St. Petersburg Times Online: News of Florida
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
  • Caregivers arrested in hopes of learning missing girl's fate
  • Cuban refugee executed
  • Ruling opens FCAT test record to parent
  • McBride quietly gets rolling
  • Police: Tourist steals gator, takes it to hotel
  • Convict says detectives forced him to confess
  • Vietnam-era helicopter begins a national journey of memory
  • Test puts all of Supreme Court docket online

  • From the state wire

  • Hurricane Jeanne appears on track to hit Florida's east coast
  • Rumor mill working overtime after Florida hurricanes
  • Developments associated with Hurricanes Ivan and Jeanne
  • Four killed in Panhandle plane crash were on Ivan charity mission
  • Hurricane Frances caused estimated $4.4 billion in insured damage
  • Disabled want more handicapped-accessible voting machines
  • USF forces administrators to resign over test score changes
  • Man's death at Universal Studios ruled accidental
  • State child welfare workers in Miami fail to do background checks
  • Hurricane Jeanne heads toward southeast U.S. coast
  • Hurricane Jeanne spurs more anxiety for storm-weary Floridians
  • Mistrial declared in case where teen was target of racial "joke"
  • Panhandle utility wants sewer plant moved to higher ground
  • State employee arrested on theft, bribery charges
  • Homestead house fire kills four children, one adult
  • Pierson leader tries to cut off relief to local fern cutters
  • Florida's high court rules Terri's law unconstitutional
  • Jacksonville students punished for putting stripper pole in dorm
  • FEMA handling nearly 600,000 applications for help
  • Man who killed wife, niece, self also killed mother in 1971
  • Producer sues city over lead ball fired by Miami police
  • Tourism suffers across Florida after pummeling by hurricanes
  • Key dates in the life of Terri Schiavo
  • An excerpt from the unanimous ruling in the Schiavo case
  • Four confirmed dead after small plane crash in Panhandle
  • Correction: Disney-Cruise Line story
  • tampabay.com

    printer version

    Convict says detectives forced him to confess

    The case involves one of two retarded men who were sentenced as teens to life in prison in the 1990 shooting death of a Broward sheriff's deputy.

    ©Associated Press
    October 3, 2002


    FORT LAUDERDALE -- A man serving a life sentence for the murder of a Broward sheriff's deputy told a judge that detectives hit him and forced him to falsely confess to the crime.

    Timothy Brown testified in his own defense Tuesday for the first time in the 11-year case history of the 1990 shooting of Deputy Patrick Behan.

    Brown, who has an IQ of 56, said he falsely admitted shooting Behan after Broward sheriff's detectives shackled him to the floor of the interrogation room and threatened him with the electric chair.

    "I thought they was going to beat me again, sir, and I really didn't think I was going to get out of that room alive," Brown said in a Miami federal court.

    Brown said Detective James Carr, who resigned this year, hit him twice during questioning and nodded his head up and down when he wanted Brown to agree during the taping of the confession.

    Brown, 26, has served 11 years of a life sentence for Behan's murder.

    A judge accepted an innocence claim last month from Brown after it was revealed this year that another man, Andrew Johnson, admitted on undercover tapes that he shot Behan.

    U.S. District Judge Donald Graham's decision Sept. 9 didn't clear Brown of his life prison sentence, but allowed further review of the constitutionality of his conviction in either state or federal court.

    Johnson and his wife told undercover agents he killed Behan in a mistaken ambush targeting another deputy who got him fired as a Broward County jail deputy.

    Johnson later said he made up the confession to impress undercover officers who he thought were criminals who might hire him. The Broward Sheriff's Office decided there was insufficient evidence to charge Johnson after the investigation became public in February.

    During cross-examination Tuesday, Broward prosecutor Tim Donnelly pointed out that Brown had previously said detectives showed him a photograph of Behan slumped over the wheel of his cruiser.

    But that photograph didn't exist because Behan was quickly removed from the cruiser by emergency workers, Donnelly said.

    "I might have said that, but I said it in the wrong manner," Brown said. He saw pictures of the crime scene and a photograph of Behan's body with a bullet hole in his cheek, Brown said.

    Brown and Keith King, 28, were teenagers when they were convicted of shooting Behan as he sat in his patrol car writing a report outside a Pembroke Park convenience store.

    King, who also is retarded, was released from prison after serving nine years for manslaughter.

    Back to State news
    Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
     
    Special Links
    Lucy Morgan


    From the Times state desk