Bangkok Post

DOUBTS OVER US MAN’S EXECUTION AFTER DNA TEST

Lawyers’ bid for extra DNA test before Ledell Lee was executed was denied.

- By Heather Murphy

For 22 years, Ledell Lee maintained that he had been wrongly convicted of murder. “My dying words will always be, as it has been, ‘I am an innocent man,’” he told the BBC in an interview published on April 19, 2017 — the day before officials in Arkansas administer­ed the lethal injection. Four years later, lawyers affiliated with the Innocence Project and the American Civil Liberties Union say DNA testing has revealed that genetic material on the murder weapon — which was never previously tested — in fact belongs to another man.

In a highly unusual developmen­t for a case in which a person has already been convicted and executed, the new genetic profile has been uploaded to a national criminal database in an attempt to identify the mystery man.

Patricia Young, Lee’s sister, has been fighting for years to prove that it was not her brother who strangled and fatally bludgeoned 26-year-old Debra Reese in Jacksonvil­le, Arkansas, a suburb of Little Rock, in 1993.

“We are glad there is new evidence in the national DNA database and remain hopeful that there will be further informatio­n uncovered in the future,” Ms Young said last week. In response to a lawsuit filed by Ms Young in January, Jacksonvil­le city officials released the bloody wooden club recovered from the victim’s bedroom, a bloody white shirt wrapped around the club and several other pieces of evidence for testing.

The Innocence Project and the ACLU have pushed for additional DNA testing at previous times, including on the eve of Lee’s execution. The request was denied. A federal judge rejected Lee’s request for a stay of the execution, saying that he had “simply delayed too long”, according to a complaint filed by Ms Young.

Lee’s execution, on April 20, 2017, was the first in Arkansas in more than a decade. Some accused the state of rushing Lee and several other prisoners to their deaths that month before the expiration of its supply of a lethal injection drug.

At a news conference on Tuesday, Gov Asa Hutchinson defended Lee’s execution. “It’s my duty to carry out the law,” he said, adding “the fact is that the jury found him guilty based upon the informatio­n that they had.” He called the new DNA evidence that has emerged “inconclusi­ve”.

Lawyers from the ACLU and the Innocence Project were cautious about what, exactly, could be extrapolat­ed from the newly tested DNA from the shirt and the murder weapon — beyond the facts that both samples appeared to belong to the same man and that that man was not Lee.

“While the results obtained 29 years after the evidence was collected proved to be incomplete and partial, it is notable that there are now new DNA profiles that were not available during the trial or post-conviction proceeding­s in Mr Lee’s case,” Nina Morrison, senior litigation counsel at the Innocence Project, said.

Uploading this newly generated profile to a national criminal database maintained by the FBI has not yet provided a “hit”, she said. That means that the mystery man’s DNA does not match any of the DNA profiles that are already in the database, taken from people who were convicted or arrested on suspicion of violent crimes.

“However, the DNA profile will now remain in the database and will be automatica­lly compared to all new profiles from convicted persons, arrestees or unsolved crimes that are entered in the future,” lawyers for the ACLU, the Innocence Project and Ms Young said.

According to the Innocence Project, no physical evidence was ever produced that connected Lee to Reese’s murder. In a summary of the case, the group also outlined obstacles that Lee had faced over the years, including a lawyer who was drunk and unprepared at court hearings, unreliable witnesses and conflicts of interest for key players.

Leslie Rutledge, the Arkansas attorney-general, said she was not swayed by the new developmen­ts. “The courts rejected Ledell Lee’s frivolous claims because the evidence demonstrat­ed beyond any shadow of a doubt that he murdered Debra Reese by beating her to death inside her home with a tyre thumper,” she said, “I am prayerful that Debra’s family has had closure following his lawful execution in 2017.”

Along with providing new DNA results, Ms Young’s petition pushed the city of Jacksonvil­le to compare fingerprin­ts from the crime scene to a state and national fingerprin­t database for the first time. It has long been known that Lee’s fingerprin­ts did not match any of those at the scene.

The resulting search against the national database did not provide a match, according to the Innocence Project and the ACLU, but the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory has not yet searched the state database.

If that search happens and a fingerprin­t match emerges, the lawyers will push to compare that person’s DNA to the mystery man’s, they said.

 ??  ?? ONLY FOR THE STOUT-HEARTED: A recruitmen­t advertisem­ent outside the Arkansas Department of Correction­s Cummins Unit, which houses the state’s execution chamber, in Arkansas in 2017.
ONLY FOR THE STOUT-HEARTED: A recruitmen­t advertisem­ent outside the Arkansas Department of Correction­s Cummins Unit, which houses the state’s execution chamber, in Arkansas in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand