The four-man, four-woman jury deliberated approximately 13 hours over three days before answering five questions.
Question No. 1: “Was plaintiff’s Constitutional right to due process of law violated by being subjected to criminal charges on false evidence deliberately fabricated by defendant Krause when she knew or should have known plaintiff was innocent of the crimes he was ultimately charged with?”
Answer: Yes.
Other questions dealt with Davidson’s liability, whether or not Davidson and Krause conspired to deprive Spencer of his rights (that answer was “no”) and if Krause’s fabricated reports were the “moving force” behind Spencer going to prison. Because the answer to that question was “yes,” the final question was how much money Spencer should receive. Spencer’s attorney suggested last week during closing arguments that $1 million a year would be fair, but jurors, without explanation on the verdict form, settled on $9 million.
Jurors were from Pierce, Cowlitz, Thurston and Clallam counties, according to court documents.
Asking for special prosecutor
In 1985, Spencer, a motorcycle officer with the Vancouver Police Department, entered an Alford plea. That’s treated as a guilty plea but allows the defendant to acknowledge a jury could find him guilty while maintaining innocence. He was sentenced to two life sentences plus 14 years and could have been released before Gov. Gary Locke commuted his sentence in 2004 — but refused to tell a parole board, on five occasions, that he was guilty.
Locke, citing numerous flaws in the investigation, commuted Spencer’s sentence in December 2004 and ordered his release.