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Wrongful Conviction

#053 Jason Flom with Kirstin Blaise Lobato

Wrongful Conviction

Lava for Good Podcasts

True Crime

4.65.7K Ratings

🗓️ 16 April 2018

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kirstin Blaise Lobato was twice convicted of the gruesome murder of a 44-year-old homeless man named Duran Bailey, whose body was found behind a dumpster off the Las Vegas Strip just after 10 p.m. on July 8, 2001, covered in a thin layer of trash. Bailey’s teeth had been knocked out, and his eyes were bloodied and swollen shut; his carotid artery had been slashed, his rectum stabbed, and his penis amputated. Despite a crime scene rich with potential evidence, Las Vegas detectives Thomas Thowsen and James LaRochelle ignored obvious leads. Instead, they focused their investigation on 18-year-old Kirstin Blaise Lobato, based solely on a third-hand rumor. Lobato became a suspect because of an attack she fended off in Las Vegas in May 2001. A man attempted to rape her, and she fought him off with a knife, slashing him in the groin area before escaping in her car. In July, police drove up to the small town of Panaca to interview Lobato about the incident. On the day of the crime, she was at home with her parents in Panaca, which was nearly three hours northeast of Las Vegas near the Utah state line. She was forthcoming with police and described an incident entirely different from Bailey’s murder. When the police told her that the man had died, she mistakenly believed it was the same man that had attacked her, and she expressed remorse, which the police took to be a confession. Even though there was not a shred of physical evidence linking Lobato to the crime scene, on May 18, 2002, she was convicted of first-degree murder and sexual penetration of a dead body and sentenced to 40 to 100 years. The state’s theory of the crime fell apart in October 2017, when Vanessa Potkin, Director of Post-Conviction Litigation at the Innocence Project, and a team of attorneys presented nearly a week’s worth of testimony from several renowned entomologists and a medical examiner, each of whom demonstrated why the state’s narrative never made any scientific sense. On December 19, 2017, the judge vacated Lobato’s conviction and ordered a new trial. Ten days later, the prosecution dropped all charges, and Kirstin Blaise Lobato was freed after serving almost 16 years in prison. In this episode she is joined by two of her Innocence Project attorneys, Jane Putcher & Adnan Salter.

https://www.wrongfulconvictionpodcast.com/with-jason-flom

Wrongful Conviction is a production of Lava For Good™ Podcasts in association with Signal Co. No1.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

America has 2.2 million people in prison. If just 1% is wrong, that's 22,000 people.

0:07.0

That's a lot of people's lives destroyed.

0:11.0

If the system want to take you out of society, they will do it.

0:20.0

No matter what laws they have to break,

0:22.5

saying that they are enforcing the laws,

0:24.6

but they're breaking the law.

0:27.4

Having to hear those people say

0:29.7

that I was guilty of a crime that I did not commit,

0:32.3

and then hear my family break down behind me

0:34.3

and not be able to do anything about it,

0:36.5

I can't describe the crushing weight that was.

0:39.3

I'm not anti-police.

0:41.3

I'm just anti-corruption.

0:43.3

A lot of times we look and we see something happen to somebody,

0:47.3

and that's the first thing we say,

0:49.3

that could never happen to me, but it can.

0:53.3

This is wrong. happen to me, but it can.

0:59.0

This is wrongful conviction. Welcome back to Wrongful Conviction.

1:14.6

Today's featured guest is Blaise Labato, who only recently was freed from prison after serving over 16 years for a crime she didn't commit.

1:26.6

July 1st, 2001, a homeless man named Duran Bailey was found brutally murdered.

1:32.3

An 18-year-old was found guilty of that crime.

1:35.3

Labato was sentenced to 13 to 45 years after being found guilty of manslaughter in 2006.

...

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