This case pf Doctor Jeffery MacDonald is eeriely similar to Doctor Sam Sheppard and of special interest to me. It has always interested me because I was born at Womack Army Hospital, Fort Bragg, NC (scene of the drama) in 1960. Doctor Jeffery MacDonald was assigned as group surgeon at Fort Bragg, North Carolina in 1969. The murders of his pregnant wife and two small daughters were in 1970. My mother split with my dad during his second tour of duty in Vietnam and returned to SW VA in mid 1965. My dad and uncle Huck knew MacDonald personally. He was convicted in 1979.
However; the Army had dismissed the charges against him. The justice department took over and somehow managed to get a conviction. Unfortunately, he remains in the federal prison in Cumberland, MD. Like Doctor San Sheppard, Jeffery MacDonald had a story that made no logical sense but from which he has never varied. The funny thing is people have been found that fit his description of the assailants, and some have confessed.
Truth seems to be on MacDonald's side, and people wonder why he is still behind bars. We have to take clues where we can get them and invariably they are slanted either for or against MacDonald, so I believe he alone knows if he killed his family or not. The fight goes on to clear his name and free him, but 1970 was 43 years ago.
In checking out this case, ignore the book Fatal Vision by Joe McGinniss. As a result of that dubious book, McGinniss settled out of court with MacDonald for $325,000 on November 23, 1987. He would hardly have paid this sum to a convicted man if he had all of his ducks in a row, would he?
One always wonders. Nobody expects it to happen in their neck of the woods, but hey, anyone's neck of the woods is foreign to somebody...
However; the Army had dismissed the charges against him. The justice department took over and somehow managed to get a conviction. Unfortunately, he remains in the federal prison in Cumberland, MD. Like Doctor San Sheppard, Jeffery MacDonald had a story that made no logical sense but from which he has never varied. The funny thing is people have been found that fit his description of the assailants, and some have confessed.
Truth seems to be on MacDonald's side, and people wonder why he is still behind bars. We have to take clues where we can get them and invariably they are slanted either for or against MacDonald, so I believe he alone knows if he killed his family or not. The fight goes on to clear his name and free him, but 1970 was 43 years ago.
In checking out this case, ignore the book Fatal Vision by Joe McGinniss. As a result of that dubious book, McGinniss settled out of court with MacDonald for $325,000 on November 23, 1987. He would hardly have paid this sum to a convicted man if he had all of his ducks in a row, would he?
One always wonders. Nobody expects it to happen in their neck of the woods, but hey, anyone's neck of the woods is foreign to somebody...
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