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Tennessee: Phillip Workman (TN) – W/W stay
of execution
No one has been executed in Tennessee since 1960. Now, amidst a time of falling crime rates, a twenty-year low in public support for the death penalty and a nationwide debate about wrongful convictions, the state of Tennessee is planning its first execution in 40 years. Phillip Workman was convicted in 1981 for killing Memphis police officer
Ronald Oliver. Lieutenant Oliver’s death was the result of a shootout
that occurred as police tried to apprehend Workman f or the armed robbery
of a Wendy’s restaurant. Despite compelling evidence that Phillip was not
responsible for the shooting, state and federal courts have washed their
There are two basic facts which call Phillip’s guilt into question. First, the ballistics evidence gathered from the crime scene indicate that the bullets which killed Ronald Oliver did not come from the gun Phillip fired during the shootout. In fact, the bullets taken from the victim match the standard-issue weapons used by Memphis police at the time. In light of this evidence, it is likely that Oliver’s tragic death was caused by the “friendly fire” of fellow officers. Second, the testimony of the prosecution’s star eye-witness has been completely discredited by Phillip’s appellate attorneys. Harold Davis was a drug-addict who hoped to collect reward money when he came to police with his version of the crime. His story changed several times until it finally matched the one touted by police. “Basically they told me what happened, how it happened, when it happened,” Davis said in a videotaped affidavit taken by Phillip’s appellate attorneys, “[they told me] this is what you’re going to say.” Davis’ former girlfriend, who was with him on the night of the shooting, also testified that they were nowhere near the Wendy’s when the crime occurred. Since all of this exculpatory evidence came out after Phillip’s trial, it is no wonder he was found guilty and sent to death row. “It is just flat lying to the public when [State Attorney Paul Summers] says that my case has been viewed by all of the judges. This evidence that we found hasn’t been viewed by any state judge,” said Phillip from death row. Some of the jurors who sentenced Phillip to die have now said that they would have voted differently in light of all this evidence. According to a new law in Tennessee, all persons sentenced to death
after January 1999 will be put to death by lethal injection. Those
convicted before that date can choose between lethal injection and the
electric chair. Phillip refused to participate in his execution by
choosing methods, and thus is scheduled to die by electrocution.
Robert Coe (TN)-w/? executed
Robert Glen Coe was sentenced to death for the 1979 killing of 8-year-old
When Cary Ann Medlin was found dead in 1979, police quickly arrested
Conversely, Robert had alibi witnesses who could place him in a different
Unfortunately, the jury which condemned Robert heard neither the
Alabama Robert Tarver (AL)-b/w executed
This happened despite the fact that according to the United States Court of Appeals “the defendant exhibited no signs of deception in a polygraph examination in which he denied committing the crime or being present when it was committed.” A pending legislation process will may offer lethal injection as the
method of execution for death row inmates in Alabama in the future but
for now Robert Tarver is still scheduled to be electrocuted.
Arkansas Michael O’Rourke (AR) – W/W stay
of execution
Michael O’Rourke was sentenced to death for murdering his parents in
The whole of the trial, from jury selection through sentencing, spanned three days, and was highlighted by his attorney’s misconceived effort to illustrate Michael’s insanity by comparing him to Jack the Ripper and Lizzie Borden. Michael himself remained mute throughout. The most damning evidence given against him was provided by his accomplice,
Dennis Meadors, who had previously cut a sweet plea bargain and received
only probation for his role in the double-murder. Meadors purchased
the gun which killed Francis O’Rourke and admitted to killing Beulah O’Rourke
with a hammer, but claimed that Michael forced him to
This was good enough for the jury, which took convicted Michael inside
an hour. Sentencing proceeded immediately, with neither the state
nor the defense offering any additional evidence. On Friday evening,
after an exhaustive 68-minute deliberation, the jury set Michael’s penalty
at death and got home to enjoy the weekend. “Wretches hang,” the
English used
Oklahoma Ronald Keith Boyd (OK) – B/?
executed
From a trial wrought with error, a jury convicted Ronald Boyd of armed robbery and murder. Most egregious of the violations was the clear misconduct of the prosecutor, who wore his ability to charge and try capital cases like a badge before the jury. He continually challenged the courage of the jury to convict Boyd and sentence him to die. On appeal, defense attorneys argued that this behavior constituted a failure on the part of the prosecution to realize the role of the jury to make decisions free from undue influence. Unfortunately, the Oklahoma judiciary has rather flippantly dismissed the issue of prosecutorial misconduct. It cited the fact that the jury had the correct instructions and presumed they therefore followed the law.
Texas Ricky McGinn (TX) – W/W stay
of execution
The state of Texas is planning to execute Ricky McGinn for the 1993 murder of his stepdaughter, Stephanie Flanery. Ricky lived together with his wife and her two daughters in Brown County, Texas. At 6:30pm on May 22, 1993, Ricky noticed that his stepdaughter, who had gone for a walk several hours earlier, was missing. After searching for her himself for three hours, Ricky called the police. Three days later, Stephanie’s lifeless body was found in a ditch. A month later, Ricky was indicted for capital murder based on the discovery of human blood and an ax in the family car. Ricky’s first attorney, Pete Gomez, initially agreed to represent him for $14,000.00, but then changed his mind and asked for $200,000.00. When Ricky said he couldn’t afford that, Gomez refused to take his case. McGinn’s second attorney, Robert Spence, was appointed by the trial court. He died in a car accident just days before Ricky’s trial was set to begin. Ben Dowl Suddereth, Ricky’s third attorney was only given a few days to prepare for trial. In the end, the jury deliberated for only forty-five minutes (including a lunch break) before sentencing Ricky to death. Ricky McGinn’s case is a good example of how poorly the Texas criminal
justice system operates. Like dozens of others on Texas’ death row,
Ricky fell through the cracks of an indigent defense system that George
W. Bush continues to under-fund and ignore.
Governor George Bush, Jr.
Department of Corrections
Executive Clemency Board
For More Information:
Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
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