"Diamond wrote Crist and said there were no photos or video that could prove the case, and no witnesses who could say with 100 percent certainty that Morrison exposed himself."

Eso he dicho yo en multitud de ocasiones: Si hubiera ocurrido habría alguna foto, algún video.
http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070417/BREAKINGNEWS/70417038
April 17, 2007



Crist taking Jim Morrison pardon seriously

ASSOCIATED PRESS


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You people are ignorant, most of you who are against this or call it a waste of time. The Governor was elected to do his job and part of his job is to review pardon & clemency requests. Morrison was a Florida citizen who was denied due process. Oh wait- you all are worried about property taxes and insurance rates as if those are the only 2 pressing issues in the world! Never mind the criminal justice system is flawed! Here's a chance for Crist to restore some integrity to the system and I am all for it! Better late than never and I applaud the people involved with this.

Posted by: DanM on Wed Apr 18, 2007 6:19 am


ya know forumteers with all of the depressing and pressing issues on Good Time Charlies plate a little mindless FEEL GOOD decission might just do HIM some good as well.

i dont think this is taking him from his duties, nor is it lessening the importance of taxes and insurance, but give it a rest, will ya.

yall are acting like he just put everything in his bottom drawer and took a 5 month vacatation at his texas ranch.

OH WAIT A SECOND .. that was DUMBO between inaugeration day and 9-11-2001

Posted by: aved0n on Tue Apr 17, 2007 11:23 pm


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Enlarge this image Melbourne-born rocker. Jim Morrison was convicted in 1970 of indecent exposure and profanity stemming from a Miami concert the year before.


GAINESVILLE — Gov. Charlie Crist just finished trying to save the world with rock star Sheryl Crow when his attention turned to a music icon — Melbourne-born Jim Morrison — and whether he should help grant the former Doors singer a posthumous pardon.

After a rally with Crow at the University of Florida on Monday to stop global warming, Crist got on a plane for the capital and seemed lost in thought. He then turned and said he is seriously thinking about seeking a pardon for Morrison’s 1970 indecent exposure and profanity conviction stemming from a Miami concert the year before.

“He died when he was 27. That’s really a kid, when you think about it, and obviously he was having some challenges. There’s some dispute about how solid the case was,” Crist said.

The arrest generated a lot of attention at the time and is still a part of the Morrison legend. He was drunk at the concert and police said he exposed himself, which Morrison denied. He did curse repeatedly at the concert, though. Morrison appealed the conviction, but was found dead in a Paris bathtub before it could be heard.

“Trying to clear his name and then he dies. If you have a heart pounding in your chest, that has to tug at you a little bit. It should,” Crist said.

The issue was brought to his attention by Ohio resident Dave Diamond last month. Diamond wrote Crist and said there were no photos or video that could prove the case, and no witnesses who could say with 100 percent certainty that Morrison exposed himself.

As for the profanity charge, Diamond pointed out that New York Gov. George Pataki pardoned comedian Lenny Bruce of an obscenity charge nearly four decades after his death, and that Morrison was at a rock concert, not a church.

Diamond said in an e-mail Tuesday that a pardon would correct a legal injustice and bring relief to the Morrison family and the surviving Doors band members who “have had to live with the embarrassment of this botched case.” He said it would put the focus back on Morrison’s poetic and musical contributions.

Crist said he has his legal team reviewing the case and determining the procedure for granting a pardon. Crist sits on the Clemency Board with the state’s three Cabinet members — Attorney General Bill McCollum, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink and Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson. While there are no procedures for posthumous pardons, at least three members of the board must approve a pardon in other circumstances.

Bronson said he saw The Doors in concert twice. He said he was willing to go along with the pardon, especially since Morrison was only convicted of a misdemeanor at a time when young people were expressing themselves in unique ways.

“I do remember it. It was kind of a big headline deal for a few days,” Bronson said of the arrest. “In those days in time, people were streaking up and down the football field. I can remember those days very well.”

Crist, certainly, is willing to forgive youthful indiscretion.

“Who doesn’t do things that maybe they wish they hadn’t done when you’re that young? And then there was a problem with drugs,” Crist said.

“I can remember when I was 10-years-old listening to the song come on, baby ’Light my Fire.’ Classic. Classic. And to have that much talent and to have it sucked out, even if there was some self-involvement ... that’s very sad and very tragic."