Shoe Print at Crime Scene Not Lisker's, FBI Confirms
By Scott Glover and Matt Lait
Times Staff Writers
August 18, 2005
Experts at the FBI crime lab in Quantico, Va.,
have determined that a bloody shoe print used to help convict a San Fernando
Valley teenager of killing his mother 22 years ago was not made by the teen's
shoes. FBI analysts also determined that the shoes worn by Bruce Lisker, now 40,
did not match an apparent shoe impression found behind his mother's right
ear.
The findings, which strongly suggest the presence of another suspect, confirm the
earlier work of an analyst in the Los Angeles Police Department's crime
lab. David Cunningham III, the outgoing president of the civilian Police
Commission, which oversees the LAPD, said the bureau's findings have convinced
him that the department should reopen its investigation into the 1983 slaying."I
absolutely think it warrants further investigation," Cunningham said.
Prior to leaving the commission this week, Cunningham asked department officials
to press forward on the case, but he said they were non-committal. Fearing the
matter may get dropped, Cunningham said he had written to incoming commissioners
appointed by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, offering to brief them on important
matters, including the Lisker case.
"I hope that they will recognize that this is an important issue," he said. Only
one commissioner, Alan J. Skobin, will remain on the panel from the board
appointed by former Mayor James K. Hahn. He and four new commissioners will hold
their first meeting next week.
One of the those commissioners, John W. Mack, said in a brief interview
Wednesday that he was troubled by what he knew of the case and planned to "study
up" on the matter. "On its face, it's very disturbing to think that an innocent
man might be in prison," said Mack, former president of the Los Angeles Urban
League. The FBI's findings, he said, "add a lot of credence to this person's
innocence."
William Genego, one of Lisker's attorneys, said the FBI's results further
supported his client's claims of innocence. He said LAPD officials "have been
told twice that what they told the jury is absolutely, indisputably false, and I
would hope they would not have to be told a third time. Someone should take
responsibility for correcting the injustice that resulted from that false
information."
Genego said he hoped the new Police Commission would follow through on
Cunningham's desire to reopen the case. Deputy Chief Gary Brennan, who oversaw
an internal review of the Lisker case, could not be reached for comment. Brennan
said in June, however, that the new shoe print evidence did not
mean that Lisker had been falsely convicted. He said the LAPD had no plans to
further investigate the case.
"An innocent man is not in prison," Brennan said.
"If we thought there was, we would continue to press forward in the interest of
justice."
Genego said there was a difference between what the police may believe and what
the evidence supports. "Whatever they may subjectively believe is not a basis
for keeping Bruce Lisker in jail," Genego said.
Dorka Lisker, 66, was fatally beaten and stabbed in her Sherman Oaks home on
March 10, 1983. Her son, Bruce, then 17, told police that he had returned home
to find his mother near death and called paramedics for help. Lisker, who had a
history of drug abuse and fighting with his mother, immediately became the prime
suspect. He was arrested the day of the killing and has been behind bars ever
since, having been sentenced to 16 years-to-life in prison.
Over the years, he twice confessed to the killing but now says he confessed out
of desperation, to minimize his time behind bars for a crime that he did not
commit.
In May, The Times published an article detailing new and previously overlooked
evidence that raised doubts about Lisker's conviction. Even the prosecutor who
convicted him told reporters that he had developed "reasonable doubt" about
Lisker's guilt.The evidence included a bloody shoe print left in the bathroom of
the Lisker home. At trial, the prosecutor said Lisker had left the shoe print.
But last year, an LAPD crime lab analyst determined that the print did not come
from Lisker's Pacer tennis shoes.
At the request of Times reporters, the same analyst determined that the
shoe
print impression found on Dorka Lisker's shaved head during an autopsy
was
"similar in size and dimension" to the mystery shoe print in the
bathroom.
The findings bolstered Lisker's statements that he had returned home to
find
his mother near death, and that the assault had been committed by an
unknown
intruder.
In June, LAPD officials asked the FBI for a second opinion on their own
analyst's work. The FBI report, a copy of which was obtained by The
Times,
confirmed that neither the print in the bathroom nor the mark on the
victim's head,
were made by Lisker's shoes. The report does not address whether the
two prints
were made by the same shoe or whether the impression near the victim's
ear was
made by a shoe.
Lisker, in a telephone interview from Mule Creek State Prison, said
Wednesday
that he was pleased ” but not surprised” by the FBI's findings.
"I wasn't worried," he said. "It's one of the benefits of having truth
on
your side."
Last month, a U.S. magistrate judge found that Lisker had made a
persuasive "preliminary" case that "he is innocent of the crime for which he has
been
convicted." As a result, he ordered an evidentiary hearing for October
to further
consider his claim of innocence, a development that legal experts said
was
rare.
Buoyed by the recent attention to Lisker's case, his stepmother, Joy
Mitchell
Lisker, has launched a letter-writing campaign aimed at persuading Los
Angeles County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley to join defense attorneys in
seeking to have
Lisker's conviction overturned.
"The D.A. has the power to do this,"
Joy
Lisker said in a letter to Lisker's supporters. "Government officials
pay
attention to letters from the public. It's time to create an outcry
from those of us
who care."Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman for Cooley, said the district attorney's
office
is monitoring the Lisker case.
"The district attorney's office has been in contact with the California
attorney general's office, which is handling this matter in U.S.
District Court,"
Gibbons said. "We will take the proper action when this latest legal
challenge
is resolved."
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