• Photo
Charlie White

Charlie White

  • Indiana News
Speed and alcohol not a factor in fatal IMPD crash
Speed, alcohol not factors in cop crash

An Indianapolis Metropolitan police officer involved in a fatal…

Chief justice urges diligence to Ind. alma mater
Chief justice speaks at Ind. alma mater

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts on Friday told …

Red Skelton museum gets $65K for July opening
Red Skelton museum moving forward

A museum devoted to the comedy of Indiana-born comic Red …

Postal Service says dog bites are on the rise
Postal Service: Control your dog

A recent increase in dog attacks on Indiana letter carriers has…

Pence orders flags at half-staff for Memorial Day
Flags at half-staff on Memorial Day

Governor Mike Pence has ordered all flags at state facilities …

Advertisement

White blames lawyer for his conviction

Updated: Thursday, 21 Mar 2013, 8:01 PM EDT
Published : Thursday, 21 Mar 2013, 8:01 PM EDT

 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Former Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White said in court documents Thursday that his attorney didn't mount any defense to protect him from the conviction that forced him from office.
   The assertion is among several in a petition filed in Hamilton County asking a judge to toss out White's convictions on voter fraud and other counts.

   White said the defense strategy used by his attorney -- former Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi -- was "deficient and unreasonable." Brizzi did not call any witnesses at White's February 2012 trial and immediately rested the defense after the prosecution wrapped up its case. White was sentenced last year to one year of home detention and remains free on bail.

   The document says Brizzi's defense was riddled with errors and that the former prosecutor was "ignorant of the law."

   "Brizzi's performance fell below any standard of reasonableness and but for that performance, the result of the proceeding would have been different," it says.

   In an email to The Associated Press, Brizzi said he was traveling out of state on business and had not seen White's petition.

   "Without reading this, the only comment would be that his view is apparently different from mine but in the end the only opinion that matters is the judge's," he said.

   White also said he was unfairly prosecuted for voting outside the district where he lived even though numerous other elected officials, including two senators and two former governors, have done the same thing without being charged.

   The document also says jurors were under duress when they arrived at their verdict because they were forced to deliberate for more than 12 hours. The jury began deliberations about 2 p.m. and announced a verdict shortly after 2:30 a.m. the following day. Both sides asked for the jury to be sequestered overnight, but there were no hotel rooms available because the Super Bowl was being played in nearby Indianapolis.

   Special prosecutor Dan Sigler said Thursday that he had reviewed White's petition and didn't think it had any merit. Such petitions are routine, he said.

   "For us in the prosecution, it's just another step in the process, and we'll see what happens," Sigler said during a phone interview from his office in Fort Wayne.
 

Ground rules for posting comments: No profanity or personal attacks. No racially charged comments.  If  it's not something you would say to someone's face, it's most likely inappropriate. Please comment on the subject of the story itself. If you do not follow these rules, we will remove your post. Repeat offenders will be banned from making future comments.  Keep it civil, folks! WANE is not responsible for the content posted in this comment section.

  • Comments (login required)
Advertisement
Advertisement

Advertisement