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Gov. Chiles Halts Execution After Witness Recants

Dublin Core

Title

Gov. Chiles Halts Execution After Witness Recants

Subject

Death penalty

Description

Witness claims Florida police planted story in his head using hypnosis.

Creator

Booth, William

Source

Washington Post

Publisher

HIST 298, University of Mary Washington

Date

1995-06-16

Rights

The materials in this online collection are held by Special Collections, Simpson Library, University of Mary Washington and are available for educational use. For this purpose only, you may reproduce materials without prior permission on the condition that you provide attribution of the source.

Format

1 JPG
300 DPI

Language

English

Coverage

Florida

Text Item Type Metadata

Text

Miami, June 16- The imminent execution of the killer they call “Crazy Joe” Spaziano, sentenced to death 20 years ago based on the testimony of a hypnotized witness, was halted by Gov. Lawton Chiles (D) this week after the crucial witness claimed he made up his testimony. The governor’s decision highlights the lingering legacy of cases in which “repressed memories” were unearthed by hypnotist and psychologist – a practice that is now widely criticized as too fallible to be used in courtrooms. The case, too has fueled debate over the death sentence. Joseph Spaziano’s case has been reviewed and upheld by the Florida Supreme Court and twice by the U.S. Supreme Court. The Stalled execution of Spaziano, who was convicted in 1975 of mutilating and murdering a young hospital worker two years earlier, has generated tremendous controversy because Spaziano was found guilty based largely on testimony of one man who – two decades later – claims that police and investigators “refreshed his drug-addled teenage memory with hypnosis and essentially planted details of a Spaziano confession in his mind. Tony Dilisio, now 37 and a self-described born-again Christian, told investigators with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement this week that his testimony years ago was essentially fabricated.

[image - Joe Spaziano]

[image caption - Florida governor will review the case of Joseph 'Crazy Joe' Spaziano.]

The videotape of his session with FDLE officers was shown to Chiles and his attorneys. Chiles on Thursday halted the execution scheduled for June 27, and asked for further investigation. The governor has not granted clemency and Spaziano could eventually face the Electric chair for his murder of Laura Lyn Harberts. At Spaziano’s trial Dilisio, then a troubled teenager with a history of LSD and marijuana abuse, told the court that “Crazy Joe” of the Orlando Outlaws biker gang took him to a dump and pointed out the decomposing bodies of two women. “That’s my styles,” Spaziano boasted, according to Diliso’s testimony, pointing at of the women, her breast mutilated. But in an interview with the Miami Herald, Dilisio said: “I remember going there, but not with Joe Spaziano… The police took me.” He asked: “How do I know what I said back then was reliable? Especially if it came out under hypnosis.” Guided by hypnotist Joseph McCawley in 1975, Dilisio fingered Spaziano and later was the prosecution’s star witness. During a second session of hypnosis, McCawley said: “There are certain things bothering you in your subconscious mind. And you’re going to let these come out. You’re kind of purging your system.” When Dilisio remembered only one body at the dump, the hypnotist asked: “Is there another body, with this body that you’re looking [at]? Think this out. It will be easier later, Tony, much easier.” Testimony recounting so-called repressed memories generated by hypnosis has largely been discredited in recent years. The Florida Supreme Court ruled after Spaziano’s conviction that hypnotically induced testimony should be banned from criminal trials, but the ruling did not apply to earlier cases such as Spanziano’s. Spanziano’s attorneys have sought support from experts who decry the practice. In one letter to Spaziano’s lawyers, a trio of scholars, including Richard Ofshe, a University of California sociologist, write: “Mr. Diliso’s testimony was utterly worthless, at best, and more likely dangerously mistaken.” The campaign to save Spaziano from the electric chair was initiated by his attorney, Michael Mello, now a professor at Vermont Law School. In editorial page articles that ran in several Florida newspapers, Mello wrote, “Mr. Spaziano is, I believe in my bone marrow, innocent. This fact makes him unique among my death row clients. When I was a Florida public defender, my caseload was 35 condemned men; in all, I have been closely involved in about 70.” Mello wrote that Spaziano’s jury recommended against the death penalty, mostly because of nagging doubts about his guilt. Yet because Spaziano was a drug abuser and member of the Outlaws biker gang, jurors did not want to see him on the loose. The judge disregarded the recommendation and ordered death. According to Mello, “Crazy Joe” got his nickname for good cause. “You see, Mr. Spaziano is crazy, That’s the truth. It’s a truth that shames and humiliates himself in his eyes.” Spaziano suffered a severe head injury after being run over by an automobile in 1966. At the trial, he had trouble recalling day-to-day details of what he did in 1973. After Chiles and his investigators review the case, they can take several actions, ranging from signing a fifth death warrant to pardoning Spaziano. Even if Spaziano is pardoned for killing of Harberts, he would continue to serve a life sentence for an unrelated rape and mutilation of a 16-year-old girl.

Original Format

Newspaper

Contributor of the Digital Item

Cusumano, Laura

Student Editor of the Digital Item

Dickinson, Terra

Files

Citation

Booth, William, “Gov. Chiles Halts Execution After Witness Recants,” HIST299, accessed July 12, 2026, https://hist299.umwhistory.org/items/show/161.