By Ann Coulter
02/03/2021
Earlier, by Ann Coulter: Black Quadruple Murderer Kevin Cooper Is Nicholas Kristofâs Profile In Courage
I assume itâs overkill to continue listing the evidence against death row inmate Kevin Cooper, duly convicted of committing a quadruple murder back in 1983. The blinding proof of his guilt was covered in last weekâs column.
To review, this included shoeprint evidence, footprint evidence, cigarette and tobacco evidence, blood evidence and DNA evidence, proving that this violent rapist and mental hospital escapee:
This week, weâll consider the specific claims made by the New York Timesâ Nicholas Kristof purporting to raise doubts about Cooperâs guilt.
Kristofâs special pleading proves that no one on death row is innocent. I didnât pick this case. The anti-death penalty zealots picked it, splashing it across the âNewspaper of Record.â I have to believe they didnât choose their worst example to showcase, so letâs look at the honesty of their arguments about Kevin Cooper.
KRISTOF:
âAlthough Josh [the 8-year-old who miraculously survived the hatchet attack] had indicated that the attack was committed by several white men, the sheriff announced just four days after the bodies were found that the sole suspect was Kevin Cooper âŚâ
First of all, eyewitness testimony is the least credible evidence, particularly in the case of children â as the child molestation hysteria of the 1980s demonstrated â and even more particularly in the case of a child whoâs found lying in a bloody mess surrounded by his murdered family members after having his throat slit and being attacked with a hatchet.
In any event, Josh never said he saw three men. He said he initially âthoughtâ it must have been the three âMexicansâ who had stopped by the house looking for work earlier in the evening. But even in his initial interviews from his hospital bed, he said he only saw one assailant in the house: âa man with bushy hair.â
KRISTOF:
âSadly, a tan T-shirt believed to have been worn by one of the killers didnât produce enough DNA to provide a profile. âŚâ
That IS sad. Luckily, itâs also not true. The Department of Justice DNA lab at UC Berkeley did find Cooperâs DNA on the tan T-shirt discarded near the murder house, which also contained partial DNA profiles of two of the victims, Doug and Peggy Ryen.
KRISTOF:
âCould the San Bernardino County Sheriffâs Office really have planted evidence, including placing Cooperâs blood on the tan T-shirt? We do know that the sheriffâs office had a history of going rogue. Floyd Tidwell, the sheriff, was himself later convicted of four felony counts for stealing 523 guns from the evidence roomâ ⌠[further denunciations of the sheriffâs department].
The âplanted evidenceâ ruse is a popular one for springing murderers, except â oops! â the T-shirt tested by the Berkeley DNA lab wasnât in the possession of the sheriffâs office. The tan T-shirt, along with the cigarette butts from the Ryensâ station wagon, had been in the custody of the San Diego Superior Court Evidence Clerk from the end of the trial right up until 2001, when they were shipped directly to the Berkeley DNA Laboratory for testing.
KRISTOF:
âLikewise, hairs found clutched in the victimsâ hands werenât Cooperâs (no hairs from an African-American were found at the crime scene) but didnât lead to a match with a suspect, either.â
While I love the idea of a 10-year-old girl ripping an African Americanâs hair out by the root as he came at her with a hatchet, the âclutched hairâ nonsense has already been thoroughly investigated and dismissed by the courts.
A team of DNA experts spent weeks testing hairs from Jessicaâs hands, as well as two hairs found on Doug Ryenâs right hand and one hair from Christopher Hughesâ arm. Their conclusion? âThe testing failed to identify another assailant and confirmed that all tested hairs most likely came from one or more of the victims.â
As U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn L. Huff explained:
âThis should not be surprising. The hairs adhered to the victimsâ bodies, including their hands, because there was a large amount of blood on the victims and a large amount of hair on the debris-ridden carpet. Also, the victims each sustained hatchet wounds to the head, causing clumps of cut hair to fall to the ground. Both animal and human hair were recovered from the hands of the victims. Just as with the animal hairs, the cut and shed human hairs adhered to the bloodied victimsâ hands because the victims came in contact with the carpet when they were dying on the floor.â
Finally, Kristof tries to pin the murder on other âsuspectsâ (whom we know arenât guilty or heâd be defending them).
KRISTOF:
âA different longtime suspect in the case recounted, not long after the murders, how he had killed the Ryens and Chris Hughes.â
I guess âconfessionsâ are only questionable in the case of the Central Park rapists. Kristof doesnât say who the confessor is specifically, but it sounds like the one repeatedly put forward by Cooperâs lawyers. Courts have characterized this so-called âconfessionâ as âa mental patientâs secondhand version of a confession.â
KRISTOF:
âThis other suspect is a white man whom Iâll identify just by his first name, Lee, for he must be presumed innocent âŚ
âLee came to the attention of the authorities during the investigation after his girlfriend, Diana Roper, fingered him as the killer: She reported that he had returned home late on the night of the killings wearing bloody coveralls, in a car that resembled the Ryensâ station wagon.
âRoper turned Leeâs bloody coveralls over to the sheriffâs office â which eventually threw them away without testing them. By then, the sheriffâs office had arrested Cooper, and deputies didnât want a complication.â
Donât be fooled by Kristofâs fake humility â âhe must be presumed innocentâ â all that blather about what Roper said was invented by defense attorneys.
Roper was not technically Leeâs âgirlfriendâ: She was his bitter ex. Far from âbloody,â the few red splotches on the coveralls were most likely paint (along with manure and dirt). Roper told investigators that she didnât even know if the coveralls belonged to Lee.
But let me quote from the court that reviewed the coveralls evidence: â[I]ssues of guilt, innocence and sentence should never be decided on information obtained from persons who believe they are witches and believe an article of clothing is connected to a crime because of a âvisionâ they receive during a âtrance.ââ (Emphasis mine.)
Yes, Roperâs evidence was based on a vision she had during a trance because she believed she was a witch. These facts are exhaustively detailed in court orders and opinions â but are entirely absent from the vast news coverage of Cooperâs case. Might distract from the claim that the sheriffâs office tossed the coveralls only to avoid âa complicationâ in their single-minded pursuit of the wrong man â as Kristof claims.
No one on death row, not one person, is innocent. Believe nothing you read in the media about their putative âinnocence.â Itâs always lies and nonsense, as with Kristofâs pet murderer, Kevin Cooper.
COPYRIGHT 2020 ANN COULTER
DISTRIBUTED BY ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION
Ann Coulter is the author of THIRTEEN New York Times bestsellers â collect them here.
Her book, ÂĄAdios America! The Leftâs Plan To Turn Our Country Into A Third World Hell Hole, was released on June 1, 2015.
Her latest book, Resistance Is Futile!: How the Trump-Hating Left Lost Its Collective Mind, was released on August 21, 2018.