The Oakland Press

Man granted new trial in 2006 triple murder freed after plea

-

TOLEDO, OHIO >> A man granted a new trial in the murders of three men in Ohio more than a decade and a half ago has been released after reaching a plea agreement with prosecutor­s.

Stoney Thompson, 43, was originally sentenced in Lucas County to three consecutiv­e life terms in the October 2006 slayings of Todd Archambeau, 44, Kenneth Nicholson, 41, and Michael York, 44, who were found shot and stabbed in a boarded-up house in Toledo.

Thompson, originally convicted of complicity to commit murder, was resentence­d on involuntar­y manslaught­er conviction­s under the plea agreement, The (Toledo) Blade reported. He submitted an Alford plea, in which a defendant does not acknowledg­e guilt but concedes that prosecutor­s have sufficient evidence for conviction.

Judge James Bates sentenced Thompson to six years for each involuntar­y manslaught­er count to be served consecutiv­ely for a total of 18 years. The judge allowed his release but ordered him to remain on probation for the remaining two years of the sentence.

The Sixth U.S. District Court of Appeals in July had ordered a new trial for Thompson, citing evidence not turned over to the defense by prosecutor­s that included other potential suspects, recorded testimony of other parties, and a photo of a bloody shoe print that didn’t match Thompson’s own shoes. Thompson’s brother, Goldy, was acquitted in the same case following a separate trial in which the evidence hadn’t been withheld, the newspaper reported.

The appeals court judges also cited a lack of physical evidence tying the defendant to the crimes and noted as “strange” the jury’s decision to acquit Thompson of firearms specificat­ions in each death, given that the victims were all shot and one died of a gunshot wound.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States