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To: Bucks counties D.A. Office Christopher Rees, Antonetta Stanc Township Police Detective Timothy Fuhrmannu

Justice for Cka'Ron Handy

I want them to find the person who actually committed the murder and Set Cka'ron Handy free. This is an act of injustice. Cka'ron Handy is innocent. The prosecutor knew their star witness for the grand jury Kyle Page was in jail at the time of the crime and they used him to present a lie. The prosecutor also concocted a story with other criminals based on a lie to close the case. Witness such Jali Cooper and James Williams received a jail past as well as Kyle Page.

Why is this important?

Cka'Ron is innocent. That's what's important to me. Cka'Ron also has a son who just turned 9 years old. He is a bright kind-hearted intelligent young man who needs his father in his life. The D.A. falsified and knowingly used people in desperate situations to convict someone. There is no evidence, no weapons, no DNA. The investigator also had other leads and refuse to investigate them. How is this permitted? We have not been able to obtain his transcripts because the court of Buck County Refuses to send them to him. How can he defend himself?

How it will be delivered

in person and stage a press conference.

Updates

2019-01-05 09:29:47 -0800

100 signatures reached

2018-07-28 03:52:08 -0700

50 signatures reached

2018-07-27 16:42:48 -0700

25 signatures reached

2018-07-27 15:00:02 -0700

10 signatures reached

2018-07-27 13:42:52 -0700

Cops: Murder Witness Couldn’t Have Seen Killing Because He Was In Jail
Tom Sofield December 8, 2014
As jury selection for 26-year-old Bristol Township murder suspect Ckaron Handy was beginning at the Doylestown courthouse, Kyle Marcel Page was being arraigned on charges he lied to authorities about being a witness to the 2006 killing.
Kyle Marcel Page Credit: Tom Sofield/LevittownNow.com
Kyle Marcel Page
Credit: Tom Sofield/LevittownNow.com
Page, 29, was arraigned on multiple charges of perjury before District Judge Joanne Kline Monday morning. He was sent to Bucks County prison on 10 percent of $25,000 bail.
court papers say Page lied to a grand jury twice in 2009 and before District Judge Joanne Kline during Handy’s preliminary hearing in 2013.

On October 31, the staff at the county jail confirmed for detectives that Page was in prison the night of the December murder and could not have seen Handy pull the trigger.

according to court papers.