(Enlarge) A new report from Baltimore’s Inspector General has identified two “persons of interest†in the controversial 2005 shooting death of prominent Howard County businessman Robert Clay, reviving hope among his family and friends that Clay’s death will be investigated as a homicide. (Baltimore Sun file photo)
A new report from Baltimore’s Inspector General has identified two
“persons of interest” in the controversial 2005 shooting death of
prominent Howard County businessman Robert Clay, reviving hope among
his family and friends that Clay’s death will be investigated as the
homicide they believe it was.
Inspector General Hilton Green
said he identified the two people through a series of interviews never
done by the city police officers who initially investigated the case.
“I’m
not ruling out anything,” Green said of Clay’s May 16, 2005, death,
which the Maryland Medical Examiner’s Office ruled a suicide, but
Clay’s family and friends are convinced was a homicide. “I’m just
saying there are people that should have been interviewed who weren’t.
“Over
four years, things change,” he added. “People talk. They think
something may be over with and they think they can talk about it now. I
do feel there’s more than concrete evidence for the Justice Department
to open this case.”
Green last week sent a copy of his report
to Maryland U.S. Attorney Rod Rosenstein, asking him to open an
investigation into Clay’s death. If Rosenstein agrees to do so, it
would be the second time a federal law enforcement agency reviewed the
case.
A spokeswoman for Rosenstein, Marcia Murphy, said her office does not confirm or deny investigations as a matter of policy.
Green
agreed to discuss his report, which was completed last month, but
declined to release it, saying only Rosenstein, Baltimore Mayor Sheila
Dixon, City Solicitor George Nilson and U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings have
received copies. He also declined to reveal the names of the “persons
of interest,” except to say they are in prison.
In his job as
inspector general, Green is responsible for investigating complaints of
‘‘fraud, waste and abuse” in Baltimore city government, according to a
city Web site.
Found dead in office
A
resident of North Laurel, Clay was found dead by his oldest daughter,
Sharon, in his Baltimore office on Brookfield Street with a gunshot
wound to the head. He was 59.
The state medical examiner’s
office ruled Clay’s death a suicide, but family and friends said he was
not suicidal and pointed out that Clay, who was right-handed, was shot
in the left side of his head.
Prominent area lawyers, state
delegates, Baltimore City Council members, a U.S. congressman and a
former judge have all publicly stated they do not believe Clay’s death
was a suicide.
U.S. Rep. Cummings, who was interviewed for Green’s report, said he will never believe that Robert Clay killed himself.
“I
knew Bob Clay for at least 20 years,” Cummings said. “I’ve always known
Robert as a fighter. This is the kind of guy that when it was something
based on principle he would fight to the end.
“Of all the
people I know, Robert Clay was the person I would least expect to do
harm to themselves. I probably will go to my grave believing that.”
The
son of a backhoe operator, Clay founded two organizations for minority
contractors and ran unsuccessfully for the state senate in 1994. His
company, Robert Clay Inc., made millions in government contracts for
minority businessmen and financially supported numerous Democrats
seeking local offices.
“He faced a lot of adversity and he
broke down a lot of doors,” Bernadette Clay, another daughter, said.
“He was a pioneer in minority contracting.”
After Clay’s death
was ruled a suicide, family and friends, including Clay’s longtime
pastor, the Rev. John Wright, of the First Baptist Church of Guilford,
in Columbia, protested outside of the Baltimore Police Department and
gave passionate testimony in front of the Baltimore City Council.
In
2007, at the request of the City Council, the FBI conducted a review of
the Baltimore Police Department’s work in the case and concurred that
Clay committed suicide.
The FBI’s decision was based on what
the agency called “undisturbed blood spatter” seen in crime scene
photographs next to Clay. Federal agents say they believe it would have
been impossible for someone to shoot Clay in the head at point-blank
range without disturbing the spatter.
But an FBI spokeswoman
said at the time that the bureau did not interview any witnesses or
conduct any investigation outside of reviewing the police file, a move
Clay’s supporters decried.
Family applauds findings
News of Green’s findings was well-received by Clay’s friends and family.
“Inspector
Green has touched onto what we’ve thought all along,” Bernadette Clay
said. “The investigation wasn’t done thoroughly or properly. He has
uncovered information the police officer didn’t look at.”
Bernadette
Clay said detectives in her dad’s death never actually pursued any
evidence of homicide, because they were convinced it was a suicide
before they began the case.
“They just automatically assumed,
‘Oh, it looked like a suicide.’ They treated it as such,” she said.
“Right away, they walked in and walked out. ‘Looks like a suicide,’ I
heard them say. They allowed people to come into the scene. They never
found the bullet. They were very sloppy.”
Over the years, the
police department has consistently defended its work against such
criticism, saying all aspects of the case point to suicide, including a
gun shot residue analysis.
A police spokesman did not respond to a request for comment this week about the Inspector General’s report.
Bernadette Clay said she hopes the jailhouse information obtained by Green will at least lead to more interviews in the case.
“The fact that someone would say, ‘These guys did it,’ should be worth looking into,” she said.
‘It’s a cover-up’
Howard
County NAACP President Jenkins Odoms said he believed the U.S. Justice
Department should have gotten involved in the Clay case years ago.
“I’m
hoping we finally get to the bottom of this murder,” he said. “It’s a
cover-up. A thorough investigation of it should have been conducted.”
He said Green’s “persons of interest” were unsurprising to him.
“I already knew there was other people involved in it,” Odoms said.
Clay’s pastor, Rev. Wright, questioned why Green’s report has not been released for public inspection.
“My
concern would be why hasn’t the report been released on a broader
scale?” he said. “There seem to be some questions on the investigation
of the police report. That sends up a flag. If we’re talking about
justice, I don’t see why they can’t release it.”
Pless Jones,
president of the Maryland Minority Contractors Association, knew Clay
for 30 years and said he was a relentless fighter for minority business
representation.
“He put everything he had into the community. We
marched together and protested together,” Jones said. “We’d like to see
his killer brought to justice.”