities to collect DNA from felons convicted before November 2004 if they are in custody, on probation, or on parole.

In addition to being jailed for 365 days, Crane was given five years probation—thus qualifying him for DNA collection.

Since 2009, adults arrested—not just convicted—for any felony offense are subject to DNA collection.

Criminal checks in Contra Costa County for the other defendants were clear except for Manuel Ortega, who was charged last July with vandalism and the unlawful possession of a weapon. Three weeks before the assault of the Richmond High student, Ortega was also charged with receiving stolen property. All three misdemeanor charges are still pending.

The preliminary hearing will continue on Monday at 9 a.m. with the DA’s final witness, Sgt. Lori Curran—the lead investigator for the case—in Contra Costa County Superior Court in Martinez.

3 Comments

  1. Jack on December 18, 2010 at 2:54 pm

    Crane’s semen was not just found inside the girl but on other parts of her body. Rodriegez made public statements that Ortega and the others had left the scene before returning and if true, Crane had opportunity to rape her. Word of her being behind the school was spreading by both word of mouth and electronically and it would have been easy for him to know she was there and incapacitated.

    Also, that the others did not say Crane was there does not mean he wasn’t and they could have omitted it for a number of reasons.

    They already lied about the presence of Cody Smith after Ortega attacked her and admitted he touched her. Also the girl’s cellphone was found in his bedroom and it had been answered well after the assaults began and taunted her father with sick sexual comments about his daughter.

    Smith was also said by at least one person to have been seen with Ortega shortly before the police arrived.

    One question I have is considering that she was beaten, kicked, and reportedly struck with a blunt object and stomped on to the point of having swelling in the brain and her face horribly bruised and swollen, that she was found hypothermic and had a life threatening level that strongly indicates her last memory of someone forcing more alcohol down her throat is true, why hasn’t anyone been charged with attempted murder?

    Her BAC was still at this extreme level despite at least 3 or 4 hours (if not more) passing between her last taking a drink voluntarily and when she was tested and had been vomiting from before she was attacked until shortly before the police arrived.

    If she hadn’t been found she would have died from alcohol poisoning, the hypothermia and her severe injuries.



  2. Jack on December 18, 2010 at 2:58 pm

    Also the odds of someone matching Crane’s profile are so statistically remote that it is stunning a lawyer would even make such a claim.



  3. Folkwolf101 on December 20, 2010 at 2:07 pm

    Lawyers can be extraordinarily scummy. Good points, Jack! I will add that their were accounts of dozens of people, not just 20 or 30, but dozens milling about and pressing in for their own action. So, no one saw Crane because no one recognized him. The evil of this gangrape has no precedent, other than certain villages in teh Congo. The victim was nearly raped to death while tortured and waterboarded with alcohol suffocation.



Richmond Confidential welcomes comments from our readers, but we ask users to keep all discussion civil and on-topic. Comments post automatically without review from our staff, but we reserve the right to delete material that is libelous, a personal attack, or spam. We request that commenters consistently use the same login name. Comments from the same user posted under multiple aliases may be deleted. Richmond Confidential assumes no liability for comments posted to the site and no endorsement is implied; commenters are solely responsible for their own content.

Card image cap
logo
Richmond Confidential

Richmond Confidential is an online news service produced by the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism for, and about, the people of Richmond, California. Our goal is to produce professional and engaging journalism that is useful for the citizens of the city.

Please send news tips to richconstaff@gmail.com.

Latest Posts

Scroll To Top