On
this date, 17 February 2011, a Neo Nazi by the name of Frank G. Spisak Jr. was
executed by lethal injection in Ohio for the shooting spree murder of three
people. I got the information about him from clarkprosecutor.org.
Number: A175-472
Date of Birth: 06/06/1951
Gender: Male
Race: White
Admission Date: 06/16/1993
County of Conviction: Cuyahoga
Convictions: AGG MURDER, ORC: 2903.01; ATT MURDER, AGG ROBBERY (2 COUNTS), ATT MURDER
Executed: 02/17/2011
On February 17, 2011, Frank Spisak was executed for the 1982 aggravated murders of Reverend Horace Rickerson, Timothy Sheehan, and Brian Warford.
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (Clemency Report)
Inmate#: OSP #A175-472
Inmate: Frank W. Spisak Jr.
DOB: June 6, 1951
County of Conviction: Cuyahoga County
Date of Offense: 02-01-1993
Case Number: CR181411, CR176651B
Date of Sentencing: February 1, 1982, August 27, 1982, August 30, 1982
Presiding Judge: James J. Sweeney
Prosecuting Attorney: Doinald Nugent
Institution: Ohio State Penetentiary
Convictions: AGG MURDER, ORC: 2903.01; ATT MURDER (7-25 YEARS), AGG ROBBERY (2 COUNTS) (7-25 YEARS)
On
February 1, 1982, the body of the Reverend Horace T. Rickerson was discovered
by a fellow student on the floor of a restroom on the Cleveland State
University campus. Horace had been shot seven times by an assailant from a
distance of more than eighteen inches. Four spent bullet casings were recovered
from the scene.
On
the evening of June 4, 1982, John Hardaway was shot seven times while waiting
for an RTA train at the West 117th Rapid Station in Cleveland. He observed a
man walking up the platform steps and had turned away when the man opened fire
on him. Hardaway survived the shooting, and was later able to identify his
assailant as Frank G. Spisak, Jr. Three pellets and seven shell casings were
recovered from the scene.
At
approximately 5:00 p.m. on August 9, 1982, Coletta Dartt, an employee of
Cleveland State University, left her office to use the restroom. Upon exiting
the stall, she encountered Spisak, holding a gun, who ordered her back into the
stall. Instead, Coletta shoved Spisak out of the way and ran down the hallway.
Spisak shot at her, but missed. A pellet was later removed from a wall in the
hallway. Coletta Dartt identified Spisak as her assailant.
On
August 27, 1982, the body of Timothy Sheehan, an employee of Cleveland State
University, was discovered in a restroom at the university by a security guard.
The guard had been searching for Sheehan after his office reported that he had
failed to answer his beeper page. Timothy had been shot four times, and two
pellets were retrieved from the scene.
On
the morning of August 30, 1982, the body of a young student, Brian Warford, was
discovered in a bus shelter on the campus of Cleveland State University. Brian
died from a single gunshot wound to the head, although five spent.22 caliber
casings were recovered from the scene.
On
September 4, 1982, Cleveland police answered a call that a man was firing shots
from a window at 1367 East 53rd Street. The police were directed to Spisak's
apartment and Spisak, after admitting he had fired one shot, invited the
officers inside. A shotgun and a .22 caliber automatic pistol were observed in
the room. Spisak made a suspicious move toward the couch but was stopped by one
of the officers who discovered a loaded .38 caliber handgun and a two-shot
derringer under the couch cushions. Spisak was arrested for possession of
unregistered handguns and discharging firearms within city limits, but was
later released on bond. The weapons, however, were confiscated.
Early
the next day, an anonymous caller told police that the confiscated weapons had
been used in the Cleveland State University shootings. Ballistics tests
confirmed the tip. A warrant was obtained, and the police returned to Spisak's
apartment, confiscating several items including newspaper clippings of the
homicides and Nazi-White Power paraphernalia. Spisak was later arrested, hiding
in the basement of a friend's house. During a brief search of Spisak's suitcase
at the scene, police discovered the beeper pager belonging to Timothy Sheehan.
Spisak later admitted to shooting Horace Rickerson for allegedly making a
homosexual advance toward him; to killing Tim Sheehan as a possible witness to
the Horace Rickerson shooting. The prosecution suggested it was the other way
around, with Spisak making the overture and being rejected. Spisak also
admitted to killing Brian Warford while on a "hunting party" looking
for a black person to kill; and finally, to shooting at Coletta Dartt and to
shooting John Hardaway. He also told police he had replaced the barrel of the
.22 caliber handgun in order to conceal the murder weapon.
More
information on the victims in this case can be found here. Tim Sheehan's son
Brendan Sheehan grew up to become a prosecutor and was seated as a trial court
judge in Cuyahoga County in 2009. His father was murdered on Brendan's 15th
birthday.
Issue Date: May 2007
Issue
"The Long Goodbye"
All
his victims were people who had changed courses in life, seeking a second
chance. Now, 25 years after Frank Spisak’s serial murders terrified Cleveland
State University, the death-row inmate gets a second chance at avoiding
execution. In a courtroom, survivors and lawyers will return to 1982 and
confront his crimes. A jury will decide his fate. John Hyduk
He
attacked five people, killing three. He would have killed more if his aim were
better. Their bodies and lives were torn by the tumbling slugs from a
.22-caliber automatic.
Now,
25 years after Frank Spisak wandered the city streets with a pistol popping
like the devil snapping his bubble gum, he will walk again in the minds of his
victims and their families. Old case files will be reopened. Healed wounds will
be torn apart. Spisak, convicted of a series of 1982 murders and sentenced to
death, has fought hard to live. The state of Ohio - navigating a gauntlet of
court appeals - has tried just as hard to kill him.
Last
October, three federal appeals court judges struck down Spisak’s death sentence
and ordered him resentenced. The judges said Spisak’s lawyer had been
ineffective and that the judge had given the jury improper instructions during
his 1983 sentencing. Although Spisak’s guilty verdict still stands, a new jury
may deliver a sentence as early as this summer. Spisak’s lawyer plans to argue
that he killed because he was insane and should be spared from death.
Raised
by emotionally distant parents, Frank Spisak was beset by gender issues from
childhood. He blamed “an extremely strict mother who humiliated and hit him
when he displayed sexual behavior,” says one court document. She “taught him to
hate people of color and others whom she deemed to be ‘undesirable’ or
‘repulsive.’ ”
Even
as Spisak married, he took female hormones, anticipating a sex-change operation
that would never happen. He used his quick and inquisitive mind to mentally
rebuild the Third Reich, joining the National Socialist White People’s Party
and fancying himself a storm trooper. He collected guns.
Today
Spisak’s world is a prison cell at the Mansfield Correctional Institution.
Inside it he lives as a woman, corresponding through prison pen-pal Web sites,
trolling for “very special girlfriends.” He signs his letters Frances Ann,
under “With love” or “Every best wish.” And no one - not even his psychiatrists
- can say with certainty where the invented Frank ends and the real Frank
Spisak begins.
The
story of Spisak and those he killed and tried to kill is a morality play with
the moral still to be written. At first, the victims seem like random choices.
Separated by age and race and gender and class, they would not have found
themselves side by side on the same city bus. But what they had in common was
this: They were all strivers after something better, people who had changed
courses in life, seeking another chance. And Cleveland is a city built on
second chances.
The
city we live in was born that summer. Four years after default, and after 13
years of burning river jokes, we declared ourselves back on track. As The
Cleveland Press closed and Halle’s department store faded, Time magazine
pronounced us one of the country’s most desirable cities and the “CBS Evening
News” reported we were on the road to recovery.
We
did not feel like a city under siege. As crime scene investigators were pulling
slugs from a campus wall, Duran Duran was opening for Blondie a few blocks away
at the Agora. As another victim lay bleeding, moving vans emptied the
Williamson and Cuyahoga buildings on Public Square for demolition before the
building of the new Standard Oil Tower. Everywhere, the 19th century was making
way for the 21st.
Second
chances seemed very real then. Now, Frank Spisak has a simple request: Give me
a second chance. Twelve jurors will decide how far second chances extend. On
one side of the courtroom, those who hope that justice will finally be done and
a verdict carried out will gather. On the other side will stand a man who
believes that true mercy cannot be strained, even if is stretched thin over a
quarter century.
A
gavel will bang like a pistol shot. Suddenly it will be 1982 all over again.
“I’m on death row for killing three men. … Although I’ve been locked up a long
time, I still feel like I am young and have a lot of life left in me to live; I
don’t want to have to waste it rotting in some prison! … I devote all my
energies toward trying to win my appeal and get me out of here before it is too
late for me to have a real second chance in succeeding in life.” Frank Spisak,
in prison letters posted on the Web site mansonfamilypicnic.com.
After
the cops and the coroners finish their work, the flattened slugs and
photographs of spent bodies go into a fat manila folder in the Cuyahoga County
Prosecutor’s Office. The folder lands on the desk of a young assistant
prosecutor named Donald Nugent. He is an ice pick in a nice suit. He is 34,
with a diploma from Xavier University and a Cleveland Marshall law degree
folded neatly around a stint in the Marine Corps. He is halfway through a
career that would see him try 50 murder cases and prosecute at least that many
rapes. The graying prosecutors in the office have dubbed him “Jack Armstrong,”
like the “All-American Boy” of old radio shows, and he is golden.
It
is 1983, and Nugent reaches into a manila folder. He looks at pictures of what
seems like half of Cleveland, bleeding.
Here
is the Rev. Horace T. Rickerson, dead, shot seven times on Feb. 1, 1982. “Four
spent bullet casings were recovered from the scene,” a court document reads in
the same flat prose that lists ingredients on a cereal box. The pastor of the
Open Door Missionary Baptist Church, Rickerson had looked at its cramped home
on East 83rd Street and dreamed, because dreams not only turned into classrooms
and towers, but into spires and pulpits, too. In December 1975, a
ground-breaking ceremony was held, and in March 1977, Rickerson dedicated the
brand-new church on Woodland Avenue, just up the street from the borrowed room
above a laundromat where the congregation had started 50 years before.
A
weekly radio show called “Heart to Heart” on WJMO carried Rickerson’s sermons.
His last broadcast, aired the night before he died, was titled “How to Know You
Are Saved.” Rickerson left to research a sermon at Cleveland State’s library
and never returned. He went home. That’s the way church people say it: He went
home. That August, Rickerson’s congregation gathered without him for a ceremony
to burn the paid-off mortgage.
Here
is John Hardaway, a working man. He had spent his young life looking at the
world from inside a bottle. He battled alcohol’s demons and wrestled them to a
draw, remaining sober for 17 years. “It was really a tribute to John that he
stayed with it,” Nugent says now, remembering. “Every Friday night he’d go to
the Black Horse Tavern and have two little cans of orange juice, cash his
paycheck, and walk over and take the Rapid home.”
Hardaway
was shot seven times on the evening of June 4, 1982, while waiting for an RTA
train at the West 117th Street Rapid station. His one quirk, for jewelry, saved
his life: A medallion he wore on his chest deflected the killing bullet aimed
at his heart. “Three pellets and seven shell casings were recovered,” the court
document reads. “Just imagine the Rapid driver,” says Nugent. “She pulls up to
the stop at 11:30 at night and she sees Hardaway there, bleeding. And then she
calls police.”
Here
is Coletta Dartt, a Cleveland State University employee, who at 5 p.m. on Aug.
9, 1982, left her office to use the restroom. Exiting the stall, she
encountered Spisak, holding a gun, who ordered her back into the stall. Dartt -
a black belt in karate - shoved him out of the way and ran down the hallway.
Spisak fired a shot as she fled. “A pellet was later removed from a wall in the
hallway.”
Here
are Timothy Sheehan, Cleveland State University’s assistant superintendent of
buildings and grounds, and CSU student Brian Warford. Sheehan had crossed an
ocean and Warford had ridden a city bus to end up at the school. There they ran
afoul of a man on a different career path, and both died.
Sheehan,
dead at 50, was discovered by a campus security guard on Aug. 27, 1982. He had
been “shot four times, and two pellets were retrieved from the scene.” Warford
was found three days later at a Euclid Avenue bus stop, dead at 17 of a “single
gunshot wound to the head, although five spent .22-caliber casings were
recovered from the scene.” “This was not some random spree,” Nugent says now.
“Here was a guy who was a pervert right from the beginning. And who had a gun.
And the gun gave him power.”
It’s
June 1983, the day of trial. The court-appointed defense team huddles at the
table across the aisle from Nugent. The accused squints through Coke-bottle
glasses from behind a belly-warmer tie. The Sheehan family survivors watch from
the back. And here comes Judge James Sweeney in his black robe. As the bailiff
calls, “All rise,” the courtroom stirs.
The
people in the folder do not move.
“The
Brendan I saw was a frightened, devastated young man surrounded by his three
sisters and his mom, not knowing what to make of the fact his dad, his best
friend, was gone. And then trying to take his dad’s place and not knowing
really how to do it.”
“He
loved his yard, his garden,” says Brendan Sheehan, Timothy’s son. “It’s funny:
A few weeks prior to my dad’s death, my sister had graduated high school. For a
graduation present, my sister wanted to go to Ireland, and she and my dad went.
He had said, ‘Brendan, you stay home and make sure the lawn is cut,’ stuff like
that. “He came back, and it was, ‘OK, here’s the thing - you didn’t cut the
lawn right; here’s how you work the hedger.’ It’s kind of ironic, like he was
preparing me.”
Tim’s
own college career had been full of bicycle rides across ancient lawns with
professors. Born in County Cork, Sheehan attended Maynooth College, west of
Dublin. Now Sheehan was an American, with a mortgage to prove it. He got up at
5 or 6 in the morning to catch the bus to work and returned at 6 in the
evening. Nothing ever happened on his shady street in Fairview Park, and people
worked themselves woozy to keep it that way.
The
day someone decided to kill Tim Sheehan, the family planned to celebrate
Brendan’s 15th birthday with dinner at a restaurant. At 2 p.m., Sheehan left
his briefcase, glasses and coat at his desk, hustled off to check a report of a
faulty door lock and vanished. Beeper pages went unanswered. Four hours later
and a city away, a Fairview police cruiser pulled into the Sheehan driveway.
Bad
news flooded the family room. “It was surreal,” Brendan remembers. “You’re
looking at your mom. You’re thinking, ‘He died? How’d he die?’ He was murdered.
Who would do that?” “I like classical music and games like chess. I used to
enjoy collecting stamps - ‘the quiet hobby’ it is called.”- Frank Spisak “He is
a coward. When you hide in darkness and in-wait for an unsuspecting person, and
you have a gun and they don’t know what’s happening, and you ambush them -
which is what he did to everybody - that shows he’s a coward.” Donald Nugent
“Slayings
end myth of CSU as urban oasis” (Plain Dealer headline, Sunday, Sept. 5, 1982)
He
was a little man in search of a soapbox. Frank Spisak dressed sharp, drove a
candy-apple-red Mustang and considered himself a self-taught student of
history. At Midpark High School, Class of ’69, he had been a scrawny library
aide, singing in the choir and glee club. He liked to talk race hate and
fascist politics, using words that hit like fists.
“After
graduation from high school I had planned to study history in college,” Spisak
wrote from his cell, “but went to work in a factory instead because I wanted
money to buy myself a car and do other things.” He entered Cleveland State in
1969 but dropped out after 40 credit hours. By 1972, he was working at a
factory on Cleveland’s East Side. Spisak courted a co-worker, Laverne Lampert,
with flowers and Elvis Presley records. They married within a year and had a
daughter.
By
1977 or 1978, after a car accident that Laverne thought had “messed his mind
up,” Frank started wearing dresses during neighborhood strolls. He listened to
albums of Hitler speeches. After he brought home another cross-dressing man and
slept with him, Laverne walked out. They briefly reconciled two years later,
but then he confided that he had always wanted to become a woman. Hormone
treatments would be great, he said. Be a man, she said. She left again.
Spisak
took a job that year as a machinist at the Edward Daniel Co. on St. Clair, with
a Teamsters Local 507 card in his wallet and $220 every payday. He collected
guns, dressed as a woman on weekends and discussed the finer points of Nazism
and gay porn with any co-worker who’d listen. He took home men and partied with
a black prostitute, substituting firearms for payment when he was short of
cash. “Hunting parties,” Spisak called his forays out to rob and kill. Spisak
stalked his victims in the city’s lonely corners. He hunted where he felt most
comfortable. He returned to Cleveland State to wander the campus and study Nazi
history in the university library.
And
there was Brian Warford, waiting.
If
good luck were pocket change, Warford would not have had bus fare. Two years
before, in 1980, he had dropped out of Collinwood High as a sophomore. He’d
been kicked out of the house after he stole his father’s van and his credit
cards. “A loner who lacked discipline,” his father growled. Brian went to live
with a sister.
But
at 17, Warford saw that his life needed to come around, or he would die on the
streets. Warford enrolled in an alternative education program offered at CSU,
and suddenly his GED was not just a pretty thought. After late classes, he
waited at a bus stop on Euclid Avenue. A pistol barked and Brian Warford fell
to the sidewalk.
They
found him sprawled on the cold pavement, on his right side. A single bullet
rested in Warford’s head. In his trouser pockets were two lottery tickets; both
tickets were losers.
“Instead
of defending the mentally ill and standing up for their civil rights (rights to
which they are entitled as American citizens), the lawyers in our communities
have joined prosecutors and tough minded ‘hard-on-crime’ judges in sending
mentally ill persons to prison and death row - treating us like we are habitual
criminals!” Frank Spisak “First he’s trying to say he didn’t do it. And when he
came to the point when he realized the gig was up, that’s when - for the first
time - he turns to this White Power BS, this Nazi stuff. Which he had an
interest in. But that wasn’t why he was killing. The reason he was doing these
killings was that he was a pervert and was looking for his own
self-gratification.” Donald Nugent
On
Sept. 4, 1982, two Cleveland patrolmen climbed the stairs to a second-story
walk-up at 1367 E. 53rd St. Labor Day weekend had just begun, and here was a
call about shots fired from an apartment window, proof that when you mix
alcohol and gunpowder, you get handcuffs. The resident said he had nothing to
hide. Which was true: A shotgun and a 22-caliber pistol were clearly visible.
The cops found a loaded .38 revolver and a two-shot Derringer buried under the
sofa cushions. Frank Spisak was booked for possession of unregistered handguns
and for discharging firearms within city limits. He posted bond and walked.
Two
days later, the street swarmed with bulletproof vests. Two tips had told police
that the gun used in the CSU murders was already in their possession.
Ballistics tests linked Spisak’s .22 to Sheehan’s and Warford’s murders. Inside
the apartment police found newspaper clippings detailing the killings, but no
Spisak. He was pulled later that day from a friend’s basement, crouching next
to a getaway suitcase. Detectives pawed through the contents: Inside was Tim
Sheehan’s beeper.
Reporters
barreled down I-71 to Midpark High, where old yearbooks were mined. One ex-classmate
remembered the argumentative glee clubber, the library geek who talked himself
into trouble and thought he could talk his way out again. He didn’t know why
Spisak would murder, but “I suspect Frank has a logical explanation.”
Spisak
told court-appointed psychiatrists “he tried to kill Coletta Dartt because he
became angry when he heard people making fun of the White People’s Party,” a
court document reads. “He decided to teach her a lesson and intended to ‘slap
the shit out of her and rob her’ when she came out of the ladies’ room at
Cleveland State.”
He
said he “felt good” about shooting Warford. His biggest worry was “getting back
across to the other side of the campus” to his car, according to one
psychiatrist. “I figured in the early morning hours it was so quiet, somebody
was bound to hear all the shots.” He admitted he was worried about getting
caught after the first murder. “He shot Hardaway on the other side of town away
from Cleveland State, where the other shootings had taken place, because ‘he
didn’t want the police to link the two shootings together and link it to
[him],’ and he ‘didn’t want to get caught.’ ”
After
murdering Sheehan, he said, he “picked up the brass casings from his gun
because the brass is worth money and also because ‘it’s sloppy to leave it
laying around.’ ” “Spisak has come to a deep and intelligent understanding of
the mental illness and gender identity disorders that drove his unfortunate and
painful actions. The understanding underlies his deep remorse. ” defense attorney
Alan C. Rossman
“Twenty-five
years later, to somehow say, ‘Well, he’s got some mental problems …’ The jury
heard all that. And the jury said he was responsible.”
At
the trial, Fank Spisak never said he was sorry. To the families, he offered no
apology. The monthlong trial began on Monday, June 13, 1983, in the common
pleas courtroom of Judge James J. Sweeney. “Part of the job that you’ve
undertaken is going to be sitting in judgment of a sick and demented mind that
spews forth a philosophy that will offend each and every one of you,” defense
lawyer Thomas M. Shaughnessy told the jury. “Make no mistake about that, you
will be offended.”
Spisak
grew a Hitler mustache for the trial. He greeted his lawyers with a Nazi
salute. He answered Judge Sweeney’s questions with a German “jawohl” instead of
“yes.” On the stand, he spoke of race war and of killing “the enemy” -
Rickerson, Warford and Hardaway were black, and Sheehan “looked like a Jew
professor,” Spisak said.
Faced
with ballistics evidence linking Spisak to the murders and eyewitness
identification from the survivors, Shaughnessy bet his client’s life on an
insanity defense. But on July 11, Dr. Oscar B. Markey, the only psychiatrist
called by the defense, testified that Spisak was the victim of several known
mental disorders - none of which could be characterized as mental illness.
Judge Sweeney asked Markey for clarification. Was Spisak mentally ill when he
committed the crimes he was accused of? Was Spisak mentally ill now? “No,”
Markey said. “No.”
Sweeney
then instructed the jury not to consider Markey’s testimony in its
deliberations. Two days later, he ruled that Spisak knew right from wrong and
understood the consequences of his actions, so he could not plead “not guilty
by reason of insanity.”
Resigned
to a guilty verdict, Spisak’s defense looked ahead toward finding mercy in the
sentencing part of the trial. “In this segment of the trial, the defense has no
defense,” Shaughnessy told the jury in summation. He would see them again, he
promised, during the penalty phase. After 60 witnesses and 250 exhibits, the
jurors concluded, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Frank Spisak did murder and
rob, propelling bullets into the bodies of his victims. This took just over
five hours.
A
reporter asked Spisak if he could think of any reason he shouldn’t be
electrocuted. “Not offhand; can you?” Spisak said. Then he grinned. During the
penalty phase, a line of psychiatrists took the stand for the defense.
“Mentally unwell,” Dr. Oscar B. Markey called Spisak. “He lacks finer feelings.
He is governed by fear, by anger, by circumstance, and not by remorse, by
tenderness, or feelings of modesty.”
Dr.
Sandra B. McPherson, a clinical psychologist, said Spisak detailed the killings
to her matter-of-factly, showing no remorse. “It was like,” she testified,
“discussing what I had for breakfast.” She was visibly shaken as she recalled
Spisak’s inkblot test - Spisak, she said, saw only bloodstains and body parts.
But none of the experts could pronounce Spisak legally insane. “Troubled” and
“unwell” would not save his life.
The
back of the courtroom had already reached a decision. “He’s a cold-blooded
killer, and he’s no good,” a recovering John Hardaway told reporters. “He was
killing people for no good reason, and he should be electrocuted.” Even
Spisak’s defense attorney seemed eager to help throw the switch. As his
client’s life hung in the balance, Shaughnessy’s summation murdered each victim
again. “Every one of us who went through this trial, we know we can feel that
cold day [and] see Horace Rickerson dead on the cold floor,” Shaughnessy said.
“And we can all know the terror that John Hardaway felt when he turned and
looked into those thick glasses and looked into the muzzle of a gun that kept
spitting out bullets.”
Shaughnessy
did argue that Spisak was mentally ill, but soon undermined his own argument.
“Don’t look to him for sympathy, because he demands none,” Shaughnessy said.
“He is sick, he is twisted. He is demented, and he is never going to be any
different.” Summing up, Shaughnessy told the jury, “Whatever you do, we are
going to be proud of you.”
After
five hours of weighing testimony and balancing death against life with the
possibility of parole, the jury voted with John Hardaway, for a death sentence.
Judge James J. Sweeney thanked the jury. Spisak rocked in his chair.
Spisak’s
final address to the court was the soapbox he’d lusted after for 32 years.
“Even though this court may pronounce me guilty a thousand times, the higher
court of our great Aryan warrior god pronounces me innocent,” he shouted. “Heil
Hitler!”
Asked
about his victims’ families afterward, Spisak was bitter. “If it makes them
happy, if it makes the whole city of Cleveland happy, if they’re going to dance
and celebrate my death, then let them dance and celebrate because today I die
and tomorrow it will be them.” But he would not run to the electric chair. “Now
[my lawyers] are going through the appeals process … until they no doubt
exhaust all the different options open to them.”
He
expected to buy time, but not a second chance. The appeals might win him “a
year, two years, or maybe 10.” Then, Spisak said, it would be time to ride “old
blunderbolt.” Instead, Frank Spisak would outlive his lawyer and the memory of
most of the city.
For
25 years, Spisak has lived on prison food and court appeals. In a series of
colorful filings, Spisak has argued that since transsexualism is considered a
“mental defect” under Ohio case law, the state of Ohio should pay for a
sex-change operation for him. He has also asked to be allowed to resume
collecting stamps and corresponding with other collectors - a request denied
when he mentioned, “My specialty is collecting old German postage stamps,
especially those from Nazi Germany.”
Last
year a three-judge panel of the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals went into
the fat folder filled with bodies and shells and balled-up crime scene tape,
and hope sprung again in a cell in the Mansfield Correctional Institution. The
judges upheld Spisak’s conviction, but ordered the case back for a new
sentencing proceeding. They cited improper instructions given to the jury that
suggested they needed to decide between life and death unanimously. Actually,
only a death sentence must be unanimous. One dissenting juror can spare a
defendant and force a life sentence instead.
The
judges also hammered the late Thomas Shaughnessy for representing Spisak
ineffectively. They criticized him for graphically recounting the crimes in his
closing argument, expressing hostility and disgust for his own client and
saying very little to offset either. Much of his argument “could have been made
by the prosecution,” noted one judge dryly, “and if it had, would likely have
been grounds for a successful prosecutorial misconduct claim.”
A
new jury has to resentence Spisak - weighing “mitigating factors” such as his
mental state. The Ohio Attorney General’s Office is considering an appeal to
the U.S. Supreme Court, but it’s a long shot. Most likely, Cuyahoga County
Prosecutor Bill Mason will have to argue all over again that Spisak deserves to
die. Attorney Alan C. Rossman now represents Spisak. For Rossman, the
“mitigating factors” are clear: We should not execute the mentally ill, and
Frank Spisak is mentally ill. “The Nazism was very much a part of the identity
disorder,” says Rossman. “What attracted him to the White People’s Party was
the uniform and the structure - and the identity. It was a symptom of his
illness as opposed to a driving force.”
Rossman
calls the first trial “a circus,” in part because Shaughnessy let Spisak
portray himself as a Nazi. “When reviewing the trial record, there was no
question in my mind that his trial counsel had nothing but contempt for him,”
Rossman says.
Rossman
passed the bar in 1981. He was still hanging his law degree during that summer
of 1982. He’s worked on several capital punishment cases. Each is a mental
challenge for him. “You never divorce yourself from the victims,” he says. But
when he tries to “understand the human side” of his clients, he realizes “how
broken they are.” “The difficult thing is to suspend judgment and get beyond
the fangs and talons that are being portrayed, and find out how they got to
where they are. Which is not to condone anything that’s happened.”
The
girl’s feet do not touch the floor. She’s wearing Dora the Explorer socks in
SpongeBob tennis shoes and sitting in a too-big chair. The littlest victim
stares past the framed photos in the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office lobby
- full of old men in stiff collars and Herbert Hoover haircuts - to the TV. A
cartoon aardvark named Arthur soars over his troubles in a magic plane. She and
her mother have come to see Brendan Sheehan.
An
assistant county prosecutor, Sheehan is director of the Internet Crimes Against
Children division. When the investigators are through, everything - the
pedophiles and abuse and monsters that swallow childhood - goes into a fat
folder that lands on his desk. “Right now I have 40 pending cases on my
docket,” he says, motioning at an office the size of a generous chimney.
A
small man can cross a courtroom in a few steps. It took Brendan Sheehan 25
years to do it. After Sheehan graduated from Baldwin-Wallace College, Don
Nugent pointed him toward a bailiff job and law school. Being a prosecutor,
Sheehan says, is “my dream job.”
Frank
Spisak is an almost-forgotten nightmare. “I’ve always prided myself on the fact
our family doesn’t talk about Frank Spisak, doesn’t think about Frank Spisak,”
Sheehan says. Now he will.
It
will be left to Sheehan’s co-workers, his fellow prosecutors, to try this case.
But he plans to be there, “sitting in the back of the courtroom, like I did 25
years ago.” As the surviving head of the Sheehan clan, sworn to protect his
mother and sisters, how can he not?
He
believes that keeping Spisak on death row is not impossible, but resentencing
him will be tricky. “How do you recapture what was said 20-some years ago to a
jury on how this guy deserves the death penalty?” Sheehan asks. “Times have
changed.”
Donald
Nugent is now U.S. District Judge Nugent, presiding over a courtroom in the
federal courthouse on Huron Road and an office the size of the 14th green at
Firestone Country Club. Spisak’s name comes up, and suddenly we are talking
about marriage chapels. “I’ve gone to every one of Brendan’s sisters’ weddings
and his wedding,” Nugent says, “and in the Irish tradition they have a father’s
prayer. Well, he’s not there. And they always have someone say the father’s
prayer in place of Tim. That comes home to Kathleen and the kids. In the
happiest moment of their lives, the Sheehans are reminded of the butchering of
Spisak and the loss of their father.”
No
matter how the case ends, Nugent says, “All of the victims’ families will know
that the police, the prosecutors and everyone who was charged of representing
them did everything that was legal and proper and appropriate to see that
justice was done. And the fact that someone, maybe, didn’t was not something
they had control over.”
If
he weren’t a judge, would Nugent like another crack at prosecuting Spisak? You
do not ask a barber if you need a haircut. “In a minute,” Nugent says. “And I
would be his worst nightmare.” Sometime soon, perhaps this summer, another jury
will be handed a fat folder filled with spent slugs and bleeding bodies and
crime scene tape. They will weigh whether a damaged man deserves a second
chance, though he took such chances away from three others.
Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor William Mason will seek another death penalty for Frank
Spisak. He has promised to deliver his office’s lead arguments himself.
A
gavel will bang like a pistol shot, and Spisak will live or die. Another judge
will enter a courtroom as the bailiff calls, “All rise.” Regardless, the people
in the folder will not move.
Please
go to this blog post to hear the quotes from the victims’ families.
Please watch this video:
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