[WORKING/BETA DRAFT]
Thirty Years of
Executions with Reasonable Doubts:
A Brief
Analysis of Some Modern Executions
by Karl Keys*
Since Gary Gilmore on January
17,
1977
said "let's do it" over 1000 persons have been executed by various
means
around the country. Twenty-five of those case are identified below as
having
occurred despite reasonable doubts as to the guilt of the person
executed.
In half of those cases the evidence suggests more than a reasonable
doubt,
but the likelihood, and in six cases, a strong likelihood, of an
innocent
person having been executed.
None
of the
men listed below has been officially exonerated. I doubt they will ever
be due to lack of a forum to raise their claims.. But the evidence that
has come to light since they
were put to death points to serious doubt as to their guilt, and in the
overwhelming majority of the cases their innocence. This list will
invariably be condemned as wishful thinking by those who seek comfort
in the belief that no innocent men have been executed recently in
America, but the evidence says otherwise.
Methodology
As the basis of the list no
attempt
is made
to include an exhaustive presentation of evidence, rather the list is drawn from
various sources including press accounts, court papers, and
opinions.�
I have been writing online for a decade on the death penalty,�
including, for many years, reviews of every published capital case in
the nation.� I have handled at this point in my career well
over a thousand felony cases and more than a few where the defendant
was facing life or even death.� Comparing those sources with my
experience I look simply� to the tell-tale signs that the
government simply convicted, and this case, executed, the wrong man,
scant evidence combined with junk science, unreliable testimony, hidden
evidence and shoddy listing.� If the list serves as an opening point in a
discussion about how to safeguard
innocence
in light current American political realities, it will have been well
worth the effort.
The list is broken down as
follows:�
[1] cases of high
probability
of innocents being executed;�
[2] cases of probable
innocents
being
executed;�
[3] cases where execution
occurred despite
evidence of that would cause most reasonable people to harbor a
reasonable
question as to innocence;�
[4] the first section is
unequivocal near
misses where the person was cleared of all charges and either came
within
a few days of execution OR had been denied through several rounds of
appeals
, if a truly innocent person can get this close than logic dictates
that
the line may well have been crossed;�
[5] a summary listing of
some
cases excluded
from the study where claims of innocence were excluded from the study,
chiefly due to lack of readily obtainable materials.�
Claims of innocence revolving
around
solely
technical legal grounds and not actual innocence have been excluded
from
analysis.�
In light of the number of
people
listed,
this study by no means represents an exhaustive analysis of each case,
rather, the study summarizes some of the evidence of innocence and
leaves
for others, in most cases, to examine reasons for why the system failed
in a given case. �
Since the list debuted in
2001two
names have been added without much effort, Ruben Cantu (Texas) and Cameron
Todd Willingham (Texas), due to the work of others.� Likewise at
least one name has changed position on the list, Larry Griffin
(Missouri), whose case has been
upgraded to high� likelihood of innocence.� I should note,
however, that one name has been
removed from the list,
Roger Coleman,� as additional evidence has been discovered that
convincing proved his guilt� -- evidence that the State had
refused
to test for close to two decades.
In the coming weeks I am
hoping to
use the power of wikis
Cases of High Likelihood
Innocence
Cases where a person has been
executed
despite
a high likelihood of innocence:�
[1] James Adams (Florida)
Adams
was convicted
of first-degree murder, sentenced to death, and executed in 1984. A
witness
who identified Adams as driving the car away from the victim's home
shortly
after the crime was later discovered that this witness was angry with
Adams
for allegedly dating his wife. A second witness heard a voice inside
the
victim's home at the time of the crime and saw someone fleeing. He
stated
this voice was a woman's; the day after the crime he stated that the
fleeing
person was positively not Adams. More importantly, a hair sample found
clutched in the victim's hand, which in all likelihood had come from
the
assailant, did not match Adams' hair. Much of this exculpatory
information
was not discovered until a skilled investigator a month before Adams'
execution
examined the case.
[2] Ruben
Cantu (Texas) Ruben Cantu was
executed in August 1993 for a robbery-murder that was committed in San
Antonio in 1985, when he was 17. In November 2005, the Houston
Chronicle reported that Cantu's co-defendant, who plead guilty to
participating in the crime but did not testify at Cantu's trial, has
signed an affidavit swearing that Cantu was not with him that night and
had no role in the murder. More important, the only eyewitness who did
testify—a second victim, who was shot nine times but survived—now says
that the police pressured him to identify Cantu as the shooter, and
that he did so even though he knew that Cantu was innocent.
The Houston
Chronicle and San
Antonio Express-News, sister papers in the
Hearst chain, published reports calling into
questions the execution of Cantu.
[3] Willie Darden
(Florida):
Darden was
convicted of the murder of a store owner during an attempted robbery.
Alibi
evidence later surfaced from two independent witnesses came to light in
1986. The witness stated that Darden could not have committed the
murder.
State and federal rules governing the discovery of newly discovered
evidence
following trial, however, prevented the evidence from ever being
addressed
in any court. Even before this new evidence emerged, the U.S. Supreme
Court
was bitterly divided over the case and upheld the conviction by a
narrow
five to four majority. The dissenting justices criticized the majority
for being "willing to tolerate a level of fairness and reliability so
low
it should make conscientious prosecutors cringe." Darden was executed
on
March 15, 1988.
[4] Carlos
Deluna (Texas) DeLuna was
convicted of stabbing a
convenience store clerk to death in 1983.The real killer,
according to a recent Chicago
Tribune investigation,� was a career criminal named Carlos
Hernandez. Hernandez bore an uncanny resemblance to DeLuna, and had a
record for knife attacks similar to the 1983 convenience
store killing. Hernandez also had repeatedly confessed to the homicide
to friends and family.� DeLuna's only conviction was the crime for
which he was sentenced to death.
[5] Larry
Griffin (Missouri)
Griffin
was convicted for killing Quintin Moss in a drive-by shooting in St.
Louis,
Missouri on June 26, 1980. Griffin's lawyer was a recent law school
graduate
who had never tried a murder case. The chief evidence against
Griffin was a career criminal with several felony charges pending
against him
who claimed he saw Griffin commit the offense.� Griffin's untested
lawyer did not
call
three eyewitnesses who would have been able to substantiate Griffin's
claim
of innocence - including a second victim who knew Griffin and said it
simply wasn't him. The state's primary witness later recanted his
testimony
and discredited his identification of Larry Griffin, claiming the had
been
"helped" in the identification process,� The "actual
innocence"
standard imposed by the U.S. Supreme Court in reviewing state court
decisions
(see Herrera below) resulted in Griffin's actual innocence claims not
being
heard by the courts despite substantial evidence of innocence. Evidence
in that case has led the city's top prosecutor to reopen the case,
saying she hopes a complete investigation will increase public
confidence in the criminal justice system.
[6] Dawud Abdullah Muhammad
(formerly
David Junior Brown) (North Carolina) Prosecution withheld eyewitnesses
and physical evidence from Mr. Muhammad, both during his trial and on
appeal.
Withheld for 14 years was also a statement by a witness who saw the
victims
alive during the time the prosecution theorized the murders were being
committed. The prosecution a witness who could have testified that the
victims' car had been moved around the time they were seen by the
witness
who had seen them alive. Two witnesses saw a man with long blonde hair
jump from the balcony of the victims' apt. when the murders could have
occurred, Dawud was black. A long blonde hair found at the crime scene
was later lost. The trial was before an all white jury.
[7] David
Spence (Texas): Spence, the prosecution argued, committed triple
murder
at the direction of Muneer Deeb, who the state claimed was a drug
dealer.
Deeb allegedly wanted several people dead and then presented evidence
that
linked the targets of the murder for hire to Deeb. The prosecution than
argued that Spence killed the wrong people because he mistook them for
the intended target. Someone other than Spence, Terry Harper, confessed
to the crime on four separate occasions to four separate people
including
at least twice prior to the bodies being found. [fn 2] Under Texas
evidentiary
law at the time of trial the confession of a person not charged with
the
crime for which the accused is inadmissible and therefore the
prosecution
did not have to turn over the evidence. Following the trial, many, if
not
most, of the prosecution's jailhouse informants came forwarded and
admitted
either perjuring themselves or receiving some form of restitution for
their
testimony. Deeb, the person who supposedly hired Spence to do the
killing,
had his capital conviction reversed on appeal unrelated to innocence.
At
Deeb's new trial much of the evidence unearthed by Spence's legal team
was used to obtain Deeb an exoneration.*
[8] Roy Stewart (Florida):
Stewart's
conviction of the murder of a woman in 1979 rested almost solely on the
testimony of a witness who testified that he had confessed the killing.
Several years after the trial witness recanted stating that she gave
her
story for the sole purpose of avoiding a jail sentence herself for
forgery
and possession of marijuana. She was released from jail following her
testimony
at Stewart's trial and was paid a cash reward for her false story.
Three
state's Attorneys who prosecuted Stewart later came forward opposing
the
execution for lack of evidence. One of the state's Attorneys said, "The
state completely botched the investigation of the scene. They threw
away
critical evidence. I came to learn... that they also had not pursued
other
defendants who had much more legitimate contact with the decedent than
Mr. Stewart." However, even over the objections of the prosecuting
attorneys,
Roy Stewart was executed on April 22, 1994.�
[9] Jesse Tafero (Florida)
Tafero
was
sentenced to death along with Sonia Jacobs for the murder of two
policemen
at a highway rest stop in 1976. A third co-defendant received a life
sentence
after pleading guilty and testifying against Jacobs and Tafero. A
childhood
friend and film maker, Micki Dickoff, then became interested in Jacobs
case. Jacobs's conviction was overturned on a federal writ of habeas
corpus
in 1992. Following the discovery that the chief prosecution witness had
failed a lie-detector test, the prosecutor accepted a plea in which
Jacobs
did not admit guilt, and she was released shortly thereafter. Jesse
Tafero,
whose conviction was based on much of the same highly questionable
evidence,
had been executed in 1990, two years before the evidence of innocence
had
been uncovered.�
[10]
Cameron
Todd Willingham (Texas) Convicted of arson murder in 1992 and
executed
in
2004. He was convicted of murdering his three children in a 1991 house
fire. An independent investigation, reported by the Chicago Tribune, found that
prosecutors and arson investigators used arson theories that have since
been repudiated by scientific advances.�� In December 2004, a
Chicago
Tribune series on junk science concluded that Cameron Todd
Willingham, executed earlier that year, had been convicted on the basis
of discredited arson analysis. A recent report by the Innocence
Project, conducted by a team of leading arson experts, supports the
Tribune story.
Cases of Strong
Evidence of
Innocence
An additional set of cases are
noted
where
a person has been executed despite strong evidence of innocence (the
weight
of the evidence is subject to dispute, although a strong case can be
made
for innocence). In at least once case below, an upgrade from probable
to
highly likely may occur before the issuance of the final report.�
[1] Walter Blair (Missouri)
Blair's claims
of innocence were never heard because he presented them to late
(successor
habeas proceedings). Blair produced seven affidavits which had strongly
suggested his factual innocence. Five of the affiants alleged that
another
man, Ernest Jones, admitted in their presence that he had killed the
victim
and framed Blair. Unlike Herrera's case (see below) these did not rely
on hearsay, and there were no internal inconsistencies on the relevant
points among the seven affidavits. There also was a plausible
explanation
for the delay in bringing forth the evidence as all seven affiants
testified
they feared Jones because they knew he previously had committed
multiple
murders. One affiant was a trial witness; her affidavit claimed that
she
had falsified her trial testimony at Jones' direction because she
feared
him. The petition also alleged prosecutorial misconduct, allegations,
that
were likewise never fully aired.
[2] Girvies Davis
(Illinois)
Davis was
convicted of the death of Charles Biebel. There were no witnesses to
Mr.
Biebel's the robbery/murder and there was no physical evidence at the
crime
scene to help identify the murderer. Despite the fact that Davis was
illiterate,
borderline mentally retarded and suffered from mental illness, he
allegedly
wrote a list of his crimes, confessing to more than a dozen other
crimes,
including eleven murders. This confession was the only evidence linking
Davis to the crime. Before the trial, the prosecutor acknowledged that
several of Davis's confessions appeared to have been false. The
prosecution
acknowledged
that Davis was not the trigger man in the Biebel killing, however, the
alleged
trigger man was never tried in relation to the murder. A jury from
which
purportedly all African Americans were systematically removed tried
Davis, an
African
American.�
[3] Barry Fairchild
(Arkansas)
Fairchild was
sentenced to death in August 1983 for the kidnap, rape and shooting
death
of Marjorie "Greta" Mason. The conviction was based solely on a
videotaped
'confession'. Blood, hair, and semen samples could not be linked to
Fairchild.
The 'confession' video shows Barry Fairchild's head wrapped in
bandages,
indicating he was subject to severe beating. Thirteen other black men
were
questioned by Pulaski County Sheriff Tommy Robinson and Deputy Larry
Dill
and also subjected to extreme physical and mental torture. Michael
Johnson,
questioned at the same time as Fairchild, states he heard Fairchild's
screams
and noises similar to beating using a baseball bat. Sheriff Tommy
Robinson
and Deputy Larry Dill denied ever using excessive force to obtain
confessions.
Two Federal Court judges, while upholding the death sentence, have
ruled
that Fairchild was not the actual killer.�
[4] Ellis Felker
(Georgia)
With
in hours of his alleged victims disappearance Felker was the main
suspect.
He was immediately put under police surveillance.� Surveillance
began
fourteen days before the discovery of her body in a
creek.
An autopsy then put her death within the previous five days. When the
government
realized that this would have ruled Felker out as a suspect because he
had been under police surveillance for the previous two weeks, the
findings
of the autopsy were changed. Attorneys representing Felker during the
appeals
process showed notes and photographs of Ludlam's body to pathologists
who
unanimously concluded that she could not have been dead for longer than
three days. Unfortunately, Felker discovered this information too late
as Congress changed the standard of late round appeals just prior to
Felker
filing his last appeal. Felker was executed, however, the state of
Georgia
is actively fighting efforts to have Mr. Felker's body, and that of his
victims, exhumed for scientific testing.� Felker -- if factually
innocent -- would have his death directly attributable to the passage
of the AEDPA and its Catch - 22 on certain types of innocence related
evidence.
[5] Gary
Graham (Texas) On May
13, 1981
at approximately 9:30 p.m., Bobby Grant Lambert was shot and killed,
execution
style, as he walked across the parking lot of a Safeway store in
Houston,
Texas. Gary Graham was arrested shortly after the murder for unrelated
crimes, and was then charged with Lambert's murder, for which he was
tried
and convicted. No physical or circumstantial evidence placed Graham at
the crime scene. The prosecution's case against Graham consisted almost
entirely of the testimony of a single eyewitness who saw him through
her
car window from 30 to 40 feet away. In a purportedly suggestive
identification
procedure, this witness failed to identify Graham in a photo array. She
subsequently identified him in a lineup in which he was the only person
who also had been in the photo array. None of the other four
eyewitnesses
identified Graham as the killer or placed him at the crime scene. In
the
police line up, which included Graham, one eyewitness specifically
excluded
Graham. Graham's physical appearance differed in important respects
from
the descriptions provided by several witnesses. Two witnesses, who saw
the man thought to be the killer at close range, have provided
affidavits
in which they assert that, having viewed Graham's photograph, they are
positive that he was not the shooter. Graham's court appointed trial
lawyer
did not interview or present at trial the other eyewitnesses or
Graham's
alibi witnesses. One of the eyewitnesses has stated under oath that he
has seen the person who shot Lambert at least twice since the murders
on
the streets of Houston. The Houston Police Department's firearms expert
found that the bullet that killed the victim, although of the same
caliber
as Graham's gun, was not, and could not have been, from Graham's gun.
Lambert,
a white man, had faced federal drug trafficking charges in Oklahoma
City
after his arrest in 1980. He was forced to testify before a federal
grand
jury about the persons for whom he was transporting drugs. He was
killed
soon after he testified. Lambert's attorneys informed Graham's counsel
before the execution that they had reason to believe that Lambert was
killed
by the drug organization with which he was involved. Evidence of
Graham's
innocence was never heard in a court of law.
[6] Freddie Lee Wright
(Alabama)
Wright
was convicted and executed for the murders of Warren and Lois Green.
The
Greens were a white couple & Wright black. The jury that sentenced
him to death was all white. Wright's first trial ended in a mistrial
with
eleven out of twelve jurors voting to acquit. No physical evidence
linked
Wright to the crime. Wright's co-defendants testified against him in
exchange
for receiving lesser sentences. Two of those co-defendants later
recanted.
One named another man as the killer. The man who was originally
arrested
for the crime was never tried, even though his gun was identified as
the
murder weapon. The state would later admit that it withheld evidence
relating
to deals made with several of its witnesses as well as intentionally
suppressing
its star witness at the second trial. Two state Supreme Court justices
voted to stay Wright's execution finding clear and convincing evidence
of his innocence. Wright's attorney was subsequently disbarred.
Cases of Plausible Innocence
The last set of cases are
executions
where
a person has been executed despite plausible evidence of innocence (the
weight of the evidence is subject to dispute, although a case can be
made
for innocence). In several of the case below, an upgrade to possible to
probable is likely in a future edition of the list.�
[1] Brian
Baldwin (Alabama)
Baldwin was executed despite compelling evidence of his innocence and
evidence
that he did not receive a fair trial. Forensic evidence discovered
shortly
before Baldwin's execution showed that the deadly blows were the work
of
a left-handed assailant, Baldwin was right handed. Years after Baldwin
had been convicted and sentenced to death, Baldwin's co-defendant,
Edward
Horsley, confessed in a letter that he, alone, was responsible for the
murder of Naomi Rolon and that Baldwin knew nothing about the killing
until
Rolon's body was discovered by police. Police are alleged to have
repeatedly
beat and intimidated Baldwin until he signed a confession. Baldwin's
confession
failed to name the correct weapon and failed to provide an accurate
description
of the murder. The confession was later altered to fit the facts, as
revealed
by Baldwin's co-defendant. Baldwin's trial lasted a total of one and
one-half
days, including jury selection, jury deliberation, and sentencing.�
[2] Derek Rocco Barnabei
(Virginia) Barnabei
was convicted and executed for the raping and murdering his girlfriend.
The government argued Barnabei transported the victim's bloody body in
his car but blood and other evidence not discovered in his car. Despite
Barnabei's being sentenced to death, the Commonwealth of Virginia
denied
DNA testing of critical forensic evidence, including the victim's
bloodstained
fingernail clippings. Although the federal district court found on
habeas
corpus review that Barnabei's trial lawyer's work was woefully poor the
court refused to order a new trial.� This matter can be resolved
with a quick $50 DNA test.
[3] Odell
Barnes, Jr. (Texas) Barnes was convicted in 1990 for the murder of
Helen Bass. Eye-witnesses were harassed by police into retracting and
changing
their testimony, one of them stating that Odell was seen running from
the
scene of the crime at 10.30pm when in fact the victim was still at work
until 11.30 the same night. The case presented much evidence of police
interference and corruption of witnesses, of racial bias in the
selection
of jurors, and intimidation of defense lawyers.�
[4] Robert Nelson Drew
(Texas)
Drew and
another man were accused of murder. The second accused, Ernest
Puralewski,
was convicted of the murder and sentenced to 60 years' imprisonment.
Puralewski
later came forward with a signed affidavit in which he stated that he
alone
had been responsible for the crime: "I am the person who murdered
Jeffrey
Mays and Robert Drew is innocent." Robert Drew's lawyers sought a new
hearing
so that this late evidence could be considered on its merits, but their
requests were turned down.
[5] Leonel Herrera (Texas)
Herrera presented
affidavits and exculpatory polygraph results from a variety of
witnesses,
including an eyewitness to the murder and a former Texas state judge,
both
of whom stated that someone else had committed the crime. However, the
Supreme Court ruled that innocence alone does not justify a federal
hearing
on this evidence nor was federal habeas relief available for mere
innocence.�
[6] Richard
Wayne Jones (Texas) Jones was convicted of abducting, robbing, and
then murdering Tammy Livingston on February 19, 1986. After 12 hours of
interrogation and 21 hours in custody without food or sleep, during
which the threatened Jones and his pregnant
girlfriend
with the death penalty if he did not confess, Jones confessed. Three
eyewitnesses
to the abduction provided a description of the suspect as a clean-cut,
white male with reddish-brown hair, who was wearing a red shirt the
night
of the murder. Jones had blonde hair, a mustache, and was wearing a
brown
and gray plaid shirt the night of the murder. According to Jones, his
sister
admitted to him that she and her boyfriend, Walt Sellers, committed the
crimes. Despite the bloodiness of the murder, only two small spots of
blood
were found on Jones's jeans, and no blood was found on his shirt. From
the time he was arrested, Jones maintained that Sellers was the actual
killer. Two witnesses gave sworn statements that they heard Sellers
implicate
himself in the murder. Witnesses corroborated Jones's testimony that
Sellers
had tried to sell items belonging to the victim. Jones had an IQ of 75
and was considered borderline retarded. DNA testing was requested and
denied
prior to execution. � Eyewitnesses tended to exculpate him.
[7] Frank Basil McFarland
(Texas) McFarland
was convicted and executed for killing Terry Hokanson. The state
withheld
evidence regarding the victim's dying declarations at the crime scene:
Three boys found her and two of these boys spoke with her. The one who
did not was the only one to testify at trial. The two boys who spoke
with
the victim gave sworn oral statements and written statements just after
the murder that were suppressed by the state and discovered seven years
later through a Freedom of Information request. All three boys saw a
white
car in the area; only one testified and he mentioned a white car. Six
state
witnesses (5 police officers and one police dispatcher) testified that
the boys said they saw a blue car..
McFarland's
car was blue. DNA testing by an FBI specialist on hair found in the
victim's
hands was inconsistent with that of McFarland or his co-defendant.
Semen
found with the victim was consistent with McFarland and 6% of the
Caucasian
population in the U.S. The state's star witness had warrants out for
his
arrest for parole violation. The victim knew McFarland previous to the
murder; she did not name him before she died, bolstering the defense
position
that her assailants were unknown to her.
[8] Joseph
O'Dell (Virginia)
Sperm found
in the victim's body had different genetic markers
than O'Dell's. Other evidence used to bolster O'Dell's plea included
the
lack of physical evidence; evidence found at the scene -- cigarettes,
footprints
and tire tracks -- not matching O'Dell's personal effects; and an
alleged
confession to Schartner's murder by double murderer David Pruett, who
was
executed in December 1993. Evidence linking him to the murders, in
light
of a DNA test was a "3-probe DNA match between Schartner's blood and
the
bloodstains on (O'Dell's) blue jacket,'' however when studied by four
expert
witnesses for both the defense and prosecution and that the tests were
''found to be in error because. . . the procedure and test were
outdated
according to FBI standards.''�
[9] Roy Michael Roberts
(Missouri) Roberts
was convicted of killing Thomas Jackson, a corrections officer a prison
riot on July 3, 1983. Roy Roberts was accused of holding Jackson, while
other inmates stabbed him. Numerous inmates testified at Roberts's
trial
that he was elsewhere during the riot. Roberts passed a polygraph test
in which he attested to his innocence just weeks before his execution.
Despite a very bloody and grisly murder no blood was found on Roberts
clothing.
Additionally, at least one witness against Roberts has admitted to
perjuring
himself in order to curry favor so as to gain parole.�
[10] Cornelius Singleton
(Alabama) Singleton
was convicted and executed for killing Sister Ann Hogan while praying
in
a cemetery. There was no physical evidence placing Singleton at the
scene
of the crime or linking him to the murder. Singleton had no connection
to the victim and no motive. Eyewitnesses identified the man thought to
be the killer as a white male with blonde hair. Singleton was an
African-American
man. No other suspects were investigated. Singleton had an IQ between
55
and 65. Singleton was taken to the cemetery where the murder took place
and was questioned about details, despite his apparent lack of
knowledge
of the crime. According to Singleton, the victim's pager and some
papers
were on the ground and he was told to pick them up but refused. He was
then returned to the police station where he was told to sign the
confession.
He could not read, but he signed the confession after being told that
other
charges pending against him would be dropped. In fact, no charges were
pending.�
[11] David Stoker (Texas )
Stoker
was
convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of David Manrrique. Of
the three witness who testified against Stoker one has recanted his
testimony
(Thompson), one, a small time drug dealer, had charges dismissed for
his
corroboration (Todd) and the third, described by acquittances at the
time
as a "methamphetamine whore" who was given money for her testimony. The
prosecution denied the existence of deal and cash for testimony until
well
after the trial and went so far as to testify under oath that neither
existed.
The prosecution witness, Thompson, who recanted his testimony has
stated
he testified against Stoker because the prosecutor had threatened him
with
a perjury conviction. Witness Todd had instigated the prosecution of
Stoker
by providing police with the murder weapon. Todd was the key witness,
without
whom, the state had no case. Todd himself was seen by two witnesses in
possession of the pistol around the time of the murder. As one federal
court of appeals judge noted during oral argument, in the final
analysis
it is just as likely that Todd committed the crime as it is that Stoker
did.
The Confirmed Near
Misses
Although there have been
approximately
one
hundred (100) [fn 1] cases where a person was released for reasons of
factual
innocence (rather than legal innocence or some other "technical"
reason)
even a quick overview of handful of these cases provides ample evidence
that the jury system can, and often does, err in capital cases.
[1] Randall Dale Adams
(Texas)
Adams was
found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of killing a police officer.
Sentenced
to death, his appeals were rejected. Just seventy-two hours from
execution,
by a stroke of good fortune, it was established that the wrong man was
about to be put to death. His case was highlighted in the movie in "A
Thin
Blue Line."
[2] Kirk Bloodsworth
(Maryland)
Bloodswoth
was convicted and sentenced to death for the rape and murder of a young
girl. Despite alibi witnesses, he was convicted primarily on the basis
of faulty eyewitness identification. When it was discovered that the
state
failed to disclose exculpatory evidence, Bloodsworth received a new
trial,
and was given a life sentence. He was released after subsequent DNA
testing
confirmed his innocence.�
[3] Clarence Brandley
(Texas)
"Since you're
the nigger your elected" was the famous quote from this case where the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, by Pickett, J., concludes that "the
color
of Clarence Brandley's skin was a substantial factor which pervaded all
aspects of the State's capital prosecution of him." He received his
first
stay 5 days from his scheduled execution. His second stay was granted
13
days from his final walk.
[4] Troy Lee Jones
(California)
The California
Supreme Court ruled in June, 1996 that Jones should have a new trial
because
he was not adequately defended at his original trial for the murder of
Carolyn Grayson in 1981. The Court found that the defense attorney
failed
to conduct an adequate pretrial investigation, speak with possible
witnesses,
obtain a relevant police report, or seek pretrial investigative funds.
Moreover, the attorney elicited damaging testimony against his own
client
during cross examination of a witness. The prosecution announced that
it
was dropping all charges against Jones in November, 1996, after he had
been on death row for 14 years.
[5] Peter Limone
(Massachusetts)
Thirty
-three years after being convicted and seentenced to death for a 1965
murder,
Peter Limone's conviction has been overturned and the case against him
officially dropped. The move came as a result of a Justice Department
task
force's discovery of compelling new evidence that Limone and his
co-defendants
Joseph Salvati, Henry Tamelo, and Louis Greco were actually innocent of
the murder of Edward Deegan. In 1968, all four were convicted and
Limone
was sentenced to die in Massachusetts' electric chair, but was spared
in
1974 when Massachusetts abolished the death penalty and his sentence
were
commuted to life in prison. Salvati, who was released from prison in
1997
when the governor commuted his sentence, received word from prosecutors
that they were dropping the case against him as well. Tamelo and Greco
both died in prison. At trial, the main witness against the four men
was
Joseph Barboza, a hit man cooperating with prosecutors, who later
admitted
that he had fabricated much of his testimony. The recently revealed FBI
documents show that informants had told the FBI before the murder that
Deegan would soon be killed and by whom, and a memorandum after the
crime
listed the men involved. Neither list included Limone, Salvati, Tamelo
or Greco. (New York Times, 2/2/01 and Boston Herald, 1/21/01).�
[6] Andrew Lee Mitchell
(Texas)
Mitchell
was granted relief on appeal due to suppressed evidence and other
evidence
of innocence, he was released from custody in 1993 and has not been
reindicted,
he came within 48 hours of execution.
[7] Roberto Miranda (Nevada)
Miranda was
released in September 1996 after the prosecution declined to retry him
following the reversal of his conviction. Miranda had maintained his
innocence
through his 14 years on death row. He originally came to the U.S. from
Cuba during the Mariel boatlift. Prosecutors originally offered him a
plea
bargain whereby he would serve as little as 10 years in prison, but he
refused because he was innocent. One day after being released from
death
row with only the clothes on his back and a few belongings, he was
incarcerated
by the Immigration Service. He was subsequently released pending a
deportation
hearing. At trial, Miranda had been represented by an attorney with one
year's experience who had inherited the case when his colleague died.
In
overturning his conviction, the judge wrote: "The lack of pretrial
preparation
by trial counsel . . . cannot be justified."
[8] Anthony Porter
(Illinois)
Porter is one of thirteen men released from Illinois's death row in the
modern era for actual innocence. He was arguably the luckiest. Porter
was
released in February, 1999 on the motion of the State's Attorney after
another man confessed on videotape to the double 1982 murder that sent
Porter to death row. Charges were filed against the other man, who
claimed
he killed in self-defense. The case was broken by investigator Paul
Ciolino
working with Prof. David Protess and journalism students from
Northwestern
University. Their investigation also found that another witness had
been
pressured by police to testify against Porter. Porter came within 2
days
of execution in 1998 and was only spared because the court wanted to
look
into his mental competency. Porter has an IQ of 51. His conviction was
officially reversed on March 11, 1999.
[9] Joe Spaziano (Florida)
Spaziano survived
numerous execution warrants despite very flimsy evidence in his case
and
substantial evidence of innocence, conviction was flipped in 1996
(twenty
years after his conviction).�
[10] Earl Washington (Virginia)
Earl Washington
suffers from mental retardation. After he was arrested on another
charge
in 1983, police convinced him to make a statement concerning the rape
and
murder of a woman in Culpeper in 1982. He later recanted that
statement.
Subsequent DNA tests confirmed that Washington did not rape the victim,
who had lived long enough to state that there was only one perpetrator
of the crime. The DNA results combined with the victim's statement all
but exonerated Washington. Shortly before leaving office in 1994,
Governor
Wilder commuted Washington's sentence to life with the possibility of
parole.
In 2000, additional DNA tests were ordered and the results again
excluded
Washington as the rapist. In October 2000, Virginia Governor Jim
Gilmore
granted Earl Washington an absolute pardon.
Other Claims of Innocence
Cases in which no evaluation has
been
made
as to the legitimacy of the claim of innocence include:�
Johnny Anderson
(Texas)
Charles Boyd(Texas)
Domingo Cantu (Texas)
Maurice O. Byrd (Missouri)
Losada
Davis(Texas)
Wilbert Lee Evans
(Virginia)
Mack Hill (Texas)
Billy Hughes (Texas)
Tommy Ray Jackson� (Texas)
Jesse Jacobs (Texas)
Carl Johnson (Texas)
Eddie Johnson (Texas)
Leo Jones (Florida)
Richard Jones (Texas)
Andrew Kokoraleis
(Illinois)
Stacey Lawton(Texas)
Thomas Mason (Texas)
Paul Nuncio (Texas)
Kenneth Ransom (Texas)
Gerald Smith (Missouri)
Martin Sauceda Vega
(Texas)
Anthony Westley (Texas)
Sample Sources:
Academic Works:
Court files:
- Barnes v. Johnson (5th Cir.
98-20504)
- Barnes v.
State (CCA No. 70,858)
- Barnes v. State (CCA No.
71,291)
- Ex Parte
Barnes
(CCA No. 30,357)
- Ex parte Jones, (CCA No.
25,990)
- Jones v. State (CCA
No. 69,894)
- Jones v. State�
(Tex. App.-Dallas No.
05-91-00997)
- Stoker v. Collins (N.D.
Tex.
5:92-CV-148)
-
Stoker v. Scott (5thCir. No. 94-11089)
- Stoker v. State (CCA No.
70,031)
Other:
- A
Closer Look at Five Cases That Resulted in Executions of Texas Inmates by Raymond Bonner & Sara Rimer, New York Times (May 14, 2000)
- A Question of Guilt,
Dallas
Morning News by �
Dan Malone
(Aug.
3, 2000)
- ABC's
World News Tonight (June 24, 2006)�
- Bush Candidacy Puts Focus on
Executions,
by Sara Rimer & Raymond Bonner, New York Times (May 14, 2000)
- Commonwealth
v. Joseph O'Dell: Truth and Justice or Confuse the Courts? The DNA
Controversy by Lori Urs, New
England School of Law:
- Death
Row Man Executed by BBC News (June 23, 2000)
- Did
Texas Execute An Innocent Man? by Lise Olsen, Houston Chronicle (2005)
- Did
This Man Die...for This Man's Crime? Chicago Tribune's Investigation, (cite)
- Did
Missouri Execute An Innocent Man?
by Associated Press (July 12, 2005)
- Executed But Possibly Innocent, Death Penalty Information
Center (http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?&did=2238, last
visited March 8, 2007)
- The
Execution
machine, HBO (2000)
- Flawed Trials Lead to Death
Chamber: Bush Confident
in System Rife with Problems, by Steve Mills, Ken
Armstrong
& Douglas Holt, Chicago Tribune (June 11, 2000)
- Guilt of Texas
Inmate Gary Graham Debated as Execution Draws Near by CNN (June 21, 2000)
- Killing Time by Bob Burton,
Houston Post (January
27,
2000)
- Missouri
Execution Case Reopened from NPR:
All Things Considered (July 12, 2005)
- Politics
Swirl In Death Probe by Marco
Robbins, San
Antonio Express-News (March
19, 2006)
- Texas
Man Executed on Disproved Forensics
by Steve Mills and Maurice Possle, Chicago Tribune (December 9, 2004)
- Virginia Inmate Executed
Despite International Campaign by
CNN (July 23, 1997)
Notes:
* Karl Keys is a lawyer with extensive case involvement in death
penalty
litigation. For the last ten years he has been the editor of Capital
Defense Weekly & its predecessor, A Capital Defender's
Toolbox.�
[fn 1]The details of the other
100+
person
unequivocally cleared of the murders for which the were sent to death
row
and how close they came to being executed are not discussed due to
space/time
limitations. For a complete listing of those convicted of a capital
crime
in the modern era for which they were later exonerated please visit http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/.
First drafted in 2001, last
updated
March 10, 2007
*Note I was involved
in the representation of this individual while in law school
�
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