Written between December 17th and 20th, 2016
Edited on January 19th, 2017
Edited on January 19th, 2017
On Saturday, December 17th, 2016,
CBS News aired “Blaming Melissa”, an episode of its investigative report series
entitled 48 Hours. Reporter Erin Moriarty hosted the episode. “Blaming
Melissa” has been described as a hit piece by members of “Free Melissa
Calusinski”, a Facebook group dedicated to proving the woman’s innocence.1
Calusinski is currently serving a
31-year prison term at Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln, Illinois. She was
convicted of first-degree murder in the January 14th, 2009 death of
toddler Benjamin Kingan.
In Illinois, a conviction of
first-degree murder requires that the prosecution demonstrate that the
defendant “killed an individual without lawful justification”, and either
“intended to kill or do great bodily harm (or knew that the act would do so),
Knew that the act created a strong probability of causing death of great bodily
harm; or Was attempting or committed a forcible felony other that second degree
murder”.2
She, her sister Crystal Calusinski, and
Nancy Kallinger, worked at a day care center in Lincolnshire, Illinois, named “Minee
Subee in the Park”. Melissa was an assistant teacher at the facility.3
The day care center has since closed, following a $2 million settlement with
Kingan’s family.
On September 30th, 2016, a
judge in Lake County, Illinois rejected a request to overturn Calusinski’s
conviction.4 Melissa was 22 years old when Kingan died; she is now
30 years old. If she serves her entire sentence, she will be in her early
fifties when she becomes a free woman.
What follows is a list of facts which,
in the opinion of this author, suggest Melissa Calusinski’s innocence in the
case, and point to her confession having been coerced.
Note: some of these facts do not
directly point to Calusinski’s innocence; but rather merely suggests oversights
in the prosecution. Point #21 explains a detail about the civil case between
the Kingan family and the day care center, and has nothing to do with the guilt
or innocence of Calusinski on an individual basis.
1. Calusinski had a low verbal I.Q., in
the bottom 4%.3
2. Calusinski had been teased as a youth
for her low comprehension skills.5
3. Calusinski was described as having an
“extreme vulner ability to suggestion”.5
4. Calusinski was described by her
attorney Kathleen Zellner as “unsophisticated about her legal rights”3.
She was interrogated without an attorney present, and “never asked for a
lawyer”.6
5. After she had confessed, Calusinski asked
interrogators whether the incident would go on her criminal record, which
suggests that she didn’t understand how serious the charge was.5
Calusinski was also described as believing that she would be allowed to go home
when the interrogation concluded.
6. Although Calusinski had the right to
leave the room during the interrogation (because she agreed to be interviewed),
she claims that she was locked inside the room while detectives were outside. Calusinski
stated, “They would leave and lock the door, and lock me in there”.3
7. Calusinski was interrogated
off-and-on for somewhere between eight and ten hours (according to various, and
somewhat conflicting, reports); from roughly 9:30 A.M. to 7 P.M. on January 16th,
20097; two days after Kingan died at 4:30 P.M. on January 14th,
2009. Most interrogations do not last anywhere near that long; most last only
several hours at the longest.
8. Calusinski was deprived of food
during the interrogation.8
9. Calusinski was deprived of restroom breaks
during the interrogation.8
10. When Calusinski entered the
interrogation room, she stated that she had “barely slept” during the two days
between Kingan’s death and the interrogation.5
11. Calusinski was interrogated seated, confined to a 9” x
12” interrogation room, backed into a corner by two males – Lake Zurich,
Illinois police department detectives Sean Curran and George Filenko9
– both of them older and larger than Calusinski.
12. Defense attorney Kathleen Zellner
said police “got in her face, yelling expletives and slamming their fists”.5
13. Calusinski denied her guilt at least 79 times before confessing.
14. Calusinski has stated that she can’t
explain why she confessed, nor why she demonstrated slamming Kingan to the
ground during the interrogation.3
15. Despite having stated that she can’t
explain her confession, Calusinski also told reporters that during the
interrogation she was “terrified”; saying “They don’t know what I was put
through in order for me to confess”.7 She also stated that she was
“emotionally exhausted” at the time.7
16. The detectives who interrogated
Calusinski arguably insisted to her that she was guilty (“he starts acting up
and you get mad at him and you throw him on the floor”) because “something else
must have happened”, and “that story you’re giving us is a load of shit”, and
“that’s a bunch of lies”.3 Several of the interrogation methods used
by the detectives parallel components of a controversial interrogation
technique known as the Reid Technique.
17. Before confessing (six hours into
the interrogation), Calusinski stated that Kingan “kind of almost slipped when
I dropped him. And then he hit the chair”. 3 Calusinski “says she
was putting Ben down, close to the ground on his tiptoes. “I thought he was
going to stand,” she told the investigator. She said he fell and hit his head.”6
18. Reporter Ruth Fuller called
Calusinski’s confession the “most troubling confession” she’d ever seen.5
19. According to their testimony, no
workers at the day care center ever saw Melissa Calusinski become frustrated,
nor angry, at the children in her care.5
20. Nancy Kallinger testified
that she didn’t hear any screaming, nor crying, at the time of the incident.5
21. Two teachers (Melissa Calusinski and
Nancy Kallinger) were present in the room at the time of the injury; which
fulfilled Illinois’s requirement that two teachers be present in the room
whenever there are more than five children.3 This means the day care
center shouldn’t have been held liable, as it was complying with the regulation,
at least at the time of the second injury (sustained on January 14th,
2009). However, Melissa Calusinski stated that she was alone in the room when
she realized that Kingan was unresponsive;10 so holding the center
liable may have been appropriate.
22. Day care workers showed the bump
from Kingan’s previous injury to his mother. Prosecutor Steve Scheller stated, “The
pediatrician actually examined Benjamin’s head, had felt around… said there was
no issues that she felt needed to be addressed, that mom should just keep an
eye on him”.5
23. Lake County Coroner Thomas Rudd
stated that the previous injury could have “easily” caused Kingan’s death two
months later, even without a second injury.5
24. Head injuries sometimes cause
vomiting; prosecutors attributed the vomiting to a stomach bug,5
although it’s unclear whether there is evidence to support the claim that
Kingan was still suffering from such an ailment in the day or two leading up to his death, following his apparent recovery from his stomach bug after taking Pedialyte.
25. State pathologist Dr. Eupil Choi
crossed out the word “significant” in an affidavit about the head injury which
Kingan sustained in October 2008.5
26. Prosecutor Matthew deMartini called
the previous injury “microscopic”, while Thomas Rudd disagrees, saying that the
injury was visible to the naked eye.5
27. Prosecutors downplayed and
suppressed evidence of Kingan’s previous injury, but conceded that the previous
injury occurred, but said it was “too small to matter”.5
28. Some attributed the abnormal rate of
growth of Kingan’s head (during the last several months of his life) to normal
growth, while others attributed this growth to swelling of the brain.5
29. Lake County Coroner Thomas Rudd
stated that Kingan was a head-banger, which if true could have made his
previous head injury worse.5 Nancy Kallinger said Kingan threw his
head back slightly, twice, shortly before he died.
30. Lake County, Illinois has a
reputation of being reluctant to admit to falsely convicting the accused, in
order to prevent the government from losing money in payouts to convicts.5
Sources:
1. “Free Melissa Calusinski”,
Facebook.com, accessed December 18th, 2016
2.
“Illinois First Degree Murder Laws”, statelaws.findlaw.com, accessed December
19th, 2016
3.
“Melissa Calusinski: Was a Day Care Worker Coerced into a Murder Confession?”,
CBSNews.com, July 18th, 2015
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/melissa-calusinski-was-a-day-care-worker-coerced-into-a-murder-confession/
4.
“Guilty Verdict Stands in Day Care Murder; Judge Rejects Reversal”,
ChicagoTribune.com, September 30th, 2016
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-day-care-worker-murder-hearing-decision-met-20160930-story.html
5.
“Blaming Melissa”, 48 Hours, CBS News, December 17th, 2016
6.
“Melissa Calusinski: Detective “Made a Mistake””, Chicago.CBSLocal.com,
February 24th, 2016
7.
“Daycare Worker Melissa Calusinski Reveals Why She Confessed to Murdering a
Toddler: ‘I Was Terrified’”; People Magazine, October 13th, 2016
8. “Is Deerfield “Killer” Innocent?
“48 Hours” Suggests So”, JWCDaily.com, March 4th, 2015
9.
“Questioning Melissa Calusinski”, CBSNews.com, February 28th, 2015
10.
“Lake County Coroner: Toddler’s Death ‘Undetermined’ in Day Care Murder Case”,
ChicagoTribune.com, July 8th, 2015
http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/lake-county-news-sun/news/ct-day-care-death-ruling-change-met-20150708-story.html
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