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COVER- Unapologetic: Prosecutor defends record while critics take aim


Published September 20, 2007 in issue 0638 of the Hook
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Jim Camblos comes from a long line of attorneys, including three judges.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO

Jim Camblos has been the Albemarle County commonwealth's attorney for almost 16 years, deciding which cases to prosecute-- or not.

Now that he's running for his fifth four-year term, his decisions to prosecute are coming under close scrutiny. Local blogger Waldo Jaquith, for instance, recently blasted Camblos for charging four UVA students with "brandishing a firearm" when they were using a broken BB gun to make an on-campus film. And Jaquith's site, cvillenews, called Camblos' decision to prosecute four teens "ludicrous" in what became derided as the "smoke bomb" case.

"I've always been willing to make difficult decisions," says Camblos, and he disputes the notion that he's controversial: "I don't think I am, and the general public in Albemarle doesn't think I am, either."

He suggests that people who criticize his performance either don't live in Albemarle County-- or are a "certain segment of the media."

Whether any fall-out from those two prosecutions will affect Republican Camblos' November bid for another term is hard to say, but they did produce his first serious opponent since 1995: Democrat Denise Lunsford.

"I felt the overall quality of representation provided to the people of Albemarle County was not up to par," says Lunsford, explaining her candidacy.

One thing is certain: while Camblos may have his detractors, his supporters are fiercely loyal.


Juris familias

Apparently Camblos is genetically wired to practice law-- he's the fifth generation in his family to do so, and his father, Jack Camblos, served as Albemarle's Commonwealth's Attorney in the 1970s.

Three forebears were judges, a position Camblos has sought twice-- unsuccessfully-- most recently earlier this year when the Albemarle Circuit Court robes went to Cheryl Higgins.

Camblos, 61, has lived here all his life, leaving only to get his law degree at Western New England College in Springfield, Massachusetts, a sojourn from which he returned with his wife, Chris.

Camblos still says some of the best advice he ever got was to ask out the cute brunette in Apartment 2 in Boston. "He won over my German shepherd before me," laughs Chris; they've been married 34 years.

Their two sons, Lyle, 30, and Mark, 27, who both now live in Waynesboro, faced their teen years with their dad as the county prosecutor.

"They knew they had to behave, and the few times they didn't, they had to pay the piper," says Chris Camblos. "They've always been very supportive and proud of their father."

A nurse case manager at Martha Jefferson, Chris is not a big fan of the media. "Lots of times he's interviewed, and what he says is twisted around... I think things are printed for the sensational effect to get people to read it," she says. 

Jim "is extremely, painfully honest. He looks at both sides," his wife adds.

"There are a lot of people in my corner who quietly support Jim because he does a good job," says a self-proclaimed liberal, architect Bill Atwood. He served in the Army Reserves with Camblos and calls his Republican buddy of 30 years "a solid guy," adding, "I think today, most people in the public sector get hammered for making tough decisions."

Defense attorney David Heilberg remembers his first office 25 years ago, when Jack and Jim Camblos were in practice together, and he was their tenant. 

"His dad was one of the most respected and able prosecutors I've ever met," says Heilberg. "Everyone thought highly of him."

 Heilberg and Jim Camblos have often found themselves on opposing sides, perhaps most notably in the "smoke bomb" case, in which Heilberg represented one of the four youths, a then 13-year-old Jack Jouett student who was the only one to risk going before a jury. The boy was acquitted.

"He's completely trustworthy," says Heilberg of Camblos. "Where he gets himself in trouble-- he shoots from the lip. He speaks without completely thinking things through."


Greatest hits list

Waldo Jaquith admits he's not a lawyer and even concedes he doesn't know what makes a good commonwealth's attorney. Nonetheless, the founder of Charlottesville's first news blog, cvillenews.com, and former contender for City Council is no fan of Camblos.

"It seems like he flips a coin to determine whether to prosecute a case," says Jaquith, who last year compiled a list of "Jim Camblos' Greatest Hits," decisions Jaquith clearly sees as mistakes.

Here's Jaquith from less than a month ago: Remember the BS charges brought against four UVA students after they filmed a scene that involved a BB gun for a class assignment? Albemarle commonwealth's attorney Jim Camblos actually charged them each with "brandishing a firearm." Well, four months later Camblos was forced to accept that the charges were just goofy. The whole thing smacked of his equally ludicrous charges in the "smoke bombers."

Camblos says he's never met Jaquith or looked at his website. But he defends his decisions in the cases Jaquith compiled-- except for one.

That was an accident on U.S. 29 in June 1998. A 19-year-old UVA student named Sarah Roth claimed a bee in her car caused her to swerve and collide with a car driven by Lois Deane and her two granddaughters, Renee and Cheyanne, killing all three.

Camblos refuses to discuss that case on the record or his decision not to prosecute Roth-- a decision that enraged Lois Deane's distraught husband, Edward. Albemarle Court records show Edward Deane was charged April 11, 1999, with trespassing at Glenmore, where Camblos used to live.

David Heilberg says he talked to the officer investigating the case and saw the "mutant bee" that was found in the car. "It was the largest bee I've ever seen," he says. "As awful as that case was, that was Jim exercising good judgment, a good example of him understanding both sides."

While Camblos was criticized for not filing involuntary manslaughter charges against Roth, he also took heat for a case in which he did file charges against an assistant dean at UVA's McIntire School of Commerce. 

On April 9, 2002, Michael Atchison fell asleep behind the wheel, ran a stoplight, and slammed into a car driven by Yu Ching Yeh, 29, who died from his injuries. The case was thrown out because Camblos neglected to subpoena a key witness.

"I made a mistake," says Camblos. "I felt he should be prosecuted. I was completely focused on the driving, and the cause of death was so obvious that I forgot to subpoena a doctor at UVA to testify to the cause of death. I went on TV and apologized the next day. I made a mistake-- that doesn't make me controversial."

"Sloppy," says Jaquith. "He forgot to subpoena a key witness?"

"I've never seen any prosecutor not go crazy to get a continuance or delay if a vital witness is not available," says Debbie Wyatt, a well-known local defense attorney.

In March of 2003, the same year charges against Atchison were dropped, an Albemarle deputy sheriff named Stephen R. Shiflett reported that he'd been shot by a black man, prompting Shiflett's boss, Sheriff Ed Robb, to brand the incident a "hate crime."

Investigators later determined that Shiflett had shot himself and lied about it, but no charges were ever filed against him.

Jaquith cites a story by then-Daily Progress reporter Reed Williams that "found Camblos has filed charges against many people for filing false police reports"; Jaquith calls the failure to do so in this case "galling."

"We never were able to prove he was lying," says Camblos today. "I was not cutting him a break because he was a deputy with the Sheriff's office. He was lying-- but you have to be able to prove it."

"I'm disappointed the matter was never brought to court, but I can't hold Jim responsible for that," says Robb, who has endorsed Camblos' latest run. "If there isn't sufficient evidence, there isn't sufficient evidence."

Robb points out that Camblos has to make difficult decisions. "I don't really think he's that controversial," says the Sheriff.

Another case on Jaquith's list is that of Buckingham couple Edward and Angela Bourne, who allegedly were forced off U.S. 29 in June 2005 and beaten up. Charges were not filed against their attackers because they were from Maryland, and it would have involved extradition, Jaquith says. 

Camblos offers another version of that story: Angela Bourne was driving when a car driven by a black man from Maryland passed them at a high rate of speed. "They felt threatened and forced off the road," he explains. "They take off and catch up. The husband uses the one-finger discount plus liberal use of the N-word."

The two cars stopped, and according to Camblos, Angela Bourne got out and used the N-word, unaware that another car carrying three or four black men was traveling with the first, and the men took a dim view of the racial epithet and the pursuit.

"They acknowledged that they used it," says Camblos. "The Bournes chased the black man and used the N-word. The detective would say the Bournes were the aggressors. They wanted us to extradite, and I wouldn't do it."

 

Alleged bomb plot

Of course, the most recent high-profile case to involve the Albemarle Commonwealth's Attorney office was last year's arrest of four teens accused of plotting to blow up Albemarle and Western Albemarle High Schools. The incendiary evidence seized from one boy's father's locked gun safe consisted of fireworks, two guns, a pack of kitchen matches, and a single roadside stand-grade smoke bomb.

Camblos is adamant that he wouldn't do anything differently in that case today. He notes that three of the boys, represented by attorneys, were found guilty in juvenile court, where the youth that prosecutors called the "ringleader" pleaded guilty.

"I would much rather answer to a few media critics and disgruntled parents than to have to write letters of condolence to parents whose children were killed," says Camblos.

"Most egregious" are the words Jaquith uses to describe that case. "It turned out there was just nothing to it."

Unlike this spring's fake bombs found at Brownsville Elementary that shut down western Albemarle schools for a day, the "smoke bomb" plot, when taken to court, ultimately hinged not on any physical evidence but on murky statements to peers about avoiding school on a certain day and on the boys' own comments made at the police station without counsel and without the presence of their parents.

In a radio interview, Camblos informed listeners that the alleged ringleader was born on April 20, which is Adolf Hitler's birthday, and that was a key factor in his arrest. 

"That was grandstanding and the desire to instill fear," says Jaquith, who also questions Camblos' possible threat to reporters after the closed trial of three of the boys in Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court on March 28, 2006.

"If anyone talks about it, they're in violation of a court order," Camblos told reporters outside the courthouse, "and we'll come after you to ask who talked about it."

"They weren't supposed to be talking about the case," Camblos reiterates more than a year later. "The judge had made a statement from the bench not to talk about it."

He says it was never the prosecution's intention to lock up the defendants and throw away the key, but to see that they received the counseling they needed. He's not surprised by the level of interest in the case.

"It involved our children," says Camblos. "The defendants were children. We weren't allowed to talk about it. When you talk about children, people get very upset."

Still upset more than a year later are at least two parents of the boys who were charged. 

When Fred Newsom heard the Hook was doing a story on Camblos, he called to make on-the-record comments, even though this newspaper has never before published the name of his son, Alan, in connection with this case because he was 15 at the time he was arrested. 

Alan Newsom, by then enrolled in Albemarle High, had previously made headlines as a sixth grader at Jack Jouett Middle School when he sued-- and won-- a case against Albemarle County Schools for making him take off his NRA t-shirt.

After Alan was arrested in the bombing incident on February 1, 2006, "His name was all over the [Daily Progress] with his picture on the front page before he had a chance to put up a defense," complains Fred Newsom, who says the damage to Alan's reputation is done, and he says he's eager to get the word out now that his son's case has been dismissed and the record  expunged.

The elder Newsom claims that his family was intimidated from the first press release the police issued and was threatened that Alan's name would be in the paper-- all, he says, "because they didn't have any evidence."

He still maintains that Alan was never involved in any plot to blow up schools, and that he was only trying to befriend the troubled 16-year-old who had put malevolent comments online.

Alan spent 110 days in jail, during which, his father says, he was denied counseling. Fred Newsom scoffs at the notion that authorities just wanted to help the boys. "They were going to send these kids to Richmond for years," he says. "It wasn't to get them help. That's bull."

He says the cost to the family, both financially and emotionally, has been huge. Alan's defense was "more money than I've ever spent on anything, and my business income was down by 53 percent," he says. His wife had a heart attack because of the stress, he adds. 

And when the whole case seemed to be winding down, the elder Newsom faced a contempt  of court charge. His crime? In asking the Albemarle County School Board when Alan might be readmitted to public school, he violated the judge's order not to talk about the case.

In deciding the contempt case against the elder Newsom, Judge Paul Peatross remarked that it was a technical violation and declined to assess any penalty. 

"You have decent people in the courtroom for contempt," John Whitehead, head of the Rutherford Institute, which is dedicated to civil liberties, said at the time. "Their main concern is their children. This is a road that could have been avoided if police and the school system hadn't overreacted. In my opinion, this never should have been in the judicial system."

"It's my opinion that [Camblos] plays fast and loose with the law," says Newsom. "I feel he's violated the law of Virginia and the United States-- if the Constitution is still the law-- and I find him not to honorably represent the people of Albemarle County."

More than a year later, Newsom still believes, "If the law had been followed, we wouldn't have been put through hell."

The father of the 13-year-old boy who was acquitted by a jury also has some words for Camblos.

"The experience we went through gave us a chance to see up close how the system operates-- I won't say 'works'-- and it revealed a lot that was scary," says the dad, who asks that his name not be used because his son, arrested in front of his peers at Jack Jouett Middle School, is now in high school and would like to put the trauma behind him.

He accuses Camblos of intimidation tactics, selective prosecution, and running his office like a "fiefdom."

 "How things look politically shouldn't be a factor" in prosecution, says the boy's father. "In my son's case, the motivation seemed to be, 'We can get a conviction, let's go for it,' not whether it has any merit or what's the truth."

"Those suggestions are coming from people who don't know all the facts," Camblos responds. "I feel nothing was improperly done with those four, and the judge properly convicted them." [One boy pleaded guilty, and three were convicted in juvenile court. Two of those convicted appealed, as did the 16-year-old Western Albemarle student born on Hitler's birthday who originally pleaded guilty.]

"Probably he erred more on the side of pursuing a marginal case," observes Heilberg. "I think the problem originated with the Albemarle police." 

In court, a videotape of the boy's interrogation showed him repeatedly telling Albemarle police sergeant Linda Jenkins that any alleged plot was a joke and that he didn't even know the Western Albemarle teen whom police called the ringleader.

Albemarle police Chief John Miller declined to comment for this article.

A prosecutor has to be a judge before a case goes to the judge, says Heilberg. "You're an official. One of the hard things for a prosecutor to do is say no to the police or victims."


Off the list

Virginia does not require that the prosecution disclose evidence it has against defendants, and their lawyers must file motions of discovery to obtain that material. To reduce the number of motions, many commonwealth's attorneys maintain an open-file policy giving defense attorneys access to evidence such as police reports.

Camblos' critics charge that he intimidates defense lawyers by denying them access to such files.

Attorneys Dana Slater and Janice Redinger were off the list after they defended Robert Cooke, the man convicted of killing Ingo, a police dog, during a 2004 pursuit after a breaking and entering. (Cooke maintains he fired down to scare the dog away and that an officer was actually responsible for firing the shot that hit Ingo.)

The trade-off in the open-file policy is that the Commonwealth's Attorney Office doesn't want to be "bombarded with pretrial motions. But to zealously defend a client, sometimes that's necessary," explains Heilberg.

And Heilberg, too, has found himself off the open-file list. It happened after he successfully defended the 13-year-old Jouett student acquitted in the Smoke Bomb trial.

"I got my open file [access] closed for a few months," he says, adding that the move felt like "retaliation" for winning the case.

"It's not intimidation," declares Camblos. "If you come in here and act irresponsibly, and we feel we cannot trust you as an attorney, the only way to protect the system is to take you off."

 Not surprisingly, Debbie Wyatt, an attorney who has defended many criminal defendants and pursued several civil cases against local officials over the years, does not have open file access. She says she's done better without it, and calls the policy a "joke."

"It's not a complete file, and sometimes information is not in the file," says Wyatt. "If you file a motion for discovery, you'll get more information and can appeal it."

Yet, she notes, "So many lawyers are scared they'll get cut off from it and won't get to see it."

Wyatt and Camblos have clashed on many cases, and she's a more vocal critic than many attorneys in town. She produces a form ordering disposal of evidence-- a cartridge-- in a case in which Albemarle police fatally shot an unarmed man named Frederick Gray at Squire Hill apartments on May 15, 1997-- a case in which she later won a $4.5 million civil award. The form, dated January 29, 1998, has Camblos' name signed by his secretary, according to Wyatt.

"It's my understanding it's a crime to destroy evidence while a case is under investigation," she says.

Camblos, however, contends the case was closed out because charges were never filed. "This was nothing more than a routine evidence disposition. We get a lot of stuff in that is not used in investigations," he says. "There was nothing devious."

Also routine, says Camblos, is to have someone else sign his name to the disposition forms-- one sheet for every piece of evidence. "Hundreds of these things come into the office," he says.

Wyatt's praise for Camblos is faint. "I think he has a deep sense of loyalty," she says. "Generally that's a good thing, but not for the commonwealth's attorney. There's also the other side of the coin-- vindictiveness."


Camblos boosters

Certainly not all of Camblos' actions in high-profile cases have drawn criticism. There's another coterie who rave about his work.

Suzanne Kogut is one. As the executive director of the SPCA, she's very pleased with Camblos' prosecution of two animal abuse cases, including a Free Union area dogfighting case in which Camblos won an 18-month sentence for the perpetrator.

"One thing with prosecuting animal cases," says Kogut, "it depends on the prosecutor's personal views. I think we see that in the Michael Vick case."

And then there was the case of Carmen, a cat who was shot by a neighbor in Bentivar subdivision in April 2006. In the trial of the shooter, local car business owner George Seymour, Kogut was impressed by Camblos' Perry Mason moment.

 Camblos got Seymour's wife, Kathy, to deny that her husband had ever shot a companion animal. Then he questiond her again, asking if she might recall that her husband had once shot one of his own dogs. Mrs. Seymour suddenly recounted that when a pet German shepherd had knocked her down when she was pregnant, George Seymour took the dog outside and dispatched it.

"He did a good job of bringing that information out in a way that had the most impact," recalls Kogut. In a state where the law can treat companion animals as less valuable than livestock, Camblos won a conviction, and Seymour was ordered to serve 10 days in jail.

"We found Jim to be a friend of the animals and to spend as much time on those cases as it took," says Kogut.

Camblos also gets high marks from Susan Painter, who has worked in the Victim/Witness Assistance Program for 17 years. She says her office is in "almost hourly" contact with the Commonwealth's Attorney office.

"One of Jim's greatest strengths is he has an amazing office," says Painter. "I think he really does look at the bigger picture and tries to work at an outcome that's best for all."

Law enforcement groups have also come out in support of Camblos, including Sheriff Ed Robb, former sheriffs George Bailey and Terry Hawkins, Scottsville Police Chief Robert Layman, and the Albemarle Law Enforcement Association.


Well-oiled machine

Public Defender Jim Hingeley agrees with Painter. "I think Jim is an excellent manager," Hingeley says. "He's able to attract really good people to work in the prosecutor's office." 

Critics and supporters say that Camblos' biggest assets are the four prosecutors who work in his office, three of whom-- Rick Moore, Ron Huber, and Jon Zug-- are veterans of the Charlottesville Commonwealth's Attorney Office. Huber briefly challenged Camblos in the 2003 election before withdrawing after about two weeks. 

"It's great to work for Jim," says Moore. "He really cares about the county and treats his people well. He's really fair."

As for why he's seen as controversial, "He says what he thinks," says Moore (who also reveals that his boss makes a mean cheesecake).

Cynthia Murray worked for Camblos for 10 years before moving over to Northrop Grumman Sperry Marine to pursue the international contract administration career she'd always wanted.

"It was bittersweet," says Murray of her move. "I obviously liked being a prosecutor." 

She says Camblos hired her because he was looking for diversity and an attorney who spoke fluent Spanish. "He has very little turnover in that office," she notes. "That not the case for other [commonwealth's attorney] offices."

Why is her former boss perceived as controversial? "He's outspoken, he's large in stature, and that can be intimidating," she says. "In my experience, most leaders are controversial just because they are the end of the line in decision making."

And criminal cases provoke stronger opinions than land use squabbles, she points out (although in Albemarle, land use policy can be a hot topic). "For that reason, Jim has taken criticism, and on the other side, praise."

Murray voices the prosecutor's frustration with wanting to reveal information to the public but being unable to do so without jeopardizing a case. "It's a delicate balance between the public's right to know and maintaining the integrity of a case," which can make it appear the prosecutor is withholding information, she says.

As for the bombing case, she says, "...It's worse when you're dealing with juveniles."

Underage drinking is a big issue for Camblos, and he wanted Murray, as his prosecutor in cases, to go to schools and make presentations to educate kids. He went with her.

And when he has made mistakes, "There was no criticism from the public or anyone else that would make him feel any worse than he already felt about himself," says Murray. "I think if he were not competent, he wouldn't be reelected so many times."


The soft side

Cynthia Murray reveals one other secret about her former boss: compassion. When her father suffered a massive stroke, "Jim was so supportive of me," she says. "He said, 'Take off whenever you need to. We've got you covered.'"

David Heilberg has a similar memory of when his 19-day-old son was diagnosed with a double hernia. "We thought he was going to die," he says. He still remembers the support from Chris, then a pediatric nurse, and Jim Camblos. 

"I know his heart is true," says Heilberg. "We may differ on procedure, but never about integrity or trustworthiness."

Jim Camblos seems invigorated by the competition in this year's race and from the response he gets going door to door. As an elected official, he acknowledges the political elements of his job.

"There are decisions to prosecute where a message needs to be sent-- like underage drinking," says Camblos who prosecuted the case of George and Elisa Robinson, the booze-serving parents who are now serving 27 months in jail, a sentence that made worldwide headlines. Camblos had asked for 90 days.

"I think I'm a compassionate, caring individual and not the S.O.B. people want to portray me as," says Camblos. "People who know me will tell you that."

His secret? "I treat people with respect, compassion, and dignity."

According to Camblos, "Defendants come up to me and say, 'Hey, Mr. Camblos, you're a fair guy.'"

And no matter how big the conviction, "You have to remember, there was a victim who was raped, murdered, or traumatized for the rest of their life," he says. "It's not like winning a football game."


Prosecutorial humor: Jim Camblos likes his "Reduce defense spending-- plead guilty" mug.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


After 34 years of marriage, Chris and Jim Camblos still seem smitten, and she says her husband "has the softest heart in the world."
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


Chris Camblos calls her husband "painfully honest," and says he often takes his work home with him.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


Earlier this year, Jim Camblos sought the Albemarle Circuit Court bench now held by Cheryl Higgins.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


Commonwealth's Attorney Jim Camblos wants the Albemarle courts to continue to be his workplace for another four years.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


Democrat Denise Lunford is challenging Camblos in this year's race. "The past six years I have not been happy with the leadership and didn't see it likely to change," she says.
PHOTO BY JEN FARIELLO


At a press conference after the arrest of serial rape suspect Toni Washington, Camblos and Detective Chuck Marshall explain that pre-arrest DNA evidence had already connected Washington to the crimes.
PHOTO BY LISA PROVENCE

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Comments

                     
Give Me a Break9/21/2007 9:20:34 AM

Now I'm no really super duper smart republican lawyer or anything but for an "Unapologetic" article, there are certainly a few apologies for all the screw ups made in an unapologetic career. I hope the community will be comforted when there are apologies for screwing up the serial rapist case and for not calling forward key witnesses or destroying evidence. This article seems to me to be missing a line...authorized and paid for by Jim Camblos. I've never seen so much political fluff in all my life. How about adding walks on water and freeze it over for the rest of us to follow! And for the stupid comment regarding his being re-elected so many times...well when you run unopposed..DUH!!!! Shame on the Dem party for not finding a candidate before now! And double shame on the Republicans for not finding a better candidate than Jim!! Hey Jim, is that "fair" in the Webster's Dictionary definition or "fair" in your own little world definition? In this industry, the people who are in the know realize things that the defendants don't – there is a reputation of playing favorites, practicing good old boy politics where deals are done with a wink and a nod and seeking unprofessional and personal retribution on attorneys who dare to challenge Jim are a common practice. Speaking of which....Hey Dave Heilberg..what?????? Well, one thing for sure - funny article -lots of laughs - great political grand-standing! At the end of the day, no matter how many babies he has kissed or how many times he has bragged about his wife and kids (eww), his ability as an attorney is sub-par and the County deserves better and smarter.

The Truth9/21/2007 1:21:18 PM

Jim's biggest problem has been and still is.... using testimony from police officers that he knows are being much less than truthful.

If he doesn't know they are being much less than truthful he has no business being re-elected again.

The Truth9/21/2007 1:24:23 PM

Jim's biggest problem has been and still is.... using testimony from police officers that he knows are being much less than truthful.

If he doesn't know they are being much less than truthful he has no business being re-elected again.

Concerned9/21/2007 1:30:11 PM

If Jim Camblos knows that the officers are "being less than honest" (lying) is that not against ethics?

Concerned9/21/2007 1:33:22 PM

Defendants in criminal cases would be prosecuted for lying on the stand. Why is Jim Camblos allowing testimony to be presented when he knows that it is not the truth? And why is he not prosecuting the officers who are being "less than truthful" as he would any criminal defendant?

Waldo Jaquith9/21/2007 9:49:29 PM

I must call up (before somebody else does) that I am a Democrat, a supporter of Denise Lunsford, and surely part of my interest in seeing Jim Camblos removed from office is because he is a Republican.

Now, I happen to believe that my opposition to him is based on how poorly that he's done his job in many respects, and I'd like to hope that I would support a Republican to replace him as eagerly as I'm supporting the Democrat who is running against him. But no Republican has run against him, and I can't very well separate my ideals from reality, so maybe that's just something I tell myself to feel good.

Clara9/23/2007 10:46:33 PM

Earl Washington ... need I say more?

Susan9/23/2007 11:03:55 PM

How many reported UVA campus rapes has Mr Camblos or his staff refused to prosecute? I think the answer would be: nearly ALL of THEM. Regardless of Mr Camblos comments in this article, it is the comments that he or his staff (for he is responsible and accountable for his staff) make behind closed doors to victims that determine the integrity of his office. Having witnessed the demeaning and unprofessional comments made by an Albemarle Commonwealth Attorney to a young rape victim, I would not vote for Mr Camblos.

P9/24/2007 8:39:39 AM

Wow, I did know that Camblos was really Captain America!!! . . .

how can the Hook staff take themselves seriously with such ridiculous pictures!?

The Truth9/24/2007 2:59:08 PM

WHOA!! Jim Chamblos had nothing to do with the Earl Washington case. The murder he was wrongfully convicted of and jailed for took place in Culpeper, Virginia.

BigBugScareMe9/24/2007 4:33:41 PM

So let me get this straight. If I harm anyone with my vehicle, all I have to do is carry a scary bug with me and Camblos will say I am innocent because the bug scared me??? I find it unbelievable that wreckless driving can be excused especially when lives are taken! When anyone gets behind the wheel of a vehicle, they ARE responsible JIM, get it?

Sarah9/24/2007 10:16:47 PM

TO: The Truth

You are correct, the crime occurred in Culpeper and Camblos was not the original prosecutor. But he was involved with delaying his release from prison. you can "google" the story from various sources; here's one:

After 3 years of freedom, former death row inmate Earl Washington Jr. still can't get any sleep.

The mildly retarded 43-year-old still dreams of being strapped to the electric chair. His stomach turns every time he remembers that despite a state pardon, prosecutors still believe he could have raped and murdered a woman in 1982.

Washington has learned that there's a difference between pardoned and innocent.In a final effort to clear his name, Washington's lawyers are prying open a secret police investigation that once put him within 9 days of execution. Doing so meant reopening old wounds, forcing the former inmate to re-examine the darkest moments in his life.

Police files made public at the request of The Associated Press and other news organizations show that one of the original investigating officers

may have helped Washington confess to the slaying of Rebecca Williams.

Lab tests also matched DNA from the crime scene to another man - a convicted rapist named Kenneth Tinsley who was sentenced to life in prison

a few years after Williams was stabbed to death in her apartment in Culpeper.

"There were so many opportunities for them to take Earl Washington off the suspect list," said Robert T. Hall, one of several attorneys representing

Washington in a federal lawsuit filed in Charlottesville against state prosecutors and police. "Once they had this confession from this mentally retarded man, not only did they shut down their investigation, they turned their back on any exculpatory evidence."

The news of the unsealed investigation also took Williams family members by surprise. Clifford Williams said he no longer blames Washington for his wife's rape and murder. "I spent 17 years cussing this man, thinking he was the killer," said Williams, who now believes Tinsley killed his wife. "Now that I find this out, it sucks...

"They picked up this poor black man from Bealeton and try to stick him with it, and they done a real good job of it. And coerced him--he's half retarded, anyway--so he said yes to satisfy the investigators, you know, and now the whole thing is screwed up."

Police have given him little information about the case over the years,Clifford Williams said. He talks to Washington's lawyers to learn about

new developments. Virginia State Police have resisted opening the Williams investigation to

the public and have asked U.S. District Judge Norman K. Moon to keep certain documents under seal. Police always keep ongoing investigations

secret as a protective measure, said Tim Murtaugh, a spokesman for Attorney General Jerry W. Kilgore.

"If you publicly identify a suspect, for example, you give that suspect an opportunity to destroy evidence," Murtaugh said.

Tinsley, who remains in prison on the rape conviction, is considered a suspect, said James L. Camblos III, an Albemarle County prosecutor who was appointed in August to review the case for state police. But so is Washington, he said this week, noting that he couldn't rule out that the

two may have worked together.

"There are a lot of crimes that are committed by more than one person, but you get physical evidence from only one of them," Camblos said.

Washington's lawyers dispute Camblos' theory of two attackers - before she died, Williams said she was attacked by a lone black man with a beard,

according to police records.

Hall also criticized how state police were reviewing the case. Camblos once represented Tinsley as he appealed his rape conviction in 1985.

When asked about his history with Tinsley, the prosecutor said he had no memory of it. Camblos removed himself from the case anyway, handing it

over to his deputy, Richard Moore, this past week.

http://www.prisontalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=51756

The Truth9/25/2007 2:45:34 PM

Sarah, I stand corrected. Thank You!

Tinsley and Washington worked "together" according to Camblos. What a laugh!

The Truth9/25/2007 2:48:08 PM

The more I look at the pictures with this story, why would any commonwealth's attorney want his wife's picture plastered in the headlines?

Deborah Wyatt9/25/2007 6:30:40 PM

Contrary to what Jim has told your reporter, the cartridge he okayed to be destroyed was related to a case which was NOT AT ALL closed but was at that very time supposedly being investigated by the FBI. In fact, it was right around this very time, early 1998 when he okayed the destruction, that the FBI actually did anything that I know of -- which was to request that ballistics tests be run which the county had never done. It was during this precise period that Camblos allowed his secretary to sign his name okaying the destruction of one of three cartridges in the case (the other two were STILL in the evidence bin as of last year, as I recall). By the way, this is the case involving an officer shooting at Squire Hill, the Gray case. Now, why would he okay one and only one to be destroyed?

Get all the facts first9/26/2007 11:42:50 AM

To the writer of Big Bugs Scare Me. I happen to know a bit more about that case. The bug in question flew into the women's car window and into her eye knocking out her contact lense and causing her to swevre into the car next to her. The bug and her contact lense were both found in the car. It was a terrible accident that could have happend to anyone. I don't think pursuing involuntary manslaughter would have been benefical in any way. It was tragic and horrible that 3 people lost their lives but it was an accident and destroying another person's life would not have helped. That young lady lives everyday of her life knowing how a freak accident can change your life in an instant.

BiggerBugWithSense9/26/2007 2:35:43 PM

To Facts,

My first reaction to an emergency such as this is not to swerve but to apply the brake and go to the shoulder. I ride a mototcycle and can tell you BIG bugs have slapped my face at 55 mph, grit has landed in my eyes and I have yet to swerve into anyone's lane or off the road. MY job as a driver is to have TOTAL control of a vehicle if it is mechanically sound. So yes, as I do sympathize with all the driver, responabilty of a vehicle remains with the driver, period!

Waldo Jaquith9/26/2007 4:47:07 PM

"The bug in question flew into the women's car window and into her eye knocking out her contact lense and causing her to swevre into the car next to her. The bug and her contact lense were both found in the car."

That does nothing to explain why she skidded just over 500 feet, rear-ended another car, pushed that car around, and skidded another 200 feet before coming to a stop. Even if I had an entire bald eagle in my eye, I suspect I'd hit the brake somewhere in that 700 foot span.

Your mention of an eye and a contact lens is the first that I have ever heard, and I'm as familiar with this case as Joe Citizen could be. The story as it is understood by others involved in the matter was, quite simply, that "a bug flew into the car."

Of course, this could all be cleared up quite easily if Mr. Camblos would comment on the matter. One imagines that if it were cleared up that easily, though, Camblos would be eager to do so.

Bad Memory9/26/2007 5:02:45 PM

Somebody correct me if I am wrong please....

Wasn't the girl involved in the fatal crash the daughter of a U S Senator or some other high ranking government official? Did this have anything to do with charges not being pursued?

MoreBugSense9/27/2007 12:00:24 PM

What Camblos political, no way! LMAO I don't know the driver's age or relations or any detailed 'facts' but perhaps since seatbelts were not worn by the victims, Jimmy thought they were to blame also so he excused the driver.

Susan9/27/2007 2:20:44 PM

I hope all the people commenting go out and find 10 more people and continue the dialog. It is time for a change in the way crime is handled in Albemarle county - from the way police investigate, to the way rapes are handled, to the way plea bargains are negotiated and and cases are prosecuted. It was asked why the "wife" is in the pictures - because this story asserts that a warm, loving family man who has been in this office for years must be right for the role. Well, we the people need more. Integrity is non-negotiable.It's ok to say "It's time for a change". It's ok to bring in someone with a fresh perspective, who is not jaded, who allows cops to slack. It's ok to tell rape victims that we will support you and allow you to go to trial if you feel strong enough to testify against your attacker. It's ok to tell the UVA Campus police to do their jobs better or we will demand jurisdiction be turned over to the local police. It's ok to be consistent and fair. Unfortunately, it's not ok to re-elect Camblos.

Someone11/5/2007 11:10:51 AM

Yes a bug may have flew in the window but I think that happened while she was on her call phone. Maybe if she had not been on the cell phone she would have been able to swat this huge bug away.

Mike11/5/2007 10:24:03 PM

Given the crash occurred in 1998, I'm not so sure a cell phone was involved or that the young driver even had one. As I remember from viewing the police report, the other driver swerved to her left to avoid the Jeep, lost control of her Chevy Monte Carlo in the median, rolled the car over and tumbled upside down into the oncoming lanes, where her car was hit by a Nissan Altima. Unfortunately, the woman had her granddaughters, ages 10 and 4, in the car, who were completely unrestrained, ejected, and killed. The driver also was unbelted and killed. As I recall, there were two women in the Altima who were not seriously injured.

I saw photos of the Monte Carlo. The roof was crushed somewhat in the front, but the rear part of the roof was okay. There is no doubt in my mind that if the children had been properly restrained in the back seat, they would have survived, probably without serious injuries. I can't say for sure about the driver.

So in my view, even though the Jeep driver initiated the chain of events that led to the crash, the other driver was irresponsible in not properly restraining her young grandchildren, who probably would be alive today.

Someone11/6/2007 8:28:42 AM

You must be a Camblos fan. Has he gotten you off of something too. You need to speak for him

Rob Whitey11/6/2007 8:44:33 PM

you said:

"The bug in question flew into the women's car window and into her eye knocking out her contact lense and causing her to swevre into the car next to her. The bug and her contact lense were both found in the car."

That does nothing to explain why she skidded just over 500 feet, rear-ended another car, pushed that car around, and skidded another 200 feet before coming to a stop. Even if I had an entire bald eagle in my eye, I suspect I'd hit the brake somewhere in that 700 foot span.

I ask: How were there 500 feet of skid marks if she didn't hit the brakes??

Any of us can lose control from the tiniest of things. Even motorcycle riders who can take a brick to the face could swerve if suddenly hit IN THE EYE. Your eyes would tear up and you could misjudge your lane.

Leave the poor girl alone. She should not have been prosecuted.

Someone11/9/2007 10:04:35 AM

Was there a bug in here eye when she was stopped for speeding????

crash test dummy11/9/2007 10:21:57 PM

How could the car "skid" 500 feet, and then "skid 200 feet if she didn't hit the brakes?????

11/10/2007 4:19:41 AM

Crash Test Dummy:

I did not live in the area and do not know the circumstances to this event however I do have an answer to your question. Simple physics really, if a driver "cuts" the wheel to hard without braking the vehicle still wants to go in a straight line. The weight and speed of the vehicle will usually make the rear of the vehicle swing around. In actuality the rear of the vehicle is continuing straight as the front turns. The marks left on the pavement from this action are curved and are actually refered to as "yaw marks". The markings left on the pavement after braking are "skid" marks and they are in a straight line.

11/10/2007 4:23:17 AM

I almost forgot...this would explain why the vehicle travelled the 700 feet total you described above. Without applying the brake a vehicle can cover a considerable amount of didstance. Yaw marks are normally longer than skid marks due to brakes slowing the vehicle's momentum.

Hope this answered your question

Mom of a UVA 1st year11/10/2007 10:04:53 AM

Reference the comment: "There are decisions to prosecute where a message needs to be sent-- like underage drinking," says Camblos who prosecuted the case of George and Elisa Robinson, the booze-serving parents who are now serving 27 months in jail...."

Maybe Camblos will now have the time to visit the numerous drinking establishments on a Fri and Sat night and observe how easy it is for underage UVA "adults" to be served drinks. Instead of going after one or two parents, in one night he and ABC could close every licensed facility in a 50 mile radius.....Or examine why the CAMPUS POLICE maintained jurisdiction for the investigation of the baby's death in a car at the Law School, not the local cops ....


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