Innocent
people have been thrown into prison for 20, 30, 40 years…or even life, and
some were able to fight their case and be released. However, a death
sentence successfully carried out is one punishment a person can never
fight back from. Justice was served just in time for these 10 innocent
people almost put to death.
1.
Randall Dale Adams
In 1976 Randall Dale Adams became a terrible victim of
circumstance. After running out of gas and hitching a ride home with
16-year-old David Harris, Adams was convicted of murdering police officer
Robert Wood. The officer pulled the teenager over after he dropped
Adams off at home. The teen shot the officer, but told authorities he still had
Adams in the car, and that Adams fired the gun. Adams was found guilty, sentenced
to death and told he had 30 days to live before his execution. Adams got
his death sentence revoked after evidence emerged that the jury
was biased. He was sentenced to life in prison and was finally
released in 1989, based on new evidence.
2.
Kennedy Brewer
In 1992, Mississippi resident Brewer was sentenced to death
for the rape and murder of the 3-year-old daughter of his girlfriend at the
time. Prosecutors used analysis of bite marks on the child to convict
Brewer. Nine years later, in 2001, analysts found that the semen found on the
girl did not match Brewer’s DNA but did match another suspect, Justin Johnson.
In spite of this evidence, Brewer was not granted a new trial for over another
five years. In 2008 he was finally exonerated.
3.
Jay C. Smith
Philadelphia high school principal Jay C. Smith was
convicted of murdering a schoolteacher and her two children in 1979. There was
another suspect — William S. Bradfield — but Bradfield had an
alibi. That, combined with the fact that Smith had just been found guilty of
an armed robbery of a Sears, was enough for prosecutors to convict Smith.
Smith spent six years on death row before his conviction was overturned on the
grounds that the testimony from Bradfield’s alibi was not solid enough.
Smith attempted to sue state police after he was released, but did not succeed.
4.
Robert Miller
In the early ’80s Oklahoma City resident Robert Miller was
sentenced to death for the rape and murder of two elderly women. Reports said
Miller denied having anything to do with the crime dozens of times. Then under
questionable circumstances, he pleaded guilty. Miller spent almost a decade in
prison before forensics proved he was not the culprit, and three years
later further evidence got Miller a new trial. He was released in 1998.
5.
Anthony Porter
In 1982, Porter was arrested for the killings of two Chicago
teenagers. Several witnesses, including some who had been robbed by Porter,
implicated him in the crime. Porter was sentenced to death. Porter filed for
several appeals during the following years, which got his death sentence pushed
back several times. In 1998, just 48 hours before his execution, Porter’s
sentence was pushed back again due to evidence he may have been moderately
retarded and incapable of understanding his punishment. In 1999, the wife of
the real killer, Alstory Simon, came forward and said she saw her
husban kill the teens. Four days later, Simon confessed to the killings
and two days after that Porter was released from death row, where he had spent
17 years.
6.
Clarence Lee Brandley
Brandley was working as a janitor at a Texas high school in
the ’80s when he was charged with raping and murdering a 16-year-old girl.
Reports say a white employee of the school was also a suspect, but it was
racism that landed Brandley in the courtroom, and in prison for six years,
sentenced to death. Eventually, a new witness plus fundraising from civil
rights activists helped Brandley get exonerated in 1990.
7.
Sabrina Butler
In 1989, new mother Butler found that her newborn son had
stopped breathing. After several attempts to resuscitate the baby, Butler
brought him to the hospital. She was charged with child abuse
and sentenced to death. Butler would spend almost three years on
death row before prosecutors reversed her conviction, and several more years in
prison before she was exonerated.
8.
Michael Roy Toney
While in prison in 1997 for burglary, Toney’s inmate Charles
Ferris told authorities that Toney had confessed to a bombing in Texas that had
killed three people. Toney was subsequently sentenced to death, and his inmate
was released as reward for the information. Toney would spend 10 years on death
row before Ferris confessed that he’d made the entire story up to get out of
jail sooner. The District Attorney’s Office withheld evidence that could have proven
Toney’s innocence. In 2009, Toney’s sentence was overturned and he was
released.
9.
Glenn Ford
In 1983, Louisiana resident Glenn Ford was sentenced to
death for shooting a watchmaker. Brothers Jake and Henry Robinson were also
suspects, but the girlfriend of one of the brothers testified that Ford was the
killer. In 2013, an anonymous informant told prosecutors that Jake had admitted
to killing the watchmaker. In 2014, Ford was released from prison, making him
the longest-serving death row inmate in the state.
10.
Joe Burrows
In 1989, Burrows was sentenced to death for killing an
Illinois farmer, William Dulin. Burrows spent five years on death row before
the real killer, Gayle Potter, confessed to the murder. Potter had been the
witness in Burrows’ trial whose “testimony” originally got him convicted.
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