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Cathy Woods, wrongly incarcerated for more than 35 years.(Reno Sheriff office)
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Michelle Mitchell, Reno murder victim.(file picture)

Attorneys for Cathy Woods, who according to the National Registry of Exonerations’ database is the longest-ever wrongfully incarcerated woman in U.S. history, filed suit in federal court Monday August 22nd, 2016 against four former Reno, NV and Shreveport, LA cops, a district attorney and a physician who knowingly caused her wrongful imprisonment.

On the evening of February 24, 1976, Michelle Mitchell, a 19-year-old University of Nevada-Reno student, was murdered near the campus. With blanketing media coverage, there was immense public pressure to solve the murder and make the campus and its young charges safe. Ms. Woods was a Reno resident at the time and, like many other Reno residents, saw the many news reports.

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In the days immediately after Ms. Mitchell’s death, numerous witnesses who were near the campus on the night of the murder came forward to the police with information that they had seen a suspicious man near and running away from the scene of the crime at around the time that the crime was believed to have occurred. In fact, the police believed that Michelle’s killer was probably a male serial killer, given similar killings of young women in the region.

One of the hottest “heater cases” on the Reno, NV police docket, it went unsolved for three years, without any arrests and no fresh leads, an embarrassment to the department.

In March 1979, after a lifelong history of severe mental illness and with only a sixth grade education, Ms. Woods had been involuntarily committed to receive psychiatric care in Shreveport, Louisiana. While she was floridly psychotic and hearing voices, Ms. Woods told a counselor at Louisiana State University (LSU) Medical Center a vague story about having killed a girl named Michelle in Reno several years earlier. The counselor contacted Shreveport police, who in turn contacted Reno police.

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For the Reno police, this was their big break, their opportunity to solve the case and rehabilitate the department after their three-year long failure to solve the case.

Dr. Douglas Burks of LSU Medical Center violated his professional ethics by participating in the interrogation of Ms. Woods with Shreveport and Reno police when Ms. Woods clearly was not competent to answer questions, let alone truly consent to be interrogated and fully understand her rights. She had been involuntarily detained at the LSU Medical Center, was not free to leave, and was in an inherently coercive environment due to her severe mental illness.

In the days leading up to the interrogation, Ms. Woods had not responded to her psychiatric medication and her condition had gotten worse. It profoundly affected her ability to function properly as she experienced disorganized thoughts, an inability to think in a linear or logical fashion, and auditory hallucinations.

As the suit notes,

“As a result of Ms. Woods’ inability to communicate in a normal manner, as well as her below-average intelligence and limited education, it was immediately obvious to any person who questioned Ms. Woods … that she was suffering from cognitive difficulties and symptoms of mental illness, and that she had little to no education or understanding of the situation…. Rather than take steps to ensure that Ms. Woods was truly and freely agreeing to confess, these Defendants took advantage of her diminished capacity and mental vulnerabilities and continued their interrogations in a manner intended to force Ms. Woods to falsely confess….

Ms. Woods’ false confession during her interrogations was not memorialized or written down in any way. It was not audio recorded, even though the Defendants had the capacity to record statements. Nor did the Defendants ask Ms. Woods to write her confession down. Nor did they write her confession down for her and ask her to review or sign it.

  To make her false confession believable, police improperly fed Woods details of the crime known only to themselves and the murderer.”

How DNA testing

proved Her Innocence

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Serial killer Rodney L. Halbower, was identified as the source of the DNA from the cigarette.(file picture)

After 35 Years, Ms. Woods Obtained Freedom.

In 2013, DNA testing was conducted on evidence from the Michelle Mitchell crime scene, including a cigarette butt found next to Michelle’s body. The testing revealed that the DNA did not come from Ms. Woods.

Instead, it matches a male serial rapist and murder named Rodney Halbower, who has been linked through DNA evidence to the murders of three other young women in northern California. Those murders were committed at around the same time as Michelle Mitchell’s murder.

In 2014, Ms. Woods’ post-conviction attorneys moved for a new trial on the basis of this newly discovered evidence. On September 10, 2014, the trial court granted Ms. Woods’s motion for a new trial and vacated her conviction. Charges remained pending against her for an additional six months. In March 2015, the State of Nevada filed a motion to dismiss the charges, and the charges against Ms. Woods were dismissed.

“While Ms. Woods’ case is extraordinary for the extreme length of her wrongful incarceration, it was tragically common in other crucial respects,” said Elizabeth Wang, attorney at Loevy & Loevy. “At the time of her wrongful arrest, Ms. Woods was a poorly educated young woman with diagnosed severe mental illness. The authorities charged with protecting her instead took advantage of her mental illness. In doing so they betrayed their professional ethics and intentionally framed her.”

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The cigarette left in the garage where Mitchell was found matched the DNA profile of sperm gathered in an unsolved homicide in San Mateo, Hicks said. That unsolved death was one of five Gypsy Hill killings in the San Francisco Bay area.

Mitchell disappeared on Feb. 24, 1976, after her Volkswagen Beetle broke down near the UNR campus. Her body was found hours later in a nearby garage with her hands bound behind her back and her throat slashed.

Three years later, while in a Louisiana mental institution, Woods confessed to killing Mitchell, but she was from Reno, and had wach the news like everybodyelse.

That led to Woods’ first trial in Reno.

Last September, Maizie Pusich, Woods’ attorney, said her client only confessed to the murder to get a better room in the institution. Woods had denied killing Mitchell for years, Pusich said.

Woods was granted a new trial in 1985 after an appeal, but was found guilty a second time. In September, Woods was released from prison after authorities found new DNA evidence from a Marlboro cigarette butt obtained at the scene decades earlier.

Rodney L. Halbower, 66, was identified as the source of the DNA from the cigarette, authorities said.

The match was found when Halbower was transferred early last year from the Nevada Department of Corrections to Oregon for crimes there.

Additionally, Halbower is a person of interest in the 1976 Gypsy Hill murders on a DNA link discovered by the San Mateo, Calif., County Crime Lab. He does not face any charges in Washoe County, Hicks said.

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Washoe County District Attorney Chris Hicks.

“Rodney Halbower is a suspect in this investigation, so I’m very limited as to what I can say on this,” Hicks said.“I do not fault the law enforcement involved in the original investigation, the prosecution or the two juries that found Cathy Woods guilty,” said Hicks.

“They were faced with a vicious and tragic unsolved murder and were presented with details of intentional confessions from a person who resided in the area at the time of the murder,” he said.

“They did not have the incredible tool of DNA,” Hicks added.

Woods was unavailable for an interview. She is staying with her brother and his wife in Southern California, Pusich said.

Although it was a victory for Woods, it was a decision that should have been made years ago, Pusich said.

“She is delighted,” Pusich said. “She is having probably the best day of her life because she knows that this is all over.”