Kym worthy daughter
Kym Worthy
American prosecutor (born )
Kym Loren Worthy (born December 5, ) is an American lawyer and politician serving as the prosecutor of Wayne County, Michigan since A member of the Democratic Party, she is the first African-American woman to serve as a county prosecutor in Michigan.
Biography Martin Sarah Goddard Power. I really don't think that those issues came from Wayne County. A: Right, right. Crain's Detroit Business.She is most noted for prosecuting then-Detroit MayorKwame Kilpatrick at the beginning of March
Career
Worthy received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan and her J.D. degree from the university of Notre Dame Law School. She attended high school in Alexandria, Virginia and is a graduate of T.C.
Williams High School.
She started as an assistant prosecutor in the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office in She served in this position for ten years, becoming the first African-American special assignment prosecutor under Prosecutor John O'Hair. Her most notable prosecution was the trial of Detroit police officers Walter Budzyn and Larry Nevers in the beating death of motorist Malice Green.
Worthy had an over 90% conviction rate.[1] In , Worthy was elected to the Detroit Recorder's Court (now the Wayne County Circuit Court).[2] From until January , Worthy was a judge on the Wayne County Circuit Court.
In , Worthy was appointed Wayne County Prosecutor by the judges of the Wayne County Circuit Court bench to succeed now Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who had resigned to become the head of the Detroit Medical Center.[citation needed]
The Wayne County Prosecutor's Office is by far the busiest in Michigan.
There are 83 counties in Michigan yet Worthy's office handles 52% of all felony cases in Michigan and 64% of all serious felony cases that go to jury trial.[3] In Worthy sued Wayne County alleging that Wayne County Executive Robert A. Ficano had provided her with an insufficient budget to fulfill her duties as outlined in the Michigan State Constitution.[4] In June , she backed former Wayne County Sheriff Warren Evans who defeated incumbent Robert A.
Ficano in the Democratic primary for Wayne County Executive. Evans later won the general election.[5]
Established programs
In , Worthy began working on resolving a massive backlog of unprocessed rape test kits in Detroit, despite previous years of refusal to even allow assistant prosecutors to look for them for over a decade.[6][7]
On August 17, , assistant prosecutor Robert Spada discovered a massive number of kits sitting in a warehouse that the Detroit Police Department had used as an overflow storage facility for evidence.
The 11, sexual assault kits languished in the DPD property warehouse from to without being submitted for testing.
In one case, a rape was linked to a man who was incarcerated for three murders he committed in the seven years after the rape. As the City of Detroit was in bankruptcy and then-Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano would not provide funding for the project, Worthy turned to the Detroit Crime Commission, Michigan Women's First Foundation and the African-American Coalition to form a public-private partnership to raise funds to test the kits.[8][9]
Financial donations were made from all over the United States.
The project received grants and funding from the National Institute for Justice, the State of Michigan and the New York District Attorneys Office. An important academic study of the project was authored by Michigan State University Professor Rebecca Campbell.[10][11]
In , Worthy was featured in the documentary I Am Evidence.[12] The documentary won a number of awards, including the Emmy in for the Best Documentary in the News and Documentary category.[13]
The 10th Anniversary of the Detroit Rape Kit Project was marked by a commemorative ceremony celebrating the completion of the testing of all of the rape kits, state legislation that sets out a time line for the submission of kits for testing and a statewide tracking system that allows victims to follow the progression of their kit for DNA testing.[14]
Worthy also established a Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU) in and became active in January As of , it received over requests for investigation.[15][16]
The CIU's function is to make recommendations to determine whether new evidence shows that an innocent person has been wrongfully convicted of a crime and to recommend steps to rectify such situations.
Kym worthy detroit prosecutor office Stoesser Lucy Thurman Charleszetta Waddles. You have the information that you need … because I've set, you know, many, many, many bonds or reduced many, many bonds or raised many, many bonds on the bench. I didn't feel that I knew enough. A: Depends on lower-level felonies.As of June , 19 prisoners had filed claims and been released from prison.[17][18][19]
In December , Worthy announced a partnership between the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office and the Wayne County Dispute Resolution Center to establish alternatives for charging adolescents and teens with low level crimes.
The program is called Talk It Out.[20][21][22]
Controversies
In , a documentary, White Boy, detailed evidence that high-ranking Detroit officials engaged in a decades-long conspiracy to unjustly imprison Richard Wershe Jr., a former FBI informant arrested for possession of 8kg of cocaine in , when Wershe was only 17 years old.
Despite being a non-violent offender and a juvenile at the time of his sentencing, Wershe was held in a Michigan prison for 29 years. In September , Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway ruled that Wershe's life sentence was unconstitutional and that he should be re-sentenced. Worthy objected to Hathaway's ruling and Wershe lost his appeal for re-sentencing.
Worthy claimed she objected because Wershe was charged and convicted of operating a car theft ring in Florida when he was in prison there. One subject interviewed suggested that she was motivated by her "personal and professional" ties to former Detroit City Council President Gil Hill, subject of an FBI investigation for which Wershe was an informant.
On August 26, , Worthy changed her position after public pressure and news reporting about this conflict of interest. She did not assist in his release but did not object to his parole from the Michigan Department of Corrections after Hill's death in [23]
Michigan Women's Hall of Fame
In , Worthy was inducted for her years of work as the Wayne County Prosecutor and specifically for her outstanding work on resolving the Detroit sexual assault kit backlog.
The other inductees were Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, Agatha Biddle and Clara Stanton Jones.[24]
References
- ^"Detroit's dramatic prosecutor (Kym Worthy, lawyer in Malice Green police brutality case)".
Prosecutor - Wayne County, Michigan: So I was particularly passionate about that as well. Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy reflects on 15 years of testing rape kits. But it seemed to me that when we had the pandemic and people were off the road that people took that as license to do whatever they wanted to do on the road. I only know what's generally done in Wayne County.
Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^"About Kym Worthy, Current Wayne County Presecutor". Re-Elect Kym Worthy for Wayne County Prosecutor. Retrieved
- ^"Wayne County, MI - Prosecutor of Wayne County". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^"Detroit Free Press article on Worthy's suit".
Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^Evans claims victory over Ficano, , Accessed June 9,
- ^"Wayne County Prosecuting Attorney's Office (Michigan) Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI)". .
- ^Charlotte Alter (July 17, ). "In Hot Pursuit of Cold Cases".
Time. Retrieved June 9,
- ^"Enough Said. Sexual Assault in Detroit". .
- ^Steinberg, Stephanie. "Kim Trent, woman behind African American Challenge". Detroit News.
- ^University, Michigan State. "Detroit solves problem of untested rape kits, MSU report finds".Kym worthy detroit prosecutor address I'm not talking about drunk driving, but we have some people in the jail for very inappropriate bonds. We had at least one case where a child was being abused in class online. I don't generally throw mental health into the mix because it's not always mental health, and most of the time it's not mental health. Q: The Supreme Court basically ruled that that system is unconstitutional.
MSUToday.
- ^"SAK Final Report"(PDF). . November 9, Retrieved
- ^"I Am Evidence". HBO.
- ^"Video showing Best Documentary Nominees and Winner". YouTube. August 10,
- ^"Event to Commemorate 10th Anniversary of Rape Kit Initiative".
. August 10, Retrieved
- ^Baldas, Tresa. "Battler for the wrongly convicted will join Wayne County Prosecutor's Office". Detroit Free Press.
- ^"Conviction Integrity Unit". . Retrieved June 9,
- ^"A Michigan Man Spent Decades in Prison for a Murder He Didn't Commit — But Who Was the Real Killer?".
.
- ^Cwiek, Sarah (29 March ).Kym worthy detroit prosecutor July A: We are still having issues with certain judges and magistrates and the bonds that are being set. I thought it was too high, I lowered it. And have you gotten the means to cover?
"After 45 years behind bars for murder, Richard Phillips is finally, officially exonerated". .
- ^Cwiek, Sarah (21 February ). "Wayne County overturns man's wrongful conviction after 25 years". .
- ^Clarke, Evrod Cassimy, Kayla (December 16, ). "'Talk It Out' program in Wayne County could give juvenile offenders a second chance".
WDIV.
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^Brand-Williams, Oralandar. "Wayne County prosecutor announces diversionary program for youth offenders".
- Prosecutor - Wayne County, Michigan
- Top Stories
Detroit News.
- ^"Press Release - Prosecutor Worthy Announces Juvenile Mediation Program Talk It Out". . Retrieved June 9,
- ^"Video: Prosecutor Worthy Denies She Fought Rick Wershe's Parole for Gil Hill". Retrieved June 9,
- ^"Dr. Mona, prosecutor Kym Worthy among Michigan Women's Hall of Fame inductees".
Crain's Detroit Business. July 20,