Last week a Texas man, Charles Chapman, was freed after spending 27 years in prison for a crime the state now admits he never committed. Sentenced to prison in 1981 for rape, it was DNA evidence that finally exonerated him. And DNA evidence is nothing new to Dallas County, the jurisdiction that convicted Chapman. In fact, since 2001 (15) wrongly convicted people have been released from this one county alone based on DNA evidence.
According to the Innocence Project, the first DNA based exoneration was in 1989 (PDF). Since that time there have been (192) people released from prison because the DNA evidence showed they were wrongly convicted. Fourteen of those wrongly convicted people had been sentenced to death. And those numbers are certainly just the tip of the iceberg.
It is now painfully clear that the debate about the likelihood of the government wrongly killing an innocent, wrongly convicted citizen has moved well beyond the academic. I fail to see how anyone, at this point, can support the death penalty when it is clear that justice not only makes mistakes, but does so frequently.
For the state to take away 27 years of someone's life is a horrific mistake. Killing them in error at this point, knowing what we now know, is nothing short of criminal.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
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