Stars Not Aligned For Death Penalty
       July 16, 2007
      Despite the death on Saturday of rookie police officer Russel Timoshenko,
        who lingered for a week on life-support after being shot, the prospect
        of his killers facing the death penalty seems unlikely. 
       Timoshenko was shot at 2:30 A.M. last Monday, making a car stop in
        Crown Heights, Brooklyn, allegedly by three felons — men with long
        records. 
       Yet the stars are not in alignment for his killers to face the death
        penalty, as they were for Ronell Wilson, who killed police officers Rodney
        Andrews and James Nemorin in 2003. 
       In these death penalty cases, politics, ego and emotion are as relevant
        as the circumstances of the killings.
       All three shaped the destiny of Wilson’s prosecution, as it undoubtedly
        will that of Timoshenko’s killers.
       Andrews and Nemorin were killed on Staten Island in June 2003, in an
        undercover gun buy. Just six months later, the borough had a new District
        Attorney, Daniel Donovan, a Republican. 
       Then in June 2004, New York’s death penalty was ruled unconstitutional.
        Had Donovan prosecuted Wilson in state court, the max Wilson could have
        gotten was 25 years to life, without parole. 
       Instead, Donovan’s support for the death penalty matched that
        of Brooklyn federal prosecutor Roz Mauskopf, U.S. Attorney General Alberto
        Gonzalez, and President George Bush. 
       Instead of proceeding in state court, Donovan gave up the case to Mauskopf.
        As Donovan’s press release said at the time, “The case is
        bigger than me and my ego.”
       From there it was a hop, skip, and jump for the feds to prove that
        Wilson was engaged in a racketeering conspiracy, providing them with
        jurisdiction. It also helped that the NYPD undercovers had been cross-designated
        as feds because of their work.
       In November 2004, Donovan and Mauskopf announced a federal indictment
        against Wilson and members of his  “Stapleton Crew.” In July
        2005, Gonzalez authorized federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty.
       Wilson was found guilty in federal court earlier this year and now
        faces the death penalty. 
       So how are Andrews’s and Nemorin’s murders different from
        Timoshenko’s? How is Wilson’s situation different from that
        of the three suspects — Dexter Bostic, Robert Ellis and Lee Woods — arrested
        for Timoshenko’s murder?
       First, Brooklyn District Attorney Joe Hynes says he’s keeping
        the case. In the past he has not hesitated to give up high-profile cases
        to the feds — most notably police torture victim Abner Louima and
        Hasidic Jew Yankel Rosenbaum.
       But now, in 2009, having given up dreams for higher office, Hynes faces
        his sixth election race for D.A., and probably wants to cite a recent
        cop-killer conviction for his campaign. 
       Unlike Donovan, Hynes is a veteran D.A. and a Democrat. He’s
        also been feuding with Mauskopf. He felt the “mafia cops”  case — taken
        over by her office — was big-footed away from him. Since then,
        he’s been sticking his finger in the feds’ eye by prosecuting
        ex-FBI agent Lindley DeVecchio as an alleged mob mole.
       [Don’t believe the nonsense that Hynes personally opposes the
        death penalty. When the law was in effect in New York State, he prosecuted
        more death-penalty cases than anybody else in town.]