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Thread: Family seeks to clear man who died in prison

  1. #1
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    Family seeks to clear man who died in prison

    DALLAS, Texas (CNN) -- The family of Timothy Cole, a Texas man who died in prison nearly a decade ago while serving a sentence for a rape he swore he did not commit, is hoping a court will issue the state's first posthumous exoneration.
    Timothy Cole died in prison while serving a sentence for a rape DNA tests show he did not commit.

    Cole was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison for the 1985 rape of 20-year-old Michele Mallin. He maintained his innocence, but it was not confirmed by DNA until years after his 1999 death, when another inmate confessed to the rape.

    "Everybody thinks he died a felon, a hardened criminal," Cole's brother, Cory Session, told CNN. "That's what hurts."

    The court hearing on the exoneration was set to begin Thursday afternoon and last into Friday.

    Mallin, who has spoken publicly about the case, will join Cole's family in the Austin, Texas, courtroom. They want a judge to clear Cole's name, according to the Innocence Project of Texas, a nonprofit organization that seeks to help the wrongfully convicted.

    Among those expected to testify are Mallin and Jerry Wayne Johnson, her confessed rapist.

    Then a student at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Mallin was walking to her car, intending to move it to another parking lot, when a man approached her asking about jumper cables, she told CNN. In a matter of seconds, he put her in a chokehold, a knife to her neck. He forced himself into her car and drove her to the outskirts of town, where he raped her.

    The next day, police investigators showed Mallin pictures of possible suspects. She chose a picture of Cole and said he was her attacker. She later identified him in a physical lineup, according to the Innocence Project of Texas.

    "I was positive," she told CNN. "I really thought it was him."

    But there was one detail: Mallin told police her attacker was a smoker. "He was smoking the entire time."

    And Cole, who suffered from severe asthma, "was never a smoker," Session said. "He took daily medications (for asthma) when he was younger."

    "He was the sacrificial lamb. To them, my brother was the Tech rapist, there was no backtracking. It was the trial of the decade for Lubbock."

    The "Tech rapist" attacked four women other than Mallin -- abducting them in parking lots near campus and driving them to a vacant location, where he would rape them and flee on foot, according to the Innocence Project of Texas. The rapist "terrorized" the Texas Tech campus in the mid-1980s, the organization said.

    Cole, like Mallin, was a student at Texas Tech. He had finished two years of college previously and was returning to school after spending two years in the Army, his brother said.

    But his dreams of getting married and having children never materialized. He was arrested and charged with Mallin's rape, declining a plea bargain offer that would have put him on probation. A jury convicted him and imposed a 25-year sentence.

    That night, "he hugged my mother, and he said, 'Mother, why these people lie on me? Why they do this to me?' " Cole's brother Reggie Session recounted for the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, which published a three-part series on the case in June.

    "He said, 'They know I ain't done nothing to that girl. I don't even know that girl. Why they do this to me, mother?' ... He cried in my mother's arms on the floor."

    Later, while in prison, Cole rejected an offer of parole that would have required him to admit his guilt. "His greatest wish was to be exonerated and completely vindicated," his mother, Ruby Session, told CNN affiliate News 8 Austin.

    But the asthma that plagued Cole throughout his life brought about his death on December 2, 1999. The cause was determined to be heart complications due to his asthmatic condition. He was 39.

    It was 2007 when a letter addressed to Cole arrived at his family's home, written by Johnson. Read the letter »

    "You may recall my name from your 1986 rape trial in Lubbock," says the letter, dated May 11, 2007. "Your Lubbock attorney, Mike Brown, tried to show I committed the rape.

    "I have been trying to locate you since 1995 to tell you I wish to confess I did in fact commit the rape Lubbock wrongly convicted you of. It is very possible that through a written confession from me and DNA testing, you can finally have your name cleared of the rape ... if this letter reaches you, please contact me by writing so that we can arrange to take the steps to get the process started. Whatever it takes, I will do it."

    Johnson did not know Cole had died. In fact, according to the Avalanche-Journal, he had been writing to court officials for years to confess to the rape, but got nowhere.

    Upon finding out that Cole was dead, Johnson wrote he "cried and felt double guilty, even though I know the system's at fault," according to the Avalanche-Journal.

    "A day later, I am still bothered, terribly, by the death revelation. Because, not knowing Mr. Cole at all, I wonder if the wrongful incarceration contributed to his death."

    Johnson has been in prison since 1985 on two convictions for aggravated sexual assault, according to the Texas Department of Corrections. He was given a life sentence for the rape of a 15-year-old girl, and a jury later tacked on a 99-year sentence for another rape, according to the Avalanche-Journal. He cannot be charged with the Mallin case, as the statute of limitations has expired.

    The Innocence Project became involved after Cole's family received Johnson's letter. DNA tests confirmed that Johnson was Mallin's attacker. Now, Cole's family hopes the court hearing will be the final step in clearing his name.

    Mallin is helping them. "I was very traumatized," she told CNN. "I was scared for my life. I tried my hardest to remember what he looked like.
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    "I'm trying to get his name cleared. It's the right thing to do."

    Cory Session said, "We don't blame Michele. She's very gracious.
    http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/02/05/...ef=mpstoryview

    I find it ironic that the very thing that may clear him,.. killed him.

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  3. #2
    Grand Marshal wheresthebeef's Avatar
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    Sounds like Texas justice alright.

    "In fact, according to the Avalanche-Journal, he had been writing to court officials for years to confess to the rape, but got nowhere."


    I applaud the actual rapist for actually standing up eventually and admitting his guilt, even if it didn't reach Timothy in time.

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    Tim Cole will be first posthumous DNA exoneration in Texas history


    Ruby Session holds a photo of her son, Tim Cole, who died in prison 13 years into a 25-year sentence for a rape he did not commit. Also picture are Session's other sons: Rodney Kennard (left) Cory Session and Reginald Kennard.

    State District Judge Charles Baird already indicated after a February hearing that he would exonerate Timothy Cole, who was convicted of a 1985 sexual assault of a Texas Tech University student. Baird is expected to reveal the legal reasoning for his decision during a hearing today in his Austin courtroom, lawyers from the Innocence Project of Texas said.

    Cole died in 1999 at 38 of complications from asthma.

    He always maintained his innocence.

    "When we started this back on September 26, 1986, when Tim was convicted, we knew this would not be a sprint race. It was going to be a marathon," said Cory Session, Cole's brother. "Here we are, a quarter century later."

    Cole, a military veteran and college student, was convicted of raping the student in Lubbock in 1985. Cole and his relatives for years claimed he was innocent, but they were ignored by the judicial system until evidence from the original rape kit was tested for DNA last year. The tests cleared Cole and connected the crime to Jerry Wayne Johnson, who is serving life in prison for other rapes.

    In 1995, after the statute of limitations had expired on the Texas Tech rape, Johnson tried to confess to the crime in letters to prosecutors and judges in Lubbock County. But no one paid attention, and Cole died in prison four years later.

    The Innocence Project of Texas eventually took on the case, pressing last year for an exoneration hearing in Lubbock County, where the case was originally prosecuted.

    [...]

    "There's never been a serious effort at a judicial examination of what went wrong in one of these cases. Our view is this is a huge step forward, and this ought to happen in every single exoneration," Blackburn said.

    "We ought to treat these exonerations like we treat a plane crash. It's a big deal. We've gotten so accustomed to false convictions in Texas that we just shrug our shoulders and say, 'Oh, well."'

    Texas leads the nation with 36 DNA exonerations, according to the Innocence Project.
    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...n.4a519d1.html

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  6. #4
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    More than a decade after his death and nearly 25 years since his arrest, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles is recommending clemency for a Fort Worth man who died in prison after being wrongfully convicted on rape charges.

    The board sent a letter to Tim Cole's attorney at the Innocence Project of Texas on Friday saying that it had voted to recommend clemency and forwarded its decision to Gov. Rick Perry for his signature.

    It would be the state's first posthumous pardon, and Perry has indicated that he would sign an order clearing Cole's name if recommended by the board.

    "Gov. Perry looks forward to pardoning Tim Cole pending the receipt of a positive recommendation from the Board of Pardons and Paroles," Perry spokeswoman Allison Castle wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press on Saturday.

    Cory Session, who has been fighting to clear his brother's name for years, said he anticipates that the governor will sign Cole's pardon in March during a ceremony in Fort Worth.

    "To say that the wheels of justice turn slowly would be an understatement," Session said Saturday.

    "The question is: How many more Tim Coles are out there?"
    [...]

    State District Judge Charlie Baird in Austin pronounced Cole not guilty during an exoneration hearing last year, saying he had "suffered the greatest miscarriage of justice imaginable in our criminal justice system."
    [...]

    Last year, the Texas Legislature passed the Tim Cole Act, increasing the lump sum compensation to victims of wrongful imprisonment from $50,000 to $80,000 for each year of imprisonment.

    Cole's family is eligible but has not filed a claim.

    "Most of the time, every one of these cases signifies that the system has gone wrong badly and that somewhere in this state there's some guilty guy wandering around committing more crimes," said Jeff Blackburn, chief counsel for the Innocence Project.

    "That's a point that I wish most prosecutors and police would understand. The innocent should be freed, and the guilty should be caught and punished. It's crazy that a group of overworked lawyers and wide-eyed law students should have to do that. The state should be doing this work."
    http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/02...d-paroles.html
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  7. #5
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    This shit makes me cry!

    Every exoneration that I hear about makes me cry because it is so many lives ruined. The exoneree, the victim, the other victims of the real perp. All the family members all the way around.

    God Bless Mr. Cole and his family. I am so sorry he died and didn't get to see this legal wrong corrected.
    "The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness. For he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee."

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  9. #6
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    Governor issues posthumous pardon for man who died in prison
    Governor Rick Perry Monday posthumously pardoned a man who died in prison after he was wrongly convicted of rape.

    Tim Cole died in 1999 of asthma complications. He was 39. Cole had been convicted of raping a Texas Tech University student in 1985.

    DNA showed another man committed the rape, but the statute of limitations had already expired when Jerry Wayne Johnson confessed to the crime in 1995.

    In 2009, a state district judge in Austin formally cleared Cole of the crime, who had always maintained his innocence. The victim also supported his exoneration.

    Cole’s family asked the governor for a pardon, but in 2009 Perry said he did not believe he was legally allowed to issue one.

    Later, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott issued an opinion on posthumous pardons that cleared the way for the governor to issue one.

    In February 2010, Cole’s family again asked the governor for a pardon, and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommended one.
    http://www.kvue.com/news/local/Gover...-85844272.html

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    And now it gets really weird....


    Johnson at hearing to clear Cole
    A prison inmate whose confession in a 1985 rape case led to a posthumous pardon for a Fort Worth man now says a judge's finding in 2009 that he was guilty of the rape has damaged his chances for parole and his rights as a prisoner.

    Jerry Wayne Johnson, who remains in prison in a separate Lubbock sexual assault, sued the Innocence Project of Texas and its chief counsel, Jeff Blackburn, this week in Lubbock County court.

    Johnson contends that state District Judge Charlie Baird, who conducted an unusual court of inquiry into the case, could not legally declare him guilty without an indictment and trial, and that, in any case, the statute of limitations in the rape case had expired.

    As early as 1995, Johnson was telling people that he, not Tim Cole, raped a Texas Tech student in 1985. Cole, a Tech student from Fort Worth, was sentenced to 25 years in prison in the case and died in prison in 1999.

    Authorities ignored Johnson's confession until the Innocence Project took up the case in 2007. DNA tests confirmed in 2008 that Johnson was the woman's attacker.

    Johnson's confession and resulting work by the project plunged the city and state into uncharted legal territory. Innocence Project attorneys had no modern legal instruments to investigate a wrongful conviction for a client who was not alive.

    They dusted off a legal relic of the state's frontier past to examine the case -- a court of inquiry.

    The court was held for two days in an Austin courtroom in 2009, and at the end Baird found Cole innocent and Johnson guilty of the crime.

    Ever since, while not recanting his confession, Johnson has argued that Baird violated his rights and state law by declaring him guilty.

    In letters to the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal since the court of inquiry, Johnson has described frustration with the declaration of guilt and questioned the validity of the court of inquiry. His guilt couldn't be determined without a trial and should have never been an issue, he has insisted.

    In his suit, he said he is seeking "a monetary award for punitive damages in the highest amount authorized by Texas law."
    http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/01...cole-case.html
    Jeff Blackburn, the Innocence Project of Texas attorney sued in a Lubbock court by Jerry Wayne Johnson earlier this week, called the claims “flat ridiculous.”

    “From what I can tell from this suit, he is claiming that we have hurt his feelings and made him look bad,” Blackburn said. “I will be the first to say I am totally guilty of making a serial rapist who has done immeasurable harm to people look bad.”
    [...]

    Blackburn “had full knowledge and understanding of Plaintiff’s statute of limitations right, but still wrongfully and intentionally sought and instituted a created criminal judicial proceeding against Plaintiff, without an indictment of a grand jury, without lawful prosecutorial authority and jurisdiction, proffered evidence of guilt against him and obtained a judicial finding of guilt against him for committing the sexual assault offense,” Johnson wrote in the lawsuit.

    He sought “a monetary award for punitive damages in the highest amount authorized by Texas law” through the lawsuit.

    “I’m very proud of what we did in this case,” Blackburn said Friday, “And, in a strange way, I’m proud that we have this guy who is a despicable rapist and guilty of everything that we said he was guilty of mad at me.”
    http://lubbockonline.com/local-news/...ng-injures-him
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  12. #8
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    Go Attorney Blackburn!

    “I’m very proud of what we did in this case,” Blackburn said Friday, “And, in a strange way, I’m proud that we have this guy who is a despicable rapist and guilty of everything that we said he was guilty of mad at me.”
    I am very proud that we have lawyers in this country that are willing to take the slings and arrows and do the right thing. Fuck that rapist and the horse he rode in on.

    I donate to the Innocence Project when I can, which isn't often right now. I am damn proud that we have them and the work they do.
    "The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness. For he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee."

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    Me too Badfish76, they are doing the dirty work and have freed so many, so sadly its too late for Cole, my favorite Innocence Project person is Cameron Todd Willingham, the torture this poor man must have went through to be called a monster and executed for killing his babies, none of us can imagine, he just gave up, wish there was a better place we go to after we die so these men also could be given a second chance but you know how unlikely that is... and the shitty health care in prison probobly contributed to Coles death... Its a hard decision to make, yeh some of these prisoners deserve eveything that happens to them but I am sure there are more than 2 innocent men stuck in each and every prison across the US... Thank God we now have DNA and someone should make a training program to train people to test DNA so it isnt so damned expensive, should be available to all rich or poor...
    Last edited by VXIII; January 22nd, 2011 at 01:45 PM.
    Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one... Albert Einstein

    “The time will come when men such as I will look upon the murder of animals as they now look on the murder of men.”
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    Texas appears to be leading the way on these wrongful convictions. I think they should be the model for every state! I do believe in the DP, but any questionable conviction should be looked into immediately. Screw the prosecutor and his ego!
    Mercy to the cruel is cruelty to the innocent.

    Justice and the law are 2 seperate issues!

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    Quote Originally Posted by walkingeagle View Post
    Texas appears to be leading the way on these wrongful convictions. I think they should be the model for every state! I do believe in the DP, but any questionable conviction should be looked into immediately. Screw the prosecutor and his ego!
    And before you put anyone to death, sometimes even with a confession, do a DNA test, should be a prerequiste to dying, although so far they can only test DNA on rape victims or if blood or something was left behind... these days are so much better than how it used to be but still far from perfect...
    Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one... Albert Einstein

    “The time will come when men such as I will look upon the murder of animals as they now look on the murder of men.”
    ― Leonardo da Vinci

    "America’s educational system as a mechanism designed to create “…functional ignorance.” Frank Zappa

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    Our system is far from perfect. In fact, I'd call it a joke! Too many elitsts that refuse to admit fault, and they cannot be held to account for it.
    Mercy to the cruel is cruelty to the innocent.

    Justice and the law are 2 seperate issues!

    http://i.imgur.com/Uak5F.gif

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    http://www.dreamindemon.com/forums/s...t=Timothy+Cole


    Theres more on the innocence project and this case here in a thread I started awhile ago about innocent people put to death and cleared after its been carried out
    Happens more then you think and officials really love to cover it up

    For every murdered child
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    For any quirk of fate we may arrange.
    We are not "meek" or "mild";
    Don't turn your back when twilight dims the sky -
    We'll haunt the perpetrators till they Die
    "Rescuing one animal may not change the world, but for that animal their world is changed forever!" - Unknown

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