It should not be possible, but these things happen. In 1986, a Texas jury convicted Michael Morton of killing his wife. The local sheriff and a prosecutor read a note he'd left to his wife on their bathroom mirror about their sexual problems and concluded he must be the perpetrator when Christine Morton was found murdered in their bed room. The note read:
At the same time, detectives ignored or withheld numerous bits of evidence that might have suggested Morton's innocence. Someone tried to use his dead wife's stolen credit card. The couple's four year old son described "a monster" coming into the house and killing his mommy. Police never bothered to collect a bloody bandana left behind the house."Chris, I know you didn't mean to, but you made me feel really unwanted last night. After a good meal, we came home, you binged on the rest of the cookies, then you farted and fell asleep. I'm not mad. I just wanted you to know how I feel without us getting into a fight about sex. Just think how you'd feel if you were left hanging on your birthday. I love you."
… Williamson County District Attorney Ken Anderson used [the note] to weave a sensational tale of unspeakable violence. In Anderson's version of the crime, Morton used a wooden club to viciously bludgeon his wife's head because she wouldn't have sex with him. Then, in triumph over her body, he pleasured himself. The mild-mannered pharmacy manager was transformed into a sexually sick, murderous psychopath. … none of it was true. Yet Anderson pounded his fists into his hands and wept to the jury as he described Morton's perversity.
Fortunately for Morton, he was sentenced to 25 years to life, not death. It took 25 years for lawyers to force the state to test the bandana for DNA, a test that turned up another suspect. Subsequently the District Attorney's files revealed the other bits of evidence exonerating Morton that had never been given to the defense. The man whose DNA showed up on the bandana had killed another woman nearby a year after Morton's wife. In their haste to convict the wrong man, authorities had let a real monster kill again.
This entire story was sensitively narrated by NPR's Scott Simon this Saturday. This 14 minute clip is absolute worth hearing in its entirety.
Yes, there are good reasons why it seems dangerous to allow the state to execute convicted criminals. What if the verdict is wrong? It can happen.
I heard this on NPR and sat in my driveway listening to the last part before getting out of my car. I sure hope that prosecutor sees the inside of a jail himself.
ReplyDeleteWhat DJan said although I'd be shocked if he did.
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