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Charades played while McCowen fate weighed

The parking lot at Barnstable Superior Courthouse was a mob scene Thursday. Peter Robbins photo.
"Extraordinary" Hearing Allows Glimpse into Jury Room
and It’s Not a Pretty View
By Jeff Blanchard

Worthington lover Tony Jackett gets swarmed by media today in Barnstable. Photo by Peter RobbinsFor over a year now, ever since Chris McCowen was sent away for the 2002 murder of Truro writer Christa Worthington, the chatter among some who followed the case was that his trial and guilty verdict represented a miscarriage of justice, that his conviction was based on flimsy evidence and racial bias, that he was the victim of a charade.
Turns out, the jury actually did play charades. Back at the hotel where they were sequestered during deliberations, one of the jurors led a game she called Catch Phrase, a game like charades but with a twist: the answer to any pantomime she did was always the same, "Oh! I'm a racist!"
The joke may finally be on the jurors
Her little joke served to split the jury into two camps (although, the only math that ever really mattered was the unanimous verdict that found McCowen guilty of rape, burglary and murder). Those gathered in the hotel room were all laughing and enjoying this moment of comic relief, and those who were late to the game, including two of the three jurors who filed affidavits with the court that alleged racial bias in jury deliberations, showed up and the game immediately stopped.
The jurors played a game like charades but with a twist: the answer to any pantomime she did was always the same, "Oh! I'm a racist!"Charades. The jury actually played charades in which the punch line was, Oh! I'm a racist! even as they deliberated over the fate of a black man who was arrested for the crime despite no evidence of rape, no evidence of burglary, and sketchy evidence of his role, if any, in the murder, especially compared to the evidence pointing in other, as-yet-unexplored directions, such as the Truro police officer who reportedly refused to submit his DNA, to a convicted murderer whose cell phone was in use that night by a drug snitch with family ties to police, to the drug snitch himself, Jeremy Frazier.
Before he questioned the jurors one by one in front of a packed house in Barnstable Superior Court today, Judge Gary Nickerson addressed them as a group and thanked them for their cooperation in this "extraordinary, unusual situation."

Author Peter Manso arrives at the Worthington hearing and creates an interesting intersection of key players; him because he's writing a book about the case and is facing possible charges relating to his sloppily stored firearms and District Attorney Michael O'Keefe, his nemesis, whose own guns were stolen a year ago from his home in a gated golf community known as the Ridge Club in Sandwich, a theft that was very little reported by its victim. Peter Robbins photoNo one declined to answer the judge's questions as of the lunch break, although several had difficulty remembering certain events, and the more incriminating the event, the worse the memory.
No one else asked questions of the jurors, just the judge, whose questions during this First Phase of the hearing were restricted to who said what to whom -- He said, She said - as opposed to his plan for Phase Two, in which he will allow not only hearsay but interpretations and opinions and feelings from the jurors on how they may have been affected by certain words and actions from other jurors, meaning -- did the racist language used by some affect the decisions of others.
To the question that hangs over all others - if 9/12ths of the jury was racist, why did the other 1/4 go along with the guilty verdict, that was answered indirectly through the jurors' various renditions of the deliberations.
One after another described tensions that rose to the level of near-violence, with one woman admitting that she stuck out her foot to prevent a second woman from getting any closer to a third woman over the question that has clouded the case from the get-go, was McCowen being charged with the crime as a black man who did it or was he charged and convicted because he's "a big black guy," an accused murderer who made one of the suspect jurors either "uncomfortable or intimidated," her words, by the sight of him.
Inquiry may result in new trial
But were you uncomfortable or intimidated because he was a "big black man," Judge Nickerson inquired.
"No," said Juror Cahill.
Did you ever refer to his race in your deliberations? Nickerson asked.
"No," she said, and the room remained silent, with no one in a position to tell her that the court had just heard several jurors testify otherwise, and she was left to squirm.
The state's case was now unraveling in the hands of a woman who played charades with another man's life.Did anyone say anything about how blacks are prone to violence? Nickerson asked.
"I don't think so," she said. He asked another, she said no, and another, she said no, and another, she said no. Was there any bad blood between you and these other jurors? "Not that I know of," she said, and that was when you could feel the air leave the room for Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe, who now sat about 12 feet away from a woman named Carol Cahill who was slowly, painstakingly losing everything he worked so hard to achieve as it concerned the arrest, conviction and incarceration of Christopher McCowen in the murder of Christa Worthington.
In front of the whole wide world as it would soon learn through Fox and the rest, the state's case against a convicted murderer, a gap-toothed hulk of a man who now stood in the courtroom in shackles and the same snappy suit and tie he was last seen in a year ago, before he was sent to prison for life and the jury was treated to a celebration dinner at Wimpy's in Osterville, on the district attorney's tab, the state's case was now unraveling in the hands of a woman who played charades with a man's life.
42 comments
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Great coverage! Was the courtroom overrun by curious spectators? Or was it just an average size crowd? Just wondering if people got turned away due to overcrowding.
It will be interesting what Judge Nickerson decides.
Plus Cahill and George said she never said big black man, just big man. Everyone else said "black" was used...even Gomes and the foreman. Liars! And under oath. But of course they can just say...I don't remember. Or, as the judge coaxed them..."to the best of my recollection."
That jury was racist, and the ones who weren't covered up for the ones who were.
Cape Cod you need to see this hearing...see yourself for what you are!
Unbelievable events.
they really played this game? This was actual testimony??
Well, even if the judge decides there was no racial bias, BG gets to go for the appeal, & frankly I think that would be best.
Take it outside the corruption on CC & to a place where McCowen will be judged by people who are not infected with the small town "we got to stick together" mentality BS. There is no way CM could get a fair trial on that island, because we know that the real criminals have family & friends who are backing them ever step of the way. A trial off Cape is a fair trial. A trial on Cape Cod is the same ole' politics as usual.
was wondering, how many of the jurors spoke about the charade game? Only the two left out?
He asked Huffman, and she told him about it; how someone would say a word like "tree". Then the others would say "your'e a racist" and laugh; Making fun of Roshena for telling Marlo George to stop using "black" this and "black" that all the time.
He asked Gomes and he said they played the game, but there was nothing Racial about it.
He asked Cahill and she said yes, but there was nothing racial about it.
He asked George, and she said yes, but there was nothing racial about it.
But these three said they never used any racial terms thru-ought the whole trial and deliberations(except George who admitted to using it once)...even though their fellow jurors testified otherwise.
Someone is lying big time.
Someone should have asked the judge, "Your Honor, were these jurors in the same deliberation room?"
Ubelieavable.
And disgraceful.
Christopher McCowen did got a fair and impartial trial...not by a long shot.
Bullies and racists is what it looks like.
So this whole thing is really kind of a farce. Black, white or paisley, a man who had 5 restraining orders against him, who admitted to beating CW up, and whose semen was found on CW, is almost overwhelmingly probably the one who killed her.
Even if the cops in Truro are racist rubes, even if all cops on Cape Cod and the planet and the whole criminal justice system is rigged against The Black Man, he's still the one who did it.
G'head, let him go free. Do you think he'd NOT beat up or kill another woman again? Because he's a gentle little lamb who became a sweetie pie while in prison?
I think it's amazing that people would rather hate cops than defend women against this monstrous criminal.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2008/01/11/jurors_testify_about_claims_of_racism/
One of the weakest aspects of our jury system is that a jury deliberates in private and without any supervision.
Hats off to Judge Nickerson for being so open and thourough...shame on the jury first for their outrageous conduct and second for thei silence and third for the clear fact that osmeo of them are lying even now. McCowen should have company in jail...some of his own jury.
Did anyone raise the comments about "looking forward to getting interviews & profitting off book deals, etc." made by the jurors who voted to convict? (source: Manso's Boston Mag. article, "Unjust Conclusion")
One of the 3 jurors mentioned the others were discussing how they could make money on the story, so if was a hung jury--no one would care about them. But since they became the "celebrity jury", they saw $$$$.
capemom--you keep qouting words that are not known to be true.
We've seen that the jury here lied, do not put it past the police!
And btw, two of the jurors said that the statement was "the bruises could Only be made by a big black man", or "Only a big black man would make bruises like that."
And now that I think about it, Cahill made the absurd statement that she didn't say she was afraid of Chris, but was intimidated by the audience.
If being scared of, and using "big black man" is ok, then why lie to hide it?
And don't say it's because of the race card being played...the truth is
They got caught.
They got caught like a bully clique in school who runs rough-shod over the weaker or unpopular kids.
They had no respect for Bohanna or her concerns, and they let their predjudices decide a man's fate.
That's my opinion about it.
Can't quite figure you! But it really doesn't matter, at least to me. Anyway, I don't there is anyone that doesn't believe they has sex. And I profess no particular knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the relationship between McCowen, the vivtimm or anyone else Christa knew. But remove your personal feelings for a minute, just a minute capemom, this won't take a tremndous amount of energy and its not an extremely complicated thought process. Now take a deep breath now that your in a tranquil frame of mind and ask yourself this, "Who did the unidentified DNA belong to ?" Doens't this have to be identified or eliminated? What if the other DNA belonged to a big white man that may have testified? Or a big white man that didn't.
Weren't you pissed that people just assumed they were guilty because they were rich, white lacrosse players?
Did you say, "what's that got to do with anything?" It was a predjudiced perception that assumed they were guilty.
Same thing here.
At any rate, the trashman's guilt is not the issue today. It would be neither fair, nor necessary, for the verdict in this case to have been based on racial bias.
I don't believe it was. But if the judge rules otherwise, so be it. In the long term, it's unlikely to prevent justice from ultimately prevailing.
yes, tragic that another person was not killed. your DA at work.
where'd the quotes come from, her?
Just why are they any more honest or reliable than anyone else?
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Samizdat (Russian: самиздат) was the clandestine copying and distribution of government-suppressed literature or other media in Soviet-bloc countries. Copies were made a few at a time, and those who received a copy would be expected to make more copies. This was often done by handwriting or typing. (Credit; wikipedia)
Jeff Blanchard is a freelance writer who lives in Brewster. This blog is an archive of his past work.
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