Tag Archives: Wrongful Convictions

Felix Garcia Should Be Granted a Full Pardon

30 Sep

I first read about Felix Garcia on the Deaf In Prison Blog.  Then I started watching the videos that James Ridgeway (Solitary Watch blog) has put together from his interviews/visits with Felix. I was moved to tears. Another innocent, wrongfully convicted, wrongfully incarcerated- his life stolen from him. Felix happens to be deaf….can you imagine being in prison and not able to hear?  He  has been incarcerated now for 30 YEARS for a crime he did not commit. Read his story, watch his videos, and PLEASE sign his petition. He deserves justice and freedom…..

 

Felix Garcia Should Be Granted a Full Pardon

For over 30 years now, Felix Garcia has been serving time for a crime he did not commit. During that time, he has suffered every form of savage abuse imaginable. There is overwhelming evidence that Felix is innocent. Felix is an intelligent, compassionate, outgoing and brave man who has educated himself in prison, and who deserves his chance at building a life and contributing to society. Won’t you please help this wrongly convicted Deaf man get the justice he is so rightly entitled to?

 

>>>sign petition here<<<

read & watch videos: Deaf In Prison Blog

 

Update on James Prindle

28 Aug

James Prindle was sentenced yesterday to 22 years, no parole. This is not justice by any means……
http://wandervogeldiary.wordpress.com/2012/08/28/bad-movie/

RALLY for Davontae Sanford-Detroits Forgotten Child

22 Mar

Two governors and attorney generals have ignored Davontae’s plight of being coerced into falsely confessing to the impossible – carrying off a quadruple homicide although blind in one eye, developmentally disabled, and only 14, proving that conviction corruption is bipartisan and high-level, and stubbornly protects the self-sullied reputations of police and prosecutors that deserve to lose their freedom along with their jobs.

Davontae Sanford should be allowed to withdraw his guilty plea so that he can go to trial based on the newly discovered evidence that a hit man says he and another person committed murder and Davontae was not there.

An Associated Press Article interview – conducted by Ed White on January 30, 2012

A Detroit hit man in prison for eight murders said he’s willing to publicly take responsibility for four more to help clear a young man who claims he’s innocent of the slayings and confessed at age 14 only to satisfy police.

Vincent Smothers’ testimony would be the most crucial evidence yet to try to persuade a judge to throw out Davontae Sanford’s guilty plea and free him from a nearly 40-year prison sentence. In an interview with The Associated Press, Smothers declared: “He’s not guilty. He didn’t do it.”

RALLY to support Davontae’s journey to FREEDOM will be held

April 23rd, 2012  8am

in front of the Recorders Court

1441 Saint Antoine St # 104 

 Detroit, MI 48226

Recorder’s Court - Directions

For more information & details, Please contact  Darcy Delaproser, Davontae’s advocate & family friend through the Facebook page created on his behalf

https://www.facebook.com/people/Davontae-Sanford/100002107776225

Davontae Sanford-684070
Ionia Maximum Correctional Facility
1576 W. Blue Water Highway
Ionia, MI 48846


Feel free to google “Davontae Sanford” to find out the injustices perpetrated on this 14 yr old child by the state of Michigan.

PLEASE sign the petition ……

http://www.change.org/petitions/new-trial-for-davontae-sanford?utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=share_petition

http://voiceofdetroit.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/FREE-DAVONTAE-SANFORD-Voice-of-Detroit.pdf

http://freedavontaesanford-irishgreeneyes.blogspot.com/

The Innocence List

13 Mar

From Kathy Spillman

http://sojo.net/magazine/2012/04/innocence-list
April 2012 | Sojourners

The Innocence List
There are many reasons to abolish the death penalty. Innocents on death row
may be the most compelling.

by Kimberly Burge

“I believed her,” Meléndez says. “But I also told him later, ‘It took you
too long, God.’”

It took 17 years, eight months, and one day.

It took considerably less time to send him to death row. Meléndez, a migrant
fruit picker, was arrested in Pennsylvania in May 1984, charged with the
killing of a man in Florida, where he had previously lived. Meléndez, who
spoke very little English, was appointed a public defender but not a
translator.

“He kept patting me on the back and saying everything’s going to be okay,”
Meléndez recalls.

In one week’s time he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death, with no
physical evidence presented against him. The conviction rested on the
testimony of two questionable witnesses—a police informant with a criminal
record and a co-defendant who was threatened with the electric chair but who
ultimately received a sentence of two years’ probation after he testified
against Meléndez. The jury contained 11 white members and one African
American.

Meléndez was sent to death row on a November Tuesday in 1984, “an ugly, ugly
day.” On Thursday, guards took a man to be executed. “I got real scared
then, thought they killed someone every week. I wondered: How long until
they come for me?”

In time, during the two hours twice a week death row prisoners were
permitted into the yard, other inmates taught him how to speak, read, and
write in English. He developed friendships with men he knew he would lose to
death. Whenever an execution took place, Meléndez recalls, he heard a
buzzing sound and watched the lights in the prison flicker as the current
was drained by the electric chair.

The Florida Supreme Court upheld his conviction three times. When a new
defense team took over in 2001, as Meléndez neared his final round of
appeals, they pored through a box of materials from his original trial—and
discovered a taped confession from the real killer. Corroborating witnesses
were found, including the wife and sister of the killer, now deceased, who
had confessed to at least 16 people. The prosecution had had a copy of this
taped confession, and had withheld this and other exculpatory evidence from
trial.

IN LIGHT OF this new evidence, Florida Circuit Court Judge Barbara Fleischer
overturned Meléndez’s capital murder conviction in December 2001 and
determined he was entitled to a new trial. The state declined to prosecute
him a second time.

Back on death row, as they began to process his release, guards began
calling him “Mr. Meléndez.”

“Everyone [on death row] knew I was getting out. There were tears running
down my cheeks, I was so happy. Tears on their cheeks, too. But I also knew
I was leaving them behind. They told me, ‘Don’t get into any trouble out
there. Take care of your mama. And don’t forget about us.’”

On Jan. 3, 2002, after more than 17 years, the state of Florida provided him
with a new shirt, a pair of pants, and $100 and set Juan Roberto Meléndez
free.

Four days after his release, when he traveled home to Puerto Rico, his
mother showed him the altar where she prayed for him. Then she made a
confession to her son. Even as she prayed for his freedom, she put away
money to bring his body back home if he was executed.

“I don’t think anyone can really comprehend being innocent and languishing
in prison while the state plots your murder,” says David Love, executive
director of Witness to Innocence. This Philadelphia-based organization is
the only one in the nation comprised of exonerated death row survivors who
now travel the country telling their own stories and speaking out for
abolition of the death penalty. Meléndez has become a passionate and
compelling speaker for Witness to Innocence, addressing audiences across the
United States and Europe.

Meléndez is number 97 on the “Innocence List,” an accounting by the Death
Penalty Information Center of death row inmates exonerated of their crimes.
Those on the list must have been convicted and sentenced to death—and then
later either been given an absolute pardon by the governor based on new
evidence of innocence, or had their conviction overturned and then been
acquitted at re-trial or had all charges dropped. To date, the list includes
140 people.

“We started as a speakers’ bureau for exonerees to tell their stories to
colleges, churches, and community groups. But we also wanted to empower them
to become effective advocates against the death penalty,” Love says. “On one
level, it can be painful to revisit their stories repeatedly. But [Witness
to Innocence] is a potent support group for exonerees. It’s also a potent
symbol for what is wrong with a system that can send innocent people to
death.”

Meléndez concurs: “I was not saved by the system. I was saved in spite of
the system.”

“YOU CAN’T ACT like nothing’s happened [after being released from death
row]. Something has happened. Something dramatic has happened,” says Delbert
Tibbs, who is number 11 on the Innocence List.

Tibbs claims he is “not a firebrand by nature,” but rather a man who prefers
books and a quiet life. But he became an outspoken abolitionist against the
death penalty the minute he walked free from death row in 1977.

A former theology school student from Chicago with no prior criminal record,
he was hitchhiking through Florida in 1974 when he was picked up for the
murder of a man and the rape of his 16-year-old companion. An all-white jury
convicted Tibbs, who is African American, based on the uncorroborated
testimony of the female victim, who was also white. Although she picked
Tibbs out of a lineup, her identification was inconsistent with the initial
description she gave of her assailant.

Tibbs had friends who were civil rights activists, and they began organizing
to secure his freedom. Celebrities such as Joan Baez and Angela Davis spoke
out on his behalf and raised money for his defense. Pete Seeger wrote a
ballad in Tibbs’ honor. The Florida Supreme Court overturned his conviction
because the verdict was not supported by the weight of the evidence; the
state decided not to retry the case. Tibbs’ former prosecutor said that the
original investigation had been tainted from the beginning and that, if
there had been a retrial, he would have appeared as a witness for Tibbs.

He walked free in 1977 after serving three years; all charges against him
were dropped in 1982. “God sent me to death row so I could be a witness
against the death penalty,” he says. “Even after my case was dropped, I
realized that I had to advocate for those still there.”

A poet, Tibbs also speaks out with Witness to Innocence. A character based
on him serves as the centerpiece of The Exonerated, an award-winning play,
based on six true stories, that has been filmed for television.

“I really wish God had found another way,” Tibbs says. “But worse things
have happened to better people than me. Anyone who’s locked up has anger.
But if you don’t embrace the evil and become evil yourself, you can
transcend it.”

MOMENTUM TO ABOLISH the death penalty has never been stronger, according to
lawyer and Witness to Innocence board member Judi Caruso. “It’s been
building in the last five years or so, but has really accelerated in the
last year, especially—and tragically—with Troy Davis,” Caruso says.

Last September, the execution of Davis in Georgia, carried out despite
significant doubts about his guilt, drew worldwide condemnation. Davis had
been convicted, primarily on the basis of eyewitness testimony, of killing
off-duty police officer Mark MacPhail. Years later, before his execution,
seven out of nine witnesses had changed their stories. Yet a federal judge
reviewing this new evidence required that Davis provide not only reasonable
doubt of his guilt, but clear proof of his innocence. He was unable to do
that to the judge’s satisfaction.

“If one of our fellow citizens can be executed with so much doubt
surrounding his guilt, then the death penalty system in our country is
unjust and outdated,” former president Jimmy Carter said.

Others appear to be coming around to share Carter’s view. A Gallup Poll last
year showed support for the death penalty at its lowest level in nearly four
decades. Sixty-one percent supported the death penalty, down from 80 percent
in 1994; 35 percent opposed it, up from 16 percent in 1994. In a 2011 CNN
poll, given a choice between the death penalty and a sentence of life
without parole for those who commit murder, 50 percent favored a life
sentence; 48 percent chose death.

The number of new death sentences imposed in 2011 dropped sharply, to 78,
falling below 100 for the first time since the death penalty was reinstated
in the United States in 1976. It’s a decline of 75 percent since 1996. The
number of executions carried out fell to 43, a 56 percent decline since
1999.

Illinois abolished the death penalty in 2011, becoming the fourth state in
four years to do so. The governor of Oregon, John Kitzhaber, declared that
no more executions would occur while he was in office: “I refuse to be a
part of this compromised and inequitable system any longer.”

For many years, activists have used pragmatic arguments to oppose the death
penalty: Capital punishment is not a deterrent to crime. Death sentences are
disproportionately handed down to people of color, or to people convicted of
killing someone white. It is a staggeringly expensive process for states.

But Caruso believes that the voices of innocent people nearly put to death
for crimes they did not commit are ultimately what will turn the tide
against the death penalty: “That’s what’s beginning to create the change of
opinion. When the punishment is irreversible, nothing but perfection is
acceptable. We can certainly improve the system, but we can never guarantee
that we can make the system perfect.”

Kirk Bloodsworth—number 48 on the Innocence List—offers a sharper
reflection, and a unique sense of authority. He was the first person with a
capital conviction to be exonerated based on DNA evidence. Accused of the
brutal rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl outside Baltimore, Bloodsworth
spent eight years, 11 months, and 19 days on death row. In letters from
prison, below his name he signed the initials A.I.M., “An Innocent Man.”

“If you want to support the death penalty in the U. S., then you’re
supporting a system that can execute an innocent person,” he says. “Even if
you believe it would be valid for the guilty, it cannot be valid for the
innocent. Do away with it before it kills your neighbor, or you.”

Night after night,  Sabrina Butler rises from her bed in Columbus,
Mississippi, and goes in to check on her 9-year-old daughter and 14-year-old
son. “My husband tells me, ‘Baby, relax. You don’t have to do that every
night.’ But I can’t relax,” she says.

In 1989, when Butler was 17 and a single mother, she found her 9-month-old
son in his crib, not breathing. After she and a neighbor tried to
resuscitate him, Butler took him to the emergency room, where he died. The
next day, she was arrested and charged with child abuse and murder, based on
bruises left by the failed attempts at CPR.

“I didn’t know what I was doing and I probably did it wrong,” she says. “I
was just trying to help him.”

Her lawyer urged her not to take the stand in her own defense and told her
they had the case nipped in the bud. But a jury found her guilty of capital
murder. Butler later learned the prosecutor in the case took the jury out
for a picnic while they were sequestered.

“Being so young, I was scared to death. I didn’t know what was happening to
me.”

On death row, a guard met her there with these words: “This is where you’re
going to be for the rest of your life until we kill you.”

The Mississippi Supreme Court overturned her conviction in 1992, saying that
the prosecution had failed to prove that the incident was anything more than
an accident. She was retried and then acquitted in 1995 after a very brief
jury deliberation. It is now believed that her son, Walter, died of kidney
disease or sudden infant death syndrome.

Butler spent six and a half years in jail, including more than two and a
half years on death row. She is the only woman to be exonerated, number 59
on the Innocence List.

Now she tells her story, and checks on her children each night, every night.

“I don’t want someone to stop breathing again on my watch.”
- – - – -
Kimberly Burge is a Sojourners contributing writer who divides her time
between Washington, D.C., and Cape Town, South Africa.

West Memphis 3- evidence shows innocence….

23 Aug

Free, finally…but still must fight to clear their name-despite no evidence to actually convict them- 18 years in prison & DNA that exonerates them!! watch this video…..JUSTICE in America.

Wrongful Convictions

8 Jun

How many innocent Americans are behind bars?

from the July 2011 issue of REASON

When Paul House was finally released from prison in 2008, he was a specter of the man who had been sentenced to death more than 22 years earlier. When I visit his home in Crossville, Tennessee, in March, House’s mother Joyce, who has cared for him since his release, points to a photo of House taken the day he was finally allowed to come home. In that photo and others from his last days in prison, House is all of 150 pounds, ashen and drawn, his fragile frame nearly consumed by his wheelchair. In most of the images he looks days away from death, although in one he wears the broad smile of a man finally escaping a long confinement.

When House’s aunt called to congratulate him on his first day back, his mother handed him her cell phone so he could chat. He inspected the phone, gave her a frustrated look, and asked her to find him one that worked. That kind of Rip Van Winkle moment is common among people freed after a long stint in prison. Dennis Fritz, one of the two wrongly convicted men profiled in John Grisham’s 2006 book The Innocent Man, talks about nearly calling the police upon seeing someone use an electronic key card the first time he found himself in a hotel after his release. He thought he’d witnessed a burglar use a credit card to jimmy open a door.

“Paul’s first meal when he got home was chili verde,” Joyce House says. “It’s his favorite. And I had been waiting a long time to make it for him.” And apparently quite a few meals after that. House, now 49, has put on 75 pounds since his release. More important, he has been getting proper treatment for his advanced-stage multiple sclerosis, treatment the Tennessee prison system hadn’t given him.

The years of inadequate care have taken a toll. House can’t walk, and he needs help with such basic tasks as bathing, feeding himself, and maneuvering around in his wheelchair. His once distinctively deep voice (which had allegedly been heard by a witness at the crime scene) is now wispy and high-pitched. He spends his time playing computer games and watching game shows.

In the hour or so that I visit with House, his mental facilities fade in and out. Communicating with him can be like trying to listen to a baseball game broadcast by a distant radio station. He will give a slurred but lucid answer to one question, then answer the next one with silence, or with the answer to a previous question, or just with a random assortment of words. He frequently falls back on the resigned refrain, “Oh, well,” delivered with a shrug. The gesture and phrasing are identical every time he uses them. It’s what House says to kill the expectation that he will be able to deliver the words others in the room are waiting for. It’s his signal to stop waiting for him and move on.

In 1986 House was convicted of murdering Carolyn Muncey in Union County, Tennessee, a rural part of the state that shoulders Appalachia. He was sentenced to death. His case is a textbook study in wrongful conviction. It includes mishandled evidence, prosecutorial misconduct, bad science, cops with tunnel vision, DNA testing, the near-execution of an innocent man, and an appellate court reluctant to reopen old cases even in the face of new evidence that strongly suggests the jury got it wrong.

Continue Reading @ Reason.com

TX – New Hell Hole News #30 by Hank Skinner

1 Jun

is available here:

http://www.hankskinner.org/hs/hs.php?en,drn

Innocence does not matter…..

28 Mar

High court rejects Ga. death row inmate’s appeal

 

Troy Anthony Davis claims that he was wrongly convicted of killing a Savannah police officer in 1989. Some witnesses have recanted testimony that helped convict him.

Amnesty International USA member  Mercedes Binns stands in front of the Georgia state capitol in support of Troy Davis on Tuesday, June 22, 2010.

Chris Dunn, cdunn@ajc.com Amnesty International USA member Mercedes Binns stands in front of the Georgia state capitol in support of Troy Davis on Tuesday, June 22, 2010.

 

By GREG BLUESTEIN

The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Georgia prosecutors who spent more than two decades trying to execute Troy Davis have won what may be their final legal battle in the U.S. Supreme Court, yet state prison officials still can’t schedule his execution.

This time it’s because federal regulators seized the state’s entire supply of a key lethal injection drug.

The Supreme Court’s Monday decision to reject Davis’ appeal clears the way for state authorities to execute Davis, who had been given a rare chance to argue his innocence but failed to convince a federal judge he was wrongly convicted of the 1989 murder of a Savannah police officer.

The high court’s decision came at an inopportune time for Georgia authorities, who have set three previous execution dates for Davis since 2007 only to have each postponed so judges could review the case. Federal regulators this month seized the state’s entire stockpile of sodium thiopental, a sedative used in the three-drug lethal injection cocktail, amid questions about how the state obtained it.

That means prison officials can’t schedule Davis’ execution until the Drug Enforcement Administration concludes its investigation or Georgia switches to another drug. Arizona, Texas and Ohio have already switched to another sedative, pentobarbital, amid a nationwide supply shortage, but Georgia prison officials won’t comment on whether they are considering a similar move.

Still, the court’s rejection is a crushing setback for Davis, who has become a cause celebre for the international anti-death penalty movement amid claims that he wasn’t the one who killed off-duty Savannah police officer Mark MacPhail — and that he had evidence to prove it.

Even Davis’ attorneys acknowledge his options are limited. Defense attorney Jason Ewart said the likeliest — and perhaps only — route is the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles. The five-member panel has the power to commute or postpone executions, but rarely does so.

“We have to address the parole board. They said they wouldn’t execute someone if there’s doubt, and this case is so riddled with doubt,” said Martina Correia, Davis’ sister. “It’s a shame in the U.S. when people don’t value innocence. You would think the highest court in the land would have a lot more sensitivity to these issues.”

MacPhail’s mother, Anneliese MacPhail, said she hopes the court’s decision has put to an end to Davis’ legal appeals.

“I’m relieved that it’s over now,” said Anneliese MacPhail. “Well, maybe. I’m not believing it until it’s over. It’s been going on for so many years now that every time we think we’re near the end, something else comes up. I just want this to end so badly, you won’t believe it. This has been a nightmare.”

MacPhail was working off-duty at a Savannah bus station on Aug. 19, 1989, when he was shot twice after rushing to help a homeless man who had been attacked. Eyewitnesses identified Davis as the shooter at his trial, but no physical evidence tied him to the slaying. Davis was convicted of the murder in 1991 and sentenced to death.

Davis has long claimed he could clear his name in MacPhail’s death if a court would give him the chance to hear new evidence. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2009 agreed he should be able to argue his innocence, a rare chance afforded no other American death row defendant in at least 50 years.

During two days of testimony in June, U.S. District Judge William T. Moore Jr. heard from two witnesses who said they falsely incriminated Davis and two others who said another man had confessed to being MacPhail’s killer in the years since Davis’ trial.

Continue Reading….

The case of Jeremy Bamber UK

13 Mar

A Human Rights case, Jeremy Bamber, has been incarcerated for 26 years, he is innocent, through corruption and monitary greed, he was convicted. Take a little time out and acquaint yourselves to his case. If this can happen to him, a nobody, it could happen to you too.

In 1986 Jeremy Bamber was wrongly convicted of murdering five members of his family at their home White House Farm in the village of Toleshunt D’arcy, Essex during the early hours of August 7th 1985.

Initially police believed that Jeremy’s sister, Sheila Caffell, a paranoid schizophrenic had shot the family at close range with a rifle. The inquest recorded the tragedy as four murders and a suicide. 

But after the killings witnesses found new evidence from the crime scene which was submitted to Police after their initial searches and Jeremy was charged with murder. He has always maintained his innocence. There is now enough evidence to prove that he did not commit the crime and that he didn’t receive a fair trial.

Jeremy has fought tirelessly to clear his name and is currently waiting for the CCRC to put his case forward for a third appeal.

Hank Skinner Update!!!

7 Mar

“Equal Justice under Law” YES!!! 6 votes to 3, Hank Skinner won in the Supreme Court today, the opinion is here:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/10pdf/09-9000.pdf
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