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All right, ladies and gentlemen, I've received your note indicating that you continue to
be a deadlock.
And so at this time, I will declare a mistrile and a home jury.
An agonizing 20-year wait for justice will have to wait a little longer.
Jurors in the second-degree murder trial of Rashan Jones accused of killing his hurricane's
football teammate, Brian Patta, could not come to a unanimous verdict.
He died when Patta and his family sat through every day of the trial, which stretched into
a third week.
Patta was shot once in the head, killed in November 2006, outside his apartment complex
near Dadeland.
Jones was not arrested until 15 years later.
My mirror of Kane's defensive line in Brian Patta was murdered on November 7, 2006.
One gun shot to the head.
Short time after practice at the University of Miami campus, he headed back to his apartment
in the Kendall area of the colony apartments that he shared with defensive tackle Dwayne
Hendrix.
And he was discovered first by his then-girlfriend and then by Hendrix, who I guess was coming
a little bit later home from practice.
And the case was obviously a big deal.
It was in the midst of a pretty terrible season for the hurricanes, Larry Coker, the head
coach would be fired just a couple of weeks later.
And there was a lot of tumult.
It was a near-losing season.
But Brian Patta's stock was on the rise.
It was looking like he was going to go probably in the early rounds of the NFL draft in
just a matter of months and go from the streets of Miami's little Haiti to becoming a professional
football player in a multi-millionaire.
The case somehow went cold, went nowhere.
Over a decade later, the Miami-Dade, homicide bureau, and the Patta family reached out to
the press specifically to try to heat the case and the investigation up again, see if anyone
would come forward with any new evidence or information and any new witnesses to try
to jog the public's collective memory about this tragedy.
And the police were cooperating for a while with ESPN, who did a real deep dive, a multi-year
investigation involving thousands of pages of documents and video and audio.
And then a weird thing happened, Roy.
They suddenly stopped cooperating with ESPN.
ESPN winds up suing them for public records that they refused to turn over.
And suddenly, the detectives had done a 180 degree turn.
This wasn't a cold case.
This wasn't a case where, as one of the detectives said, it could be any number of theories.
It could have been anyone.
It could have been anything that happened.
But suddenly, they're saying this is an open and active investigation.
There is an arrest that's imminent, and there is a prime suspect.
All of that is the opposite of what they had previously been telling the press on the
record.
And this was all in an effort, apparently, to not have to turn over these public records
so that the press could continue to look into this investigation and find that it was
woefully inadequate.
That the detectives clearly appeared to have bungled this in the early days, and now
over a decade later, it was cold.
And then what happened in August of 2021, Rashan Jones, who was a defensive back originally
from Lake City, Florida, who had been suspended, actually, during the practice on the day
of Brian Patis murder after testing positive from marijuana, which was his third failed
drug test.
So he was suspended and basically kicked off the team for at least the time being.
And he gets arrested.
This is in 2021, and he has been in jail ever since because he could not afford the bail,
which is how this system works.
So now he is still in jail because he was tried by a jury of six of his peers, and they
could not come to a verdict.
So the jury was hung and they judged declared a mistrial.
We are now being joined by Rashan Jones's defense team, represented by Christian Maroni, Sarah
Alvarez, and Danielle Perez.
Guys, starting with you, Christian, is this considered a victory?
I mean, he wasn't convicted.
I guess he's going to get another day in court.
What is sort of your take on the verdict or lack thereof here?
Yeah, I mean, so it's certainly not a victory, right?
We wanted to hear a not guilty verdict, and that's the only thing that we would have
accepted as victory in this case.
But it's also not a loss.
You know, he's not been convicted.
We get the chance to go to another trial if the state decides to retry it.
So it's not a loss, but it's not a win, and we're ready to go again whenever the time
comes.
Obviously, it's not the best feeling in the world to have a mistrial, but it's not
the worst feeling in the world either.
Much, much better than the victory having come back with a guilty verdict.
So, you know, the feeling is somewhere in the middle.
I understand that you did not necessarily get to present the defense that you wanted
to present.
I've been following the trial a bit.
Pre-trial, you were trying to introduce some alternate theories of the case.
I mean, I think it's somewhat remarkable that you got a, I don't want to say a positive
outcome, but you got the outcome.
But God, despite the fact that you're not allowed to present the defense you wanted
to, what were some of the things that you would have presented as a defense?
Had they been admissible?
And why weren't they admissible?
Yeah.
So, I mean, we did get to present the defense we wanted broadly speaking, right?
We argued to the jury that Rashan Jones was not responsible.
The thing that we weren't able to get into and the thing we weren't able to present to
the jury were a third party culpability theories.
Other people who may have been responsible, other people's names who came up during
the investigation that weren't looked into sufficiently, who could have been responsible
for this crime.
One of them, there's sort of two or three categories of these alternative theories that
we wanted to get into.
The first had to do with a fight that happened at a club in the summer of 2006.
So there was information in the police report and it seemed like as the police were interviewing
witnesses in this case, this is the thing that consistently came up with every person
that they spoke to at the beginning of this investigation.
And there was a fight that happened at a club between Brian Patta, Willie Williams is
another football player.
There were another couple football players from the University of Miami there as well,
and then Brian's brother, Fetnell.
They were on one side of an altercation and then on the other side of the altercation
were some individuals who were known to be involved in some gang activity.
The West Side Boys gang was what's named in the reports.
And two individuals are named specifically as being involved in that fight and being involved
with that gang.
And this wasn't a normal fight.
There were accounts of this fight starting inside the club, making its white outside the
club.
Somebody got their neck cut with a knife or with a razor.
He was hit in the head with a pipe.
It was a serious, serious altercation.
And then at the end of the fight, one of the two people who were named, who were said
to be affiliated with this gang, looked over to Brian Patta and Willie Williams in that
group and said, we're going to get you.
We're coming to get you.
And that's where it starts.
And then a few weeks later, Willie Williams, one of the other football players who was involved,
reaches out to Brian and says that he heard from three individuals.
He names Brandon Ash is the only full name that he gives.
Then he gives two other names, Tony, a first name only, and then a third name also first
name only.
And says three people have called him and said that there is a hit out on himself and
on Brian Patta as a result of this fight.
How some time goes on, there's some accounts and reports that they sort of thought it was
squashed, that this hit was taken care of for a period of time.
And then sometime in the middle of October, the Brian gets a call from Willie Williams as
well on the speaker next cell phone.
And his girlfriend overhears this where Willie Williams says, hey man, I thought you said
that these hits were taken care of, that we had no further issues, but I'm still hearing
from people that there's a hit out on us.
And at this point, and as far as the report goes, Brian's girlfriend Jada says that he gets
vividly nervous.
He says, I thought I took care of it, I just saw him, there were no problems.
And then makes a comment to his girlfriend about how he wants to change his license plate
because he's worried about this.
This is something he takes seriously.
According to the information from the reports and the information that we got during this
case, that was sometime in the middle of October.
So about three weeks before the murder.
Now following this, there were two individuals who made confessions.
There was one person who made a confession to a confidential informant from ICE.
And another individual who made a confession to his cellmate in jail.
Both of these individuals said that they were hired to perform this murder as a hit.
It was a hit that they were paid for, which links up with the information that Willie
Williams was given that Jada had overheard that stems back to this fight at the club.
One of these individuals, they both specifically named Brian Pat as the person that they were
paid to kill.
One of them was known to have a 38 caliber handgun that came from the individual who
was the confidential informant at ICE.
And the firearms analyst in this case testified that the projectile taken from Brian Patel
was consistent with a 38 caliber projectile.
So that's another link.
And we learned sort of right before the trial started, because we just got a response
from ICE like the day before we were supposed to proceed with opening, responding to a letter
that we sent asking them for a limited deposition about this individual and this confidential
informant.
And another thing we learned was that the person who confessed, his name was Wilmer Yacinthi,
to this confidential informant also told him that he was practicing voodoo.
He was doing some voodoo type rituals at the gravesite and told this confidential informant
where he would find these certain items that were related to these voodoo rituals.
And then the ICE agent went out, looked exactly in the spot where the confidential informant
told him these things would be.
He finds these things and reports it, writes it in his report and tries to get hold of it.
The ESPN, the original ESPN investigation opens in a very eerie scene.
Brian Patel's mother and I think his sister basically digging up the body and moving it
to a secret location in part because these rituals and these artifacts were found in
the area with Patel's name like on a bottle or something.
So this all seems consistent with the evidence.
It's my understanding Sarah that the jury did not hear about any of these alternative theories
or alleged confessions.
And as Christian just mentioned, you may have struggled to get some records or information
about them.
You said like on the eve of trial, you got this information from ICE.
Were there any other issues with discovery and attempting to get records?
Obviously ESPN got a bunch of records and then they stopped getting records.
So did you guys have a similar struggle with getting the information you needed in the
evidence?
You needed to go to trial.
I mean, that would be the understatement of the century.
So to date, we're still getting new information and it's not even from the state, the information
that we're getting now.
It's connection in connection with public records request, which is ultimately how we had
to go about getting the discovery in this case because very little was turned over to us.
And so just like Christian mentioned with the whole ICE agent debacle that came out after
the jury had already been sworn and it was obviously, you know, huge, obviously very
potentially, sculpatory evidence.
We weren't able to get into it anyway, but as, you know, the defense, we have a right
to prepare our defense to use that information to find evidence that couldn't be admissible
in court.
And throughout we have been, you know, fronted from pursuing those avenues.
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So I also understand this case got a little heated.
There was some footage that came out of it.
It was a recorded trial of not televised live, obviously.
But there was raised voices between you guys, the prosecution, you guys and the judge.
And you attempted, I think, on multiple occasions to get the judge removed.
Why and what happened with that?
Yeah, so that definitely was not our finest hour in that video.
But things had been boiling, coming to a head for a long time.
The first time that we tried to get the judge disqualified was after a series of hearings
where we felt that not so much the rulings that were actually being made,
although we clearly took issue with those as well.
But the way in which both sides were being treated, just to say this as diplomatically as possible,
it just did not feel like there was a neutral arbiter in the courtroom.
And so we moved to disqualified.
That didn't work out.
The second time was because the judge said to Rashan when she was asking him whether he wanted
to accept the state's plea or whether he wanted to make any other offer.
And that was pretty significant that he was being essentially asked repeatedly
if he would make a plea to the court.
And she would allow him to potentially plead no contest instead of it make guilt
in a murder case, this murder case.
And so during that interaction after he clearly asserted that he wanted to go to trial,
he said, deep in my heart, I know that I'm innocent.
The only thing that I would accept is a dismissal.
The judge then said to him, well, okay, if you roll the dice and you go to trial
and you're convicted, the only way that you'll come out is in a pine box.
And she explicitly said that she would sentence him to life.
And the problem with that other than the fact that it's coercive is that by statute,
by Florida law, the mandatory minimum, if you were to be convicted,
would be 25 years up to life.
And so under the law, a judge isn't supposed to predetermine a sentence
before hearing any evidence.
And so that's what we could do if you were.
Yeah, you know, do process and such.
And such that's what we could do with.
And that was similarly denied.
Danielle, I want to ask you this at trial because we've heard now Christian talk
about multiple alternative theories, suspects alleged confessions.
But there was a detective who took the stand who basically said that Rashon Jones
was the only suspect with a motive and the only suspect who owned a 38.
As I mentioned earlier, I wanted to get the direct quote from the ESPN investigation
that in multiple interviews spanning more than two years, detectives insisted to ESPN
that they never had a prime suspect.
In fact, Miami-Dade detective Miguel Dominguez in 2019 said, quote,
at the end of the day, it could be anybody.
The possibilities are endless.
So how do we go from that to a detective testifying that the possibilities aren't endless?
This was our prime suspect from day one in 2006.
And how did that happen?
And how could he say that under oath in court when even though the jury didn't hear about it,
but that there were potentially other plausible suspects?
Yeah, I mean, you know, as Christian and his very mentioned before,
before there was many plausible leads.
And he got up there and he testified that Rashon Jones is the,
that the all roads lead to Rashon Jones.
And I think because Christian did the six-hour cross-examination,
I think he would much better fill in the gaps of the question that you asked.
You know, first of all, it was our position at that open the door
to allow us to now cross-examine and bring out some of these things
that had been excluded previously.
Obviously, we weren't allowed to do that.
We did get a little bit of leeway to point out some faults in the investigation,
but we weren't able to get into any specifics or point out any specific individuals
who may have had a motive and why they may have had a motive.
And I think one thing that came out in the detective's testimony was,
he kept saying that all the, you know, these other leads were excluded.
There were no credible leads left.
There were no credible leads remaining.
But when pressed on what was done to close out these leads,
what was done to investigate these leads,
he couldn't answer that question for most of the things that we were trying to point out.
And I think that came across, and I think that is sort of an overarching theme in this case,
where the reason we wanted to bring a lot of this stuff out that I mentioned earlier
was because there was an investigation done into it.
None of these individuals on the other side of this club fight were interviewed.
The individual who had made this confession that was made known to police from the ICE agent,
there was no follow-up done.
They were just kind of sitting on their heels waiting for ICE to get back to him.
There was information that ICE was reaching out to them trying to give them updates
and they weren't able to get in touch with anybody.
The other individual who confessed there was a mistake where they thought he was in custody
at the time of the crime, so didn't investigate it.
And then they didn't learn that that was a mistake and that he was actually out of custody
when the crime occurred until 2022.
So after Rashon has already been arrested and charged.
So that was, you know, that's the main thing that we wanted to point out
that there wasn't investigation done into these things.
And then there was this concludes retestimony about how none of these were credible.
These were excluded by who?
Not sure, man.
And then I just jumped in here and add that part of what was so frustrating about this
is that basically all of the leads that we weren't able to talk about,
unless, you know, we're talking about there were some just like throw away random leads
that, sure, they just didn't seem to have any merit at all.
But there was more evidence against those people than there is against Rashon Jones.
And so for the detective to be allowed to get up there and tell the jury straight up
that, you know, all roads led to Rashon Jones.
Nobody else could have done it.
Nobody else had a 38.
It hasn't been proven that Rashon had a 38.
Hasn't even really been proven that the bullet itself was a 38.
It was like, you know, almost completely flattened.
Well, Sarah, wasn't there some testimony that Rashon Jones made reference
to having his 38 on?
Yes.
So there were two witnesses who testified about Rashon and guns.
Both of them are now police officers.
And both of them are also, they were Pat his best friends and are still very,
very close to the family.
One of them testified that Rashon said something to the effect of big bra.
I got my 38 on.
Mind you, Rashon's number on the team was 38.
So who knows?
So that was his jersey number.
That was his jersey number.
So he would literally have had a 38 on.
Correct.
Also he was not friends with it.
Like even this guy admits that they weren't really buddies.
So don't know why he would be saying such things to this person if he was saying these
things at all.
And then the other person who testified, Dave Howell, also police officer, also friends
with the patas, he basically said that Rashon had shown him a gun at some point.
And this happened in the context of someone else's dorm room where that person didn't see
anything, didn't hear anything.
And then he said that so he said that he believed it could be, I believe a smaller caliber
fire arm, but he could only even tell what kind of gun he thought it could potentially
be based on his police experience 20 years after the fact.
Looking back on that, he now knows that it was this happens to be consistent.
Sarah, what do we know about what happened with this jury had six people deliberating for
six hours last Friday, another hour and change on Monday, this week, Hungary.
What do we know though?
Have the vote come down?
Yeah.
So it would appear that it was five to one, five knock guilty, one hold out who, according
to reporters who were able to speak with this person, and I'm not sure who this person
is, but they wouldn't move based on a gut feeling and they weren't willing to discuss
that gut feeling with the rest of the jurors once they have made up their mind.
These are refused to deliberate at that point, hence the hung jury in the mistrial, Danielle,
with a five to one in favor of acquittal, what's next is that state going to retry this
case with the same evidence and the same witnesses that they nearly lost with?
I mean, ultimately that's what they're posturing for.
They've, I mean, we're ready, we're going to keep fighting.
I know that they haven't, that their, their only posture has been continue on to trial.
We haven't heard anything otherwise.
So we fully, as Sarah beautifully said it, when we were leaving the courtroom after the
mistrial, we're going to keep fighting because we know that Rashan's innocent.
Christian, Rashan Jones has been in jail since August of 2021.
I mean, this summer, it'll be five years.
He was offered a plea of 15 years.
He's already almost served a third of what the plea was.
I don't know if he did it or he didn't do it, but clearly the way the justice system
works, he is now sort of a victim to some extent of this.
Is there, I mean, and he's got bail, though, right?
He just can't afford to post it, which is a f***ed up way that this system where I mean,
if you had the money, he'd be, he'd be out on the street, but for all this time, but
what happens now with him?
How's he doing?
How's he feeling?
What's morale like?
And is there some reconsideration on bail or something?
Yeah.
So his bond, I believe it's currently $850,000.
We have a motion that's set for hearing tomorrow to get a bond reduction based on the mistrial
and some of the other information we learned about what the jury was thinking and the split.
And hopefully we can get a bond reduction so that he can get out of custody for the time
being until the retrial happens.
But as far as what he's feeling, I think he feels similar to what I was expanding to
at the beginning.
Right?
It's nobody feels like it was a win, but it also wasn't a loss.
And he's been waiting now four and a half years, almost five years for his day in court.
And he's willing to, if he has to remain in, if the motion of 1 to 5 bond gets denied,
he's willing to do whatever it takes and wait as long as he needs to get his next day
in court.
Because like he said when the judge was asking him questions about a potential plea, he
knows that he's innocent.
And he does not want to plead guilty to a crime that he didn't commit.
So that's where we're at.
And we're at.
Hopefully he can get out pending this retrial.
But if not, I don't see any resolution as of right now, of course things might change.
Roy, this is just like a compounding tragedy because the, of course, the Patta family
has no closure here whatsoever.
Brian Patic cannot rest in peace.
And at the same time, you've got Rashan Jones in this position where, again, I don't know
if he did it or not, but when you're in the stage of the system, it's a matter of what
can the prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
If they didn't feel they could make this case in 2006 or 2007, what makes them think
that they can do it beyond a reasonable doubt 20 years later.
And as it turned out, they couldn't, if you've got a jury five to one voting for acquittal,
I really feel for the Patta family and the continuing tragedy of going through this.
And I, yeah.
To be clear, we do too, you know, we all do what happened to Brian was tragic.
It should have never happened.
No matter what he was involved, then, you know, we're not trying to, to slander him.
He didn't deserve, I nobody deserves that, but, you know, you got to get the right guy.
Christian Moroni, Sarah Alvarez and Danielle Perez, thanks so much for being here.
Good luck to you.
Thank you.
Before we go, Roy, you remember, uh, Joe Corralio, don't you?
He's always happy to see her.
Yeah, but Joe Corralio rings the bell.
So remember that lawsuit he lost for $62.5 million for weaponizing city government
against those business owners in little Havana.
Yeah, we didn't talk enough about that.
And you'd think now that he's like retired and sailed off to Shangri-La, little Billy Corbin,
that we wouldn't have to talk about it anymore.
But the damnedest thing happened apparently, he tried to appeal the case again, the verdict
to the United States Supreme Court.
What?
Moroni Jeff Gotchis, who's been a guest on this program who represented the owners of
ball and chain released this statement.
The United States Supreme Court denied certiori in fuller V. Corroyo, leaving in place the
lower courts ruling in favor of William Fuller and Martin Penea.
With that decision, this case has finally reached its end.
For years, my clients, small business owners, endured retaliation, financial harm and
significant stress on their families for exercising their first amendment rights.
The courts made clear that such conduct is unconstitutional.
It is unfortunate that the city of Miami chose to spend millions of taxpayer dollars defending
this abuse rather than accepting responsibility.
Today's outcome reaffirms that constitutional protections apply to everyone and that government
retaliation has consequences.
This consequences are a 62 and a half million dollar judgment and coming up, they're going
to trial Roy on a case that could bankrupt the city, that could cost the city taxpayers
over a hundred million dollars.
Because the first time they just sued Joe Corroyo, but this time they're suing the city
of Miami for this weaponization, using all the same evidence and all the same witnesses
and all the same exhibits that they used in the first trial that they won.
So you better believe, they're going to win this time, there's going to be good money
after bad and it's going to cost the taxpayers nine figures, cocaine, cocaine.
The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

