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Monday, September 17, 2012

Judge Considers New Evidence in 42-Year-Old Jeffrey MacDonald Murder Case

de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception

Jeffrey MacDonald: Judge to Consider New Evidence in 42-Year-Old Murder Case (ABC News)

Jeffrey MacDonald, a green beret and doctor convicted 33 years ago in the stabbing and beating deaths of his pregnant wife and two daughters, will be back in court on Monday as a judge considers new evidence that may prove his innocence.

68-year-old MacDonald is serving three life sentences and will be eligible for parole in 2020. His supporters are hoping new DNA evidence, not available at the time of his conviction, as well as witness testimony, will exonerate him.

"The case has bothered me for years," said Errol Morris, a former private detective and author of, "A Wilderness of Error," a book examining MacDonald's case.  "The trial in and of itself was a terrible miscarriage of justice. He's been asking for three decades for someone to listen to all the evidence and this will be the first time that that has happened," Morris said.

On February 17, 1970, MacDonald claimed to have awoken on the sofa in his North Carolina home to find drugged-up hippies, three men and a woman, beating his pregnant wife, Colette, and their two daughters, 5-year-old Kimberley and 2-year-old Kristen.

The word "Pig" was written in blood on the headboard in MacDonald's bedroom.

The gruesome murders, only months after details of the Manson Family murders had been revealed, captivated the world and spawned a best selling book, "Fatal Vision," and a 1984 television mini-series.

Freddy Kassab, MacDonald's father-in-law, initially stood by him following the murders, in time his confidence in MacDonald's story faded. He pushed for charges to be brought against his son-in-law and MacDonald was convicted in 1979, nine years after the slayings.

In a letter provided to the Associated Press written in 2000 by MacDonald to his new wife, Kathryn: "It would be a dishonor to their memory to compromise the truth and 'admit' to something I didn't do — no matter how long it takes."

Nearly 33 years to the day of his conviction, MacDonald may have an opportunity to clear his name.

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