Fred Thomas (convict)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fred Thomas was convicted of the murder of William "Skip" Moyer Jr., a Federal Express truck driver, but his conviction was later overturned. The murder occurred in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 21, 1993. Thomas was sentenced to death. Moyer was shot in the face at Ninth and Clearfield Streets in a drug-infested neighborhood often referred to as “the Badlands.” A witness, Maria Fielding, who died in 1999, gave a statement to police the morning after Moyer's murder, in which she described three male assailants, none being Thomas. The DA's office failed to bring her into court for the two Thomas trials, even though at one point she was in the same building for charges on an unrelated matter. Although two bench warrants were issued for Fielding around the time of the first two trials, they apparently were not lodged for her. Prosecutors at the time maintained she had left the area and could not be found.

No physical evidence linked Thomas to the crime, but he was convicted based on the testimony of two men who were “found” by Detective James Ryan, a police officer who was not assigned to the district or the case. These men testified that they were on the other side of the street and saw Thomas walk around Moyer's truck after they heard a gunshot. Another witness, whose mother lives on the street on which the murder occurred, corroborated Fielding's version of events. Detective Ryan has since been convicted of shaking down drug dealers and making illegal armed detentions. In another murder case, he paid a witness $500 to provide false testimony against a defendant. In May 2002, a judge overturned Thomas’ conviction. In October 2002, Thomas died on Pennsylvania's Death Row, before a retrial could take place.

[edit] References