Location |
Defendant(s) |
Date of Alleged Crime |
Pulaski County, AR |
James Dean Walker |
Apr 16, 1963 |
James Dean Walker was convicted
of murdering Police Officer Jerrell Vaughn of North Little Rock. Walker and a
companion, Russell Kumpe, were at a Little Rock nightclub with two women, one
of whom was Linda Ford. Following an altercation at the club in which
another patron was shot, Kumpe, Walker, and Ford left in Kumpe's Oldsmobile.
Kumpe drove, while Walker sat in the passenger seat, with Ford sitting
in the center. Police Officer Gene Barentine pursued and stopped the
car and parked his vehicle behind it. Officer Vaughan arrived
on the scene almost immediately thereafter, as did two cabdrivers.
Read More by Clicking Here
|
Alameda
County, CA |
Huey P. Newton |
Oct 28, 1967 |
“Before any evidence was heard,
many Americans believed that Huey P. Newton, co-founder and ‘minister of
defense’ of the Black Panther Party, had murdered a police officer in cold
blood. Others were equally certain that the charge was a trumped-up
attempt to crush the militant Black Panther Party.”
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Los Angeles County, CA |
Daniel Kamacho |
Mar 11, 1946 |
Daniel
Kamacho was convicted of the murder of Deputy Sheriff Fred T.
Guiol. Guiol attended a movie with a friend, Miss Pearl Rattenbury,
and drove her to her home at 1117 Elden Ave. Before Rattenbury
could step out of the car, a young man armed with a gun wrenched open the
car door and demanded the occupants hand over their money. When Guiol reached for his gun, the man shot Guiol
dead and ran off.
Read More
by Clicking Here |
Los Angeles
County, CA |
Chance & Powell |
Dec 12, 1973 |
Clarence Chance and Benny Powell were convicted
the murder of David Andrews, an off-duty California Highway Patrol officer
at a South Central Los Angeles gas station. The murder occurred in the gas
station men's room reportedly during a robbery of the station. A four-year investigation by Centurion Ministries,
supported by the district attorney's office, showed that the LAPD had
coerced trial witnesses to lie against the two men. The judge who freed
Chance and Powell apologized to them. Both defendants each served 17 1/2
years of life without parole sentences. Since their release, each man has
been awarded $3.5 million. (CM) |
Siskiyou
County, CA |
John & Coke Brite |
Aug 30, 1936 (Horse Creek) |
John and Coke Brite, brothers,
were convicted of the murders of deputy sheriffs Martin Lange and Joseph
Clarke, as well as the murder of Captain Fred Seaborn, a U.S. Navy officer. The Brites, who were gold prospectors, returned to a cabin on their rented
land, where their parents stayed, and then headed out again. At nightfall
they set up camp on the land of a neighbor, B. F. Decker, and went to bed. Two intruders then entered their camp, another neighbor, Charley Baker, and
his friend, Fred Seaborn. At trial, Baker alleged they were looking for a
strayed horse that Baker owned. It was later learned that Baker had been
using the cabin on the Brites' property for rent-free storage and had motive
to drive the Brites from their land. Baker and Seaborn picked a fight with
the Brites, which proved to be a mistake as the Brites made quick work of
them. Baker then went to a judge and talked him into issuing warrants
charging the Brites with assault.
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Siskiyou
County, CA |
Patrick Croy |
July 17, 1978 (Yreka) |
Patrick Eugene “Hooty” Croy was
sentenced to death for the murder of Bo Hittson, a Yreka police officer. A
weekend of partying led to an ill-fated shoot-out between police and a group
of Native Americans, including Croy. Croy was convicted of attempted
robbery, conspiracy to commit murder, attempted murder, assault, and the
murder of the police officer.
In 1985,
the
California Supreme Court overturned most of Croy's convictions. The Court
found that the trial judge had read the wrong instructions to the jury,
allowing the jury to convict Croy of robbery even if he did not intend to
steal. Because the murder conviction was based on the theory that Croy had
intentionally committed a robbery that had caused the officer's death, the
murder conviction was reversed.
At retrial in
1990, Croy's defense presented evidence that Croy acted in self-defense
during the shoot-out, including evidence that Croy himself was shot twice
during the altercation, expert testimony regarding the antagonistic
relationship between law enforcement and local Native Americans at the time
of the crime, and that Officer Hittson had a blood alcohol level of .07 at
his time of death. Croy was acquitted of all charges for which he was tried,
based on self-defense. The trial court entered a finding that, if the
conspiracy and assault charges had been included in the retrial, Croy would
have been acquitted of them as well. Croy was resentenced on these charges
and was released on parole.
In 1997, Croy
violated parole and was given an indeterminate life sentence. In 2005,
Croy's original conspiracy and assault convictions were also overturned. The
state decided not to appeal and Croy was freed in Mar. 2005. He had served
19 years in prison, 7 of them on death row. (Info)
[6/08] |
Yuba County,
CA |
Thomas Berdue |
1851 |
Thomas
Berdue was
convicted of murdering the Yuba County Sheriff. See San Francisco County,
Berdue & Wildred. |
San Francisco
County, CA |
Berdue & Wildred |
Feb 19, 1851 |
Thomas Berdue and Joseph Wildred
were convicted of robbery. The victim, Charles Jansen, was the proprietor
of a wholesale dry goods establishment on Montgomery Street. Jansen was
struck on the head with a bar of iron and robbed by two men of several
thousand dollars in coin and gold dust. Police recognized from Jansen's
description that one of the robbers was James Stuart, the leader of a feared
band of escaped Australian convicts. Stuart was also wanted for the murder
of a sheriff in Yuba County.
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Broward
County, FL |
Tafero & Jacobs |
Feb 20, 1976 |
Along with Sonia “Sunny” Jacobs
and Walter Rhodes, Jesse Joseph Tafero was convicted of murdering Florida
highway patrolman Phillip Black and visiting Canadian constable Donald
Irwin at an I-95 rest stop. The conviction was based largely on the
testimony of Rhodes, who named Tafero as the shooter. The state withheld
from the defense results of a polygraph that indicated Rhodes had failed.
The state also withheld gunpowder test results that indicated Rhodes was the
only person to have fired a gun.
Rhodes recanted
his testimony on three occasions in 1977, 1979, and 1982, stating that he,
not Tafero, shot the policemen. A statement from a prison guard
corroborating Rhodes' recantations was suppressed and found years later.
Rhodes has since reverted to his original testimony. The trial judge,
“Maximum Dan” Futch, had been a highway patrolman three years before the
trial and wore his police hat to work. He kept a miniature replica of an
electric chair on his desk. He did not allow Tafero to call witnesses, nor
would not allow him hearings on this decision. Two eyewitnesses, testifying
for the state, said that while the shots were being fired, one officer was
holding Tafero over the hood of the car. Tafero was executed in the
electric chair on May 4, 1990. Officials interrupted the execution three
times because flames and smoke shot out of his head.
Like Tafero,
Jacobs was sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted to life
imprisonment in 1981. In Jacobs' 1992 appeal, the new evidence was
presented which resulted in the reversal of her conviction. Had the
evidence been found before Tafero's execution, it is highly probable that
his conviction would have been likewise overturned. Jacobs later accepted a
plea bargain in which she did not have to admit guilt and was released. She
affirms her innocence. A 1996 ABC TV movie was made about the case
entitled In the Blink of an Eye. (CWC) (NY
Times)
[6/05] |
Broward
County, FL |
Brown & King |
Nov 13, 1990 |
Timothy Brown,
a mentally retarded man, gave a garbled confession to the murder of Broward
Sheriff's Deputy Patrick Behan for which he was convicted. In 2001, the
Miami Herald questioned the conviction in a series of investigative
articles. In 2003, a judge threw out Brown's confession and Brown was
released on low bail. It seems unlikely that he will be retried.
Brown's
co-defendant, Keith King, also gave a confession after being coerced,
threatened, and punched by detectives. King served a reduced sentence on a
plea bargain to manslaughter and was free at the time of Brown's release.
(Miami
Herald) (AP
News) [9/05] |
Duval County,
FL |
Leo Jones |
May 23, 1981 |
Leo Jones, a black man, was convicted
of the sniper killing of white police officer Thomas Szafranski, 28, and
sentenced to death. The main witness against Jones later recanted. Two key
officers in the case had left the Jacksonville Police Department under a
cloud, and allegations that one of them beat Jones before he supposedly
confessed had gained credence.
A retired police
officer, Cleveland Smith, came forward and said Officer Lynwood Mundy had
bragged that he beat Jones after his arrest. Smith, who described Mundy as
an “enforcer,” testified that he once watched Mundy get a confession from a
suspect by squeezing the suspect's genitals in a vise grip. He said Mundy
unabashedly described beating Jones. Smith waited until his 1997 retirement
to come forward because he wanted to secure his pension.
More than a dozen people had implicated another man as the killer, saying
they either saw him carrying a rifle as he ran from the crime scene or heard
him brag he had shot the officer. Even Florida Supreme Court Justice
Leander Shaw, who formerly headed a division of the state attorney's office,
wrote that Jones's case had become “a horse of a different color.”
Newly discovered evidence, Shaw wrote, “casts serious doubt on Jones's
guilt.” Shaw and one other judge voted to grant Jones a new trial.
But a five-judge majority ruled against Jones. Jones was executed one
week later in the electric chair on March 24, 1998. (Chicago
Tribune)
[11/05] |
Leon County,
FL |
Quincy Five |
Sept 18, 1970 (Tallahassee) |
After Khomas Revels, an off-duty
deputy sheriff, was murdered during a robbery of Luke's Grocery store,
Tallahassee police charged five black men from Quincy, Florida with the
crime. One of these men, David Keaton, was an 18-year-old star football
player with plans to enter the ministry. Although he had an alibi, Keaton
was held in custody for more than a week. During that time he maintained he
had been threatened, lied to, and beaten until he confessed. He believed
that despite his confession, no jury would convict him when they heard his
alibi. He was wrong. At trial his coerced confession was buttressed by the
false testimony of five eyewitnesses. Keaton was convicted and sentenced to
death. In his confession Keaton implicated Johnnie Frederick, who was
“clean as a whistle,” in the belief that a judge and jury would see that his
confession was false. Frederick was convicted as well and sentenced to life
in prison.
David Charles
Smith and two other Quincy defendants still awaited trial. In the meantime,
a witness arose, Benjamin Franklin Pye, who knew the actual men who
committed the crime. The men were from Jacksonville, not Quincy, though Pye
knew only their street names. But he knew the motel where they had stayed,
the dates, and the rental car they drove. He was with them when they cased
Luke's to rob it later. Pye gave this information to his attorney, who in
turn relayed it to Smith's attorney, Will Varn. Varn was a former U.S.
attorney, and he was able to get funds from the judge to hire an
investigator who came up with names to fit Pye's story. The names also fit
the crime scene fingerprints that had not matched any of the Quincy Five.
The three Jacksonville men were tried and convicted.
Despite the new
evidence, the state continued to insist the Quincy Five were guilty as
well. When Smith came to trial, five white eyewitnesses swore he was
guilty. But Varn had the conflicting fingerprints and convictions, Pye's
testimony, and a good alibi for Smith. An all-white jury acquitted him.
The Florida Supreme Court took note and ordered new trials for Keaton and
Frederick. The prosecution soon dropped charges against Keaton and
Frederick, as well as against the remaining two Quincy defendants. Keaton
and Frederick were released in 1973. In 1974 Tallahassee writer
Jeffrey Lickson published a 142-page book about the case entitled David
Charles: The Story of the Quincy Five. (SP
Times) (TWM) (FLCC)
(SPT1)
(SPT2)
(OSB)
(Papers) [3/07] |
Chatham
County, GA |
Troy Davis |
Aug 19, 1989 (Savannah) |
Troy Anthony Davis, a black man,
was sentenced to death for the shooting murder of Mark Allen MacPhail, a
white police officer. At the time MacPhail, 27, was working off-duty as a
security guard for a Greyhound bus station. A homeless man, Larry Young,
was being harassed by an assailant for the can of beer that Young held in a
paper sack. A crowd of bystanders, some of whom spilled out a pool hall,
followed the fight as it progressed up Oglethorpe Ave. toward the bus
station. The assailant then pulled a pistol out of his pants and used it
beat Young on the head. Fearing for his life Young yelled for someone to
call the police, and Officer MacPhail responded. He was shot twice and
died.
At trial Young
identified Davis as the man who both assaulted him and murdered MacPhail.
Young has since recanted. “After I was assaulted that night … some
police officers grabbed me and threw me down on the hood of the police car
and handcuffed me. They treated me like a criminal; like I was the one
who killed the officer … They made it clear that we weren't leaving until I
told them what they wanted to hear. They suggested answers and I would
give them what they wanted. They put typed papers in my face and told
me to sign them. I did sign them without reading them.”
There was no
physical evidence against Davis and the murder weapon has never been found.
The case against him depended entirely on the testimony of nine prosecution
witnesses. Since the trial seven of the nine witnesses, including Young,
have recanted their testimony. Many of the witnesses cited police pressure
as the reason for their false trial testimony.
Davis said he
was one of the bystanders who came out of the pool hall and watched the
assailant torment Young. He stated he left after the assailant
threatened to shoot Young and he never looked back. He also stated he
did not have a gun and that the assailant was one of the remaining
prosecution witnesses, Sylvester Coles. Coles was known as a
neighborhood bully. Davis's appeals lawyers could not locate the other
remaining witness. Georgia planned to execute Davis on July 17, 2007,
but on July 16 he was granted a 90-day stay of execution. Davis's
attorneys say they have affidavits from three new witnesses showing that
Coles was the shooter.
(www.troyanthonydavis.org)
[7/07] |
Greene County,
GA |
Robert Wallace |
May 16, 1979 |
Robert Wallace was
convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of Thomas Rowry, a Union Point police
officer. Wallace, who was drunk, had been in a scuffle over a gun with a
different officer when the gun went off, killing the officer he was accused
of murdering. The prosecution argued that Wallace intentionally shot the
victim officer. Upon retrial in 1987, a jury acquitted Wallace. (PC)
[7/05] |
Cook County,
IL |
Haymarket Eight |
May 4, 1886 (Chicago) |
Eight men were
convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the
death of police officer Mathias J. Degan. On May 1, 1886 there were
general strikes throughout the United States in support of an 8-hour
workday. On May 3
there was a rally of striking workers at the McCormick Harvesting Machine
Company plant in Chicago. This rally ended with police firing on the workers.
Two workers died although some newspaper accounts reported six
fatalities.
Read More by
Clicking Here |
Cook County,
IL |
Majczek & Marcinkiewicz |
Dec 9, 1932 (Chicago) |
Joseph Majczek and Theodore
Marcinkiewicz were convicted in 1933 of murdering Chicago police officer
William D. Lundy. Lundy was killed in a delicatessen-speakeasy at 4312
S. Ashland Ave. during an apparent holdup. The case came to the attention of a Chicago Times
reporter in 1944 after Majczek's mother placed a classified ad offering a
$5,000 reward for information on Lundy's killers. The Times did a
front-page human-interest story on how the mother scrubbed floors on her
hands and knees six nights a week for over a decade to raise the money.
A Times
researcher got a statement from Joseph Majczek that said his trial judge
met privately with him and promised him a new trial. Normally the
researcher would dismiss as preposterous a claim that a judge would host a
private conversation with a convicted cop-killer, but the story reporter
wondered aloud to him why Majczek was not sent to the electric chair, the
usual sentence for a cop-killer. Further research produced a compelling
case for innocence. The judge had not carried through on his promise
because prosecutors had threatened him that granting new trials would end
his career in politics.
The Times
crusaded for Majczek's exoneration and he was pardoned in 1945.
Marcinkiewicz was seemingly forgotten, but in 1950, he was legally
exonerated through a state habeas corpus proceeding. The legislature later
awarded $24,000 to Majczek and $35,000 to Marcinkiewicz. Chapter 1 of
Not Guilty covers the case in
more detail including why the two were convicted. The case is the
subject of a 1948 movie, Call Northside 777 starring Jimmy
Stewart. (CWC)
[12/05] |
Suffolk
County, MA |
Ella Mae Ellison |
Nov 30, 1973 |
Ella Mae
Ellison was
convicted of murder and armed robbery in 1974. The crime involved the
robbery of Suffolk Jewelers, a pawnshop on Washington St. in Roxbury.
During the robbery, Detective John Schroeder, an off-duty police officer,
entered the store and attempted to thwart the robbers. He was shot and
killed. The 1997 Boston Police Headquarters is on “One Schroeder
Plaza,” named in honor of Schroeder and his brother Walter, also an officer,
who was killed responding to a bank alarm in 1970. In 1976, two key
witnesses recanted their testimony against Ellison and claimed she was innocent.
In 1978, an appeals court vacated her convictions because the prosecutor
withheld evidence that could have exonerated her. Ellison was
released in 1978. (CIPM)
[4/08] |
Hennepin
County, MN |
Leonard Hankins |
Dec 16, 1932 (Minneapolis) |
Leonard Hankins was convicted in 1933 of
participating in the murders of three people in the course of a bank
robbery. The robbery occurred at the Third Northwestern Bank in
Minneapolis. Two police officers, Ira L. Evans and Leo Gorski, were killed
when they responded to the robbery. A passerby was also killed. Following
the robbery, Hankins walked into a rooming house where one of the robbers
had been seized. Several witnesses said Hankins resembled the lookout man,
although one witness denied Hankins was the lookout man. Hankins claimed he
was getting a haircut at the time of the robbery. A barber corroborated
that claim.
The FBI later
captured one the bank robbers, Jess Doyle, who said Hankins had nothing to
do with the robbery. Other members of the gang also said Hankins had nothing
to do with the robbery. In 1935, the FBI advised the Minneapolis police of
Hankins' innocence, but the local authorities refused to release him because
the FBI would not give them its file on Doyle. Hankins spent another 15
years in prison before being pardoned in 1951. In 1954, the state
legislature awarded Hankins $300/month for life for his wrongful
imprisonment. [11/07] |
Jefferson
Davis County, MS |
Cory Maye |
Dec 26, 2001 (Prentiss) |
Cory Maye, a black man, was sentenced
to death for the murder of a white police officer. One night while the
21-year-old Maye was drifting off to sleep in front of a television, a
violent pounding on his front door awakened him. It sounded as though
someone was trying to break it down. He retrieved his handgun and went to
the bedroom where his 14-month-old daughter was sleeping and got down on the
floor next to the bed. He hoped the noises would go away, but they shifted
around to the back of the house, where after a loud crash, Maye's rear door
was violently flung open, nearly separating it from its hinges. After
someone kicked open the bedroom door, Maye fired three shots. The next
thing Maye heard is someone scream, “Police! Police! You just shot an
officer!” Maye then dropped his gun and surrendered. The shot officer, Ron
Jones, was wearing a bulletproof vest, but one of Maye's bullets hit him
just below the vest and proved fatal. Jones was the son of the town's
police chief.
Maye was
severely beaten after his arrest. Police denied this charge, but a press
photo shows him with a swollen black eye. Maye's family was prohibited from
seeing him for more than a week – long enough for his bruises to heal.
Police had raided Maye's duplex because a reputed drug dealer – a person
Maye had never met – lived in an adjoining half of the duplex. A
confidential informant said there were large stashes of marijuana in both
halves of the duplex. Only the remains of a smoked joint were found in
Maye's duplex. Maye had no criminal record and police did not know his name
prior to the drug raid. Maye's conviction has provoked outrage not only by
liberals concerned about racially charged Southern Justice, but also by
conservative supporters of the right to bear arms. Maye's death sentence
was overturned in Sept. 2006. (Reason) (DOC)
[4/07] |
Wilkinson County, MS |
Leon Chambers |
June 14, 1969 (Woodville) |
Leon Chambers was convicted of the
murder of Sonny Liberty, a police officer. Two Woodville police officers,
James Forman and Aaron “Sonny” Liberty, tried to arrest a local youth named
C. C. Jackson at Hayes' Café, a bar and pool hall on First West St.
However, a crowd of 50 to 60 people gathered who frustrated their arrest
attempt. Forman radioed for backup and Liberty removed his riot gun, a
12-gauge sawed-off shotgun, from his patrol car.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
St. Louis City,
MO |
Louis DeMore |
Apr 29, 1934 |
Louis
DeMore joked
to police on the street that he fit the description of a wanted killer and
he was arrested. In May 1934, DeMore confessed and pleaded guilty to the
murder of Patrolman Albert Siko to escape the death sentence that police threatened him with if
he went
to trial. Gov. Park pardoned DeMore in Oct. 1934 after police caught another man,
George Couch,
who confessed to being the real killer. (FJDB) (Dredmund) [10/05] |
Hudson County,
NJ |
James Landano |
Aug 13, 1976 |
Vincent James Landano was
convicted of the murder of Police Officer John Snow. On Aug. 13, 1976,
two gunmen robbed the Hi-Way Check Cashing Service in Kearny. One went
inside, while the other waited in a getaway car. As the robbery was in
progress, John Snow, a Newark police officer, arrived in his patrol car with
an attaché case containing $46,000 to be delivered to the business.
Before Snow could get out of his car, the outside gunman walked up to the
patrol car and shot Snow at point-blank range. The gunman then took
the attaché case and got into his car, while the the other gunman left the
check-cashing service with a cash drawer containing about $6,000. This
gunman put the drawer on the roof of the car and jumped into the back seat.
The car sped away leaving $6,000 fluttering in the air behind it.
A man arrested
for the crime, Allen Rollo, admitted being the inside gunman, and identified
Landano as his partner, the one who shot Snow. Centurion
Ministries discovered a hidden police report in which the only eyewitness to
the murder identified another man as the shooter. When the case was
retried, the jury deliberated for less than an hour and acquitted Landano in
1989. Jurors later celebrated with him at a victory party. (NY
Times) (CM) [4/08] |
Union County,
NJ |
George Merritt |
July 16, 1967 (Plainfield) |
In the midst
of a five-day race riot, a white Plainfield patrolman, John V. Gleason, Jr., 39, shot
and wounded a black youth who allegedly had attacked him with a hammer. He was
surrounded by an angry mob of blacks and was beaten, stomped, and shot to
death with his own service revolver. Of 12 defendants put on trial, two
were convicted including George Merritt. The case against Merritt
rested solely on the testimony of one witness, Donald Frazier. Frazier
testified that Merritt assaulted Gleason with a meat cleaver, but the wounds
on Gleason were not indicative that such a weapon was used on him, nor was
this weapon found. Merritt's conviction was reversed in 1972 and
1976, but he was reconvicted after each reversal. Following Merritt's
third conviction, a pretrial police interview with Frazier surfaced that was
completely at odds with his trial testimony. The prosecutor had
withheld this document from Merritt's defense. Because of this
document, Merritt's conviction was again reversed in 1980, but this time charges against
him were dropped. (NY Times)
(MJ) [7/09] |
Bernalillo
County, NM |
Van Bering Robinson |
Sept 10, 1980 |
Van Bering Robinson was convicted of murdering Albuquerque Police Officer
Phil Chacon. Chacon was gunned down on his motorcycle at Wyoming Blvd.
and Central Ave. while pursuing a vehicle driven by a man who had just
robbed a Kinney's shoe store. Robinson was exonerated in 1983 after it
was found that three Albuquerque police officers falsified information to
frame him for the murder. Robinson was awarded $75,000 in 1985.
(83)
(86)
(90) [9/05] |
New York
County, NY |
Harry Cashin |
Feb 19, 1931 |
Harry F. Cashin was convicted of the murder of Detective Christopher W.
Scheuing during the holdup of a speakeasy at 49 Lexington Avenue.
Cashin was sentenced to death. His conviction was due to the testimony
of Gladys Clayton, a woman of shady character. The prosecution
concealed from the defense a witness who said Cashin was not “the right
man.” On appeal, Cashin's conviction was reversed. The charges
were dropped in 1933 when Clayton admitted that Cashin had nothing to do
with the murder. (ISI)
(NY Times) (Google) [4/08] |
New York
County, NY |
Isidore Zimmerman |
Apr 10, 1937 |
Isidore
Zimmerman was
sentenced to death for the shooting murder of a police detective, Michael
Foley, during an armed robbery of the Boulevard Restaurant at 144 Second
Ave. A gang of six, dubbed the “East
Side Boys” by the press, had robbed the restaurant. Zimmerman was not
present at the robbery, but was convicted for allegedly supplying the gun
used in the murder. He was cleared in 1962 after it was revealed that a
government witness perjured himself when he testified that Zimmerman
provided the gun. Zimmerman was awarded $1 million for 24 years of wrongful
imprisonment. |
Clinton
County, OH |
Clarence
McKinney |
Feb 14, 1922
(Wilmington) |
Late in the evening, Wilmington
police officers Henry Adams and Emory McCreight were patrolling an alley
skirting the post office on Main Street when they heard a racket at the back
of the Murphy and Benham hardware store. After approaching the area, the officers saw two shadowy
figures against the building. Unbeknownst to the officers, the two were
cutting their way through the rear door of the hardware store.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
Franklin
County, OH |
Allen Thrower |
Aug 28, 1972 (Columbus) |
Allen
Thrower was
convicted of the shotgun murder of Columbus Police Officer Joseph Edwards. In 1978 the Internal Affairs
Bureau of the Columbus Division of Police determined that Detective Tom
Jones Sr. had acted egregiously during the investigation of Thrower. Thrower
was released from prison in 1979. [12/06] |
Seminole County, OK |
Paul Goodwin |
July 4, 1936 |
Paul Goodwin was convicted of the murder of Officer Christopher C. Whitson
of the Seminole Police Department. Another man, Horace Lindsay, gave a
statement in which he confessed to shooting Whitson. Lindsay also led
police to the location where he had hidden Whitson's gun. Some time
later Lindsay gave a second statement in which he implicated Goodwin as the
shooter, but he refused to testify against Goodwin at his trial. At Goodwin's trial,
Lindsay's second statement was read into evidence
before the jury by the Chief of Police of Seminole County. Goodwin was permitted no opportunity to
cross-examine Lindsay, nor was he permitted to introduce Lindsay's earlier
statement which contradicted the presented statement. Although paroled
in 1961, Goodwin was reincarcerated in 1962 on a parole violation. In
1969 Goodwin was released from prison after the 10th Circuit Federal Court
ruled that he was denied due process. (Goodwin
v. Page) (Seminole
PD) (ISI)
[10/09] |
Philadelphia County, PA |
Bilger & Sheeler |
Nov 23, 1936 |
Philadelphia patrolman James T.
Morrow was murdered while tracking down a suspected robber who had been
terrorizing the northeast section of the city. Police, in efforts to solve
the murder, arrested and extracted confessions from three different men over
a several year period. Two of the men were convicted and sentenced to life
in prison before being exonerated.
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Colleton
County, SC |
Michael Linder |
June 29, 1979 |
Michael
Linder was
sentenced to death for murdering Willie Peeples, a highway patrol officer. Linder contended
he acted in self-defense because the officer had groundlessly fired six
shots at him. At trial the prosecution presented expert witnesses who
testified that the officer never fired his gun. At a retrial the defense
secured previously undisclosed ballistics evidence from the state crime lab
and was able to prove that the officer had fired his gun and that the
prosecution's witnesses had distorted other evidence to make it appear that
Linder had been the aggressor. Linder was acquitted at his retrial and
released in 1981. (NY Times) [7/05] |
Dillon County,
SC |
Warren Douglas Manning |
Oct 29, 1988 |
Warren Douglas
Manning was
convicted of pistol whipping and shooting to death George T. Radford, a
state highway trooper. Manning was sentenced to death. The trooper was
shot at close range with his own revolver. The defense argued that although
the trooper arrested Manning for driving with a suspended license, Manning
escaped when the officer stopped another car. The defense also claimed that
if Manning had shot the officer, he would have been covered in blood.
Witnesses who saw Manning minutes after the shooting noticed no blood on
him. A retrial resulted in a hung jury, but Manning was reconvicted at a
third trial. This reconviction was overturned and a fourth trial resulted
in a mistrial. At Manning's fifth trial, his new lawyer told the jury, “The
law requires the state prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Without
that, the law says you cannot find him guilty.” The fifth trial jury
acquitted Manning of all charges. [9/05] |
Pine Ridge, SD |
Leonard Peltier |
June 26, 1975 |
(Federal Case) In Feb. 1973, 200 American Indian
Movement (AIM) activists launched a 72-day occupation of Wounded Knee, SD
(Site of an 1890 American Indian massacre) to protest living conditions at
the Pine Ridge reservation. During the next three years, the FBI carried
out intensive local surveillance, as well as the repeated arrests,
harassment, and bad-faith legal proceedings against AIM leaders and
supporters. In 1975, two FBI agents entered the reservation and with
tensions being high managed to provoke a firefight between themselves and
local Indians. Both FBI agents as well as Indians were killed. To avenge
the death of the two agents, the government issued arrest warrants against
four men, including Leonard Peltier. It dropped charges against one and
tried two, but during the trial a key prosecution witness admitted that he
had been threatened by the FBI and as a result had changed his testimony
upon the agents' instructions, so as to support the government's position.
The two defendants were acquitted.
Peltier was in
Canada and to get him extradited the government submitted an affidavit from
a mentally unstable woman who claimed to have been Peltier's girlfriend, and
to have been present during the shootout, and to have witnessed the
murders. In fact, she did not know Peltier, nor was she present at the time
of the shooting. She later confessed she had given the false statement
after being pressured and terrorized by FBI agents. At Peltier's trial, the
government withheld thousands of documents. It presented coerced witnesses;
though none placed Peltier at the murder scene before the murders occurred
or claimed Peltier shot the two agents. Peltier was convicted and sentenced
to two life sentences.
Peltier's case is detailed in In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, a 1983
bestseller, and in
Incident at Oglala, a documentary produced by
Robert Redford. (www.leonardpeltier.net) (AJ) (Famous
Trials)
[6/05] |
Shelby County,
TN |
Phillip Workman |
Aug 5, 1981 (Memphis) |
Phillip Workman robbed a Wendy's
restaurant with a .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol. On leaving, police
officers gave chase and Workman tripped on a curb. He yelled, “I give up!”
and tried to pull his gun from his pants to give to officers. As he tried
to surrender his weapon, he was hit on the head with a flashlight. At that
moment his pistol went off, aimed straight up at the sky. Suddenly he was
surrounded by gunfire, and he tried to run again, but tripped and his gun
went off, firing another shot into the air. Workman escaped the immediate
melee, but a civilian found him hiding under a truck. He was covered with
blood from his head wound, and had a shotgun wound to his buttocks.
At the scene of
the shootout, a police officer, Lt. Ronald Oliver, lay dying from a bullet
that passed completely through his body. Oliver would soon be dead.
Workman was convicted of Oliver's murder and sentenced to death. In 1990,
exculpatory ballistic evidence was discovered that showed that Oliver was
not shot by a bullet from Workman's gun. Instead, Oliver must have been
killed by “friendly fire.” An eyewitness at trial, Harold Davis, recanted
testimony that he had seen the shooting. The police report on the crime
scene never noted Davis's presence and five other people near the scene do
not remember seeing Davis.
A civilian
eyewitness, Steve Craig, who never testified at trial, said he saw Officer
Parker fire a shotgun at Workman. Craig also stated that police told him,
“There was no need to talk about this ... unless it was with someone from
the department.” In the trial transcript, Officers Stoddard and Parker
repeatedly testified that only two people fired guns, Workman and Oliver.
Ballistics and Craig's statements imply Officers Stoddard and Parker
committed perjury. The new evidence caused Workman's scheduled execution
date to be postponed several times. Workman was executed by lethal
injection on May 9, 2007. (Justice: Denied)
[1/07] |
Cameron County, TX |
Leonel Torres Herrera |
Sept 29, 1981 |
Leonel Torres Herrera was sentenced to death
for murdering two police officers, David Rucker and Enrique Carrisalez. The
murders occurred at separate locations along a highway between Brownsville
and Los Fresnos. Enrique Hernandez, Carrisalez's patrol car partner,
identified Herrera. Hernandez also said Herrera was only person in the car
that they stopped. Carrisalez, who did not die until 9 days after he was
shot, identified Herrera from a single photo. A license plate check showed
that the stopped car belonged to Herrera's live in girlfriend.
In 1984, after
Herrera's brother Raul was murdered, Raul's attorney came forward and signed
an affidavit stating that Raul told him he had killed Rucker and
Carrisalez. A former cellmate of Raul also came forward and signed a
similar affidavit. Raul's son, Raul Jr., who was nine at the time of the
killings, signed a third affidavit. It averred that he had witnessed the
killings. Jose Ybarra, Jr., a schoolmate of the Herrera brothers, signed a
fourth affidavit. Ybarra alleged that Raul Sr. told him in 1983 that he had
shot the two police officers. Herrera alleged that law enforcement
officials were aware of Ybarra's statement and had withheld it in violation
of Brady v. Maryland. Armed with these affidavits, Herrera petitioned for a
new trial, but was denied relief in state courts. One court did dismiss
Herrera's Brady claim due to lack of evidence. Herrera's appeal eventually
reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where it was argued in Oct. 1992.
In Jan. 1993,
the Supreme Court ruled that Herrera's actual innocence was not a bar to his
execution. He had to show that there were procedural errors in his trial in
order to gain relief. Justice Rehnquist wrote that the “presumption of
innocence disappears” once a defendant has been convicted in a fair trial.
Dissenting Justice Blackmun wrote: “The execution of a person who can show
that he is innocent comes perilously close to simple murder.” Herrera was
executed four months after the ruling on May 12, 1993. (Herrera
v. Collins)
[1/07] |
Dallas County,
TX |
Randall Dale Adams |
Nov 28, 1976 |
Randall Dale Adams was sentenced
to death for the murder of police officer Robert Wood. Evidence in the case
pointed to David Ray Harris. However, Harris was for some reason an unsatisfactory suspect
to police. Police may not have wished to charge him because he was 16-years-old and under Texas law could not be
sentenced to death. At Adams' trial, Harris named Adams as the shooter, and
Harris was soon back on the streets. A prosecution psychologist, Dr. James
Grigson, told Adam's jury that Adams would remain an ongoing menace if kept
alive. Grigson was known as Dr. Death, after having testified in more than
100 trials that resulted in death sentences.
In 1985, a
young filmmaker, Errol Morris, came to Dallas to work on a documentary about
Grigson. When he met Adams, Morris thought he was an unlikely killer and
decided to take a closer look. Morris soon discovered that Harris had been
compiling a criminal record of some magnitude. Morris discovered other
problems with several witnesses who testified at Adams' trial. Because of
such evidence, Adams was granted a hearing for a retrial. At the hearing in
1989, David Harris admitted that he was the killer. An appeals court
overturned Adams' conviction, holding that prosecutor Douglas D. Mulder
withheld a statement a witness gave to the police that cast doubt on her
credibility and allowed her to give perjured testimony. Further, the court
found that after Adams' attorney discovered the statement late in Adams'
trial, Mulder falsely told the court that he did not know the witness's
whereabouts. Adams' conviction was overturned and the prosecution dropped
charges. His case is profiled in the documentary
The Thin Blue Line.
(CWC)
[1/06] |
Harris County, TX |
Ricardo Aldape Guerra |
July 13, 1982 |
Ricardo Aldape Guerra, a Mexican national, was
sentenced to death for the murder of James D. Harris, a Houston police
officer. Harris was killed during a routine traffic stop. The gun that
killed Harris was found on Roberto Carrasco some hours later, after Carrasco
was killed in a shootout with police. Guerra, a 20-year-old acquaintance of
Carrasco, was riding in the car with Carrasco when Harris was killed.
Police theorized that Guerra shot Harris and later traded guns with
Carrasco. Guerra's fingerprints were not found on the gun, but five
eyewitnesses identified him as the shooter.
Beginning in
1994, evidence emerged that police and prosecutors had systematically
intimidated and manipulated the eyewitnesses into identifying Guerra as
Harris's killer. During a federal appeal, these witnesses testified that
they had perjured themselves because they feared police and prosecutors.
Guerra's conviction was overturned in Nov. 1994. The state delayed justice
by appealing the ruling, but ultimately released Guerra in Apr. 1997, as
they had no intimidated witnesses with which to retry him. Upon release,
Guerra returned to Mexico where he was the subject of a book, a feature film
and at least one popular song and music video. (NC
Reporter) [2/07] |
City of
Petersburg, VA |
Silas Rogers |
July 18, 1943 |
Silas Rogers was sentenced to death for
the shooting murder of Robert B. Hatchell, a police officer. Two police
officers chased a stolen car through Petersburg, VA and forced it into a
ditch. The driver escaped on foot and was pursued by one officer, R. B.
Hatchell. The other officer stayed behind to guard the car's two
passengers. The passengers were two AWOL soldiers. A half-hour later, two
shots rang out and Officer Hatchell was found dead.
Police then
combed the area and picked up a black hitchhiker named Silas Rogers. They
got Rogers to confess that he had stolen the car in Raliegh, NC and had shot
the cop. A judge would not allow Rogers' confession to be used at trial
because there was clear evidence that it was obtained through third
degree methods. However, at trial the soldiers identified Hatchell as the
man who picked them up in the stolen car. Rogers was convicted.
The NAACP
reviewed the case and thought the evidence was weak. They found a witness
who corroborated Rogers' story that he arrived in Petersburg by train. As a
result Rogers' death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. Then a
fellow convict told Rogers of Argosy magazine's “Court of Last Resort,” an
investigative agency that worked to free wrongfully convicted inmates.
Rogers wrote to Argosy and got them to work on his case. Jack Kirkpatrick,
an editorial writer for the Richmond News-Leader also began an
investigation. Working with Argosy, Kirkpatrick assembled a mass of
evidence and affidavits to show the two soldiers had perjured themselves at
Rogers' trial.
The soldiers
testified that they shared cigarettes with Rogers in the stolen car.
However, Kirkpatrick proved that Rogers never smoked. He also proved that
Rogers could not have driven the stolen car, as he had never learned to
drive. The only remaining piece of evidence against Rogers was testimony
that his coat was found in the stolen car. When an Argosy investigator
found and questioned the witness who gave that testimony, the witness
quickly changed his story and acknowledged that Rogers' coat was brown while
the coat found in the stolen car was blue. Virginia Governor Battle
pardoned Rogers on Dec. 23, 1952. (Argosy) (Time)
[7/07] |
Mercer County, WV |
Payne Boyd |
May 30, 1918 (Modoc) |
In 1918, a black coal miner named
Cleveland Boyd was convicted on vagrancy complaints. He was sentenced to 30
days in jail and fined $25. The judge who convicted him, Squire H. E. Cook,
and a deputy sheriff, A. M. Godfrey, then prepared to take him to the jail
at Matoaka. Boyd, however, pleaded to stop at his home about 100 yards away
where he could exchange his new shoes for older, more comfortable ones. On
stopping at his home, Boyd retrieved a revolver and shot the judge twice,
mortally wounding him. The deputy sheriff fled for his life. Boyd fled
into the hills and escaped capture.
Read More by
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|
Milwaukee
County, WI |
Laurie Bembenek |
May 28, 1981 |
Lawrencia
Bembenek, also known as Bambi, was convicted of murdering Christine Schultz,
her husband's ex-wife. Bambi's husband Fred Schultz was a police officer as
was his ex-wife. Bambi had become a police officer and was stunned by the
amount of graft going on in the department: officers selling pornography
from their cars, accepting oral sex from hookers, frequenting drug hangouts,
and harassing minorities.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
Jamaica |
Dixon & Sangster |
Sept 18, 1996 |
“Randall Dixon and Mark Sangster were wrongly convicted on July 9, 1998 of
murdering a policeman during the robbery of a a Western Union branch in
Spanish Town, Jamaica of $18 million in September 1996. Their convictions
were based on their identification in a line-up by two policemen who
witnessed the robbery. Sangster was sentenced to life for non-capital
murder, and Dixon was sentenced to death by hanging for capital murder.
After their convictions the men learned that the prosecution had failed to
disclose to them that they did not appear on the film of the robbers
recorded by a security camera in the Western Union branch. Eyewitnesses saw
four robbers, and neither man was among the four robbers captured by the
security camera. The men appealed their convictions to the Privy Council in
London, which is the highest court of appeal for Jamaica, and on October 7,
2002, their convictions were set aside and their sentences were quashed. On
October 8, 2003, Jamaica's Court of Appeal ordered judgments of acquittal
for both men and they were released after seven years of wrongful
imprisonment. In 2005 the men sued the government of Jamaica for false
imprisonment, malicious prosecution, breach of their constitutional rights
and for exemplary and aggravated damages. In October 2007 Mark Sangster was
awarded $13,450,500, and Randal Dixon was awarded $13,192,500. [$71
Jamaican = $1 U.S. in 2007]” –
FJDB (Jamaica
Observer) |
England |
William Habron |
Aug 1, 1876 (Whaley Range) |
William Habron was convicted of the murder of Constable Cock, a local
lawman. Habron was a patron of the Royal Oak, a pub near
Manchester that was on the constable's beat. Habron was frequently getting
into fights with other patrons, which Cock had to break up. After one
fight Cock threatened to arrest Habron the next time he got into a fight.
Habron replied, “It'll be a sorry day for you, the day you arrest me.”
The next time Cock passed the pub and heard sounds of a fight, he entered
without waiting to be called and saw Habron and another patron in the midst
of a fight. Cock arrested Habron. However, Habron had actually been on
his best behavior. The other patron had interpreted Habron's
behavior as a sign of weakness and, inspired by liquor, decided that it was
a good time to pick a fight.
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|
Berrien County, MI |
Maurice Carter |
Dec 20, 1973 (Benton Harbor) |
Maurice Carter was convicted of
the attempted murder of Thomas Schadler, an off-duty Benton Harbor police
officer. Schadler was shopping with his wife at the Harbor Wig and
Record Shop on East Main Street in Benton Harbor when a man suddenly and
without provocation pulled a .22-caliber pistol and shot him six times.
There were twelve eyewitnesses to the crime.
Read More by Clicking Here |
|