MO attorney general agrees to hearing for woman imprisoned 42 years who claims innocence [The Kansas City Star]
In an uncommon move, the
Lawyers with the
In its response last week, the attorney general’s office asked the circuit court judge overseeing the case,
The AG’s office reserved the right to raise defenses against Hemme’s claims, meaning its lawyers could try to get her case thrown out once more fact finding has been done. The office also said Hemme’s attorneys have “alleged facts that if true may entitle her to relief.”
The response was surprising to local attorneys, given that the AG’s office has for decades, under
“I truly hope this means they will be evaluating the evidence and not having a knee-jerk reaction of opposing the petition,” said
Ramsey, who is not involved in Hemme’s case, said the AG’s office usually opposes evidentiary hearings in innocence claims.
Gipson — who has criticized the AG for typically opposing every case “no matter what the facts are” — also considered the response in Hemme’s case atypical. But Gipson, who also is not involved in the case, said until the AG’s office concedes someone was wrongly convicted, he doubted the six-page court filing signaled a broader shift in the office’s culture.
“I hope I’m wrong, but I just don’t see this as a wholesale change in their attitude toward litigating these things,” he said.
The AG’s opposition to innocence claims has gained national attention in recent years, especially under former Attorney General
Schmitt’s office fought
A spokesperson for the attorney general’s office, now under
Sandra Hemme’s innocence claim
The only evidence connecting Hemme to the murder of Jeschke, a quiet
A patient at the St. Joseph State Hospital’s psychiatric ward at the time, Hemme gave many conflicting statements to the police when questioned after the crime. She initially didn’t even mention a murder. She later claimed to have seen a man commit the killing — a theory that was pursued by police and prosecutors, who charged the man, until they realized he was miles away in
Another time, Hemme said she knew about the murder because of extrasensory perception — or, as it is also known, the sixth sense.
It wasn’t until nearly two weeks after her first encounter with detectives that Hemme told authorities that she, alone, violently took Jeschke’s life. Even then, she was anything but certain.
“I think I stabbed her with it,” Hemme said of a hunting knife. “I don’t know. I don’t know.”
Hemme initially pleaded guilty to capital murder, but her conviction was thrown out on appeal. She was then found guilty in 1985 during a one-day jury trial devoid of physical evidence and eyewitnesses. Her words were the only evidence against her.
In recounting the case in its response, the attorney general’s office did argue that Hemme’s numerous statements included details that she “could not have known unless” she committed the murder.
But the
Shortly after Jeschke was found dead, Holman tried to use her credit card to buy
Additionally, Jeschke’s earrings were found at Holman’s apartment — a fact that was hidden from Hemme’s lawyers at trial.
Holman, who died in 2015, was considered a suspect late in the homicide investigation. His colleagues looked into his alibi — a story of him having sex with a woman named “Mary” at a motel next to Jeschke’s apartment — but it could not be corroborated.
Hemme’s fight for freedom is supported by
One of Hemme’s former attorneys,
If Hemme is ultimately exonerated, her prison term would mark the longest known wrongful conviction of a woman in
©2023 The Kansas City Star. Visit kansascity.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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