Attorney says focus on Zoloft hurt boy's defense

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WINNSBORO, S.C. --- A 12-year-old South Carolina boy who killed his grandparents, blaming Zoloft, might have been better off if his attorneys had been focused on his defense instead of on drawing attention to the possible side effects of antidepressants, one of the boy's lawyers testified Thursday.

"The biggest fear that I had was that we needed more perspective from a criminal defense lawyer in South Carolina," Karen Menzies, a civil litigator who was one of several attorneys on Christopher Pittman's original team.

Ms. Menzies testified during the second day of testimony in a hearing that will determine if Mr. Pittman gets a new trial.

In 2001, when he was 12, Mr. Pittman killed his grandparents, Joe and Joy Pittman, with a shotgun and set fire to their Chester County home.

He took off in the family's car, initially telling police a black man committed the crimes but later saying he shot the couple as they slept.

During his 2005 trial, Mr. Pittman's attorneys unsuccessfully argued that the antidepressant Zoloft was to blame for his crimes. Now a new defense team is asking for a new trial, arguing that the original attorneys made mistakes. Circuit Judge Roger Young is hearing testimony and will make that decision later.

Ms. Menzies, a California attorney specializing in pharmaceutical litigation, says she was put on Mr. Pittman's defense team because of her expertise in dealing with drug companies.

Ms. Menzies worked with Andy Vickery and said the pair hoped to draw attention to the possible harmful side effects of antidepressants.

The case spurred a media maelstrom.

"It was not helpful to Chris' case," Ms. Menzies said. "I think, in the end, it was detrimental."

Taking the stand next, Mr. Vickery denied taking the case purely to publicize his own fight.

Mr. Vickery also said he worked extensively on a plea deal for Mr. Pittman before jurors returned with a guilty verdict, but says prosecutors would only agree to a deal under which Mr. Pittman would serve a maximum sentence.

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justus4
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justus4 08/28/09 - 07:05 am
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getalife
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getalife 08/28/09 - 08:23 am
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It is sad when people make up

It is sad when people make up a story to cover what they did themselves. This story only proves there are people that lie about a crime. All of the blacks that are accused of committing crimes are not made up lies. Justus4, you should be mad about the black on black crimes that fills the paper everyday. I don't think it is racial profiling when 15% of the population are committing over 90% of the crimes.

fht610
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fht610 08/28/09 - 09:13 am
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"It was not helpful to Chris'

"It was not helpful to Chris' case," Ms. Menzies said. "I think, in the end, it was detrimental." Killing his grandparents probably wasn't helpful to Chris' case either.......

lifelongresidient
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lifelongresidient 08/28/09 - 05:06 pm
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i guess the pills gave him

i guess the pills gave him the idea to blame a "black man" or how about this one since zoloff made him do it then why do we get a whole batch of pills and guns and take them to afghanistan and set down them side-by-side and watch the zoloff make the rifles fire......yeah right

corgimom
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corgimom 08/28/09 - 05:37 pm
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You can't be too incompetent

You can't be too incompetent when you have the capacity to make up a lie and try to blame it on someone else. The defense lawyers had no other defense because he killed them in cold blood for no reason.

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