Copy of Graves Pet Dec Jgmnt

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    NO.

    ANTHONY GRAVES,Plaintiff

    v. GREG ABBOTT, in his official capacity as ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS,

    Defendant

    IN THE DISTRICT COURT

    OF TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS _____ JUDICIAL DISTRICT

    PLAINTIFFS ORIGINAL PETITION FOR A DECLARATORY JUDGMENT

    Anthony Graves, Plaintiff, brings this action to clear his name and restore hisreputation. Relying upon his rights under Article 1, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution,

    he asks the Court for a declaratory judgment that he is actually innocent of the crime of

    capital murder and for other relief.

    In support, he shows:

    DISCOVERY

    1. Plaintiff intends to conduct discovery under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure

    Level 2.

    PARTIES

    2. Plaintiff Anthony Graves is a resident of Travis County.

    3. Defendant is the Attorney General of the State of Texas, and is being sued inhis official capacity as the chief law enforcement officer of the state only. He may be

    served at the Office of the Attorney General, 300 W. 15th St., Austin, TX 78701. Service

    is requested .

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    JURISDICTIONAND VENUE

    4. This Court has jurisdiction. T EX. GOV . CODE 27.007-008.

    5. Travis County is the proper venue for this suit. T EX . CIV . PRAC . & R EM . CODE

    15.002.

    CONDITIONSPRECEDENT

    6. All conditions precedent have been performed or have occurred.

    FACTS

    TheArrest and Tri al ofAnthony Graves

    7.

    On August 18, 1992, a series of grisly murders happened in Somerville, Texas.

    Somerville is located in Burleson County.

    8. Officers arrested a man named Robert Carter a few days later. He was an

    obvious suspect: he had the motive, means, and opportunity to commit the crime and

    physical evidence directly connected him to it.

    9. Carter confessed. In an apparent effort to get leniency, he falsely implicated

    other people in the murders. One of those people was Anthony Graves.

    10. Mr. Graves had no connection to the murders and barely knew Carter.

    Nonetheless, he was arrested and charged with capital murder on August 23, 1992. He

    maintained his innocence from the first day of his arrest.

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    11. Mr. Graves sat in jail awaiting trial for the next two years. He believed in our

    justice system and that he would be acquitted.

    12. His trial began on October 20, 1994. Despite his belief in the system and his

    steadfast claim of innocence he was convicted and sentenced to death.

    The Court of Crimi nal Appeals Affirms Hi s Sentence, EvenAs the Case

    Agai nst Him Unravels

    13. Mr. Graves continued to believe in the system. Still maintaining his absolute

    innocence, he appealed his case to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

    14. The Court rejected his appeal in 1997. Two years later, it denied his application

    for a writ of habeas corpus.

    15. That same year- 2000- the prosecutor in Mr. Graves case, Charles Sebesta,

    appeared on a nationally televised program and admitted that Carter had told him that Mr.

    Graves was innocent. This was the first time that this critical piece of exculpatory

    evidence had ever been revealed by Sebesta.

    16. In May of 2000- two weeks before he was to be executed- Carter gave a sworn

    deposition that he had falsely implicated Mr. Graves.

    17. Carter was executed on schedule. His dying words were Anthony Graves had

    nothing to do with itI lied on him in court.

    18. Mr. Graves remained on death row, still fighting for his life and proclaiming

    his innocence. He filed more applications for writs of habeas corpus to the Court of

    Criminal Appeals. He still believed that this court would do justice.

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    19. He was mistaken. In 2002, the Court rejected his claims and affirmed his death

    sentence.

    ALast-Di tch Effort and a Vi ctory i n the Federal Courts

    20. Later that year, a lawyer named Nicole Casarez got involved with Mr. Graves

    case. She was teaching a journalism class at St. Thomas University in Houston. She and

    her students began a diligent effort to unearth facts about the case. This work, which

    would last years and was done completely for free, finally resulted in facts being

    established which conclusively proved Mr. Graves innocence. Ms. Casarez is one of the

    undersigned lawyers in this action.

    21. As a result of this effort Mr. Graves was able to bring forth new facts in a

    federal writ of habeas corpus. This writ was heard by the federal courts and eventually

    resulted in a reversal of Mr. Graves conviction by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for

    the 5 th Circuit on March 3, 2006.

    Burleson County Refuses to Release Him

    22. Mr. Graves was returned to state custody. Rather than release him, the

    Burleson County authorities chose to try him again and kept him in the Burleson County

    jail.

    23. At this point, Ms. Casarez was joined in her efforts by Jeff Blackburn and

    David Mullin, attorneys from Amarillo. All three of these lawyers, each of whom are

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    representing him in the current action, undertook Mr. Graves representation pro bono .

    24. Later, Katherine Scardino and Jimmy Phillips were appointed to represent Mr.

    Graves. Their excellent work and diligent effort went far beyond the norm of court

    appointed criminal work, and they doggedly worked at proving him innocent.

    Kelly Si egler Takes Over the Prosecuti on

    25. The case dragged on for four more years. In February 2010, Attorney Kelly

    Siegler from Houston became special prosecutor. Ms. Siegler was a highly regarded

    former prosecutor with a history of winning tough cases.

    26. Ms. Siegler approached Mr. Graves case not only with fresh eyes but fresh

    attitude: she gave priority to doing justice above all else.

    27. She conducted her own investigation of Mr. Graves case. She and her staff

    interviewed all of the relevant witnesses, analyzed the physical evidence, and carefully

    examined all of the facts.

    All Charges Are Di smi ssed

    28. On October 27, 2010- more than eighteen years after Anthony Graves was

    falsely convicted- Ms. Siegler, joined by the local District Attorney, dismissed all charges

    against Mr. Graves. Rather than claim that the evidence was stale, or that witnesses

    could not be found, or any of the hundred other prevarications that prosecutors

    sometimes use, she said bluntly that Anthony Graves was innocent and that his case was

    a travesty. Her courageous position was taken in the best tradition of prosecutors in

    this state and put to rest any idea that Mr. Graves was somehow getting off under the

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    law.

    29. The order dismissing the charges against Mr. Graves recited, in the common

    language of the criminal courts, that there was no credible evidence against him. It did

    not contain the exact words actual innocence.

    Mr. Graves

    Choi ce

    30. Mr. Graves had several options at that point. He could have chosen to sue the

    State of Texas officials and the local authorities of Burleson County in a civil rights

    action in U.S. District Court or in the Texas courts. Instead, he chose to apply for simple

    compensation under the states Timothy Cole Compensation Act. He did this because he

    wanted to get his life underway and put the past behind him. He also chose this course of

    action because he has family members who need his support and attention. He holds no

    grudge against the State of Texas. He simply wants to start living a life that has been put

    on hold for eighteen years.

    The Comptrollerns Deci si on

    31. Mr. Graves filed his claim with the Texas Comptroller shortly after being

    released. His claim was denied in February of 2011 by the Texas Comptroller on the

    ground that the order dismissing the charges against him did not contain the correct

    wording.

    32. The Comptroller made her decision based on an honest interpretation of the

    law, which is relatively new and untested.

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    33. The Comptrollers decision caused many people in Texas state government,

    most notably Governor Rick Perry, to openly support Mr. Graves in his quest to correct

    the injustice done to him. On February 16, 2011, Governor Perry called Mr. Graves case

    a great miscarriage of justice and pledged his support for Mr. Graves efforts to win

    compensation and clear his name. Many other legislators and state officials have echoed

    this sentiment.

    MR. GRAVESnRIGHTSUNDER THE TEXAS CONSTITUTION

    34. Our state constitution guarantees to Mr. Graves and all people in Texas several

    key rights- the right to a remedy at law, the right to equal protection, and the right to due

    course of law. Mr. Graves brings this action pursuant to those rights.

    Arti cle 1, Secti on 13- The Right to a Remedy

    35. Article 1, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution guarantees that every person,

    for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by

    due course of law.

    36. This provision of our constitution is powerful. It has been found in every

    version of our organic law since the days of the Republic of Texas. It ensures that any

    person whose reputation has been damaged has a right to redress in our courts- the only

    legal body that can restore a persons good name.

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    Arti cle 1, Secti on 3- The Right to EqualProtecti on

    37. Article 1, Section 3 of the Texas Constitution- the equal rights provision of our

    Texas Bill of Rights- also protects Mr. Graves. It gives him an affirmative right to be

    equally protected under the law.

    38. Unless this Court grants relief, Mr. Graves will be denied his equal right to

    recover compensation under our compensation law.

    Arti cle 1, Secti on 19- The Right to Due Course of Law

    39. Finally, Article 1, Section 19 of our state constitution guarantees that no person

    shall be deprived of their rights except without due course of law.

    40. Unless this Court grants relief, Mr. Graves will be deprived of his right to clear

    his name and accept compensation without due course of law.

    41. Although Mr. Graves has been released from prison, he has not been fully

    cleared. Until and unless a court of this state proclaims his actual innocence, his name

    will be clouded and his reputation will be questioned.

    42. Mr. Graves relies upon our Constitution and the power of this Court to apply it

    to give him a way to restore his good name and reputation.

    WHYADECLARATORYJUDGMENT?

    43. Mr. Graves does not want to sue any official of this state for the damages done

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    to him. He does not seek an order compelling the Texas Comptroller to pay him

    restitution, as he believes that she made an honest error in denying his claim and will

    rectify it once she gets the appropriate order.

    44. Instead, he asks this court only for an order proclaiming him to be actually

    innocent of the charge that cost him eighteen years of his life and ruined his name and

    reputation.

    45. The Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act gives this Court the power to

    adjudicate the legal status of any party before it and grant relief from uncertainty and

    insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal relations. Tex. C IV. PRAC . &

    R EM . CODE 37.002(b).

    RELIEF REQUESTED

    46. Mr. Graves respectfully asks the Court to exercise the power given it by the

    Texas Constitution and the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act and declare his status to

    be an innocent man, falsely accused and falsely convicted.47.

    Mr. Graves also seeks his costs and reasonable and necessary attorneys fees as

    are equitable and just, pursuant to Tex. C IV. PRAC . & R EM . CODE 37.009.

    48. Mr. Graves also asks for any other relief, at law or in equity, to which he may

    be justly entitled.

    Dated: February 28, 2011

    Respectfully submitted,

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    JEFF BLACKBURNTexas Bar No. 02385400718 S.W. 16 th Ave.Amarillo, Texas 79101

    (806) 371-8333 [telephone]

    (806) 350-7716 [fax] LEAD COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF NICOLE CASAREZTexas Bar No. 029521003800 MontroseHouston, Texas 77006(713) 525-3578 [telephone]

    CO-COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF DAVID MULLINTexas Bar No. 14651600Mullin Hoard & Brown, LLP500 S. Taylor, Suite 800Amarillo, Texas 79120(806) 372-5050 [telephone](806) 372-5086 [fax] CO-COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF

    JAMES C. HARRINGTONTexas Bar No. 09048500WAYNE KRAUSETexas Bar No. 24032644SCOTT MEDLOCK Texas Bar No. 24044783BRIAN MCGIVERINTexas Bar No. 24067760 TEXAS CIVIL RIGHTSPROJECT

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    1405 Montopolis DriveAustin, TX 78741(512) 474-5073 [phone](512) 474-0726 [fax]

    LOCAL COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF