Jury selection begins today for the retrial of a Miccosukee man accused of murdering his two young sons.
Kirk Billie drove an SUV carrying the boys, ages 3 and 5, into a canal. He has said he didn't know they were in the car at the time of the accident.
In February 2001, a jury found Billie guilty of second-degree murder. But an appeals court threw out the conviction because information about Billie's violent past was allowed at the trial.
The incident took place off the reservation but state investigators tried to go on tribal lands to interview witnesses and seek evidence. The tribe refused to allow state law enforcement onto the reservation.
The tribe has since agreed to cooperate with state law enforcement, a concession that could help the tribe win passage of a bill to retrocede state jurisdiction on tribal lands. Florida is a Public Law 280 state.
The retrial is expected to last two weeks.
Get the Story:
Father faces retrial in sons' drowning deaths (The Miami Herald 1/13)
pwpwd
Man faces retrial in SUV drowning of two sons in Everglades
(AP 1/13)
Court Decision:
Billie v.
State (July 30, 2003)
Related Stories:
Miccosukee man faces retrial for sons'
deaths (09/06)
Miccosukee Tribe to
cooperate with state police (08/12)
Miccosukee man's murder hearing closed to
public (04/21)
Lawyer for accused
Miccosukee man disqualified (03/23)
Fla. court overturns conviction of Indian
man (7/31)
Billie given two
life sentences (4/20)
Billie
plans appeal of murder conviction (2/23)
Fla. murder trial winds up
(2/22)
Mother testifies about death
of sons (2/8)
Murder trial
begins in Florida (2/7)
Feds
dispute tribe's brand of justice (10/16)
Miccosukee tribe tries to protect
sovereignty (9/26)
Miccosukee man on trial again for murder of sons
Thursday, January 13, 2005
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