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Absolute pardon: Soering petitions another governor

During the 30 years he’s spent in prison, Jens Soering has maintained he had nothing to do with the brutal 1985 murders of Derek and Nancy Haysom, and that he only confessed to protect his girlfriend, Elizabeth Haysom, from the death penalty.

Now Tim Kaine, the governor who agreed to send Soering back to Germany in 2010, a decision overturned by his successor, Bob McDonnell, is running for vice president, and Soering’s attorney has filed a petition for absolute pardon with Governor Terry McAuliffe, thrusting the case back into the international spotlight.

Germany, from its highest levels of government, has long lobbied for Soering’s return, and Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed the case with President Barack Obama. German filmmakers have made a documentary, The Promise, on the heinous case in which two UVA Echols scholars were convicted that premiered in Munich in March and will be screened in the U.S. later this year.

Attorney Steve Rosenfield filed the petition August 23 and says he has indisputable scientific evidence that proves Soering, 50, is innocent. He points to a 1985 lab analysis of blood taken from the Haysoms’ Bedford home, which documents five stains of type O human blood—the same as Soering’s, but also the most common blood type.

In 2009, DNA analysis was done on two of those samples—the others were too degraded—and Virginia’s Department of Forensic Science said that Soering was “eliminated as a contributor.”

“That completely undermines the government’s argument it was Soering’s blood,” says Rosenfield.

But that’s not all. Rosenfield has a laundry list of errors made during the investigation and prosecution of Soering, who says he confessed because he thought his father’s mid-level diplomatic status would give him immunity.

An expert on police interrogations and confessions, Dr. Andrew Griffiths spent four months reviewing all statements Soering made to police and prosecutors after he and Haysom were caught in London a year after the murders, and concluded British and American investigators “violated a host of British laws,” says Rosenfield, including holding Soering incommunicado and denying him access to his solicitor.

Soering also failed to accurately describe the crime scene, says Rosenfield. The UVA student claimed he was in the dining room, walked behind Derek Haysom and sliced his throat. “Why didn’t we find blood on the table?” asks Rosenfield. Haysom was found with 38 stab wounds in the living room, which was awash in blood.

Nancy Haysom was wearing her night clothes, and FBI profiler Ed Sluzbach said the killer was someone she was very comfortable with because she was a “proper woman” and wouldn’t have entertained in her pajamas. Soering said she was wearing jeans, says Rosenfield.

Elizabeth Haysom, who is serving 90 years in the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women as an accessory before the fact, claimed she was in Washington, D.C., to establish an alibi while Soering drove to Bedford to kill her parents. Yet a dishrag was found near Nancy Haysom’s body with type B blood, the same type as Elizabeth’s, says Rosenfield.

Elizabeth also alleged she was on a street in Georgetown when Soering drove up in the rental car, covered in blood and wearing only a sheet. Detectives sprayed the car with Luminol, which causes even minute flecks of blood to light up in blue. No stains turned up in the car, according to Rosenfield.

Prosecutors in the 1990 trial also tied Soering to a sock print, the use of which has been discredited by the FBI and American Academy of Forensic Scientists, along with bite marks. In 2009, Innocence Project cofounder Peter Neufeld and UVA law professor/wrongful conviction expert Brandon Garrett wrote an article that asserted sock prints are not accepted as scientific evidence.

And then there’s the mysterious man. About two months after the murders, transmission shop owner Tony Buchanan said he called Bedford investigators because a woman and man brought a car to his shop that had blood on the floorboard and a hunting knife, the type of weapon police believe was used, in between the seats. After Haysom and Soering went on the lam, Buchanan said he recognized her from news photos, but the man with her was not Soering. Police never responded to his information, Rosenfield says.

Rosenfield held a press conference August 24, during which he criticized Republicans and right-wing media who are “uninterested in the facts of the case” and who instead are targeting Hillary Clinton’s running mate Kaine for attempting to repatriate Soering under the terms of an international treaty.

Present at the press conference were Kaine staffers who spent months investigating the case, which McDonnell rejected immediately upon taking office with no investigation, according to Rosenfield.

Not only does Rosenfield want Soering given an absolute pardon, but while the parole board investigates the case, he wants Soering released from the Buckingham Correctional Center on parole “in light of Jens’ innocence.”

Rosenfield represented former Crozet resident Robert Davis, who spent 13 years in prison after making a false confession. McAuliffe granted him a conditional pardon December 21, 2015.

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VP candidate and convicted murderer in spotlight again

Former UVA student Jens Soering has spent more than 30 years in prison while protesting his innocence. And Tim Kaine, shortly before he left the Governor’s Mansion in 2010, agreed to repatriate Soering to Germany, a move that was immediately overturned by his successor, Bob McDonnell.

Now Kaine has been tapped to be the Democratic vice presidential candidate, and Soering is still in prison–and still claiming his innocence in the heinous murders of his then-girlfriend Elizabeth Haysom’s parents in 1985 in Bedford. His story, which has gained international attention, was made into a documentary that premiered in Munich last month. 

Because of the notoriety of the murders, Kaine experienced some fallout from his decision to send Soering back to Germany, but not enough to derail his run for the U.S. Senate in 2012. But according to Soering’s lawyer, Steve Rosenfield, the then-governor was doing what Congress and the president wanted him to do when they created an international treaty for the transfer of prisoners in 1977 to aid in rehabilitation and to save money.

“Tim Kaine spent nine months investigating the case,” and Rosenfield calls it “very commendable” that he did so. “McDonnell and [Ken] Cuccinelli had a press conference and did no investigation,” he says. “For them it was all politics.”

Soering has advocates at the highest levels of German government, and Chancellor Angela Merkel broached the topic with President Barack Obama in 2014. The position of the Germans, says Rosenfield, “always has been Jens should be returned to Germany under international treaty.”

Governor Terry McAuliffe rejected a petition to do so last year. But with Kaine running for vice president, and a documentary headed to the U.S., Soering’s story is unlikely to go unnoticed.

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Soering documentary to premiere at Munich Film Festival

With the success of the podcast “Serial” and Netflix’s “Making a Murderer,” wrongful convictions are a hot topic. Joining the debate is a documentary about one of central Virginia’s most notorious double homicides—and the convicted murderer who has insisted he’s innocent for 30 years.

The Promise: The Story of Jens Soering and Elizabeth Haysom heads to the Munich Film Festival for its world premiere in June, says Karin Steinberger, one of the film’s two directors, in a phone call from Germany.

UVA Echols scholars Soering and Haysom were convicted for the March 30, 1985, stabbings and near-decapitations of Haysom’s parents, Derek and Nancy Haysom, in their Bedford County home.

Soering, a German diplomat’s son who wrongly believed he had diplomatic immunity, initially said he committed the crime. Although he recanted before he went to trial in 1990, a jury convicted him and sentenced him to two life sentences. In 1987, Haysom pleaded guilty to first-degree murder as an accessory before the fact and was sentenced to 90 years in prison.

“It is a big love story,” says Steinberger. “A crazy, incredible love story. He said, ‘I confessed for her so she wouldn’t be killed in the electric chair.’”

Soering’s case has intense interest in Germany. Chancellor Angela Merkel raised the issue with President Barack Obama in 2014, and the case drew international headlines in 2010 when outgoing-governor Tim Kaine agreed to send Soering back to Germany, only to have that decision immediately rescinded by his successor, Bob McDonnell.

“The harshness of the American system is hard for people in Germany to understand,” says Steinberger, who notes that America incarcerates more of its citizens than any other country. Germany does not have life sentences without the possibility of parole, and it’s very rare to have someone sit in prison as long as Soering has, she says.

“Here, the system allows you a second chance, particularly if you’re young,” Steinberger says. “It doesn’t help to have a lot of people in prison. They’re part of society. We want them to be back in society.”

Soering was 18 when the murders occurred, and he has been denied parole 11 times since he was eligible in 2003, most recently in December.

The filmmakers asked questions about what they observed, including why the judge, William Sweeney, a friend of the Nancy Haysom’s brother, was allowed to preside. “In Germany this is not thinkable,” says Steinberger.

She also wonders why nude pictures of Elizabeth Haysom taken by her mother were not entered as evidence. Haysom has claimed she was abused by her mother. “This is a huge motive,” says Steinberger. “The judge sealed off the photos. He very clearly didn’t want them discussed in court. But if you want to find out the truth, you have to talk about everything.”

Many people with information about the case were not questioned in court, and an FBI profile of the Haysoms’ killer disappeared, according to Steinberger. She says noted FBI profiler Ed Sulzbach appeared on camera and said he came to the conclusion the killer “was very close to the family and female.”

Steinberger first interviewed Soering in 2006 and got him on film before Virginia prisons banned videoing. Now, she can’t even speak to him on the phone because such calls require a U.S. phone number.

After The Promise premieres June 24 in Munich, co-producer BBC will air the documentary and it will head to U.S. movie theaters and television.

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McAuliffe’s dilemma: Will he support McDonnell or Kaine in Jens Soering case?

Former UVA student/convicted murderer Jens Soering has been in prison for 29 years for the stabbing deaths of his girlfriend’s parents, Derek and Nancy Haysom, in 1985. During that time, his case has become an international cause célèbre, and a request to repatriate him to Germany is again before a Virginia governor.

In 2010, outgoing Democratic Governor Tim Kaine agreed to send Soering back to Germany. Almost immediately upon taking office, Republican Governor Bob McDonnell, since convicted of criminal charges himself, revoked Kaine’s decision.

Charlottesville civil rights attorney Steve Rosenfield represented Soering in a lawsuit against McDonnell in 2011, and argued McDonnell did not have the authority to revoke his predecessor’s order. He lost in 2012, and is representing Soering again in the latest repatriation efforts.

“Kaine spent nine months exploring, investigating and negotiating with the German government before his consent to the transfer, whereas McDonnell heard about the decision after a few days in office and did no homework before deciding to rescind Governor Kaine’s consent,” says Rosenfield.

Since McDonnell’s decision, 123 members of the German Parliament have petitioned Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe to release Soering, the son of a German diplomat. Chancellor Angela Merkel raised the issue during a 2014 visit to Washington, D.C., and the German human rights commissioner visited Soering at Buckingham Correctional Institute, where he’s being held, that same year.

While many people believe Soering’s case is one of botched justice and a human rights travesty, others believe he should rot in jail.

Delegate Rob Bell is one. “Given the vile and heinous nature of his crime, he should spend the rest of his life behind bars,” Bell writes in a recent letter to supporters, urging them to write McAuliffe and ask him to oppose Soering’s release.

Eighteen delegates, including Matt Fariss, who represents a portion of southern Albemarle, have written to McAuliffe and said Soering’s release “would also significantly undermine the integrity of Virginia’s criminal justice system, and would demonstrate that the justice system provides benefits to the powerful and well connected that are not available to minorities and the less fortunate.”

Bell was at UVA from 1984 to 1986, during some of which Soering, a Jefferson Scholar, and his girlfriend, Elizabeth Haysom, were students there. Bell says he “cannot recall a more atrocious crime.”

Following Kaine’s decision to allow the transfer to Germany, Bell urged the House of Delegates to pass a resolution opposing the move. “This is a grotesque miscarriage of justice,” he said on the House floor. “In 25 years—a quarter of a century—we haven’t had a more vile, abominable murder in Central Virginia.”

The night the Haysoms were murdered in their Bedford home, Soering and Elizabeth Haysom had rented a car and driven up to Washington. Someone drove the car back down to Bedford, where Derek Haysom was stabbed 36 times and Nancy Haysom eight times.

Soering and Haysom went on the lam for about a year, hopping from Europe to Bangkok to England, where they were caught running a check-and-merchandise return scam. Initially Soering confessed to the murders, and he said he believed that as the son of a German diplomat he would have immunity and could protect Haysom. He later recanted the confession, and said he stayed in Washington and bought movie tickets while Haysom drove down to Bedford.

She pleaded guilty to first-degree murder as an accessory before the fact in 1987 and was sentenced to 90 years in prison. She’s currently being held in the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women.

Soering fought extradition, and England only agreed to send him back to the U.S. if capital punishment were taken off the table. Soering was returned to Bedford in 1990, and a jury convicted him of two counts of first-degree murder and sentenced him to two life sentences.

That was before Governor George Allen did away with parole. Soering has been eligible since 2003 and has been denied parole 10 times.

In prison, Soering has never been disciplined for an infraction, and he’s written nine books. While he doesn’t have access to a computer, supporters have created a website with all the particulars of his case. The New Yorker ran a nearly 12,000-word piece on Soering in its November 9 issue.

Two matters are now pending for Soering. He went before the parole board a couple of months ago for the 11th time and has not gotten a decision. “It’s very unusual for the parole board to take this long,” says Rosenfield.

The repatriation request has been pending before Governor McAuliffe for a long time as well, he says. “That’s not unusual because it’s a highly political issue,” Rosenfield says. “The governor is faced with a dilemma of either supporting the decision of Republican Governor McDonnell or Democratic Governor Kaine.”

A spokesperson for Kaine says, “When he was governor, Senator Kaine recommended that Jens Soering be transferred into the German penal system and never be allowed to set foot again in the U.S. He has had no involvement in the case since January 2010 and would not presume to advise Governor McAuliffe on it.”

McAuliffe spokesperson Brian Coy says there is no timetable for a decision. “The process is underway and we will make an announcement when it is complete.”

Correction 11/21/15: Elizabeth Haysom was convicted of being an accessory before that fact, not after.