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Working together

Carruth jury foreman proud of the decision they made

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Posted: Saturday January 20, 2001 5:14 PM
Updated: Sunday January 21, 2001 10:54 AM

  Rae Carruth Rae Curruth was acquitted of first-degree murder but convicted of three other charges. AP

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- The jury foreman in the Rae Carruth murder trial praised his colleagues for their ability to focus on key evidence in the complicated case and come to a united, not compromised, verdict.

In the end, foreman Clark Pennell said Saturday, the jury worked together to reach a verdict that didn't force any one in the group to surrender his or her individual principles. He took issue with opinions raised by some legal experts that the split verdict was a compromise so a sharply divided panel could avoid becoming a hung jury.

"I don't think there is anyone on the jury who could not look you right in the eye and say they felt we made the [right] decision," he said.

Carruth college teammates
ponder friend's fate
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- Although anxious about the verdict in Rae Carruth's murder trial, his former college teammates preferred to concentrate on their positive memories of the young man.

Carruth, 27, formerly with the NFL's Carolina Panthers, was convicted Friday of conspiring to kill his pregnant girlfriend. He faces a maximum prison sentence of 20 years.

Blake Anderson would rather think about the time he and Carruth were part of a quartet of wide receivers that helped the University of Colorado engineer a 27-26 win as time ran out in a 1994 game against Michigan.

The play called for Anderson to deflect the ball to another receiver, but had rarely worked in practice.

That time it did. The four receivers sprinted down the left side of the field, and quarterback Kordell Stewart, now with the Pittsburgh Steelers, lobbed a 70-yard throw to the goal line.

Anderson tipped the ball to Michael Westbrook, who landed in the end zone with 0:00 on the clock.

"That was the highlight of my career," Anderson said, "but Rae had such a great opportunity making it to the NFL. That's what makes it so sad."

Vance Joseph, a backup quarterback on that 1994 team who went on to play three years in the NFL as a defensive back, said he didn't understand how the jury in Charlotte, N.C., could find Carruth guilty of conspiracy to commit murder but not guilty of his girlfriend's murder.

David Plati, Colorado's sports information director, who closely followed the trial closely, saw it as the jury's way of sparing Carruth the death penalty.

Whatever it was, "I was relieved," Joseph said. "Someone else dying doesn't solve anything. It just makes the world a worse place to live in."

What made it even sadder for those who knew Carruth when he was a young college student was wondering how he could have been any part of the murder.

"The person I know wouldn't have done that," Joseph said.

The person he knew was too smart to have done that, Plati said. Carruth was "pretty much a model kid," he said.

Colorado's receivers coach, Jon Embree, also followed the trial closely and was asked by defense lawyers to testify on Carruth's behalf at a sentencing hearing in case of the worst possible verdict.

Embree said he was relieved that he wouldn't have to do that now, "but I didn't have a hard time with that because I don't believe he did it. I still believe that."

He said he planned to send Carruth a message through his lawyers. "The only thing I would tell him is to hang in there and keep fighting," Embree said. 
 
 

"I can only answer for myself, but at no point did I feel I was ever compromising my position. There may be others on the jury who considered that they compromised, but we came to all of our decisions together."

On Friday, the seven-man, five-woman jury acquitted the former NFL player of first-degree murder but convicted him of three other charges, including conspiring to kill his pregnant girlfriend, who was ambushed and shot in her car in November 1999.

Carruth, who turned 27 Saturday, faces up to 25 years in prison, legal experts said. A sentencing hearing was set for Monday.

Cherica Adams, 24, was mortally wounded in an attack prosecutors said Carruth set up to avoid paying child support. Prosecutors said the former Carolina Panthers wide receiver used his white Ford Expedition to block Adams and set her up for the kill by a hired gunman, Van Brett Watkins.

The verdict came after about 20 hours of jury deliberations over four days.

Reached by telephone at his Charlotte home, Pennell said the jury did not immediately take a vote after getting the case Tuesday.

"We went through our notes for about 20 or 30 minutes, then we started our discussions," he said. "We had a huge amount of stuff we needed to go through."

With Pennell in charge, the jury went through each of the questions they had about the evidence in the long trial.

Pennell, 52, a manager of furniture services for Crisis Assistance Ministry, a nonprofit agency that assists the needy, said the work was methodical and productive.

"We didn't take a vote until 15 to 20 minutes before we sent out our first note to the judge [at noon Thursday]," he said. "We felt we were at an impasse and we wanted some additional instructions."

Pennell said the jury made a pact not to disclose the numerical breakdown on the first of the two votes it took during the deliberations. While the jurors were divided on the initial secret ballot, he said, they were not a hung jury.

After Lamm sent them back to continue their deliberations Thursday, jurors went back and started from scratch, Pennell said. They did not talk, but each juror quietly reviewed his or her notes again.

Just before the jury was about to go home Thursday night, the members decided to "try to look at the flip side" of the issues that divided them. When they gathered Friday, it was a very productive meeting.

"Some voices were raised, but it was the kind of discussion where you speak loudly to make your point," he said.


 
Related information
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Jury finds Carruth guilty on three of four charges
SI's Lester Munson breaks down Carruth verdict
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