Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Province & Vancouver Sun get THE video!!

How awesome is THAT!?

On the down side, Jean Ann James's has a lawyer that is trying to appeal the verdict.

Jean James appealing murder verdict; video released of confession to 'Mr. Big'

The Vancouver Sun and Province jointly applied to B.C. Supreme Court to obtain and broadcast James' video-taped confession and were granted permission


METRO VANCOUVER -- A Richmond senior convicted last month of first-degree murder for the 1992 slaying of her husband's lover is appealing the jury's guilty verdict.

Jean Ann James, 72, admitted to undercover police posing as organized criminals that she slit the throat of Gladys Wakabayashi in June 1992 because the billionaire's daughter was sleeping with her husband, Derek James.

The confession to "Mr. Big" — the purported leader of the gang — came in November 2008, after almost a year-long operation in which the officers befriended James, earned her trust and got her involved in criminal acts for their fake counterfeit-goods ring.

Over 11 months, James worked her way up to meeting "Mr. Big" in a Montreal hotel room, where he talked to her about whether she was ready for a job in which she was going to earn hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The Vancouver Sun and Province jointly applied to B.C. Supreme Court to obtain and broadcast the video-taped confession and were granted permission by Justice Catherine Bruce as long as the images and voices of the undercover operators were altered to protect their identities.

James's appeal lawyer, Ravi Hira, said some of the prejudicial things James said during the 90-minute meeting in Montreal should not have been stressed during Bruce's charge to the jury.

"We are appealing on the grounds there was evidence that should not have been admitted for the jury and we are appealing based on the reliability of the alleged confession," Hira said.

The grounds in the appeal filed last week say: "That the learned trail judge erred in law by failing to exclude editable prejudicial evidence that was not probative of any issue led by the Crown in the various Mr. Big scenarios."

Hira also said the judge "erred in law by emphasizing in her charge to the jury the Crown's theory that no one else had a grudge against the deceased after disallowing defence counsel to cross-examine on that issue."

The final ground of appeal suggests Bruce also erred "by emphasizing in her charge to the jury various prejudicial comments made by the defendant and other bad character evidence relating to the defendant."

James was a suspect almost immediately after Wakabayashi's body was found in her palatial westside Vancouver home in the 6800-block of Selkirk on June 24, 1992. But there was no forensic evidence linking the retired flight attendant to the crime scene — Wakabayashi's master-bedroom suite on the upper floor of the house.

It wasn't until 2007 that the RCMP's provincial Unsolved Homicide Unit made another major effort to solve the case, developing a year-long "Mr. Big" operation where a number of officers posed as members of a crime ring and ingratiated themselves with James after a "chance" meeting at a spa.

Through a series of recorded meetings and events, it was clear James eagerly embraced her new criminal life, even offering to kill for the gang. She eventually confessed in chilling detail to her "crime boss" about how she cut Wakabayashi's legs with a box cutter as she probed for information about the affair, then slit her throat. The cold-blooded killer said she felt no regret.

The RCMP has used the "Mr. Big" technique in more than 350 criminal cases, with an amazing success rate.

Some critiques claim the scenarios are so elaborate and other-worldly that suspects make false confessions because they are caught up in the allure of potential profit, or are simply trying to impress people they think are high-level gangsters. And some targets have claimed they confessed because they were afraid of what their new associates might do to them if they didn't admit guilt.

"The undercover operators cultivate an atmosphere of fear and intimidation, which also creates a significant degree of psychological influence over the target," said Simon Fraser University PhD student Kouri Keenan, who co-authored a 2010 book called Mr. Big: Exposing Undercover Investigations in Canada. "The combination of the enticements or the inducements and the fear create the conditions for eliciting false confessions."

In an interview, Keenan said Mr. Big confessions are more reliable when "the confession was accompanied by narrative details that could only have been known by the perpetrator or someone who knew the perpetrator, notwithstanding the context within which the self-incriminating statement was made."

But, he said, if the RCMP don't include a number of safeguards during the operation, the chance of a false confession increases.

"As it stands right now, there is no sort of safeguard or no way within the criminal law to test the reliability of these confessions," Keenan said.

The RCMP techniques have evolved over the 20-year period studied by Keenan. Now operators posing as crime bosses stress that the gang has a code of reliability, honesty and loyalty — to warn suspects not to admit to things they haven't done.

"Those are the sort of fundamental themes that resonate throughout these investigations," he said.

Keenan said that if the investigations are long-term — the operators in the James case, for instance, built a relationship for almost a year — the confessions tend to be more reliable.

In one case where a confession was later proven to be false, the investigation lasted less than a month, he said.

University of the Fraser Valley criminologist Darryl Plecas said the Mr. Big technique is an invaluable tool for law enforcement when there is no other way to advance a case.

"I think it is a great practice. The acid test is when they do it, does it work? And as it turns out, it does," he said.

He said the safeguards adequately protect against false confessions by ensuring that a suspect provides details about a crime that no one but investigators would have known.

"It is not like somebody sitting down badgering somebody and them providing snippets of what happened," Plecas said. "I think that concern is unfounded."


Above is the article by Kim Bolan for the Vancouver Sun.



To view the full video (or shall I say the 3 portions of the video) go to THIS LINK.

HERE is the PDF transcript of the confession.

On a related note, HERE is an interesting article from yesterday regarding the Courts supporting the use of the "Mr.Big" method.

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