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Rights and Liberties

4 Prisoners Facing Executions or Serving Extreme Jail Sentences Who Very Well May Be Innocent

By Liliana Segura, AlterNet. Posted October 26, 2009.


Recent evidence shows that an executed Texas man was innocent. There are others who still might avoid that fate.
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The tragic unraveling of the case against Cameron Todd Willingham -- the Texas man executed in 2004 for killing his own daughters by supposedly setting fire to his house -- seems to have crossed a major threshold in the debate over the death penalty in the past several weeks. For the first time in recent memory, there is devastating proof that an innocent man was put to death in this country.

Such a revelation, one might think, would give pause to even the most enthusiastic death penalty supporter. Yet Texas Governor Rick Perry, who has signed off on more than 200 executions, including Willingham's, is only focused on protecting his political career. The governor, who faces a hotly contested primary race against Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson next year, is going to great lengths to cover up evidence of Willingham's innocence -- particularly proof that he had this evidence in his hands before he signed off on his murder. At the same time, he continues to defend the death penalty in Texas as perfectly fine: "Our process works and I don’t see anything out there that would merit calling for a moratorium on the Texas death penalty,” he said last week.

Meanwhile, Texas is gearing up to execute another prisoner tomorrow, a man named Reginald Blanton, who has a very strong innocence claim of his own. (Read about his case here.)

Cruel and unusual though it might seem, for a person to be sentenced to die for a crime he or she did not commit is hardly a unique phenomenon in this country. In the past 35 years, no fewer than 138 people have been released from death row after proof of their innocence was discovered -- including eight this year alone. How many may have been executed before their innocence was known is unclear. As Adam Liptak wrote in the New York Times last year, "we know almost nothing about the number of innocent people in prison."

Beyond death row, innocent men and women have languished in prison for decades, serving life sentences for crimes they didn't commit. Some have been exonerated. But many remain scattered in prison cells across the country, insisting on their innocence. These are prisoners whose cases, when examined up close, are often full of holes: a lack of physical evidence, unreliable -- or recanted -- witness testimony, false confessions, and more. Racism, crooked and lazy cops, untrustworthy jailhouse snitches, and the political aspirations of prosecutors who use them are just a few factors fueling wrongful convictions.

The list below could be much, much longer. But here are just four cases where innocent people appear to have been wrongfully convicted of terrible crimes. Some of them were sentenced to multiple life sentences. Others were sentenced to death. All of them remain behind bars.

Rodney Reed

In April of 1996, a 19-year-old woman named Stacey Stites was murdered in Texas, her body discovered in a wooded area just outside the city of Bastrop. Stites's body was partly clothed; she had evidently been strangled to death. DNA taken from semen found inside her body was matched to an African American man from Bastrop. His name was Rodney Reed.

At trial, the prosecution accused Reed of assaulting Stites while she was on her way to work, early in the morning. According to a 2002 report in the Austin Chronicle, "Prosecutors successfully argued that at some point on Stites' early morning drive ... Reed accosted Stites and forced his way into the truck -- while apparently on foot and without the aid of any weapon -- and raped, sodomized, and strangled her with the braided leather belt she was wearing, then dumped her body and abandoned the truck "

"This theory of the crime was deduced, theorized, and then presented at trial from a single piece of evidence: the match of Reed's DNA."

There was no other physical evidence linking him to the crime. Nevertheless, Reed was found guilty and sentenced to death.

Yet there was one critical twist in the case: Rodney Reed, many said, was having an affair with the engaged Stites. That would make their sexual relationship consensual, explaining the semen found in her body.

Stites's fiancee, Jimmy Fennell, was a police officer in Giddings. At trial, Reed's defense attorneys tried, unsuccessfully, to show that it was Fennell who killed Stites, in a fit of rage over her affair with Reed. According to the Chronicle, "Court records show 10 other people were publicly identified as witnesses to the affair either during the trial or by affidavit." 'Everyone knew,' [Austin attorney Jimmy Brown] said. 'The people who worked with her knew; they confirmed it unofficially. None would come out with it, because we are talking about a white woman who was having sex with a black man in Bastrop -- and then she's dead. But there is no question they knew about it.'"


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See more stories tagged with: death penalty, rick perry, death row, rodney reed, innocence, cameron todd willingham, timothy mckinney, efren paredes jr, anthony mckinney, jimmy fennell, stacey stites

Liliana Segura is an AlterNet staff writer and editor of Rights & Liberties and World Special Coverage. http://twitter.com/LilianaSegura

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capital punishment
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 26, 2009 3:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a pamphlet entitled The Death Penalty: Cruel & Inhuman Punishment, Amnesty International USA reports that "the United States is the only western industrial nation which still practices capital punishment."

Moreover, the death penalty does not deter violent crime:

"Most people who murder do not see beyond their action; they kill quickly in moments of great fear or emotional stress and under the influence of drugs or alcohol. When the crime is premeditated, the individual rarely believes he or she will be apprehended or executed…in 1976, the United States Supreme Court found no conclusive evidence that the death penalty deters violent crime. The United Nations came to similar conclusions."

According to Amnesty International USA, capital punishment tends to discriminate against minorities and the poor. In the United States since 1972, over 65 percent of the people on death row have been unskilled, service, or domestic workers, while 60 percent were unemployed at the time of their crimes.

"In the United States," reports Amnesty International USA, "blacks and other minorities face a much greater likelihood of execution than whites similarly charged...The victim’s race still factors heavily in determining the offender’s punishment. In Texas, blacks who kill whites are six times more likely to receive the death sentence than those with black victims. In Florida, black offenders who murder whites are forty times more likely than whites who kill blacks to end up on death row."

Responding to the concept of "an eye for an eye," Amnesty International USA asks, "If capital punishment is appropriate because it takes a life for a life, why doesn’t the government also burn the arsonist’s home and rape the rapist? Because justice does not mean punishment that imitates the crime." Amnesty International USA states further that the death penalty costs more than life imprisonment.

United States Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall once observed: "The death penalty is no more effective a deterrent than life imprisonment… While police and law enforcement officials are the strongest advocates of capital punishment, the evidence is overwhelming that police are no safer in communities that retain the sanction than in those that have abolished it. It also is evident that the burden of capital punishment falls upon the poor, the ignorant, and the underprivileged members of society."

United States Supreme Court Justice William Brennan once argued against capital punishment, saying, "The calculated killing of a human being involves, by its very nature, an absolute denial of the executed person's humanity."

Justice Brennan claimed the 8th Amendment bans "cruel and unusual punishment." Yet the 5th Amendment refers to "capital or otherwise infamous crime" and says no person "shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law."

This clearly implies that persons can be deprived of their right to life, but only under due process of law. Capital punishment, therefore, is constitutional, and, ultimately, the only way death penalty opponents can correct this apparent injustice is through a Constitutional Amendment.

Attacking capital punishment, the early church father Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, wrote: "Christians are not allowed to kill, it is not permitted for the guiltless to put even the guilty to death."

Religious leaders throughout the world have taken a stand against capital punishment. Leading Jewish organizations, Protestant denominations, and the United States Catholic Bishops Conference all oppose the death penalty.

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This is why
Posted by: C. Rich on Oct 26, 2009 3:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need honesty in politicians who handle the death penalty and why this gay thing with the governor should be out in the open. Just Google Charlie Crist and the film “Outrage” and see what I mean.

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C'mon it's Texas
Posted by: robchapman on Oct 26, 2009 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
C'mon it's Texas, they don't care.

The attitude in Texas is that if the guy didn't do this particular thing, there are plenty of other crimes he got away with that the state can hang him for.

Texans are interested in showing that they are tough, not in showing that they are fair or just.

Due process in Texas is not getting caught.

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The "Bible" belt
Posted by: rugger on Oct 26, 2009 3:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How ironic that the so called religious center of the country has the highest degree of blood lust for vengeance.

Hypocritical, mother-f**king, sister-f**king cock-sucking, bastards.

What would Jesus do, you inbred pricks?

Secede, finally, once and for all.

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» RE: The "Bible" belt Posted by: Haji54
Some states are right - too many are wrong
Posted by: LeonBNJ on Oct 26, 2009 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About 13 USA states do not have a Death Penalty in their state Statues. Many states that do have it very rarely carry it out or haven't do so since reinstating them in the 1970's. Of the remaining states that still have it, really only about 6 or 7 actually carry out death penalties, especially Texas. Those remaining states are wrong.
About a year ago, New Jersey repealed it's death penalty as effective appeals and other issues basically meant no one ever going to be executed. While dozens had been sentenced to death, all ended up being moved to life without parole. Sister Mary Prejean, a well known advocate against the death penalty made several appearance in churches in New Jersey and to political leaders in the state to lobby for the repeal of the death penalty statute. Her appearances were a major turning point to cause the repeal.
Moral pressure may work in some places, but practical issues including the costs of endless appeal, including to taxpayers vs. 'life without parole' may be the best way to end death penalities. One has to wonder about the mental health of anyone who would commit murder. That should be the best reason for not to ever use the death penalty. No death penalties in all states (and even in the Federal level), minimum standards to assure adquate legal defense, automatic appeals of any extensive or life sentences, having legal procedures by police and at trial to make sure justice is sound and proper must be the way we should go.

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Please Sign the Petition to Free Efrén Paredes, Jr.
Posted by: TIME on Oct 26, 2009 5:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for posting this very important article. I urge readers to support the campaign to free Efrén Paredes, Jr. (whose case was featured in this article) by signing the online petition to free Efrén at http://tinyurl.com/FreeEPJ.

Efrén has the support of several notable scholars and activists across the country including Dr. Elizabeth "Betita" Martinez, Director, Institute for MultiRacial Justice, author, and activist; Dr. Carlos Muñoz, Jr., Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, author and activist; Dr. Rodolfo Acuña, historian, educator and Chicano studies scholar; Dr. Jorge Chinea, Director of Chicano-Boricua Studies Department, Wayne State University, author and activist; Juana Alicia, muralist, printmaker, educator, and activist; Favianna Rodriguez, political printmaker, digital artist, activist; Dr. Martha Grace Duncan, Professor of Law, Emory University, and author; Dr. Walter Garcia-Kawamoto, Journal of Adolescent Research, Manuscript Consulting Editor; Elena Herrada, Director of Centro Obrero, activist, and writer; Elisha Miranda aka E-Fierce, filmmaker, writer, and activist; and others.

Efrén also enjoys the support of world renowned wrongful convictions expert Paul Ciolino, a veteran private investigator.

Ciolino is the author of numerous articles in professional publications and the book "In the Company of Giants: The Ultimate Investigation Guide for Legal Professionals, Activists, Journalists & the Wrongfully Convicted". In addition he co-wrote the best-selling and critically acclaimed textbooks "Advanced Forensic Criminal Defense Investigations" and "Advanced Forensic Civil Investigations".

Ciolino is chief investigative advisor to Northwestern University Law School's Center on Wrongful Convictions, the Medill School of Journalism, and DePaul University Center for Justice in Capital Cases.

According to Ciolino, "There is not one shred of credible evidence to suggest that Efrén was involved in the murder. No weapon, no eyewitnesses, no physical evidence, no motive, no prior conduct to suggest that a 15-year-old student athlete, and honor role student with zero criminal background, would have planned, participated or committed this murder. The community and jury were sold a bill of goods based on the words of drug dealers and thieves."

Please invite people to sign our petition expressing support for Efrén's release and ask that the Hon. Governor Jennifer Granholm grant his commutation request. You can sign the petition at http://tinyurl.com/FreeEPJ. I also urge you to write a story about Efrén's case.

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» Exactly! Posted by: Tweck9
» Not innocent. Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Posted by: GerryAttric
Not necessarily innocent
Posted by: mlee on Oct 26, 2009 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even if some evidence used to convict a prisoner is weakened or reversed, does not AUTOMATICALLY mean the prisoner is innocent. There may have been enough other evidence to convict. Even it the evidence was totally reversed, unless it proves that the defendant was actually innocent, it may mean simply that our prosecutors didn't do a sufficient job.

If you'll read the Willingham case's new findings, it merely states that the fire pattern evidence was inconclusive, that it MAY have been accidental. While it might have crossed the line from "guilt beyond doubt", it did not prove innocence.

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» Good 'ol Efren Posted by: Tweck9
» We're talking about Willingham Posted by: leafsong1
theological perspectives
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 26, 2009 7:00 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Using the Bible to advocate ethical vegetarianism and compassion towards animals is comparable to using the Bible to advocate the emancipation of women or the abolition of human slavery: the secular arguments are much stronger.

A vegetarian interpretation of the Bible IS possible, as St. Jerome, Thomas Tryon, William Metcalfe, John Wesley, Ellen White, and other distinguished figures in the Christian tradition have demonstrated. Christian activists often cite the Bible with regards to other contemporary moral issues.

In his book Death as a Penalty, Howard Zehr makes a Christian case for the abolition of capital punishment. He notes that retaliation in the Old Testament was not as much of a requirement as it was a limitation on vengeance. In early Hebrew history, vengeance had to be controlled. "An eye for an eye" was a rule to make retaliation proportionate to the offense.

Hebrew society thus moved from unlimited to limited retaliation. "An eye for an eye" was not a command to seek vengeance, but a limitation on retribution. According to Zehr, "Retribution, like divorce, reflected a concession, not God's highest intent." (Deuteronomy 24; Matthew 19:8)

Zehr points out that the Old Testament death penalty included many offenses that our society does not consider capital. "To be consistent with the Old Testament," Zehr argues, "we would need to apply the death penalty much more broadly than we do today, including for accidental manslaughter and rebellious teenagers without regard to intent or mitigating circumstances. (Exodus 21)"

Moreover, the Old Testament and later rabbinic tradition placed many restrictions on the application of capital punishment. An "eye for an eye" was one such limitation. Mosaic law and the later rabbinic tradition established a strict set of judicial procedures for cases involving capital punishment. The standard of proof required to convict someone went beyond our own standard of "beyond reasonable doubt" and required almost absolute certainty.

A conviction required at least two eyewitnesses, and witnesses who lied were subject to the same penalty as the accused. (Deuteronomy 17, 19) Hebrew law regarding capital punishment was much more restrictive than our own. Further restrictions were added, and by the 2nd century, the sanction was rarely carried out.

According to Zehr, a frequent theme in the Old Testament is that of mercy for the offender: "The first murder recorded was followed by an act of God protecting the murderer (Genesis 4). Cities of refuge were to be provided where the guilty could avoid revenge by the victim’s family (Numbers 35; Deuteronomy 4, 19; Joshua 20). These sanctuaries allowed time for tempers to cool and a solution to be worked out.

"The themes of Deuteronomy 32:35--‘To Me belong vengeance and recompense’--and of Leviticus 19:18--‘You shall not take vengeance... but shall love your neighbor as yourself’--recur frequently in the Old Testament."

Zehr states that taking a life for a life in the Old Testament was more of a sacrificial and ceremonial action, rather than a legal one: "A killing was a religious evil that demanded compensation through a religious ceremony. (Genesis 9, Exodus 21, Deuteronomy 19)" Executions, Zehr insists, were not as much a device for maintaining social order as they were a way of righting a moral imbalance. "The death penalty had a sacrificial and ceremonial more than a legal function," observes Zehr, "and to draw parallels to modern use of capital punishment is fallacious."

Zehr thus draws the conclusion that "The Old Testament allowed capital punishment, but as a concession. Retribution was possible, but as a limitation, not as a command. Mercy was preferred. The death penalty served a primarily ceremonial function and was hedged with serious restrictions and reservations."

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theological perspectives (cont'd)
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 26, 2009 7:01 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the New Testament, Jesus refers to capital punishment in one of his parables. (Luke 19:27) However, Jesus’ response to capital punishment undermined the penalty by his demand that both judges and executioners be sinless.

"On one occasion," Zehr writes, "Christ was asked to rule on a death penalty case (John 8). His response: ‘Let one without sin cast the first stone.’ And this was consistent with Christ’s other teachings. He reminds his listeners to beware of condemning others because God’s judgments do not necessarily coincide with our own (e.g. Matthew 25, Luke 6). If our judgments are so fallible, how can we make the decision to take a life?"

According to Zehr, the sacrificial aspect of taking a life was fulfilled by the sacrifice of Christ:

"Christ's death on the cross, itself an application of capital punishment, wiped away the Old Testament ceremonial and moral basis for the death penalty (e.g. Hebrews 10). No more blood needs to be shed to testify to the sacredness of life. Christ died that others may live. By trading places with the guilty and the enemy, by dying in place of the murderer Barabbas, Christ closed off the Old Testament reason for the death penalty.

"Christ did not simply eliminate the rationale for the death penalty. He constantly reiterated our responsibility to see Christ in our needy neighbor, even in our enemies."

A theme repeated throughout the New Testament is that of love and forgiveness towards one's enemies and persecutors:

"When Christ himself was executed," observes Zehr, "he gave a model response to his enemies in his dying words: ‘Father, forgive them.’ Jesus teaches that we are to love those who harm us and he sees no way to love a person without caring for life.

"If we love God, Jesus says we are obligated to show that love in our actions toward others. Christ moves us from the Old Testament perspective of limited retaliation to nonretaliation and active love (e.g. Romans 12, I John 4, Luke 6:27-36).

"In Jesus’ teaching," Zehr concludes, "life belongs to God. It is not ours to take. We also have to repudiate capital punishment because it is incompatible with the basic focus of the Gospel--reconciliation and redemption."

Attacking capital punishment, the early church father Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, wrote: "Christians are not allowed to kill, it is not permitted for the guiltless to put even the guilty to death.

Zehr asks, "When the state takes a life, is it performing a function that belongs to God?"

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Efren Paredes
Posted by: Tweck9 on Oct 26, 2009 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... is not innocent. I'm as activistic as anyone on these issues, but Mr. Paredes murdered that man. The evidence is overwhelming. This article does not correctly portray the events as they really unfolded, and leaves out a whole lot of information that would make it a lot more clear that he is not innocent, and deserves what he got. Efren is very clearly guilty of murder and should not be featured in one of these articles.

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» RE: fren Paredes Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: fren Paredes Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: fren Paredes Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: fren Paredes Posted by: Tweck9
Ho-hum, Another Execution.
Posted by: Midway54 on Oct 26, 2009 7:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Texas is first in the Union with the number of executions, and at least some of the dimwit, swaggering cowboy types seem proud of the questionable distinction. News of the latest execution perhaps serves as a temporary break in the incessant boredom of life in the vast, rural precincts of the Loon Star State.

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I would NEVER go to Texas or any red state.
Posted by: Ellie1 on Oct 26, 2009 7:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I recently drove cross country and made a determined effort to avoid the southern regions and red states of this country, and when I couldn't avoid them I didn't stop to buy anything. I'll be damned if I'll allow MY money to fund jackasses who live in these areas.

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GET GOVERNMENT OUT OF THE MURDER BUSINESS NOW!!!
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Oct 26, 2009 8:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Government can't be expected or trusted to do any damn thing right, and here we have them deciding who gets put to death??? Stop this medieval lunacy now!!!

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Tweck9 is a Fraud
Posted by: Necalli.Ollin on Oct 26, 2009 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tweck9 is a complete fraud. He masquerades like he knows about the Paredes case and is simply full of lies. On another page he left the comment, "I can't tell you that Efren committed this crime, because I simply do not know." Then he comes on here and says the opposite. You can see the evidence for yourself at:

http://tinyurl.com/yada6uq

A world renowned wrongful convictions expert and private investigator supports Paredes' innocence. You can read his statements and other facts at http://4Efren.com.

The only activism Tweck9 knows is lying and supporting right-wing extremists.

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» What a joke! Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Posted by: GerryAttric
» YOU are the frauds. Posted by: Tweck9
» Thank you Posted by: Tweck9
Treason is the only crime worthy of death...
Posted by: truthteller on Oct 26, 2009 8:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...And every senior member of the Bush administration deserves to be lined up for a public hangin' on the Mall in DC, including Condi and Colin. These people stole two presidential elections so they could lie to take us to war to overthrow a government in Iraq they could not control, to get control of it's oil resources, create the need to buy more weapons from the MIC, and to serve as a wedge over Iran to protect the people who really run our government - Israel. They are the most heinous kind of people. They blood of thousands of Americans, and hundreds of thousands in Asia is on their hands. This is what the death penalty should be for, the big people who definitely should know better. Their corporate masters also deserve the same fate. Bloody, class-warfare coup anybody?

I keep asking, where is the angry left in this country, and why is it those on the angry right are the only ones with guns? When the environmental, energy and economic crap hits the fan, they are going to be the only ones capable of throwing the bums out and putting a bunch of their Fascists in!

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Furthermore, eliminate the blanket immunity that prosecutors have from wrongdoing, an far,
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Oct 26, 2009 9:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
few cases of prosecutorial conduct will occur!!!

Everyone must be held responsible for their wrongdoing and mistakes too!

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Am I the only one having trouble with Alternet, it runs slow,
Posted by: bitsfick on Oct 26, 2009 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and jams up constantly? I have DSL, am running visa, and internet exporer. . This is the only web site I have a problem with.

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» Yeah, it's bad today Posted by: leafsong1
REVENGE IS THE POWER BEHIND CAPITAL PUNISHMENT. WHERE IS THE BIBLICAL
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Oct 26, 2009 10:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
admonition "revenge is mine sayeth the lord"? You cannot be a New Testament christian and support capital punishment. Remember "forgive them lord for they know not what they do". Christians have a lot to answer for.

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A great point:
Posted by: abbadon2007 on Oct 27, 2009 12:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whether innocent or guilty, one point that seems to escape the peanut gallery here is the reprehensible and unprofessional conduct of the prosecution and police during this investigation, prosecution, and lengthy appeals process. Let me remind you that we have proven, PROVEN, that the justice system is riddled with flaws and incorrect convictions. I just can't get over the arrogance of all you idiots claiming certainty of his guilt. Here's a little wise lingo to digest:

"The [prosecuting attorney] is the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a
sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all;
and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice
shall be done. As such, he [or she] is in a peculiar and very definite sense the servant of the law, the
twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with
earnestness and vigor—indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty
to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a
wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one."
—Berger v. United States

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» RE: A great point: Posted by: mlee
Tweck9's Transparency Seen for What It Is
Posted by: Necalli.Ollin on Oct 27, 2009 5:28 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for seeing through Tweck9's transparency. A review of the blog that Efrén's family maintains for him will reflect that he and his family have ALWAYS been open to sitting down with ANYONE interested in discussing the details of his case. They have extended many invitations to people (whoever they may be) to do this and have gone so far as to post their e-mail and phone number publicly to facilitate this. In over 20 years not ONE SINGLE person from the county who has opposed Efrén's release has contacted the family, including this Tweck9 character who continues to lurk in the shadows, throw stones and hide his hand. You can view the recent invitation that Efrén's mother extended to the community only weeks ago at 4Efren.blogspot.com.

Another thing I would like to bring to people's attention is that Paul Ciolino, a world renowned wrongful convictions expert has thoroughly investigated this case and supports Efrén's innocence. Ciolino has worked with these cases for many years and has exonerated several men who were wrongly convicted. Tweck9 is no wrongful convictions expert. You can read a response Ciolino wrote to an article in the newspaper below:

http://tinyurl.com/yzw2e7q

What the general public is unaware of is that most evidence of innocence, as in Efrén's case, does not surface until decades after a wrongful conviction. It has taken some evidence in Efrén's case over a decade to surface, and in some instances two decades.

People who are serious about wanting to help with this case are welcome to contact us, sit down with us and go through evidence, and

I would add that Tweck9 claims to be about social justice. He follows our articles around and makes negative comments yet has NEVER accepted our invitation to sit down and talk about the facts. He has no idea what the newly discovered evidence is Efrén's case.

What social justice is truly promoting when he is unwilling to sit down and discuss the facts? He says he would consider changing his mind if he found evidence of innocence but his claims are all hollow because he has yet to come forward.

And as for Efrén being a "bully." Efrén was a little 135 pound high school honor student who was well liked by students and teachers alike. He was a participant in Junior Achievement, member of the Key Club, German Club, played on the school soccer team and was a member of the school track team. Hardly a bully. For Tweck9 I guess anything to stir controversy will work. He still can't change the facts.

And until Tweck9 sits down with Efrén's family to discuss the facts his claims will remain baseless.

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40 Wrongful Convictions in Berrien County, Michigan
Posted by: TIME on Oct 27, 2009 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For those following the case of Efrén Paredes, Jr. above, or interested in reading information about wrongful convictions, I encourage you to read a recent article which appeared in The Michigan Messenger about 40 wrongful convictions occurring in Berrien County recently, the county that Efrén was convicted in.

The Berrien County Prosecutor dismissed all 40 cases after police pleaded guilty to federal charges that they manufactured evidence, conducted illegal searches and wrongfully arrested people.

This was just the product of two police officers. The investigation is still underway as the layers of police corruption continue to be exposed.

http://tinyurl.com/ykxoj22

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Tweck9
Posted by: Necalli.Ollin on Oct 27, 2009 10:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hope you do write a letter to the Prosecutor so we can FOIA it, learn your true identity and expose you for the fraud you are. You may want to reconsider the slander you are spreading. Doesn't look good in civil litigation, and if you keep up this nonsense you'll see firsthand. And so you know, hiding behind a username won't protect you. You have a long record of committing your slanderous actions.

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» RE: Tweck9 Posted by: mlee
» RE: Tweck9 Posted by: Necalli.Ollin
two more
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Oct 27, 2009 10:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
randy halprin
www.randyhalprin.net

jarvis jay masters
www.freejarvis.org

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Tweck9
Posted by: KAW on Oct 28, 2009 6:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tweck9 you're a clown. you spend all day crawling web sites leaving stupid comments that are counter to being a progressive. i don't know if this guy Paredes is guilty or innocent but what i do know is that the evidence presented shows he did NOT receive a fair trial, racism played a large role, and the cops even admit in documents that they destroyed evidence in the case. a juror at his trial was friends with a victim family member. if you were truly about social justice you would be looking more into this case. something obviously went terribly wrong in this case.

your personal "relationship" to people in the case (yeah i know who you are)is blinding you from learning the truth. i'm going to reveal your real identity so the rest of these people will know who you are real soon. do yourself a favor. don't speak about things you know nothing about.

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Downside of democracy
Posted by: hilaryuk on Oct 28, 2009 3:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a European, I am constantly appalled by America's bloodlust and willingness to indulge in judicial murder so long as the victim is a nobody and he/she can't afford decent legal representation. But is the problem aggravated by the fact that players in the legal system are elected? Surely they will always have one eye on how their actions will play with the electorate, rather than two eyes on ensuring proper legal process?

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THIS disturbs me
Posted by: clvngodess on Oct 30, 2009 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"But, like other innocent prisoners who refuse to express remorse for a crime they did not commit, this lack of remorse could convince the Board to deny his commutation request."

Why should one express remorse for actions one did NOT commit? WHY?

I wouldn't, and don't express remorse for things I have no part in doing. I might express empathy, or compassion from my own perspective, but to express remorse for something I didn't do, is like an admission of guilt.

This is simply stupid. The system is set up to deem us all guilty until proven innocent. It's upside down. And parole review boards need to be trained in psychology or something along these lines to understand the why behind not admitting guilt when no guilt is to be admitted. Or to not express remorse for things one did not participate in doing.

It reminds one of false confessions under duress.

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