2024 Annual Gala

2024 Annual Gala

Info

Our Honorees

Recognition of Service

Kate Germond

Sr. Advocate & Investigator

Kate Germond has been a tireless advocate for justice for the wrongly convicted for 37 years. Currently our Senior Advocate and Investigator, Kate joined Centurion Ministries in January of 1987 after reading an article in the NY Times about Jim McCloskey’s pioneering work on behalf of innocent people in prison. She tracked him down, they met, thought they could get along, and for 30 years worked shoulder to shoulder to investigate innocence claims and free those who have been victimized by our criminal legal system.

A trailblazer in the innocence field, Kate was one of the first women in the world to dedicate herself to freeing the innocent from wrongful incarceration. In the early days, Kate organized Centurion’s Case Assessment and Development process, recruited and trained volunteers, staff and interns to help manage the deluge of requests for help Centurion received, and took on her own cases to investigate. After Jim’s retirement in May 2015, Kate became the Executive Director of Centurion. She continued to grow the organization until the end of 2019 when she returned to her passion of working directly with clients. 

Recognizing the myriad challenges our clients face, Kate began the groundwork and the initial formation of a system to support our clients after release. This forethought of the importance of helping people get back on their feet was later enhanced and formalized into our current Post-Release Support (PRS) program. PRS provides Centurion’s clients with holistic, comprehensive assistance upon their release, and ultimately for the rest of their lives. Centurion is one of the only organizations in the world to offer a robust support system to our clients post-release, all because Kate understood the importance of supporting our clients as they navigate life after losing decades due to wrongful imprisonment.

Prior to joining Centurion, Kate was a businesswoman and community activist in Mendocino, California where she lived with her family for close to 20 years. Kate is an integral part of Centurion’s operations and is grateful every single day for Jim’s commitment in 1980 to free from prison a complete stranger. Centurion would not be what it is today were it not for Kate Germond.

Celebration of Freedom

Jose Carrion

On August 1, 2024 Jose Carrion walked out of a Queens, NY prison into the loving arms of a crowd of family members after spending more than 25 years for a crime he did not commit. Jose is the 71st person Centurion had freed from wrongful incarceration.

Jose’s case and wrongful conviction is the result of wrongful accusation, the testimony of an unreliable eyewitness who over a period of several years gave wildly inconsistent accounts of what he saw during a drug deal gone bad was all it took to send Jose Carrion to prison for the rest of his life.

Carrion was convicted of a 1995 murder that took place at a Bronx apartment. He had no known connection to the victim or anyone else in the apartment and had no history of using or selling drugs.

Just before midnight on April 20, 1995, three intruders allegedly entered a Bronx apartment looking to rob drugs and money. In the apartment prior to their entry were two drug dealers and a drug buyer. One of the drug dealers was shot and killed. The other dealer was shot and wounded. The drug buyer was roughed up.

From the get-go, police had a difficult time sorting out the victims from the possible suspects. They had to rely almost entirely on the two men who survived the incident for information about what transpired. Both men had their own interests to protect.

Between 1995 and 2001, Juan Ventura, the wounded drug dealer, repeatedly changed his story about 1.) who was in the apartment, 2.) when they were there, and 3.) what events led up to the shootings. He initially identified someone other than Carrion as the only perpetrator he recognized. As it turned out, however, that person was in jail at the time of the crime. 

A week later, Ventura leafed through pages of police mug shot books and identified Carrion as the gunman. Carrion was in the book because as a juvenile he had stolen a fax machine from a hearing aid store.

Eddie Corniel, the drug buyer who was assaulted during the attack, wasn’t cooperative with police.

Carrion was arrested four years after the crime happened. The prosecution’s entire case rested on Ventura’s identification of him.

At Carrion’s trial, Corniel was called to the stand by the prosecution but invoked his 5th Amendment rights against self-incrimination. The prosecution declined to give him immunity due to its belief that Corniel might end up testifying that he was the shooter.

After serving time for other drug-related crimes, Ventura returned to his native Dominican Republic. It is unclear whether he went voluntarily or was deported by immigration authorities. His current whereabouts has made it difficult to interview him about the case.

Most of Centurion’s efforts to prove Carrion’s innocence have centered on locating and interviewing Eddie Corniel. Unfortunately, he is a transient career criminal who might be reluctant to revisit what happened at the Bronx apartment in 1995. In an attempt to make contact with him, Centurion has spoken to his sister, two ex-wives, his daughter, and his former employer.

In difficult circumstances, Carrion is trying to remain as upbeat and positive as possible. He communicates regularly with his daughter, an Army private stationed in South Korea. And he also frequently exchanges letters with his elderly mother in Florida.  

Carrion completed his G.E.D. while in prison and has participated in vocational programs in custodial maintenance and carpentry. He worked for the paint crew responsible for keeping the facility clean and painted year round, and he has volunteered on his days off to work with the lawn and grounds crew to cut grass and shovel snow. He was moved into the prison’s honor block several years ago. 

Mr. Carrion was released on parole and currently resides in Florida with his family. Centurion will continue to pursue his full exoneration now that he has been released. We look forward to celebrating his release on Sept. 21 and continue to support him on his journey to reclaiming his life.

Info
Category:
Location: New York Historical Society
Date: September 21, 2024
Duration: 1 Day