DNA testing casts doubt on convictions in 1997 Pasco child murder, defense attorneys say
DADE CITY — The convictions of two men in one of the most heinous crimes in Pasco County history could be in trouble after the testing of DNA evidence from more than two decades ago.
Defense attorneys for Gary Steven Cannon, who is serving a life sentence for raping and killing 9-year-old Sharra Ferger in 1997, are expected to say at a court hearing Tuesday afternoon that a never-before-performed DNA analysis casts enough doubt on Cannon’s role in the crime that he deserves a new trial.
There was DNA present in samples taken from Sharra’s body that didn’t belong to her, the attorneys said, but it came from an unknown party, not Cannon or his co-defendant Gary Elishi Cochran.
“This evidence significantly undermines the state’s theory at trial,” Pinellas-Pasco Assistant Public Defender Maria DeLiberato said Monday in an interview. “It corroborates Mr. Cannon’s long-standing claim of innocence.”
An attorney for Cochran said Monday that he also plans to ask a judge to vacate his client’s conviction. Cochran, 55, is also serving a life sentence.
Cochran’s DNA was at the center of the latest analysis, which excluded him as a contributor of DNA in oral, vaginal and anal swabs collected from Sharra’s body. An earlier analysis concluded the same result for Cannon, 40. At the time, the samples were tested for the presence of sperm but none was found, so no further tests were done, according to court documents. Since then, advances in technology have made it possible to test the samples for DNA.
“In this case you have a child, and in those intimate places … you have DNA that is foreign to the victim and to Cochran and Cannon,” said Seth Miller, executive director of the Innocence Project of Florida and the attorney representing Cochran. “That turns the state’s theory of this case on its head.”
Pinellas-Pasco State Attorney Bruce Bartlett, who was one of the lead prosecutors who helped convict the men, did not return a call or email seeking comment.
The state’s theory was this: In the predawn hours of Oct. 3, 1997, Cannon, a family friend, and Cochran, Sharra’s uncle, lured the girl from her home north of Dade City to a field nearby and sexually assaulted her, then stabbed her to death. There were no eyewitnesses.
Key to the case was a man who testified that Cannon described the attack to him in great detail while the men were in a Pasco County jail pod together. Use of so-called jail snitches or jailhouse informants has come under scrutiny in recent years as advances in DNA technology have helped exonerate people put behind bars by their faulty testimony.
The other main piece of evidence against Cannon was that his DNA was found on hairs taken from the girl’s body. The defense maintained that they could have come from a visit a couple weeks prior in which Cannon slept on the same couch that Sharra was sleeping on when she was last seen alive. The only physical evidence linking Cochran to the crime was a bite mark on the girl’s left shoulder.
That same bite mark had been used to implicate another man, Dale Morris Jr., in the weeks after the crime. Morris’ public defenders found dental experts who cast doubt on the analysis by the state’s dentists. With no other evidence linking him to the crime, prosecutors dropped the charge. Bite mark evidence has since been widely debunked as unreliable.
A jury convicted Cannon of first-degree murder after a seven-day trial in 2005. The next year, Cochran, facing the death penalty if convicted at trial, pleaded guilty to the same charge in exchange for a life sentence.
However, a series of court decisions in the last decade triggered a review of one of the cases. Because Cannon was 17 at the time of the crime, he is eligible for resentencing based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that mandatory life sentences for children are unconstitutional. Rather, a court must take into consideration each child’s individual circumstances and the extent of their role in the crime when determining the appropriate sentence.
It’s the latter factor that gave Cannon’s attorneys the latitude to pursue DNA testing. The testing would “offer evidence relevant as to the extent of the Defendant’s participation in the offense and is likely to conclusively identify a perpetrator or perpetrators in the offense,” his attorneys wrote in a motion to release evidence for DNA testing filed in May 2020.
A key aspect of the jail snitch testimony was that Cannon wore a condom during the attack, but, the defense noted in another motion, prosecutors “never asserted or presented any evidence that Cochran wore a condom.”
So when an analysis came back in February excluding Cannon as a contributor to the DNA collected in the rape kit, they asked a judge for permission to test Cochran’s DNA.
“If Mr. Cochran is also excluded as a source of the DNA on those swabs,” his lawyers wrote in a motion filed in March, “such evidence would wholly undercut the State’s theory of the case and would further confirm that a third, unidentified person was in fact the perpetrator of this crime.”
At a hearing in March, Assistant State Attorney Glenn Martin argued that Cochran’s involvement in the crime has no bearing on Cannon’s resentencing.
“I’m suggesting … that we keep our eye on the ball in this particular case,” Martin said, according to a transcript of the proceedings. “We need to get him (Cannon) sentenced. Once he gets sentenced, other motions may be filed … however, any type of testing and analysis of the co-defendant in this case is premature and not relevant in the resentencing of Mr. Cannon.”
Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Lynn Tepper sided with the defense. The state’s theory rode on the men carrying out the crime together, she said, quoting from a transcript of State Attorney Bartlett’s closing argument during Cannon’s trial.
“That could go to the heart of the state’s theory of the case that Mr. Cochran and Mr. Cannon getting together, the vehicle, all those different things,” she said. “Therefore, I think it clearly is relevant to the question of Mr. Cannon’s participation.”
Staff writer Romy Ellenbogen contributed to this report.