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Thread: "Ought To Be Free" &" The Innocence Project"

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    "Ought To Be Free" &" The Innocence Project"

    Ought To Be Free
    I have been reading and keeping up on Tommy Silverstien,locked up in solitary 27 yrs now.I by no means condone what he did,but have been checking out other prisoners proclaiming they are innocent.I actually never met a prisoner that didnt say he was wrongly convicted or a prisoner that hasnt found "God" in prison they all find god!! But I decided to look into it further and came acoss 12 on Tommys site.
    In this country, there is no justice for the poor," words of a WI activist. We have been working with prisoners for 10 years now and have learned first hand about our assembly-line justice. Here Are some of the stories. Please contact FFUP or contact the prisoners themselves if you have questions or would like to see documentation. Email us at swansol@mwt.net or send mail to FFUP PO Box 285, Richland Center, WI 53581
    Bryant Johnson
    In Search of Pro Bono Representation
    My name is Bryant Johnson I'm a lifer and I am in dire need of representation that is competent, loyal and dedicated in bringing forth the truth. I've been locked down going on 18 years for a crime I had absolutely nothing to do with and my plight to clear myself has lead me down many dark alleys of ignorance due to my lack of knowledge of the Law. And it has become painfully apparent to me that I can not fight against the powerful forces of the state without help from a trained professional attorney.
    I would articulate the circumstances surrounding my incarceration to the lawyer / paralegal who decides to assist me in my request. But I will say this I am an innocent man and my innocence has been undermined by over zealous officials whose priorities were a conviction. There was No DNA evidence to even slightly connect me to the crimes for which I was convicted of; it is a known fact that the DNA evidence pointed to someone else, and I am willing to take ANY HIGH TECH TEST they got out there to prove that I speak the truth when I say I AM TRULY AN INNOCENT MAN
    In closing I pray that I would get the assistance I am in search offer meaningful assistance is imperative at this critical stage.
    Sincerely,
    Bryant Johnson #130677
    WSPF
    Po Box 9900
    Boscobel, WI 53805
    http://oughttobefree.blogspot.com/20...t-johnson.html Reginald Clytus
    My name is Reginald but everybody calls mr Reggie. I'm 20 years old. I'm Milwaukee, Wisconsin born and raised in the North Lawn housing projects in the north side I'm the youngest of three boys, well men now. I'm from single parent raised by my mother in a two bedroom unit. As you can probably imagine, I had a tough upbringing-gang, sex, drugs, violence, and crime- I seen it all . My mother tried her best to keep me and my brother out of the street life. But as it is well known, fast money, cars, and girls is always going to look better that the hard work. My mother was determined not to lets us fall through the cracks and become victims of the streets or "another number in the system " To make a long story short, both my older brothers have graduated high school, one is in college now and the other is managing a small business. As for me, I was a friend with the wrong people. My name come up in some investigation in some gang stuff that I am not even part of or know alot about, and as a result of that I got locked up my senior year of high school with 7 months left till graduation. Kind of funny when you think about it, huh? I been trying to build up my spirits and find my self since the day the handcuffs locked on my wrist. But I can't help but see the lost souls that are around me and the people that just gave up on their life. This is the hell I encounter on a day to day, basics: outside of small food portions, two showers a week, and the heating on here only 6 hours a day on segregation. This isn't for me- this life behind bars, never seeing family, never choosing when I want to eat or what I want to do with my days.
    I tried out these so called jailhouse lawyers and was scammed out of my money. Turns out crime doesn't stop when you go to prison. I stayed to myself and have been trying to put legal cases and things together ever since and I'm not very good at it. I was forced into signing a statement, my rights were violated and I was railroaded every step of the way. The first so called lawyer never told me when I had a hearing coming up, never talked to my people about where I was at the time of the crime. He advised me not to testify on my behalf at the Miranda good child hearing because it would hurt me at trial. He did everything in his power to destroy me and I paid for him. I got on to what he was doing so I wrote the bar association and fired him. Well, the next lawyer took over my case and said she could get none of those hearings back and we would have to go to trial like that. A month later she came to me with a plea from the DA and said I was getting 10 years in prison and 5 years out. At first I didn't want to take the deal because I know you hear this alot but I didn't do it, I wasn't there. But she said because of the statement I can't get my hearing back I took the so called deal. That was anything but what I received- 25 years in prison and 20 years out under the truth in sentencing law. I didn't know about capped deals , appeals , motions, or anything like that . I don't know the justice system because I don't break the law.. Well, I speed and don't wear my seat belt all the time and have driven with a broken tail light. But come on, because of who I know and the side of the town I live on makes me another worthless kid from the ghetto. Not true.
    http://oughttobefree.blogspot.com/20...ld-clytus.html Diane Borchardt, innocent
    Diane Borchardt#298089
    Taychedah Correctional Institiution
    Fond du Lac, Wi 54936

    My name is Diane Borchardt . I was born at St Mary's Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin on August 8, 1949. My case number is 94cf313. My appeal attorney filed an appeal on my behalf on April 23, 1998. It was denied with extensive media.

    Thus now I'm in my eleventh year here, twelfth year of being wrongly convicted. I received a 40 year sentence for a crime that I was never a part of, did not conspire to, nor want in any way shape or form. Yes, my husband was divorcing me after 15 years. No, I was not unhappy nor fighting it. With the household equally split-the dining room floor to ceiling, my husband beats me up April 2nd upon arriving in town. I decide to report it to the sheriff (It is Saturday, my divorce attorney is not in). While recording it, my thirteen year old comes over to let me know that daddy is on his way to the store. Since I owned Mrs B's silk Screen , Ruben, my husband was to be on the property (due to a lot of BS done by him and his divorce attorney)without me present. The sheriff comes with me, they talk to Ruben, then they advise me not to return to our home that night. "Give him some time to cool off. "

    Thus from this my husband is found shot in the basement of our rural Jefferson home at 3:45 am. With no DNA taken, no GSR testing on my son(16, the only person in our home), they concluded that I had done this. Upon locating me in Wautoma "noon" April 3rd, the next day the newspaper reported "Husband found shot in rural Jefferson , it looks like a murder for hire by wife. "

    Please, no one will help me as I have no money. I was declared dead in civil court, thus disinheriting everything.
    http://oughttobefree.blogspot.com/20...-innocent.html I. But then I see so many being freed from The Innocence Project.Innocence Project Case Profiles
    There have been 251 post-conviction DNA exonerations in United States history. These stories are becoming more familiar as more innocent people gain their freedom through postconviction testing. They are not proof, however, that our system is righting itself.

    The common themes that run through these cases — from global problems like poverty and racial issues to criminal justice issues like eyewitness misidentification, invalid or improper forensic science, overzealous police and prosecutors and inept defense counsel — cannot be ignored and continue to plague our criminal justice system.

    •Seventeen people had been sentenced to death before DNA proved their innocence and led to their release.
    •The average sentence served by DNA exonerees has been 13 years.
    •About 70 percent of those exonerated by DNA testing are members of minority groups.
    •In almost 40 percent of the cases profiled here, the actual perpetrator has been identified by DNA testing.
    •Exonerations have been won in 34 states and Washington, D.C.
    http://www.innocenceproject.org/
    Browse some profiles,,http://www.innocenceproject.org/know...e-Profiles.php Search for a profile by defendant name, crime, location, year, conviction or contributing causehttp://www.innocenceproject.org/know...-Profiles.phpm View a national map of exoneration cases to get a geographical perspective of the issues http://www.innocenceproject.org/know/National-View.php I just wonder what everyone thinks of The Innocence Project<? Or maybe you know someone exonerated.
    Last edited by Whisper; February 28th, 2010 at 12:44 AM.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    What do I think about The Innocence Project? I fucking love it. L. O. V. E. it. I have expectations for the society in which I live, and those expectations don't include killing people for crimes they didn't commit. And if that means more money must be spent to ensure that adequate evidence of guilt exists before a person is put to death? Yeah, I can live with that.

    Especially when you consider it's cheaper to imprison someone for life than to put them on Death Row.
    Lizard is not woman, and not a man. She is something you will never understand. ~From the collected works of the great and marvelous Morbid

    It's hard to shoot yourself in the foot when it's in your mouth. ~Stephen Colbert

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    TY me too, to many have been cleared lately for courts to not take a second look at some cases.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    Canada's wrongful convictionsCases where the courts got it wrong --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    They languished behind bars for years, wrongfully jailed for crimes they did not commit.

    But the high-profile ordeals of Donald Marshall Jr., David Milgaard and others have put a spotlight on what has been called the fallibility of Canadian justice.
    These cases are not unique and certainly not isolated to Canada, although estimates of the actual number of wrongful convictions vary widely.

    Each miscarriage of justice, however, deals a blow to a society's confidence in the legal system, experts say.

    "Wrongful convictions undermine the two prongs of the criminal justice system’s legitimacy," states a 1992 report prepared by the Library of Parliament. "If someone is wrongfully convicted, that person is punished for an offence he or she did not commit and the actual perpetrator of the crime goes free."

    To make it worse, advocates say many who were ultimately exonerated watched their applications stall for years in the federal review board process.

    In 2000, federal Justice Minister Anne McLellan announced plans to try to prevent such cases from happening again. The changes, since enacted in the Criminal Code of Canada, enable the justice minister to use his or her discretion to respond to persons who believe they have been wrongfully convicted.

    Groups such as the Association in Defence of the Wrongfully Convicted have also advocated on behalf of those they say have been jailed unfairly.
    http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2009/...convicted.html High-profile cases
    James Driskell
    Anthony Hanemaayer
    Donald Marshall Jr.
    Simon Marshall
    David Milgaard
    Guy Paul Morin
    William Mullins-Johnson
    Romeo Phillion
    Thomas Sophonow
    Steven Truscott
    Kyle Unger
    Erin Walsh
    Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2009/...#ixzz0go0W0DLH
    <Joyce Milgaard makes a phone call after the release of a Saskatchewan report into the wrongful conviction of her son, David Milgaard, in September 2008. The report praised her 'epic struggle' in seeking David's release during his more than 22 years behind bars.

    Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2009/...#ixzz0go0itcCn

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    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.
    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 began Thursday afternoon, according to the Austin American-Statesman.

    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. Watch Cole's mother make emotional plea »

    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.

    "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/...ion/index.html <
    Timothy Cole died in prison while serving a sentence for a rape DNA tests show he did not commit.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    Innocent Man Released from Death Row
    INNOCENT MAN PUT ON DEATH ROW BY LYING POLICE OFFICER FINALLY SET FREE


    NEWTON, NC –
    Today Glen Edward Chapman, who spent 15 years on North Carolina’s death row for crimes he did not commit, is walking out of prison a free man.

    Chapman was sentenced to death for the 1992 murders of Betty Jean Ramseur and Tenene Yvette Conley in Hickory. Last November Superior Court Judge Robert C. Ervin ordered a new trial for Chapman, citing withheld evidence, “lost, misplaced or destroyed” documents, the use of weak, circumstantial evidence, false testimony by the lead investigator, and ineffective assistance of defense counsel. Ervin also cited evidence that Ms. Conley may not have been murdered, but instead died of a drug overdose.

    Catawba County District Attorney James Gaither, Jr. dismissed the charges against Chapman today.

    Chapman’s lawyers, Frank Goldsmith and Jessica Leaven, are very pleased with their client’s release for which they fought long and hard. “Edward has always maintained, and we have always believed in, his innocence,” said Goldsmith. “Justice has not been served for the families of Ms. Ramseur and Ms. Conley, and we hope their deaths will be reinvestigated.” Goldsmith added, “We are extremely grateful to Judge Ervin and to Mr. Gaither for doing the right thing.”

    Judge Ervin found that each of the lead detectives assigned to the cases by the Hickory Police Department had covered up exculpatory evidence that pointed to Chapman’s innocence and that was inconsistent with the State’s theory of his guilt. In addition, Judge Ervin found that Hickory Police Department Detective Dennis Rhoney had perjured himself at Chapman’s original trial, and that his testimony at the hearings conducted by Judge Ervin was “not credible.”

    In his order, Judge Ervin also cited evidence presented by a forensic pathologist, Donald Jason, who found the cause of Conley’s death “undetermined.” Dr. Jason found no life-threatening injuries and suggested a possible cocaine overdose. Judge Ervin wrote that Dr. Jason’s report “strongly indicates that Terene Conley’s death was not a murder. The notion that a defendant can be put to death when no crime in fact occurred is troubling at best.”

    Additionally, Judge Ervin found ineffective assistance of counsel by Chapman’s trial attorneys, Robert Adams and Thomas Portwood, for failing to adequately investigate the facts. Adams has been disciplined by the North Carolina State Bar and Portwood died of an alcohol-related illness. Portwood represented Ronnie Frye in his death penalty trial less than a year before Chapman’s trial started. Portwood admitted that he was drinking 12 shots of rum nightly during Frye’s trial. Frye was executed in 2001. Portwood was later removed from another death penalty case and entered alcohol detoxification treatment.

    For more information, contact:
    Frank Goldsmith (828) 230-6977 or (828) 652-3000
    Jessica Leaven (919) 942-5200 or (919) 428-1924

    Congratulations to Mr. Chapman and his attorneys. A victory hard-fought and long deserved.
    http://deathwatch.wordpress.com/2008...rom-death-row/

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    I gotta quit b/c there are so many,and many executed then found innocent,just way to many id end up writing a book

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    Wadi Thooo Wannabe Lizard's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by whisperswing View Post
    I gotta quit b/c there are so many,and many executed then found innocent,just way to many id end up writing a book
    No, whisp, but maybe we should change the thread title or talk to Morbid about setting up another subforum: "Believed Guilty but Found Innocent"?
    Lizard is not woman, and not a man. She is something you will never understand. ~From the collected works of the great and marvelous Morbid

    It's hard to shoot yourself in the foot when it's in your mouth. ~Stephen Colbert

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lizard View Post
    No, whisp, but maybe we should change the thread title or talk to Morbid about setting up another subforum: "Believed Guilty but Found Innocent"?
    Sounds good to me,I was shocked looking through all the diff States/Provinces,just name after name after name.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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

  16. #10
    Wadi Thooo Wannabe Lizard's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by whisperswing View Post
    Sounds good to me,I was shocked looking through all the diff States/Provinces,just name after name after name.
    Okay, I'll ask The M. about setting up a subforum (or whatever he thinks will be best--I'd like to have a place to put these cases together).
    Lizard is not woman, and not a man. She is something you will never understand. ~From the collected works of the great and marvelous Morbid

    It's hard to shoot yourself in the foot when it's in your mouth. ~Stephen Colbert

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    cool just let me know I book marked a shitload,,

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    DPIC's Death Penalty Quiz,click on link and take the test and get your score
    http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/dpic...h-penalty-quiz
    Question 1:TrueFalse The death penalty saves taxpayers money because it is cheaper to execute someone than to keep them in prison for the rest of their life.

    Question 2:TrueFalse Since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, more black people have been executed than white people.

    Question 3:TrueFalse After the Supreme Court allowed the death penalty to resume in 1976, the first person to be executed was Gary Gilmore in Utah by a firing squad.

    Question 4:TrueFalse Since the death penalty was reinstated in the U.S., very few people have been released from death row because they were innocent.

    Question 5:TrueFalse In most states with the death penalty, you can be executed even if you suffer from mental illness.

    Question 6:TrueFalse There are some states in the U.S. where you cannot receive the death penalty for any crime.

    Question 7:TrueFalse Hanging has not been used as a method of execution in the United States for over 30 years.

    Question 8:TrueFalse When the police chiefs of the U.S. were polled on their views about ways to lower the crime rate, only 1% named the death penalty as their top priority in reducing violent crime.

    Question 9:TrueFalse No woman has been executed in the U.S. for over 25 years.

    Question 10:TrueFalse Those who commit a crime when they are under 18 years of age are ineligible for the death penalty in the U.S.
    Executed But Possibly InnocentPosted:
    There is no way to tell how many of the over 1,000 people executed since 1976 may also have been innocent. Courts do not generally entertain claims of innocence when the defendant is dead. Defense attorneys move on to other cases where clients' lives can still be saved. Some cases with strong evidence of innocence include:
    Carlos DeLuna Texas Conviction: 1983, Executed: 1989
    Ruben Cantu Texas Convicted: 1985, Executed: 1993
    Larry Griffin Missouri Conviction: 1981, Executed: 1995
    Joseph O'Dell Virginia Conviction: 1986, Executed: 1997
    David Spence Texas Conviction: 1984, Executed: 1997
    Leo Jones Florida Convicted: 1981, Executed: 1998
    Gary Graham Texas Convicted: 1981, Executed: 2000
    Cameron Willingham Texas Convicted: 1992, Executed: 2004
    http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/exec...sibly-innocent < click on link to view each profile seperately. This a link to 139 exonerated."
    http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/inno...reed-death-row This site has EVERYTHING you may want to know about DP, its crazy packed with millions of links and they make it so easy to use it and navigate it.
    Last edited by Whisper; March 1st, 2010 at 01:12 AM.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    A Trial of Fire: Executed

    Capital punishment has become a controversial issue. The case of Cameron Todd Willingham has only added fuel to the fire when discussing the death penalty. In 1991, Willingham was accused of killing his three young daughters by arson. He was executed for these crimes on Feb. 17, 2004. An arson expert had a report that brought serious questioning about the quality of the arson investigation which convicted Willingham. This report was sent to Rick Perry, Governor of Texas, but he refused to issue a 30-day reprieve for Willingham.

    Since the execution, other fire experts have reviewed the evidence in the Willingham case and came to the same conclusion. The fire was a accident. Perry, acting like a criminal, released the chairman and two members of the State Forensic Science Commission. It just so happens that they were to begin holding hearings on the evidence in the case. Seems there is something to hide. Perry will not comment on why they did not issue a reprieve, when requested in the Willingham case. His only responses have been that Willingham is a "monster", he was less than an admirable father and husband. Are those grounds to execute any man? If you can execute a man for being deficient in those departments, then, the divorce and child support courts would not be so over-whelmed with cases.

    Perry does a questionable job as Governor. Now he is calling any scientist who refutes the evidence in the Willingham case, " supposed experts". He is the Governor, but, when did being the Governor make you a forensic science expert? The same Governor who turned down stimulus money for the state.( That's another story in itself. )

    Gerald Hurst, is a arson expert. His findings have exonerated more than 10 people. Hurst, got Willingham's friend, Ernest Willis exonerated for a similar arson charge. Willis was set free and the attorney general was quoted saying, " I don't turn Killers loose. If Willis was guilty, I'd be trying him right now. And I'd use Hurst as my witness. He is a brilliant scientist." So, It has to make you think, did the Governor feel that he gave them one, now, give him one. As far fetch as that may seem, it is possible. That has always been the rumor amongst those involved in the legal battle.

    The Evidence in the End

    Experts have reviewed the evidence against Willingham. " The conclusion is unescapable, Willingham was innocent. There can no longer be any doubt that a innocent man has been executed." With mistakes like this, can we continue to use the death penalty? One wrongful death is one too many. The investigations was not efficient. Willingham's trial took two days. Only two days to convict a man of killing his babies by arson. Death by Lethal Injection was his punishment. A man who turned down a plea deal, that would lower his sentence to life in prison. After 13 years of being accused and convicted of killing his daughters, was a 30 day reprieve to much to ask for. If there was any evidence that could probably prove that Willingham was not the "monster" he was made out to be, 30 days should have at least been allowed. Instead we are left with the sour end of the deal, a man executed for being accused of being, " a monster ", " a less than admirable father and husband".

    The Final Conclusion

    The state of Texas has executed 441 inmates since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976. From the year of 1990 to the present, there have been 424 executions in Texas. How many of those executed, were innocent? No, we can't change the past, but, in order to change the "future", we must reflect on the past mistakes. " How do you know where you are going, if you don't know where you have been."

    The death penalty is a touchy subject for some. For some it means justice, peace, closure and even payback. Those who have been allowed to witness the executions of someone who have committed a horrible crime against their family have said that it doesn't bring closure. It doesn' satisfy that void that has been left in their life.

    One thing is for sure, if the death penalty is going to continue to be used as punishment for "horrible" crimes. Then the sytems needs to be checked, double checked and triple checked, before we start that "lethal drip" down an IV, into the blood stream of a possibly innocent man or woman.
    http://hubpages.com/hub/The-Death-Pe...fully-Executed

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    Wrongful execution is a miscarriage of justice
    Wrongful execution is a miscarriage of justice occurring when an innocent person is put to death by capital punishment, the "death penalty." Cases of wrongful execution are cited as an argument by the opponents of capital punishment.[1]
    A number of people are claimed to have been innocent victims of the death penalty.
    Newly-available DNA evidence has allowed the exoneration and release of more than 15 death row inmates since 1992 in the United States,[4] but DNA evidence is available in only a fraction of capital cases. Others have been released due to weak cases against them, sometimes involving prosecutorial misconduct, resulting in acquittal at retrial, charges dropped, or innocence-based pardons. The Death Penalty Information Center (U.S.) has published a list of 8 inmates "executed but possibly innocent", although none of them has yet had his innocence recognized by any court. At least 39 executions are claimed to have been carried out in the U.S. in the face of evidence of innocence or serious doubt about guilt.
    In the U.K., reviews prompted by the Criminal Cases Review Commission have resulted in one pardon and three exonerations for people executed between 1950 and 1953[citation needed] (when the execution rate in England and Wales averaged 17 per year), with compensation being paid.
    Specific examples[quote]
    Of the American cases, one often quoted is the execution of Jesse Tafero in Florida. Tafero was convicted along with an accomplice, Sonia Jacobs, of murdering two police officers in 1976 while the two were fleeing drug charges; each was sentenced to death based partially on the testimony of a third person, Walter Rhodes, a prison acquaintance of Tafero's who was an accessory to the crime and who testified against the pair in exchange for a lighter sentence. Jacobs's death sentence was commuted in 1981. In 1982, Rhodes recanted his testimony and claimed full responsibility for the crime. Despite Rhodes's admission, Tafero was executed in 1990. In 1992 the conviction against Jacobs was quashed and the state subsequently did not have enough evidence to retry her. She then entered an Alford plea and was sentenced to time served. It has been presumed that, as the same evidence was used against Tafero as against Jacobs, Tafero would have been released as well had he still been alive.
    Wayne Felker,
    a convicted rapist, is also claimed by some observers to have been an innocent victim of execution. Felker was a suspect in the disappearance of a Georgia (US) woman in 1981 and was under police surveillance for two weeks prior to the woman's body being found. The autopsy was conducted by an unqualified technician, and the results were changed to show the death occurring before the surveillance had begun. After Felker's conviction, his lawyers presented testimony by forensics experts that the body could not have been dead more than three days when found; a stack of evidence was found hidden by the prosecution that hadn't been presented in court, including DNA evidence that might have exonerated Felker or cast doubt on his guilt. There was also a signed confession by another suspect in the paperwork, but despite all this, Felker was executed in 1996. In 2000, his case was reopened in an attempt to make him the first executed person in the US to have DNA testing used to prove his innocence after his execution. This attempt failed, as the DNA tests were ruled inconclusive as to innocence or guilt.
    Cameron Willingham
    was executed in Texas in 2004 for an arson fire in 1991 which took the lives of his three small daughters. Subsequently, doubt has been cast on the forensic evidence which underlay the conviction, particularly whether evidence existed of an accelerant having been used to start the blaze.
    Thomas Griffin and Meeks Griffen
    were executed in 1915 for the murder of a man involved in an interracial affair two years before but were pardoned 94 years after execution. It is thought that they were arrested and charged because they were wealthy enough to hire competant legal counsel and get an acquittal.
    In the United Kingdom, Timothy Evans was tried and executed in 1950
    for the murder of his baby daughter Geraldine. An official inquiry conducted 16 years later determined that it was Evans's fellow tenant, serial killer John Reginald Halliday Christie, who was responsible for the murder. Evans was pardoned posthumously following this, in 1966.
    Derek Bentley
    was a mentally retarded young man who was executed in 1953, also in the United Kingdom. He was convicted of the murder of a police officer during an attempted robbery despite the fact that it was his accomplice who fired the gun, and Bentley was under arrest at the time of the shooting
    .http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrongful_execution

    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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    Totally lost me when I saw Diane Borchardt. Never thought she was innocent. Still don't. She can whine all she wants but shes nothing more than another prisoner declaring her innocence... like most in prison.
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    Im not saying shes innocent,she was on the opening article of the persons that are being used as examples in the "Ought To Be Free" project. I dont know who she is or what she has done.What I have been finding and book marking are the ones that have been "executed then proven innocent" That was an article I found and asked Liz to check out while I was emailing Tommy Silverstien about a drawing I want to buy.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    Buzzkill. Athena's Avatar
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    One of the biggest issues here in the U.S. (and maybe Canada, too, I'm not sure) is the fact that most prisoners do not have access to DNA testing for any number of reasons:

    1.) The evidence was destroyed upon conviction or was mishandled resulting in loss.
    2.) The judge denies a prisoner's appeal to gain access (common).
    3.) The state requires the inmate to pay for testing (common).

    In order for us to have even a shot at objective justice, these wrongs must be corrected. Inmates MUST have access to DNA evidence that has the potential to clear them, and states MUST be required to re-test in cases where the test method or lab was deemed unreliable.

    God only knows how many innocent men have and will take their last breath behind bars. And, until we can start holding [url=http://www.theagitator.com/2009/10/26/no-accountability-3/]over-zealous[/quote] prosecutors accountable, this problem will only continue. We pit prosecutors with every resource available to them, whose goal is to convict (as opposed to find justice) against convicts with no resources whatsoever, and we don't think there's room for improvement?
    Last edited by Athena; March 1st, 2010 at 01:52 PM.
    "Now that ceaseless exposure has calloused us to the lewd and the vulgar, it is instructive to see what still seems wicked to us. What still slaps the clammy flab of our submissive consciousness hard enough to get our attention?"

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    Actually it is the same here,if DNA had been tested and not taken almost 3 yrs in Toronto here Paul Bernardo wouldve been in prison for being the Scarbourough Rapist.Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffey wouldnt be dead.They took all that time to test it.Yet I can do a home test for 89.00 and have overnight results(which I have thats only way I know)

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    The Innocence Project shouldn't be needed - but is. Hopefully, they will put themselves out of business. By that I mean enough changes will be made that the need for their services will cease. Never going to happen... just my wishful thinking.

    Much of what they have done involves cases where technology advanced after the case OR where laws didn't keep up with technology.

    We will always have cases where there is just no way to prove things other than circumstantial evidence. And that will forever lay things open to claims of innocence. In those cases, who do we trust if not the jury? Is there ever a way to 100% guarantee that the right person is in jail?
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    Quote Originally Posted by whisperswing View Post
    Yet I can do a home test for 89.00 and have overnight results(which I have thats only way I know)
    I would not bet my life on an $89 home test kit. It takes so long because only certain labs can do tests for legal purposes. They get backed up because almost every case seems to have/want/demand DNA these days.

    Also, testing technology when Bernardo and Homolka were active can't realistically be compared to what is available today. It's come a long way... with more to go.
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    Well I wouldnt bet my home on it either but I am saying they have millions out there now.That was a very basic DNA test to find out if our friend was the father of a child he was being sued to support b/c he didnt think it was.Turned out he wasnt the dad after paying support 10 yrs and the test stood up in court.That test was through a website of men that have paid support some for over 20 yrs only to find out they werent the daddy. I have also seen DNA Home Tests now which I havent6 got a clue how they would work but have seen advertised.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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    Quote Originally Posted by Dakota Valkyrie View Post
    We will always have cases where there is just no way to prove things other than circumstantial evidence. And that will forever lay things open to claims of innocence. In those cases, who do we trust if not the jury? Is there ever a way to 100% guarantee that the right person is in jail?
    Well, sure. We will never have a 100% error-free justice system. But that should remain our perpetual goal. As it stands currently, there are glaring contradictions to this goal - contradictions that can be corrected.
    "Now that ceaseless exposure has calloused us to the lewd and the vulgar, it is instructive to see what still seems wicked to us. What still slaps the clammy flab of our submissive consciousness hard enough to get our attention?"

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    Quote Originally Posted by Athena View Post
    Well, sure. We will never have a 100% error-free justice system. But that should remain our perpetual goal. As it stands currently, there are glaring contradictions to this goal - contradictions that can be corrected.
    That is what I was pointing out. Exactly why the Innocence Project or organizations with similar goals will always be around and needed. There is little chance of those changes without a concerted effort of many.

    As they accomplish those goals, the type of cases we see showcased will become fewer and fewer (hopefully).
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    Diane Borchardt proclaiming she is innocent? Why am I not surprised?

    The Borchardts were neighbors of my cousins and in fact my oldest cousin was/still is best friends with Ruben.

    Diane should rot in hell for what she did! Hell I can't believe that some activist organization even thinks she might be innocent......

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    Quote Originally Posted by whisperswing View Post
    Well I wouldnt bet my home on it either but I am saying they have millions out there now.That was a very basic DNA test to find out if our friend was the father of a child he was being sued to support b/c he didnt think it was.Turned out he wasnt the dad after paying support 10 yrs and the test stood up in court.That test was through a website of men that have paid support some for over 20 yrs only to find out they werent the daddy. I have also seen DNA Home Tests now which I havent6 got a clue how they would work but have seen advertised.
    All I was pointing out is that the testing requirements for legal means is vastly different than what you need for quickie tests. There is chain of custody issues to be held to and and all sorts of legal protocol involved in proving a criminal complaint. Defense attorneys will rip apart any test that is not followed to the exact letter of the law and accepted science and even then they will call it into question (as they should).

    I sat through a trial that the jury hung and the second trial where they convicted. It hinged greatly on the DNA evidence. The defense picked on every little tiny bit of it and the process. Had I been a juror, I would not have convicted on the basis of the first trial (despite my personal belief that he did it). The prosecution did a better job the second time around and I was much more comfortable that the right man was sentenced to life. (He also went on to be convicted of one of the most heinous rapes in local history and other sex crimes... all that occurred before the murder)

    Only the advancements in technology have enabled the home tests, but those advances have also allowed for faster/better testing in criminal cases. And because of that more tests are needed/used in criminal cases.

    The law and laws now need to catch up to that and grow as the technology grows to avoid the very things that some convicted people are facing.
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  39. #26
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    Incidentally, North Carolina is the only state with a state-run innocence commission... and they recently exonerated their first convict.
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    This was the case that caught my attention b.c I saw him on so many programs and so many were going nuts to get this guys DNA tested and protesting all over the States .Then turns out even in his final words proclaiming innocence and when they finally tested,he was guilty. DNA Testing Could Exonerate Executed ManJan 11, 2006
    As early as today, the nation may know if the state of Virginia put an innocent man to death in the electric chair 13 years ago.

    Since Roger Coleman's execution for the 1981 rape and murder of Wanda McCoy, there has been intense debate about the quality of the evidence against him.

    Today a Toronto laboratory is completing DNA tests at the request of Gov. Mark Warner, who is trying to resolve the matter once and for all.

    "There'll be three results," Warner said last week. "Either confirm the guilt. It may demonstrate and there's a high probability that it will remain inconclusive. Or it may to some degree exonerate him. "

    The governor's decision comes as public support for capital punishment has fallen in the last decade after a number of death row inmates have been exonerated.


    Maintaining Innocence
    Coleman went to the electric chair maintaining he did not kill his sister-in-law.

    "I didn't commit the murder," Coleman said in a jailhouse interview. "I didn't commit the rape. I was not at fault ... I'm innocent. What else is there for me to say?"

    Prosecutors and McCoy's family members say Coleman is guilty and should have been executed. The evidence, they say, is overwhelming.

    His blood type was consistent with that found on the victim, and Coleman had been convicted earlier of trying to rape another woman in the same area.

    Jim McCloskey of Centurion Ministries has worked for more than a decade trying to prove otherwise.

    "I have no doubt," said McCloskey. "I believe 100 percent Roger Coleman is innocent."

    If Coleman is innocent, there could be a sea change in the debate about capital punishment.
    http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/LegalCenter/story?id=1494435

    DNA Tests Confirm Guilt of Executed Man
    Friday, January 13, 2006

    Modern DNA tests have confirmed the guilt of a Virginia man who had proclaimed he was innocent of murder and rape even as he was strapped into the electric chair and executed more than a decade ago, the governor announced yesterday.

    The results stunned and disappointed those who have fought a 25-year crusade to prove that Roger K. Coleman was innocent. They also dashed hopes among death penalty foes that the case would catalyze opposition to capital punishment across the country.

    Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner (D) yesterday said genetic analysis conducted in recent weeks proves that Coleman, who was executed in 1992 for the slaying of his 19-year-old sister-in-law, was a rapist and killer. The tests show there is a one in 19 million chance that semen found on the victim's body belonged to someone else.

    "We have sought the truth using DNA technology not available at the time the commonwealth carried out the ultimate criminal sanction," Warner said in a statement. "The confirmation that Roger Coleman's DNA was present reaffirms the verdict and the sanction."

    Coleman's case had become a focal point in the debate over capital punishment, with opponents insisting that DNA tests would prove that an innocent man was put to death and proponents saying that justice was served. Coleman had maintained his innocence in a series of television and newspaper interviews that generated attention around the world, and his backers tried for years to get the courts or politicians to order the tests. Warner, in his last weeks in office, agreed to allow the analysis and became the nation's first governor to allow post-execution testing.

    Legal scholars said the test results denied death penalty opponents a long-sought opportunity to put a human face on one of their most compelling arguments: that the U.S. justice system makes mistakes that result in the executions of innocent men.

    "The opportunity to bring new people into the abolitionist movement has been lost," said Phyllis Goldfarb, a professor at Boston College's law school.

    But Goldfarb said that though the exoneration of an executed inmate could have profoundly eroded support for the death penalty, confirmation of Coleman's guilt won't change many opinions. "Supporters of the death penalty will be confirmed in their skepticism of claims of innocence," she said. "Opponents still have reason to oppose. The risk of executing innocents still exists."

    Coleman, a coal miner from the small Appalachian town of Grundy, Va., was convicted and sentenced to death in the 1981 rape and stabbing of Wanda McCoy.

    Coleman's assertions of innocence and questions over the strength of the evidence prompted Centurion Ministries, a New Jersey charity that investigates wrongful convictions, to investigate the case. Media organizations, including The Washington Post, joined Centurion in an unsuccessful court fight to have the DNA tests conducted years ago.

    Yesterday, James C. McCloskey, Centurion's executive director, said he felt betrayed by the man whose last words included the statement, "An innocent man is going to be murdered tonight."

    "How can somebody, with such equanimity, such dignity, such quiet confidence, make those his final words even though he is guilty?" McCloskey said.
    Had the evidence shown him to be innocent . . . that would have had a tremendous effect on the anti-death-penalty movement in terms of perhaps encouraging moratoriums and even abolition," McCloskey said. "Those are not the set of facts we have in this instance. That will not happen, at least as the result of this case."

    But he and his attorney, who battled without pay for six years to have Coleman's DNA tested, insisted that Coleman's case will serve as a model to encourage other politicians and prosecutors to allow testing of DNA before and after someone is convicted. "The results in this case don't end the debate over the death penalty," said Paul Enzinna, a lawyer with the Washington firm of Baker, Botts.

    Tom Scott, a criminal defense lawyer from Grundy who helped prosecute Coleman, said he remained convinced all along that the right man was tried, convicted and executed.

    "I never had any doubt about his guilt, never," Scott said. "All the evidence always pointed to Coleman."

    During Coleman's trial, authorities said evidence included hair on McCoy's body that was similar to Coleman's and the account of a jailhouse informant. Coleman also had been convicted of attempted rape a few years earlier.

    Coleman said he had an alibi and would not have had time to commit the killing. Defense attorneys also gathered affidavits from people who said another man admitted to killing McCoy.

    The testing in Coleman's case marks only the second time nationwide that DNA tests have been performed after an execution. In 2000, tests ordered by a Georgia judge in the case of Ellis W. Felker, who was executed in 1996, were inconclusive.

    Genetic tests exonerated Florida inmate Frank L. Smith in 2000, several months after he died of natural causes while awaiting execution.

    After the results of the testing in Coleman's case were made public, the death penalty debate continued.

    "Today's finding is a further demonstration that Virginians' trust in our criminal justice system is well founded," said Robert F. McDonnell (R), who will become Virginia's attorney general tomorrow. "Today is further proof that this is exactly the manner in which the death penalty has been, and will continue to be, employed in the commonwealth."

    Joshua K. Marquis, vice president of the National District Attorneys Association and an Oregon prosecutor, was more vehement. "This is not at all unexpected and puts to a lie the myth that wrongful convictions are epidemic," he said. "Coleman was not just a rapist and a murderer but a liar as well."

    But Peter Neufeld, co-director of the New York-based Innocence Project, which has helped exonerate more than 170 inmates, said that there may have been mistakes in other cases and that similar investigations should continue.

    "Today we got just one answer, and one man cannot speak for the correctness of the verdicts in a thousand other capital cases," Neufeld said.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...011201210.html

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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  42. #28
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    I added a spoiler here b/c these are 3 execution photos of Allen Lee Davis.After his execution they enclosed these pics to The Supreme Courts to get Electric Chair Replaced by Lethal Injection .So very graphic photos I hope I did it right.
    [/IMG]

    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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    I'm confused... what's this thread about? LOL

    Wrongfully convicted? Convicted but claiming innocent? Executions gone wrong?

    I really don't mind that some fat ass murderer got a nosebleed. Death is rarely pretty. I'm sure Davis looks better than his victims.
    Allen Lee Davis (July 20, 1944 – July 8, 1999) was a convicted murderer executed for the May 11, 1982 Jacksonville, Florida murder of Nancy Weiler, who was three months pregnant at the time. According to reports, Nancy Weiler was "beaten almost beyond recognition" by Davis with a .357 Magnum, and hit over 25 times in the face and head.

    He was also convicted of killing Nancy Weiler's two daughters, Kristina (9, shot twice in the face) and Katherine (5, shot as she was trying to run away). Davis was on parole for armed robbery at the time of the murders. He was executed on July 8, 1999.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_Lee_Davis
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  44. #30
    Baptized N Dirty Water
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    I was just pointing out the case that drew me to checking into executed people that later have been cleared.Roger Colemen wasnt cleared but he snowed alot of people me included.I normally dont fall for such moronic things but he had me convinced they executed a innocent person.Then when they finally tested the DNA all those yrs later he was guilty!!And as for the pics I just came across them as I was searching and knowing how some here like to browse stuff like that decided to add them and they kinda fit with the DP.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    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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