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Today's Paper | May 04, 2024

Updated 22 Mar, 2018 10:49am

Tennis umpire accused of killing aims to clear name

LOS: Lois Goodman was walking out of a hotel on her way to judge a U.S. Open tennis match in New York in 2012 when police swept in to handcuff and arrest her in front of news cameras.

The charge was murder and the victim was her husband of a half-century, Alan Goodman, who had been found dead in their Los Angeles home four months earlier.

It would be another four months before Los Angeles prosecutors acknowledged that they didn’t have a case and dropped the charges. Six years later, Lois Goodman is still fighting to reclaim the reputation that was tarnished by the legal ordeal.

Goodman goes to federal court Wednesday for trial in her lawsuit claiming a doctor at the Los Angeles coroner’s office deprived her civil rights by falsifying the autopsy report.

She says Deputy Medical Examiner Yulai Wang didn’t follow procedure when he changed the cause of death on Alan Goodman’s death certificate from an accident to a homicide without explanation.

Wang has denied the allegations. He still works for the county coroner, but spokesman Ed Winter declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Attorneys in the case are under a court order not to comment until a jury is seated. Wang’s attorneys didn’t return messages seeking comment.

The change in cause of death led to a murder charge and the sensational arrest that included footage of Goodman being driven away in a New York City police squad car.

Police said Goodman bludgeoned her husband with a coffee mug. Her lawyers said the 80-year-old, who was legally blind, tripped and fell down stairs at home while she was officiating a college tennis match and getting a manicure on April 17, 2012.

She returned home that evening to find him dead in bed. A shattered coffee mug was found at the bottom of the stairs.

The charges were dropped in December 2012 after Goodman passed a lie detector test and two other experts retained by prosecutors reviewed the autopsy report and concluded the death was an accident.

Dr. Frank Sheridan, San Bernardino County chief medical examiner, said parts of Wang’s autopsy report were extremely “below standard,” according to court records.

There were no blood spatters that would have been consistent with a beating, none of Lois Goodman’s DNA was on the mug and none of her husband’s blood was found on the clothing she wore that day.

Goodman wants to have the coroner change the cause of death on the death certificate to an accident. She also wants $100,000 that she spent on lawyers, bail and other expenses as well as unspecified damages for the emotional toll of the arrest.

Published in Dawn, March 22nd, 2018

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