Medill Innocence Project students publish groundbreaking stories about murder victim and elusive eyewitness
For the first time in the Medill Innocence Project’s 13-year history, students tell the victim’s story and publish an article about co-defendant of Illinois inmate Ariel Gomez who disputes Gomez’s claims of innocence.
March 14, 2012
Northwestern
University journalism students supported by the Medill Innocence Project have
published two groundbreaking stories: a profile of the murder victim’s wife and
another based on interviews with a key eyewitness who said his childhood
friend, Ariel Gomez, is guilty of the murder for which he was convicted.
Students have been investigating this 1997 Chicago murder case for six months
under Medill Professor Alec Klein, director of the Medill Innocence Project.
During the past several months, students tracked
down murder victim Concepcion Diaz’s wife, Manuela Avalos, overcoming the
difficulty of finding someone who went by a different first and last name in
court documents. During an interview with students, Avalos said she did not
remember writing a victim impact statement where she asked the judge to
sentence Gomez to the maximum penalty. In addition to Avalos’ story, students
also profiled Gomez’s wife, Ivette Ginjauma, who married Gomez while he was in
prison.
Students also interviewed an elusive co-defendant
in the case, Paul Yalda, who was acquitted in 1998—the only one of the five
boys charged with Diaz’s murder whom students had not found. As they searched
for Yalda, members of his family and friends said he no longer lived in Arizona
where records indicated he had once lived. But under Professor Klein’s
supervision, four students traveled to Maricopa County, Ariz., on the hunch
that he might still be there. During their three-day stay, Yalda eluded the
students. But the students persisted and found Yalda, who made startling
statements about the crime, claiming Gomez committed the murder and switched
the guns, resulting in the negative ballistics test. In a recent prison
interview, Gomez denied Yalda’s allegations.
Students also interviewed various authorities,
including crime scene reconstruction experts, who reexamined Gomez’s case. The
majority of these experts questioned his conviction.
Two investigative feature stories appear Wednesday
on the Medill Innocence Project website at www.medillinnocenceproject.org. As part of a multimedia package, the students
have produced a behind-the-scenes video, photo gallery and an interactive
graphic that presents experts’ comments and features a diagrammed map that
further illuminates what may have happened the night of the crime.
The work of the 10 Medill undergraduates during
the just-ended 10-week academic term is a continuation of the investigation
that students began in the fall and wrote about in an extensive article
published in December. Gomez is accused of a fatal drive-by shooting that took
place June 13, 1997, the night the Chicago Bulls clinched their fifth
championship. The victim, Diaz, was 32; Gomez was 17. No witness identified
Gomez as the shooter; the ballistics did not match, and three witnesses told Medill
students that police had tried to convince them that Gomez was Diaz’s killer.
The March 14 publication is the culmination of an
investigative journalism class taught by Klein, a best-selling author and
former Washington Post award-winning investigative reporter. Also contributing
to the students’ investigation were Medill Innocence Project research associate
Alison Flowers and Suyeon “Summer” Son, a University of Maryland journalism
student who was awarded a Medill Innocence Project fellowship.
For more information, contact Medill Professor
Alec Klein, director of the Medill Innocence Project, at (847) 467-4476 or by
e-mail at alec-klein@northwestern.edu.
About
Medill
Medill was founded in 1921 and offers programs in
journalism and integrated marketing communications. It teaches new techniques
essential in today's digital world. Medill is leading the way in training a new
generation of multimedia journalists and integrated marketing communications
professionals. The Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing
Communications at Northwestern University is named after Joseph Medill, a
newspaper man and former Mayor of Chicago.
For more
information:
Alec Klein, Medill Professor (primary)
(847) 467-4476
alec-klein@northwestern.edu
Michael Dizon, Senior Director, Marketing, Medill
(secondary)
(847) 467-2961
michael.dizon@northwestern.edu