Second lawsuit says Kentucky police framed person for murder


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FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — A Tennessee man says he spent five years in jail for a murder he did not commit because authorities framed him so they could protect another man who had bribed the sheriff and was related by marriage to a State Police detective.

William Anderson filed a lawsuit in federal court Monday that says former Knox County Sheriff John Pickard and Kentucky State Police Detective Jason York coached witnesses on what to say and even assaulted one man during a recorded interview for refusing to change his story. The investigation led to a murder charge for Anderson. And with bail set at an insurmountable $500,000, Anderson sat in a jail cell for five years while his five kids grew up and his mother and other relatives died.

Anderson, 37, was finally released last year after a jury acquitted him of all charges.

"It was horrible," he said.

It is the second lawsuit since April to accuse Pickard and York, among others, of writing fake police reports and fabricating witness testimony before a grand jury in a murder case. In both instances, people spent years in jail awaiting trial before being cleared of all charges and released.

Anderson, who lives in Campbell County, Tennessee, had been charged with murder in the 2011 slaying of Bob Wiggins in Bell County, Kentucky.

According to the lawsuit, Wiggins' killer beat him over the head several times and used Wiggin's knife to slit his throat and stab him 18 times. The killer then had help from an accomplice to bury Wiggins' body on Red Bird Mountain, covering it with six bags of lime, purchased from a local Lowe's.

Another man, James Sizemore, pleaded guilty to the murder and is serving a 30-year prison sentence. Sizemore testified both he and Anderson had planned to rob Wiggins, who sold prescription painkillers. Sizemore said he hit Wiggins, but it was Anderson who stabbed him.

But Anderson says Sizemore killed Wiggins alone and then got another man to help him bury the body. That man, Anderson says, was related by marriage to a Kentucky State Police detective assigned to investigate the murder. And Anderson says that same man had also been bribing the local sheriff for five years "for the right to conduct criminal activity without fear of prosecution."

Authorities never charged that man in the case, and the alleged bribery did not come up as part of Anderson's criminal trial. But Elliot Slosar, Anderson's attorney, says he has a recorded conversation of the man admitting to the bribery scheme.

Anderson's attorneys say recorded police interviews show officers coaching Sizemore on what to say. After initially telling Sizemore that "all my evidence points to you," Knox County Sheriff's Deputy Derek Eubanks told him "If you can take me and show me and give me evidence that points at somebody else, I'm gonna turn left and go down that road."

"The Defendants then fed Mr. Sizemore the false and fabricated story that they wanted him to repeat. And like a puppet, Mr. Sizemore acquiesced to his master's commands," Slosar wrote in the lawsuit.

Anderson's lawsuit names Knox County, Pickard, York, Eubanks, and four other state police officers. The Kentucky State Police as an institution isn't named because it's shielded by state law.

Attorneys for York, Pickard and Eubanks declined to comment, saying they had not seen the lawsuit.

Anderson is represented by the Chicago-based Loevy & Loevy law firm, which bills itself as one of the largest civil rights law firms in the country.

The firm also represents Amanda Hoskins and Jonathan Taylor, who spent at least three years in jail on a murder charge only to be released because prosecutors said they lacked probable cause. Hoskins and Taylor also sued Pickard and York, among others, accusing them of planted evidence to frame them for the murder to protect another man who worked for the police as a confidential informant.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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