Leo Schofield is innocent! Leo Schofield Is Innocent!


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5-10-10
Any idiot can see that leo didnt do this....from the first time I read the newspaper back in 2007, it was evident...prosecutors dont care about justice...they just want another notch on their belt!!   I hope the Judge has half a brain and sees the injustice and, at the least, gives Leo a new trial....I am praying that he does...hang tough Leo !
Tina Gardner 

10-2-09
I have enlisted a great deal of people who have been praying for true justice ever since I visited with Leo and Crissie for the first time. This list of people spans Main to California, Germany, Ireland, India and Kenya. God DOES hear prayers and is a just God.
John Munroe
Once Leo's Instructor at St. Joseph's College of Maine
Westbrook, Maine


2-19-08

Hang in there Leo and Crissie. I have a feeling God just sent you guys an angel to bring Leo home.
MMJ


9-2-07
A retrial is in order
(Letter to the Editor)

Thank you for publishing the excellent article about Leo Schofield, so ably produced and written by Meg Laughlin and Don Morris. I am grateful to you for making the facts known about the whole matter of Schofield's trial and conviction.

When I was a boy, my mother taught me to trust and respect police officers, and I have done that all my life. My mother also told me that police officers always wanted to do "the right thing."

While police officers are due our respect, your article shows that the trust we invest in those in authority must always be given with a reasonable amount of skepticism. It would seem that those who served on the jury that convicted Schofield of murder failed to employ even that amount of skepticism. Moreover, one might feel some uncertainty about Polk County prosecutor John Aguero's intention to do "the right thing" where Schofield was concerned. Of course, the fingerprint evidence is the most significant piece of the long list of injustices.

It would seem reasonable to think that Aguero would recognize the egregious injustice of Leo Schofield's first trial, and do "the right thing" by asking for a new one, based on the evidence brought to light by Laughlin and Morris. Is that too much to expect?

Ralph N. Madison Jr., St. Petersburg

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