New trial ordered for man convicted in ’86 murder

The Supreme

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The Supreme Judicial Court on Tuesday ordered a new trial for Joseph Pope, who was convicted in 1986 for his role in a drug-related murder in Uphams Corner two years earlier. The court ruled that an assistant Suffolk County district attorney withheld notes he took during the murder investigation that that might have helped the defense.

Pope was one of two men convicted for the shooting murder of Efrain DeJesus on Nonquit Street on May 23, 1984. According to the court summary, the two men robbed and shot DeJesus downstairs from his brother’s apartment over cocaine and money.

Although the other man was convicted of actually shooting DeJesus, Pope was convicted of first-degree murder under a legal concept known as “felony-murder,” in which he was judged to be just as guilty as the trigger puller because he was actively involved in planning and carrying out the crime that turned into a murder.

In their ruling today, the justices concluded that Pope’s rights to a fair trial were violated because an assistant DA who responded to the murder scene and who took notes did not give a copy to Pope’s then attorney. That, the court ruled, was a violation of a constitutional mandate that prosecutors turn over any evidence that might help the defense. 

The notes, the court ruled, could have been used to poke holes in the testimony of the main witness in the case – DeJesus’s brother – because they were further proof that the brother kept changing his story of what happened from the time he was first interviewed by investigators to the time he testified in court and because they showed that a police detective had suspicions about possible involvement by DeJesus’s brother.

The court said that this equally applies to notes about an interview with another person who contradicted the brother’s assertion that the victim was a cocaine dealer – raising the possibility it was the brother who was the dealer in the family.

Pope’s appeals lawyer found a copy of the memo in 2018 in a box of evidence held by the DA’s office.

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