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Court orders Mennonite's immediate release from jail in Colorado death penalty case

Posted at 2:45 PM, Mar 12, 2018
and last updated 2018-03-12 16:45:22-04

DENVER — An Arapahoe County court has ordered the immediate release of a Mennonite criminal defense investigator from jail after she agreed to testify in a capital punishment case.

Greta Lindecrantz, a Mennonite who opposes capital punishment, refused to testify for prosecutors during an appeal of the conviction and death sentence of Robert Ray, fearing her testimony could be used to help execute him.

But according to a court document filed Saturday on her intent to now testify, Ray's lawyers say her refusal to testify is hurting his appeal and putting his life at risk.

Monday’s written order releases Lindercrantz to testify during a hearing scheduled for Wednesday. She has been jailed for nearly two weeks.

"Based on this dramatic change in circumstance, she has concluded that her religious principles honoring human life now compel that she must testify," Lindecrantz's lawyer, Mari Newman, wrote in the document.

Lindecrantz worked on Ray's original legal team, focusing on finding things that might persuade jurors to vote against the death penalty. His current lawyers are challenging his 2009 conviction and death sentence partly by arguing that he did not have an effective defense.

Prosecutors subpoenaed Lindecrantz to testify to back up their case that he did have good representation from his publicly-funded defense team. They questioned Ray's original lawyers as part of the appeal proceedings.

One of Ray's current lawyers, Mary Claire Mulligan, declined to comment on the defense's position on Lindecrantz's testimony, citing a gag order in the case and court rules.

Ray and co-defendant Sir Mario Owens were sentenced to death for the 2005 killings of Javad Marshall-Fields and his fiancee, Vivian Wolfe. Marshall-Fields had witnessed an earlier shooting that Owens was convicted of committing.