Centurion Ministries

Centurion Ministries, Inc is a secular, non-profit organization located in Princeton, New Jersey whose primary mission is to free and vindicate from prison those who are completely innocent of the crimes for which they have been wrongly convicted and imprisoned for life or death.[1]

History

Centurion Ministries was founded in 1983 by Jim McCloskey subsequent to his earning a Masters of Divinity degree from Princeton Theological Seminary. In 1987, California businesswoman, Kate Germond, joined Mr. McCloskey and together they built an organization that has secured the release of 53 (as of 12/11/2013) wrongly convicted men and women from all across the United States and Canada.

In 1996, Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist Paul Henderson joined Centurion Ministries as a full-time investigator.

Process

Centurion Ministries undergoes a formal process to help prove those wrongfully convicted are innocent.[2]

Selected cases

Jorge De Los Santos

[3] Newark, NJ. "Convicted and sentenced to life in prison for the 1975 murder of a Newark, NJ used-car salesman, Jorge De Los Santos spent almost 9 years in prison before being freed in July, 1983, by former US District Court Judge Frederick B. Lacey. The judge said testimony from a jailhouse witness that convicted De Los Santos "reeked of perjury" and that the prosecutor knew it. Centurion Ministries' investigation yielded the new evidence that freed De Los Santos."

Kerry Max Cook

[3] [4] Tyler, TX. "In November, 1997, Kerry Max Cook was freed after spending nearly 20 years on death row for a murder in which he had no involvement. This was the crowning moment of a grueling seven-year effort by Centurion Ministries on Cook's behalf. Texas' highest court threw out the conviction and ruled that the state's "illicit manipulation of the evidence permeated the entire investigation of the murder", and that the state "gained a conviction based on fraud and ignored its own duty to seek the truth""

David Milgaard

[3] Saskatoon, Canada. "An unprecedented order of the Canadian Supreme Court freed David Milgaard on April 16, 1992 after 23 years of false imprisonment. Centurion Ministries' two-year investigation of a 1969 Saskatoon, Canada, rape/murder established the identity of the real killer. The Supreme Court recognized that "the continued conviction of Milgaard amounts to a miscarriage of justice" Then, a 1997 DNA testing of physical evidence confirmed Milgaard's innocence and resulted in the arrest of the actual killer, albeit 28 years after the crime."

Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt

[3] Los Angeles, CA. "In the late 1960's Elmer 'Geronimo' Pratt was the leader of the Los Angeles Black Panther Party. Soon after the FBI had vowed to "neutralize" him, he was falsely charged and then convicted in 1972 for a 1968 murder on a Santa Monica, CA, tennis court. After 27 years of imprisonment and many denials of habeas petitions, Pratt was granted a new trial and then freed in June 1997 by Orange County Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey. After conducting an extensive evidentiary hearing, Judge Dickey ruled that the state's primary witness was in fact an FBI, LAPD, and LADA informant, who had significantly lied against Pratt at trial. This culminated a four-year effort by Centurion Ministries on Pratt's behalf."

Darryl Burton

[3] [4] St. Louis, Mo. "Based Primarily on the false eyewitness account by a career criminal informant for the St. Louis Police, Darryl Burton spent 24 years wrongly confined in Missouri prisons for the 1984 fatal shooting of Donald Bell at an Amoco gas station. The African American cashier that was present at the gas station at the time of the shooting testified at a 2007 post conviction hearing that she had told the police they had the wrong man because the shooter was light complected and Mr. Burton is very dark skinned. Freeing Darryl in August 2008, the Cole County judge found this witness' certainty that Mr. Burton was not the killer to be "clear, credible, and powerful." The judge also ruled that the informant's extensive criminal history was kept from the defense; and had the jury known of it, it would have provided "persuasive evidence of the defendant's innocence.""

Executive staff

James C. McCloskey

[5] Jim McCloskey was raised in the suburbs of Philadelphia and is a 1964 graduate of Bucknell University. After three years as a naval officer in Japan & Vietnam, he spent 13 years in business, primarily as an executive for two different international management consulting firms, one in Tokyo and the other, The Hay Group, in Philadelphia. He left the business world for the ministry in 1979. Subsequent to earning a Masters of Divinity degree from Princeton Theological Seminary, he officially founded Centurion Ministries, Inc. in 1983. However, McCloskey actually began the work of Centurion Ministries in 1980 when he took a one year leave of absence from his seminary studies to investigate the claim of innocence by a Trenton State Prison inmate whom he met while serving as a student chaplain at the prison. Mr. McCloskey's efforts were rewarded with the release and exoneration in 1983 of the inmate, Jorge De Los Santos.

Kate Germond

[5] Kate Germond joined Centurion Ministries in January 1987 after becoming intrigues by the newsworthy success of Mr. McCloskey. Prior to that she was a businesswoman and community activist in Mendocino, California where she lived with her family for close to 20 years. Kate co-manages Centurion Ministries with Mr. McCloskey. In addition to performing in-the-field investigations of her own cases, Kate oversees the Case Development Manager. Kate is naturally talented at this type of work, and considers it to be her calling.

Nick O'Connell

[5] Nick O'Connell joined Centurion Ministries in July 2013 to assist with Development and Exonoree Support. The son of Frank O'Connell, Centurion Ministries' 49th freed client, Nick is uniquely connected to our work. His father's 27 year wrongful incarceration forged Nick's passion to work for those wrongfully convicted.

Nick studied marketing at The University of Colorado and has extensive experience in marketing, operations ad management. Born in California, Nick spent the last 20 years in Colorado before moving to join CM.

Alan Maimon

[5] Alan Maimon worked for 12 years as a journalist before joining Centurion ministries in January 2012. While with the Louisville Courier-Journal, he contributed to a series of stories about Kentucky's criminal justice system that was a finalist for the 2004 Pulitzer Prize in Public Service. As an investigative reporter for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, he was the recipient of a Silver Gavel Award from the American Bar Association. He is a Philadelphia native and a graduate of Brown University.

Hired in January 2012, Alan is Centurion Ministries' full-time investigator.

Paul Henderson, Retired

Paul Henderson, a former investigative reporter for the Seattle Times, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1982 for a series of articles that vindicated a man who had been falsely convicted of rape. In 1985, Paul became a private investigator and worked successfully since 1988 on a number of Centurion Ministries cases. In 1996, Paul became a full-time staff investigator for Centurion Ministries. Paul lives in Seattle, Washington.

News

References

  1. Golin, Sarah. "Working to Save Innocent Souls", "The Washington Post", October 25, 2008, accessed June 29, 2011
  2. "Centurion Ministries". Centurion Ministries. Retrieved 2013-10-06.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 "Cases". Centurion Ministries. Retrieved 2013-10-06.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "McCloskey labors to exonerate innocent prisoners". NJ.com. 2008-10-02. Retrieved 2013-10-06.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Centurion Ministries". Centurion Ministries. Retrieved 2013-12-11.

External links