Archive for the ‘Widmer Trial’ Category

TueJan17

New Widmer trial motion denied; appeal continues

Posted by rrichardson January 17th, 2012, 6:12 pm Post a Comment

Janice Morse reports:

A Warren County court has denied Ryan Widmer’s attempt to secure a fourth trial, shifting the focus of his continuing legal battle to an appeals court.

Widmer, now 31, was convicted last February of murder in the 2008 drowning of his wife, Sarah, 24, in their Hamilton Township bathtub. It was his third trial, following two mistrials.

On Tuesday, the county Common Pleas Court denied Widmer’s motion for a new trial, the county prosecutor’s office said in a news release.

Widmer’s appeal of his conviction is still pending with the Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals in Middletown.

In its ruling Tuesday, the county court also refused to order genetic testing on any usable DNA from Sarah Widmer. Widmer’s lawyers were seeking those tests because they wanted to see whether Sarah Widmer may have suffered from a genetic condition that can cause a heart-rhythm disturbance. They argue that such an undetected medical problem may have contributed to her drowning.

Widmer has protested his innocence in post-conviction interviews, but did not testify during his trials.

Prosecutors have contended there was sufficient evidence to support Widmer’s conviction, and that the evidence included marks on her head and neck areas that were suggestive of force.

Should Ryan Widmer receive a fourth trial?

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MonDec12

Widmer lawyers: Bathtub seized improperly

Posted by rrichardson December 12th, 2011, 5:45 pm Post a Comment

Janice Morse reports:

Was Ryan Widmer’s murder conviction “a manifest miscarriage of justice?”

In an appeal filed Monday lawyers for Widmer allege that a jury lost its way and that authorities made crucial mistakes, including improperly seizing the bathtub in which his wife, Sarah, 24, had drowned in 2008.

Widmer, 30, of Mason, is serving 15 years to life in prison after a jury convicted him of murder in February.

Since then, Widmer has given two public interviews protesting his innocence and saying he wanted to testify but he did not take the witness stand during any of his three trials based on his lawyers’ advice.

Today was the deadline for attorney Michele Berry to file the appeal on Widmer’s behalf in the Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals in Middletown.

That court previously refused to extend a deadline while Judge Neal Bronson considers motions for a fourth trial in Warren County Common Pleas Court.

In those motions, Widmer’s lawyers want Bronson to order genetic testing that could show whether Sarah Widmer suffered from a disorder that can disrupt heartbeats. Berry argues Widmer’s previous lawyers made a mistake by failing to seek that testing.

They also argue Bronson should grant a new trial because evidence emerged after Widmer’s conviction showing that the lead investigators on the case, Lt. Jeff Braley, had likely made false representations about his job history and education on employment documents.

Bronson had refused to allow Widmer’s lawyers to grill Braley on those credibility issues largely because Braley had denied making the false claims. Braley resigned from the Hamilton Township police force in June after an indpendent investigator told trustees there was reason to consider launching a pre-disciplinary hearing over issues with his honesty.

Widmer’s lawyers say that the genetic testing and Braley evidence likely would have altered the entire course of Widmer’s trial, had they been included.

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TueNov22

Widmer case preceded by 1944 ‘Bathtub Trial’

Posted by rrichardson November 22nd, 2011, 8:58 am Post a Comment

Jim Rohrer reports:

A young man finds his wife unresponsive in the bathtub. He gets her out and tries to revive her, only to realize she has died. Eventually, he is charged with her murder.

Cincinnatians are riveted. A crush of reporters recounts every detail. In media shorthand, the case is trumpeted as “The Bathtub Murder.”

Capt. Robert J. Connors

Capt. Robert J. Connors' acquittal of murdering his wife was front-page news.

Sound familiar?

The resemblance is eerie, but this “bathtub murder” is not the case of Ryan and Sarah Widmer, which Ryan Widmer’s defense team is still contesting (Widmer, 32, who last lived in Mason, was convicted of his wife’s murder in February).

This trial happened in the war year of 1944, and the defendant was an Army captain of movie-star good looks, Robert J. Connors, 26. His wife, Lois, 25, had died while the pair spent a few days together at the Sinton Hotel, Downtown, before his overseas deployment.

No less an authority than legendary defense attorney William “Foss” Hopkins claimed in his book, “Murder is My Business,” that it was one of the most highly publicized cases he ever tried.

Capt. Robert J. Connors’ acquittal of murdering his wife was front-page news.

Hopkins called the courtroom battle “no holds barred,” mostly centering on dueling medical experts who disagreed on the cause of death.

Lois Connors’ death, earlier that year, at first had been ruled due to “natural causes.” But her parents were suspicious and asked for a second autopsy. The body was exhumed months later and a Philadelphia physician ruled she had suffered injuries to her head and throat. He ruled it a homicide, and Robert Connors was arrested.

At trial, Hopkins undressed the Philadelphia physician. He was shown to be incompetent and the wounds were then attributed to embalming procedures (the throat) and to a broken soda bottle that crashed to the floor and sent glass shards everywhere during the revival attempt (the head wound).

Robert Connors was acquitted, to a cheering courtroom.

Lois Connors’ father, Robert E. Burns, attended the trial and had some carefully chosen words before he left.

“If the people out there think he didn’t do it, it’s all right with me,” he said.

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ThuNov17

Court rejects more time for Widmer appeal

Posted by rrichardson November 17th, 2011, 6:20 pm Post a Comment

Paul McKibben reports:

The Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals will not grant Ryan Widmer’s defense team more time to appeal his February murder conviction.

“The 12th District (and any appellate court for that matter) rarely – almost never – grants stays in these circumstances but it made sense to try for the stay here because our case before Bronson is so strong,” said attorney Michele Berry, who is handling the appeal.

Berry said the court did not speak to the strength of their case and called the ruling a procedural matter.

In a separate issue, Warren County Common Pleas Judge Neal Bronson hasn’t ruled yet on whether Widmer should be granted a fourth trial.

Earlier this year, Berry said she needed more time to file the appeal because she had not received a complete transcript of Widmer’s third trial and pre-trial hearings. She said the partial third trial transcript already was more than 3,000 pages with another 1,000 or more pages likely. Berry also said she was reviewing thousands of other pages of transcripts from Widmer’s two previous trials.

A Warren County jury convicted Widmer in February for the 2008 bathtub drowning death of his wife Sarah in their Hamilton Township home.

Widmer, 31, who last lived in Mason, is serving 15 years to life in prison. The Colerain Township native has maintained his innocence. He was convicted in his first trial in 2009 but the verdict was set aside because of jury misconduct. His 2010 trial resulted in a hung jury.

Berry said a brief for the appeal is due to the appeals court on Dec. 12.

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TueNov15

Widmer judge won’t run for re-election

Posted by rrichardson November 15th, 2011, 3:30 pm Post a Comment

Judge Neal BronsonPaul McKibben reports:

The Warren County judge who presided over Ryan Widmer’s three murder trials won’t seek re-election in 2012 and there’s already a candidate officially running for the seat.

Warren County Common Pleas Judge Neal Bronson, a Republican, declined comment on Tuesday. Republican Carolyn Duvelius, Warren County Juvenile and Probate Court chief magistrate, said she’s filed petitions to replace him.

“This is a great opportunity to continue my career goal of serving and protecting the people of Warren County,” Duvelius said. “Warren County needs judges who are conservative and just. My whole career I have been both. I have dedicated my career to keeping criminals off of our streets and protecting the people of this county and I will continue to do so as judge.”

Bronson was appointed in 1987.

Duvelius has served as a magistrate for eight years and has heard more than 11,000 cases, her campaign said. Previously, she was an assistant Warren County prosecutor for 15 years. Her husband Mark is an investigator for the Warren County prosecutor’s office.

She is a member of St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Lebanon, Warren County Republican Women and a board member of Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Warren and Clinton Counties.

Republican Warren County Court Judge Donald Oda II has taken out petitions for the seat but hasn’t filed them, according to the Warren County Board of Elections. The filing deadline is Dec. 7. The primary is March 6.

Widmer’s last trial resulted in a jury convicting him in February of murder for killing his 24-year-old wife three years ago in their Hamilton Township homee. Widmer, 31, who last lived in Mason, has maintained his innocence and is appealing.  He is serving 15 years to life.

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    MonOct17

    Widmer’s chance of new trial ‘fair’ at best, say legal experts

    Posted by rrichardson October 17th, 2011, 9:08 am Post a Comment

    Legal experts who’ve followed the Ryan Widmer case say the chances of the convicted Mason man getting a fourth trial are “fair” at best.

    Attorneys for Widmer, who was convicted in February in the 2008 drowning death of his wife, Sarah, filed a motion Wednesday asking a Warren County judge to set aside Widmer’s February murder conviction and accusing officials of perjury and cover-up.

    The Enquirer’s Janice Morse spoke with several legal experts who’ve been following the case about the latest court documents filed.

    “I think Judge (Neal) Bronson probably has a pretty strong case of ‘Widmer fatigue,’ but even so, he’ll do the right thing,” says defense lawyer Mike Allen, who has closely watched the saga since it began in 2008 with the drowning of Widmer’s wife, Sarah, 24, in their Hamilton Township bathtub.

    While Allen, Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell and other experts think Widmer’s chances of persuading Bronson to grant a fourth trial are small, University of Cincinnati law professor Christo Lassiter says issues swirling around the case are grave.

    Concerns about the honesty of Jeff Braley, the lead investigator, and how he may have influenced the county coroner, Russell Uptegrove, “not only provides a reason to doubt the conviction, it reeks of an injustice,” Lassiter said.

    Despite that strong statement, Lassiter agrees with other experts that it will be very difficult for Widmer’s lawyer to overcome legal hurdles to prove a new trial is warranted.

    Joe Mooney, a Northern Kentucky University law student who coordinated a panel discussion on the Widmer case said, “I think this (motion for a new trial) is a ‘Hail Mary’ pass that will likely fall incomplete. … At the end of the day, I would not bet any money on a fourth trial.”

    Bronson’s decision on whether to grant a retrial may well turn on whether he now agrees that a jury should have been allowed to hear Widmer’s lawyers grill Braley over his credentials. Bronson blocked that line of questioning after a closed-door hearing in his chambers in 2010 about alleged resume fraud.

    “When he made that decision, Judge Bronson didn’t know everything that we know now about Braley. … And now, if the judge believes Braley committed perjury, that’s one of the keys to the case,” said Mark Krumbein, a defense lawyer who became so fascinated by Widmer’s case he attended portions of all three trials.

    Braley resigned in June after an investigator reported that Braley falsely claimed he had served in the U.S. Special Forces, which secured him a position heading the township’s police tactical unit in 2001 – before he became a sworn police officer.

    “What happened with Braley was an abomination,” Allen said. “It’s almost unbelievable that a person could misrepresent his credentials like that and be put in such a position of responsibility.”

    The investigator also found evidence dating to 1996, supporting allegations that Braley falsely asserted on township documents that he earned a master’s degree and held various jobs; Braley denied making the misrepresentations, but a handwriting analysis supported the allegation that the writing was his, officials said.

    Fornshell downplayed the significance of Braley’s issues. But Allen, a former Hamilton County prosecutor, said that if he were in Fornshell’s position, he thinks the situation is “egregious enough” to consider taking the case to a grand jury to consider a possible perjury indictment of Braley.

    “The problems with Braley are huge,” Allen said. “But did not knowing about them during the trial affect the outcome? I think a strong argument could be made either way.”

    Lassiter thinks that, in order to grant a new trial, Bronson would have to decide that revelations about Braley may well have changed jurors’ minds about Widmer’s guilt, had they been aired during the trial.

    Allen notes that Bronson has a reputation for doing what he thinks is just, even if it draws fire. It was Bronson who voided Widmer’s 2009 murder conviction because of jury misconduct; a hung jury resulted in 2010, followed by a conviction this year.

    Fornshell dismisses Braley’s issues as irrelevant to the crime that Widmer is convicted of committing. But Krumbein said it’s reasonable to question the entire foundation of the case based on Braley’s involvement in it.

    “Judge Bronson may feel that, if he (Braley) lied about substantive things in the past, and lied under oath in a pre-trial hearing, can anything he did or said be trusted?” Krumbein said.

    And Braley did play a pivotal role in the case, Krumbein said.

    “He maintained the crime scene, supervised gathering all the evidence. Then he told the coroner he thought this was a homicide – and he may not have been any more qualified to say that than the Man in the Moon. His qualifications were pretty bad.

    “As the defense has already argued, if you can’t trust the messenger, you may get the wrong message.”

    Widmer, 30, who last lived in Mason, was convicted in his third trial on Feb. 15.  His first trial ended in a conviction, but the guilty verdict was set aside because of jury misconduct.  The second trial ended with a hung jury.

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    WedOct12

    Will there be a fourth Ryan Widmer murder trial?

    Posted by rrichardson October 12th, 2011, 6:21 pm Post a Comment

    An attorney for Ryan Widmer has filed a motion requesting a new trial for the Mason man convicted in the 2008 drowning of his wife, Sarah.

    Widmer’s lawyer, Michele Berry, filed court documents today asking a Warren County judge to set aside Widmer’s February murder conviction and accusing officials of perjury and cover-up.

    Berry also wants the judge to grant a hearing based on the “newly discovered evidence of false statements, lack of competence and training and outright fraud by the lead detective in this case, former Lieutenant Detective Jeff Braley.”

    Further, Berry says Widmer’s former lawyers also made a grievous mistake when they failed to get Sarah Widmer’s DNA tested for Long QT Syndrome, a genetic condition that could have contributed to her drowning.

    That alone should entitle Widmer to a new trial, Berry said.

    Enquirer reporter Janice Morse has more details on the latest development in the case:

    But much of the 35-page motion hammers on Braley’s involvement in the case and authorities’ failure to disclose information about Braley’s history of alleged misrepresentations. Braley resigned from his job earlier this year after an outside investigator checked into those allegations.

    If the defense lawyers had been aware of the facts that were later released, Widmer’s lawyers could have impeached Braley and mounted a defense “which would have changed the nature of the entire trial,” Berry said.

    “Had the defense been aware of these facts, this evidence could have been used not only to impeach Braley … but… to mount a … defense, which would have changed the nature of the entire trial.”

    Last month, an expert who has evaluated 500 cases of police misconduct nationwide, Dennis Waller, issued a report about the Widmer case and “opines that, based on national law enforcement standards, Braley could be classified as ‘an opportunist without substance in a police department without established standards,’” Berry wrote.

    In the court filing, Berry alleges that Braley committed perjury in a closed-door hearing on May 5, 2010, focusing on allegations that he had misrepresented his qualifications.

    Previously, prosecutors have asserted that Braley’s role in Widmer’s trial was minimal, and the evidence was strong enough to obtain a conviction without him.

    But in court records, Berry says Waller believes that “Braley’s incompetence, untrustworthiness, and penchant for manufacturing facts to further his career, are all relevant to the fingerprints and other marks on the bathtub, the collection of evidence in general … the decision to charge Widmer, and the conclusion of (Warren County Coroner Russell Uptegrove) that this case was a homicide.”

    Uptegrove, in an interview with the Enquirer earlier this year, denied that Braley exerted any undue influence.

    Widmer, 30, who last lived in Mason, was convicted in his third trial on Feb. 15.  His first trial ended in a conviction, but the guilty verdict was set aside because of jury misconduct.  The second trial ended with a hung jury.

    MasonBuzz will update this story.

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    What do you think?  Should Ryan Widmer get a fourth trial?  Discuss in the comments below.

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    MonAug29

    Prosecutors agree to give Widmer lawyers more time to file murder appeal

    Posted by rrichardson August 29th, 2011, 10:49 am Post a Comment

    Warren County prosecutors have agreed to give attorneys for Ryan Widmer more time to file an appeal of his murder conviction in the 2008 drowning of his wife, Sarah.

    Widmer, 30, who last lived in Mason, was convicted in his third trial on Feb. 15.  His first trial ended in a conviction, but the guilty verdict was set aside because of jury misconduct.  The second trial ended with a hung jury.

    Attorney Michele Berry filed a motion in July asking the Middletown-based Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals to extend its deadline for the appeal to 90 days after the complete record is ready, citing a “highly unusual case” with an “extraordinarily voluminous record” to review.

    Prosecutors on Friday agreed to the defense attorneys’ requests.  Berry said the court has not yet ruled on the extension, but she doesn’t anticipate problems since the state consented to the request.

    Defense attorneys originally had a deadline of Aug. 29.  If approved by the court, the new deadline to file an appeal would be Nov. 28.

    Widmer, a native of Colerain Township, is serving 15 years to life in Warren Correctional Institution, an Ohio prison near Lebanon.

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    MonJul11

    Ryan Widmer’s lawyer needs more time for appeal

    Posted by rrichardson July 11th, 2011, 1:35 pm Post a Comment

    A lawyer for Ryan Widmer says she needs more time to file an appeal of his murder conviction in the 2008 drowning of his wife, Sarah, because she hasn’t received a complete transcript of his third trial and pre-trial hearings.

    The Enquirer’s Janice Morse has the details:

    Attorney Michele Berry filed a motion Friday asking the Middletown-based Ohio 12th District Court of Appeals to extend its deadline for the appeal to 90 days after the complete record is ready.

    “That date is currently unknown because the court reporter, who has already diligently prepared thousands of pages worth of transcripts, is still working to prepare thousands of additional pages of transcripts,” Berry wrote.

    She noted that the partial third trial transcript already exceeds 3,000 pages – and there are likely to be “1,000 or more additional pages.”

    Further, Berry is also reviewing thousands of other pages of transcripts from Widmer’s two previous trials in Warren County Common Pleas Court. His 2009 conviction was set aside because of jury misconduct and a 2010 trial ended with a hung jury.

    “This lengthy extension is necessary as this is a highly unusual case that is particularly time consuming and involves an extraordinarily voluminous record,” she wrote.

    Widmer, 30, who last lived in Mason, was convicted in his third trial Feb. 15. He protests his innocence but prosecutors say they are convinced that Widmer forcibly drowned his wife of four months in their Hamilton Township bathroom. Prosecutors presented a bathtub as evidence, but some jurors thought Sarah Widmer may have been drowned in the toilet.

    A native of Colerain Township, Widmer is serving 15 years to life in Warren Correctional Institution, an Ohio prison near Lebanon.

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    SunJun12

    Ryan Widmer: “I’ll never give up”

    Posted by rrichardson June 12th, 2011, 9:22 am Post a Comment

    Ryan Widmer interview

    For the first time in his nearly three-year saga, convicted wife-killer Ryan Widmer agreed to tell his side of the story to local media in a recent 2½-hour interview with The Enquirer.

    Widmer, 30, of Mason, is appealing his Feb. 15 murder conviction in the 2008 drowning of his wife, Sarah, 24.

    From a close-security prison, Widmer spoke to Enquirer reporter Janice Morse about his conviction — and his commitment to prove his innocence.

    His only other interview, with “Dateline NBC,” was drastically cut to just four minutes at the tail-end of a two-hour program that aired nationally May 6.

    In a state prison near Lebanon, Ryan Widmer lies awake, in disbelief that anyone could think he is some sort of criminal mastermind.

    “I mean, I’m a regular guy, but yet one night I grow into the perfect assassin? That’s really what they’re trying to make me out to be,” Widmer said.

    If he had killed his wife, Sarah, when she drowned in the couple’s suburban bathroom in 2008, he would have pulled off a near-perfect crime, he said.

    No evidence directly links him to her death. He suffered no wounds. If there was a struggle that night, there was no obvious sign of it.

    “In my eyes, it’s clear-cut that I’m innocent,” he said.

    Jurors disagreed.

    All but a handful of the 36 Warren County jurors who heard Widmer’s three trials voted him guilty of murder. Some theorized Widmer drowned his wife in the toilet, though prosecutors argued she drowned in the bathtub.

    After two mistrials and much public debate, some hailed Widmer’s Feb. 15 conviction as justice served; others decried it as a horrible injustice.

    In the Enquirer interview, Widmer revealed why he never testified in his own defense, which the “Dateline” segment did not address. He discussed being prosecuted and subjected to intense scrutiny. He described what happened the night 24-year-old Sarah Steward Widmer’s life ended – and his life changed forever.

    “In the back of my mind, I know that I’m here 15 years to life,” he said in a visiting room at Warren Correctional Institution. “But I’ll never give up hope … there’s just too many things that I feel like could happen to make this right.”

    To that end, Widmer, 30, keeps paper and a pen handy. He jots down angles to be explored, questions to ask lawyers working to get his conviction overturned.

    That conviction, prosecutors say, is supported by circumstantial evidence and suspicious bruising on Sarah Widmer’s head and neck.

    Defense lawyers counter that medics repeatedly manipulated her neck and stuck it with needles. They’re trying to prove that an undiagnosed medical problem led to her drowning and that a misguided jury convicted Widmer.

    “All I do 24/7 is think about this,” Widmer said. “I think the only reason I sleep at night is I wear myself out mentally.”

    Before his wife drowned on Aug. 11, 2008, Ryan Widmer was an ordinary citizen with no criminal history. But after 114 days of marriage, the college-educated Colerain Township native was accused of being a killer. The strange “bathtub murder” case drew national attention and riveted his hometown.

    “I’ve lost my wife, the person I love most, and a day later I’m fighting for my life,” he said. “I was blind to the system. I thought there was no way you would ever be convicted of something you didn’t do.”

    He traces his predicament to people like Jeff Braley.

    Braley, the lead detective on the case, recently resigned from the Hamilton Township police force after an investigation raised concerns about misrepresentations in his employment credentials.

    Widmer thinks Braley, who had little death-investigation training, likely influenced the county coroner to call Sarah’s death a homicide. That set the stage for Widmer to be charged with murder less than 48 hours after his wife drowned.

    Widmer said he was aghast to learn he was accused. “How can this be happening?” All he can figure is, “They jumped to a conclusion and they were never backing down.”

    Widmer said if he were guilty, he would have admitted it to spare his family from emotional and financial ruin. Legal battles drained $500,000.

    He stands by his decision to reject prosecutors’ plea offer: five years in prison, at most, for manslaughter. “I would have to admit to taking somebody’s life – my wife’s life – which I didn’t do,” he said.

    About the night his wife drowned, Widmer said: “I can’t explain what happened to Sarah. I wasn’t in the bathroom with her.” He has no information, he said, that would shed light on her drowning – so that’s the biggest reason he didn’t testify.

    If he hadn’t listened to a recording of his 911 call reporting his wife unresponsive, Widmer said, he would have recalled only the basics of what he said. He misspoke a couple times on the call, he said, because he was upset – and he feels he’s been pilloried for it.

    For instance, during the 911 call, Widmer said he found Sarah in the tub face-down. A nurse testified that he told her Sarah was face-up. Widmer said the conflicting statements, portrayed as incriminating in his trials, were just an honest mistake made while he was flustered. Wid- mer said she was face-up, with her whole head underwater.

    “It’s a hard thing to remember exactly, because my main concern was her,” he said.

    “You’re taught to call 911 if you need help,” he said. “I did what I was supposed to do, and look where it got me.”

    He said it’s unfair that other people are allowed to misspeak – but he isn’t. During his three trials, some witnesses changed testimony, omitted facts or said they forgot certain facts, he said.

    During the Enquirer interview, Widmer frequently interrupted himself and spoke in incomplete sentences. His phrasing was sometimes awkward. People who know him say that is how he typically speaks, no matter the topic.

    When Widmer told a dispatcher his wife fell asleep in the tub, it was not an attempt to concoct a story to cover up a forced drowning, as prosecutors asserted, Widmer said. Rather, he assumed his wife had fallen asleep because he had found her asleep in the tub before. One evening, “she literally fell asleep on me in mid-sentence,” he said.

    His wife, a dental hygienist, also slept during work breaks and complained to her Fort Thomas co-workers about severe headaches, making her see spots.

    After she died, authorities “didn’t do their jobs” to fully investigate, Widmer said.

    “She was not feeling well … I don’t know what happened to her,” he said, “and hopefully we can find out because, unfortunately, I’m left to prove that I’m innocent.”

    Widmer said incidents of other drownings traced to seizures raise awareness that people can drown because of medical issues, or can die suddenly without explanation. “You can’t just jump to a (conclusion) like you did on me … and not even look at anything else,” he said.

    “The sad thing about this whole situation is that Sarah, my wife, has gotten lost so much in all of this,” he said.

    A year and three months after his wife died, he became involved with another Sarah – Sarah Manherz of New York.

    “It doesn’t take away from the love I have for my wife, Sarah,” he said.

    Widmer knows local people were shocked in May when “Dateline NBC” revealed Manherz had given birth to his son last August. But he said: “People that lose a loved one move into different relationships all the time. Mine’s being scrutinized more because my whole life’s been scrutinized.”

    After “Dateline” first aired a segment on his case in September 2009, dozens of men and women reached out via emails, text messages and phone calls. It felt good knowing people believed in him, Widmer said.

    Among the supporters was Manherz, a pretty blonde who worked as a medical technician.

    “One thing led to another and we fell in love,” Widmer said.

    Manherz, now 30, believed she was unable to get pregnant. But after being intimate once in November 2009, the couple conceived a child. Widmer initially bemoaned the timing: His second trial was looming.

    “But when the news sunk in, I was just overjoyed. It was like, ‘Something good is finally happening in my life.’”

    Widmer had thought the arrival of his son was a sign that he might be acquitted: “I thought, ‘God would never give me this unless things were going to be OK.’”

    Now known as inmate No. A599952 in a close-security prison, Widmer said his desire to “be there” for his son strengthens his resolve to regain his freedom.

    Manherz and others bring the baby to visit Widmer in prison.

    “He’s another reason that I’ll never give up,” Widmer said.

    What did you think of Widmer’s interview?  Has it changed your opinion of the case?

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