Homer And Gracie

From 1983 to 1988, the year my dad passed away, I lived on a farm of sorts.  My dad’s property – forty acres in the middle of East Texas.  He called it The Pine Curtain.  He raised pigs, goats, chickens, pheasant and quail.  Geese and ducks lived on the pond.  I accused him of having a petting zoo, because it seemed like the animals considered themselves tenants – not a possible food source.

My dad would let them out, and they’d follow him around, like interns following the lead doctor in a hospital.  Most people would think it was an illusion or trick, but the animals just knew my dad loved them, even though some of them did eventually end up on the menu.

The goats didn’t think of themselves as goats.  They were guests. They were Nubian goats.  The female, Gracie, was black and white, and the male, Homer, was brown and orange.  When dad first brought them home, they were just kids. They’d follow him and eat the grass, meandering around like foreign tourists, “No, thank you, we’re just visiting.”

When they matured, they mated and had little goats.  Two at a time. The little ones would follow my son around when he was four or five, and if anything got near Mike, they’d chase them off.   It wasn’t unusual to see my son digging in the backyard, playing like little boys will, with two small goats standing guard like unpaid babysitters. 

When my dad passed away, my mom had me sell the larger animals, the pigs and goats, because she couldn’t handle the workload.  An older man down the road had goats on his farm and agreed to buy Homer and Gracie.  I warned him Homer was better suited to be penned in or tied so he didn’t cause any damage.  Even though Homer was a goat, he was like a bull in a china shop.

The man assured me that he’d been raising goats all his life and could handle anything Homer had up his sleeve (or hoof).

After about a week, I ran into the man at the local feed store.  He told me he was sorry he didn’t believe me.  He had let Homer roam the house grounds, unsupervised.  The goat had apparently climbed on top of his wife’s car and beat the hood up, kicking in the windshield and eating the vinyl roof.

I asked if he’d done anything to the goat, and he told me he tied Homer up.  He thought about shooting him but admitted that I had warned him, so he didn’t have the heart.

I made Homer’s bail! 

Goats are pretty smart if you raise them from babies, but once in a awhile you get one who is just plain ornery.  But much like people, even goats deserve a chance…

ABOUT THE  AUTHOR.  John is currently doing a two-year set off, after 25 years of incarceration.  He is a frequent contributor as well as author of Life Between The Bars, a unique and heartwarming memoir recognized by Terry LeClerc, “This book is so good because each chapter is short, has a point, doesn’t whine. It’s an excellent book.”  John can be contacted at:
John Green #671771
C.T. Terrell Unit A150
1300 FM655
Rosharon, TX 77583

All Posts By John Green.

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Why Did I Testify? From Death Row, Charles Mamou

My attorneys told me we didn’t need to call any witnesses.  Those intelligent white jury members understand what happened.

I’m no killer, and I was and never will be a rapist.  I never physically hurt anyone who was innocent in my life.  When I refused a plea deal to help them convict the ones they felt were responsible, I became the Kunta – that would never be their Toby.  So they did what they needed to ‘teach me a lesson’.

A few days before my trial began, I sat in the courtroom before the Assistant D.A., Lyn McClellan, and my state-appointed trial attorney, Wayne Hill.   Lyn McClellan was good at sending people to death row and was friends with my attorney – I’ve heard rumor McClellan was the godfather of my attorney’s son.   I guess if it’s true, that makes them practically family.  It wouldn’t surprise me – that’s Harris County, Texas. On that day McClellan turned to me and said, “If it was up to me, I wouldn’t prosecute this case.  It’s clear what happened here.  But it’s not up to me.   My boss wants this case to go through.  I may even lose.”  McClellan’s boss was the legendary Johnny Holmes.

I was arrogantly naïve, thinking the truth would set me free – justice. 

There were subliminal messages being sent before the trial even started.  Referring to the famous O.J. Simpson case, the judge assured jurors that was, “not going to happen here.  This is the real world.  It is not California.”  He compared the job of a juror to, “being a pallbearer at a funeral.”  “And when a child acts out we must discipline that child.  We may not like it, but we have to do it.”  My trial hadn’t even started, and he was telling the jury I was already guilty.  There was no need to over think it.

The finality came during Dodson’s testimony though.  The moment he told the jury I ‘confessed to him’ that I sexually assaulted Mary – women on the jury began to cry and look at me with vengeance.  I had to turn away from one woman’s glare after she took off her glasses and wiped her eyes.  My character was castrated for an act that never happened. 

Before the trial when they questioned me, trying to get me to take a deal – they told me they had DNA.   So, why didn’t they use it?  If they had it, they didn’t use it because it wasn’t mine.  They said I sexually assaulted her – but there was no DNA presented at my trial.  Why? 

I had two defense lawyers.  One was hired a month before the trial began and knew nothing about the strategy or defense in my case.   The people representing me had a letter written by the ‘key’ witness – Dodson – and his initial interrogation video.  They had in their possession evidence to dispute the key witness’s testimony, but they never presented it.  They allegedly ‘misplaced’ that evidence during my trial.  They miraculously found it after I was found guilty.  Dodson said I confessed to him – the letter he wrote said he didn’t know shit.  The jury never saw it.

I didn’t kill Mary.  They had someone testify about me finding my sunglasses after Mary disappeared.   They presented the glasses testimony like a smoking gun.  If the glasses were near the body – I had to be the killer.  What the jury never heard was that the glasses were found nearly five miles away from the body.  I’d dropped them in the grass two days before I ever met Mary and nowhere near where she was found.  My attorneys didn’t tell the jury that either.  Nor were they told how many miles I would have had to have driven that night in a car with a flat tire in order to do what they said I did.  They just listened to the prosecution paint their picture.     

So, why did I testify?  I was damned if I did and damned if I didn’t, but after having the media portray me as a drug dealing rapist and murderer, just short of a serial killer, I was tormented so much that I knew if I ever had the chance to set things straight, I would.  If I was going out on lies– I wanted the record to show my mother I didn’t lie.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR.  Charles “Chucky” Mamou is living on Death Row in Texas.  He is out of appeals and has always maintained his innocence.

He can be contacted at:
Charles Mamou #999333
Polunsky Unit 12-CD-53
3872 South FM 350
Livingston, TX 77351

Writing By Charles Mamou

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The Voice

A caged bird sings,
And a condemned man writes.
The only freedom to be had
In a tomb, sealed tight.
But no, not airtight,
Just enough to breathe.
See the mugginess that looms
In the dank lonely room?
Shall it bring you constant misery
For the wrong you have done.
Murderer!
You worthless monster!
The same grief you have caused
Should be exacted on your mama.
O’ but it has,
Just not enough.
Heathenish villain
Who deserves no forgiveness,
And for that we’re going to bring
Out the lethal stuff.
Undo what God has done,
Rid fathers of their sons,
As your souls erode in darkness
Till the day of judgment comes.
And when that day comes,
No tears, nor fears,
Nor uprising peers
Will hinder the injustice
Inflicted on you for years,
From way, way back
On the slave man’s back.
We are all black,
And the distinction of skin color
Is fallacy designed by the elitist
As a means to stay in power.
Watching the seconds tick
As it nears the twelfth hour,
Where preparations are made
And sympathy forbade;
Ain’t nothing
Going on here
But the necessary removal
Of a threat to society.
Placaters
Turned player haters,
Never losing an ounce
Of sleep at night
From knowing that death
Is just a business.
Torture chambers need hosts,
Tax payers foot the cost,
With endless sights of vigil lights
As advocates brave the cold,
Chanting, “No more deaths!”
“No more deaths!”
But there will always be deaths
Till by death there’s no one left,
But the supreme man
And him who understands
That classism
Is about one clan.
Not black, or white
Nor those with the will to fight.
And neither the caged bird that sings
Nor the condemned man that writes.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:  Terry Robinson writes under the pen name ‘Chanton’. Terry is a thought provoking, inspirational writer and a frequent contributor. It’s a privilege to share his work. He can be contacted at:
Terry Robinson #0349019
Central Prison
4285 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, NC 27699-4285

All Posts By Chanton

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Tarnished Prisoner

It’s been said a life is priceless,
But freedom is not.
You can purchase my life,
But my freedom I can not?

Is a life that is tarnished,
Still worth as much?
If freedom is taken,
Can a bunch be bought ba
ck?

Years of slavery,
The Constitution says facts.
We call them Amendments,
The fourteenth is exact.

Modern day slavery,
Combined with a life.
Means no more time,
For kids and a wife.

If my tarnished life
Were no longer priceless,
How much would it cost me,
When to you nearly worthless?

How can I pay you,
And still have mine?
Still have life
And still have time.

Could I be a soldier,
And pay my debt overseas?
Risk my life for my country,
And buy back the deed?

Bathe in the glory,
With sacrifice and pride.
Live through the nightmares
Of others who have died.

Wash off the tarnish,
And come back anew.
Knowing I paid with my life,
It’s what I want to do.

There is no honor
In dying a prisoner’s death.
No parades or salutes,
Praises in depth.

Only tears from a mother,
Or whomever may be left.
A cardboard box, a hole, and a number.
Maybe some rain, but hardly the thunder.

Let me die with some honor,
To further a cause.
I’m still one of the Nation,
And that’s under God
.

I can’t sleep at night,
Because I see a way,
For me to wager my life
At a price you can pay.

With nothing to lose
And all to gain.
You still will win,
Even if I get slain.

You say a life is priceless,
But freedom is not.
Then you purchase my life,
But my freedom I can not?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Terome Porter found inspiration for this poem in his proposal, “Project Reform” – a prisoner’s push for redemption. He can be contacted at:
Terome Porter #680067
Davis Correctional Facility
DCF-CCA
6888 East 133rd Road
Holdenville, OK 74848-9033

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According to State’s Witness, Mamou – awaiting execution – didn’t have time to do it

Charles Mamou had a fifteen to forty-five minute window to do what the prosecution said he did, according to their witness, Howard Scott.  By everyone’s account, Mamou was on Lantern Point Drive at approximately midnight on December 6, 1998. Scott testified he was back at his apartment on Fondren between 12:15 and 12:45.   Could he have murdered the victim in forty-five minutes or less?

At midnight that evening, there was a drug deal on Lantern Point Drive in Houston that ended in gunfire.  The majority of the witnesses testified that Mamou’s driver, Samuel Johnson, pulled away when the shooting began, leaving Mamou behind.  Mamou then jumped in the running vehicle left behind by the individuals he’d just had a shoot out with. 

After that – the stories differ.  Mamou testified he realized Mary Carmouche was in the car after he fled the scene.  He also says he saw her for the last time after they both exited the car at the apartment on Fondren, where the vehicle was later found by police.  Mamou also said there were several other people at that location who had contact with Miss Carmouche.

The drug deal took place at approximately midnight.  The drive from Lantern Point Drive to Fondren is 9.3 miles and 18 minutes.  When the police later recovered the Lexis at the apartments, one of the tires was completely flat and partially off the rim.  Howard Scott testified that Mamou arrived at his apartment between 12:15 and 12:45 that evening.

The state presented a different version of events.  The prosecution claimed Mamou, who lived in Louisiana, left Lantern Point Drive after the shooting and drove to a deserted home on Lynchester Drive, located 17.9 miles away.  They say he then took Mary into the backyard, forced her to perform oral sex and shot her.  No explanation was offered as to how Mamou may have been able to locate an abandoned home on Lynchester. 

There was no evidence introduced in the courtroom regarding a sexual assault – not a hair, not a semen sample, no DNA.  After the shooting, Mamou would have had to drive from the house on Lynchester to the apartments on Fondren and park the car where it was found.  The drive from Lynchester to Fondren takes thirty minutes.

That scenario would have taken an hour and five minutes in driving time, not taking into account the condition of the tire, locating a deserted home, a sexual assault and murder.  The travel time to get to the crime scene was never addressed during the trial.

The Mamou case is riddled with questions. For many, it calls into question the concept of ‘innocent until proven guilty’.  Among the areas of concern:

Although the jury was told Mamou sexually assaulted the victim, he was never charged with sexual assault and there was no physical evidence to support that claim. 

Each of the parties involved in the drug transaction testified against Mamou, and it appears none were charged. 

The only witness who came close to putting Mamou near the crime scene testified that Mamou confessed to him.  That same witness later wrote a letter to Mamou while he was incarcerated stating, “I’m glad you didn’t tell me shit about that cause I don’t wanna know shit, I feel better off that way.”  The jury never saw that letter.

The state’s witnesses all contradicted themselves and each other throughout the trial, as well as all testifying to lying at various points of the investigation. 

Mamou, who had no prior charges of violence, was described as ‘vicious’, ‘ruthless’ and ‘cold-blooded’ during closing statements.  He was also accused of murdering other individuals during the prosecution’s closing statements. 

Autopsy photos and testimony were presented to the jury, as well as victim impact statements from victims of crimes Charles Mamou was never charged with.

Charles Mamou was never charged with any crime connected to Anthony Williams who died months before.  The prosecution told the jury more than once, “And he murders Anthony Williams.”

Charles Mamou has maintained his innocence for over twenty years.

TO CONTACT CHARLES MAMOU:
Charles Mamou #999333
Polunsky Unit 12-CD-53
3872 South FM 350
Livingston, TX 77351

Related Articles:   What Does It Take To Get On Texas Death Row;
Texas Death Sentence Clouded By Irrefutable Doubt;
Awaiting Execution – “Have You Ever Felt Like You Can Taste The Future?”;
Because They Can – Execution In Texas;
Letter From Key Mamou Witness Contradicting Testimony;
Testimony Worthy Of An Execution? The Mamou Transcripts – Part I;
The Mamou Transcripts Part II;
The Mamou Transcripts Part III – Death Sentence Built On The Testimony Of Dealers;
The Mamou Transcripts IV;
The Mamou Trial – Was Race A Factor?;
Mamou’s Death Sentence Sealed With Graphic Testimony And Photos – Of Victims Of Crimes He Was Never Charged With

Writing By Charles Mamou

Source:

Harris County, Texas. Charles Mamou, Jr. Vs. The State Of Texas. Sept. 1999.

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