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McCullough letter: ‘Set me free’

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McCullough did not testify on his own behalf at trial.

DeKalb County State’s Attorney Clay Campbell said Hallock ruled the FBI records were inadmissible because no one named in them had any independent knowledge as to McCullough’s whereabouts. Records indicate that McCullough told several people he had an alibi, not that anyone could establish he had an alibi.

“The truth is that the FBI reports did not and could not clear the defendant,” Campbell said.

McCullough’s attorney, interim Public Defender Tom McCulloch, said the passage of almost 55 years since Ridulph’s death seemed to be on the state’s side in the case, and the ruling that the FBI records were inadmissible likely will be a large part of an appeal.

“I think the problem ... is the passage of time made everything that was favorable to Jack inadmissible, at least according to the judge’s ruling,” he said. “I don’t think there is a rational explanation right at the moment.”

McCulloch said the records show McCullough made certain phone calls from Rockford to Sycamore at the time the kidnapping was said to have occurred.

“If ever there was a great alibi, that was it,” he said. “That’s all we wanted to do was use the records we were given.”

Maria’s older brother, Charles Ridulph, said there was plenty of evidence that showed McCullough was not where he claimed to be at the time of Ridulph’s kidnapping.

“But the evidence was there to disprove his alibi, had he presented one,” Charles Ridulph said.

Even if McCullough made the phone call from Rockford at 6:57 p.m., as the documents mentioned, Ridulph’s abduction took place about an hour earlier, Charles Ridulph said.

“There was plenty of time for that phone call,” he said.

Before an appeal would be filed, defense attorneys can take other steps. McCulloch said he plans to file a post-trial motion, although he’s not optimistic, in the next week to 10 days.

Asking for a new trial is a procedural requirement, but it’s not terribly productive, he said.

McCullough, who has been held at the county jail since July 2011, is set to be sentenced Nov. 30, and McCulloch said they would likely file a motion to reconsider the sentence afterward.


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