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Miscarriages of justice > USA
Glenn Ford 1949-2015
Glenn Ford,
at his home in New Orleans shortly
after being freed from death row in 2014.
Photograph: Henrietta Wildsmith
The Shreveport Times, via Associated Press
Glenn Ford,
Death Row Prisoner Freed After 29 Years,
Dies at
65
NYT
July 2, 2015
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/03/
us/glenn-ford-spared-death-row-dies-at-65.html
Glenn Ford USA 1949-2015
Glenn Ford
(...)
spent nearly 30 years
on death row in Louisiana
for a murder
he almost certainly did not commit,
died (...) less
than 16 months
after his conviction and death sentence
were vacated and he was
released
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/03/
us/glenn-ford-spared-death-row-dies-at-65.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/03/
us/glenn-ford-spared-death-row-dies-at-65.html
https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2014/03/12/
289520498/man-exonerated-freed-after-3-decades-on-louisianas-death-row
Corpus of news articles
Northern Ireland, UK, USA > Justice
Miscarriages of justice, Injustice
Exonerations
DNA evidence
152 Innocents, Marked for Death
APRIL 13, 2015
The New York Times
The Opinion Pages
Editorial
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
However much Americans may disagree about the morality of capital
punishment, no one wants to see an innocent person executed.
And yet, far too often, people end up on death row after being convicted of
horrific crimes they did not commit. The lucky ones are exonerated while they
are still alive — a macabre club that has grown to include 152 members since
1973.
The rest remain locked up for life in closet-size cells. Some die there of
natural causes; in at least two documented cases, inmates who were almost
certainly innocent were put to death.
How many more innocent people have met the same fate, or are awaiting it? That
may never be known. But over the past 42 years, someone on death row has been
exonerated, on average, every three months. According to one study, at least 4
percent of all death-row inmates in the United States have been wrongfully
convicted. That is far more than often enough to conclude that the death penalty
— besides being cruel, immoral, and ineffective at reducing crime — is so
riddled with error that no civilized nation should tolerate its use.
Innocent people get convicted for many reasons, including bad lawyering,
mistaken identifications and false confessions made under duress. But as
advances in DNA analysis have accelerated the pace of exonerations, it has also
become clear that prosecutorial misconduct is at the heart of an alarming number
of these cases.
In the past year alone, nine people who had been sentenced to death were
released — and in all but one case, prosecutors’ wrongdoing played a key role.
The latest was Anthony Ray Hinton, who on Apr. 3 walked out of the Alabama
prison where he had spent almost 30 years, half his life, on death row. Mr.
Hinton was convicted of two murders largely on faulty evidence that the bullets
had come from his gun. His prosecutor at the time said he knew Mr. Hinton was
guilty and “evil” just by looking at him. And later prosecutors continued to
insist on his guilt even when expert testimony clearly refuted the case against
him.
Why does this keep happening? In a remarkable letter to the editor published
last month in The Shreveport Times, A.M. Stroud III, a former prosecutor in
Louisiana’s Caddo Parish, offered a chillingly frank answer: “Winning became
everything.”
In 1984, Mr. Stroud convinced a jury to convict a man named Glenn Ford and
sentence him to death for murder. But Mr. Stroud now admits that because he was
so focused on winning rather than on seeking justice, he failed to identify and
turn over evidence that would have cleared Mr. Ford.
“How totally wrong was I,” Mr. Stroud wrote, apologizing to Mr. Ford — who spent
30 years in prison, 26 of those on death row — as well as his family, the judge,
the jury, and the family of the murder victim, a jeweler named Isadore Rozeman.
This is little consolation to Mr. Ford, who was released in 2014 but is now
dying from lung cancer that developed, and went untreated, while he wasted away
in prison. (Last month a Louisiana judge denied Mr. Ford any compensation beyond
the $20 debit card he received upon his release.) Still, Mr. Stroud’s powerful
message is a rare admission of prosecutorial hubris and the outrageously high
price many people pay for it.
Unfortunately, that message is unlikely to be heeded in places where it needs to
be heard most — in Caddo Parish itself, for example, which sentences more people
to death per capita than anywhere else in the country. Responding to the searing
honesty of Mr. Stroud’s letter, the parish’s current first assistant district
attorney, Dale Cox, offered up some candor of his own: “I’m a believer that the
death penalty serves society’s interest in revenge,” Mr. Cox told The Shreveport
Times. “I think we need to kill more people.”
The all-too-common mind-set to win at all costs has facilitated the executions
of people like Cameron Todd Willingham or Carlos DeLuna, whose convictions have
been convincingly debunked in recent years. And that mind-set led to the
wrongful conviction of people like Mr. Hinton, Mr. Ford and Henry Lee McCollum,
who was exonerated last year after spending three decades on North Carolina’s
death row.
If not for the extraordinary after-the-fact efforts of lawyers, investigators,
or just plain dumb luck, these men would be dead too, and neither Mr. Cox nor
anyone else would be the wiser.
A version of this editorial
appears in print
on April 13, 2015,
on page A18 of
the New York edition
with the headline:
152 Innocents, Marked for Death.
152 Innocents, Marked for Death,
NYT,
APRIL 12, 2015,
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/13/
opinion/152-innocents-marked-for-death.html
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