Prime Suspect
Will New Evidence Give Marty Tankleff A Second Chance?
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Play CBS Video Video Moriarty's Reporter's Notebook Only On The Web: 48 Hours correspondent Erin Moriarty talks about the case of Marty Tankleff, a Long Island teenager, who was convicted of murdering his parents.
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Tankleff is incarcerated at the Great Meadow Correctional Facility in Comstock, New York. (CBS)
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Marty Tankleff was a teenager when he confessed to killing his parents. (CBS/48 Hours)
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Interactive Under The Gun Learn more about some interrogation techniques used by police.
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Interactive Forensics 101 Find out more about forensics, DNA and some cases in which DNA has made a difference.
"The confession of Marty Tankleff is Detective McCready's story. Not Marty's story," says Salpeter, adding, "Detective McCready is a bad detective … It's just mind boggling what this man did to this kid."
At the funeral for his mother Arlene, Marty had to mourn in shackles.
"It wasn't a funeral. It was a burial. You couldn't really grieve. You couldn't say goodbye," he says.
He had been arrested and charged with her murder and the attack on his father after police say he confessed.
But Ron Falbee, Marty's cousin, says the police jumped to the wrong conclusion.
"He is guilty of waking up in the morning alive," he says. "And the minute Marty talks to anyone else outside of the cops, the first thing out of his mouth is, 'They made me say it.' "
And Ron is not the only family member in Marty's corner: several relatives, including an aunt and uncle and cousins, have been fighting to free Marty.
"The strange part is, there isn't anybody sitting here, that ever got question asked by the police. They never talked to anybody in this room," says Marty's relative Mike.
But when Moriarty asks, "Did you ask to speak to them and they said no?"
He replies, "No. I never asked directly to speak to them. I didn't have to. What were they going to add to my case?"
But the relatives say they had plenty to add. For one, they knew Marty.
The relatives didn't think it was odd that Marty was not showing emotion when police arrived. "That's his way. He still has that about him. 'How are you? Oh, I'm great. Everything's fine.' This is the way he is," explains Marty's relative Ruth.
"I was brought up to be a very non-emotional person. I mean I was brought up to very much internalize emotions," says Marty.
And while police say Marty killed his parents to get money, his family disagrees.
"He wasn't supposed to get any money till he was 25 years old," explains his aunt Marianne. "So what was he supposed to do from 17 to 25?"
While Marty says he was aware he couldn't inherit any money until he was 25, Det. McCready was not.
"Jim, isn't it important to talk to everybody before you settle on someone when you know their entire life …could be ruined by this?" Moriarty asks.
"No, no," argues McCready. "Under the circumstances in this case everything we needed to know we pretty much knew in the first day."
With his suspect behind bars, McCready thought he had the whole case all wrapped up in a day. But a week later, with Marty's father Seymour lingering in a coma, the case took an unexpected turn. Seymour's business partner, the same man Marty had told the police to investigate, disappeared.
At the time, Marty thought the business partner would become the main suspect.
But, as a police report shows, McCready still refused to consider Jerry Steuerman a suspect.
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Someone asked about DNA. I believe that there actually is DNA available, but the judge has suppressed it and refuses to allow it to be tested because of a technicality. Others know the details better than I do on this.
As for the DA being "stupid," that is unfair. Before he was elected, he used to say that he believed Marty to be innocent. He was right then. But having been the defense attorney for Todd Steuerman AND for Detective McCready, both of whom were tried for serious offenses, he may be "partial" and unwilling to open up a case that would obviously lead to other guilty parties. It is easier to keep one innocent person in prison than it is to expose former defendants and call into question everything the police did back in those days.
I look forward to meeting Marty face to face, out of prison. God grant that that day come soon.
Jewel681
I have never before felt compelled to speak out for people that I%u2019ve never met and mean nothing to me. However, I%u2019ve never known of a situation in which an assistant District Attorney so blatantly disregarded his responsibility to seek the truth.
I do not know whether Marty Tankleff is innocent or guilty of murdering his parents. However, it is abundantly clear that Leonard Lato is actually hindering the process of discovering who should pay for the horrible murder of the Tankleff%u2019s, by not allowing a new trial.
%u2022 The police never investigated anyone other than Tankleff
%u2022 Too many people, with too little ulterior motive are speaking up on behalf of Tankleff and against Creedon
%u2022 It is absurd not to give immunity to Glenn Harris and hear what he has to say about the gloves and his involvement
Whoever is found guilty by a jury, who has all of the new information and witnesses, should pay for the crime.
- by deborahcox05 August 12, 2007 1:12 AM EDT
- You know what you have to have for probably cause to arrest someone in the U.S.?
- Reply to this comment
See all 14 CommentsNOTHING!! The police do NOT have to investigate anything. That is the big joke about our system.
You know what an attorney told me once? Here you go:
If he and I had a meeting that morning and he had cut his face shaving, and for whatever reason he decided to give a sworn statement to the police that I had cut his face in an attack, the police would have probable cause to arrest me!
It is then my responsibility to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that I was innocent!
You are not innocent until proven guilty! You are guilty until you can prove yourself innocent!
Our justice system is the "just-us" system and the cops are out of control!
They are not here to serve and protect. They are all about getting a conviction - RIGHT OR WRONG!
This is my PERSONAL EXPERIENCE!