Post by Anja Nieser on Sept 6, 2006 21:54:43 GMT -5
Texas' top court deliberates on appeal for a new trial----Rodney Reed's
long struggle for justice
BRYAN McCANN reports on Texas death row prisoner Rodney Reed's long
struggle for justice.
IN THE coming weeks, Rodney Reed will learn whether justice long delayed
is again justice denied. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) is
considering whether Reed, an innocent man who has been on death row since
1998, should receive a new trial.
The CCA deliberations come on the heels of a recommendation by district
court Judge Reva Towslee Corbett against a new trial for Reed. Corbett was
ordered by the CCA to hold a hearing into Reed's appeal for a new
trial--despite the fact that her father was the presiding judge at
Rodney's original trial.
The CCA isn't technically bound by her recommendation, but activists fear
it will weigh heavily in their final decision. This has given further
sense of urgency to the grassroots mobilization around Rodney's case to
demand that the CCA grant him a new trial.
Rodney Reed's case is a particularly sickening example of how rotten the
Texas death penalty system is.
Reed was sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of Stacey Stites in
Bastrop, Texas. The only piece of evidence connecting Reed to Stites is a
DNA sample taken from her body, which Rodney and his supporters say is
evidence of a well-corroborated sexual relationship between the 2.
At the time of the murder, Stites was engaged to Jimmy Fennell, a white
local police officer. Fennell failed 2 lie detector tests in which he was
asked, "Did you strangle Stacey Stites?"
Investigators never searched the apartment the couple shared, and police
returned Fennell's truck, which Stacey was driving the day of the murder,
before conducting a complete forensic analysis. Fingerprint dusting from
the truck produced only 2 sets of prints--Fennell's and Stites'. Upon
receiving the truck from police, Fennell immediately sold it.
Additionally, investigators found 2 beer cans at the scene of the crime
containing the DNA of Giddings officer David Hall and Bastrop Police
officer Ed Samela. Samela, three months into investigating the case, died
of an alleged self-inflicted gunshot wound. The defense was never made
aware of these findings.
Overall, the crime scene investigation was a fiasco. Stites' body was
missing for 2 hours before arriving at the medical examiner's office. When
it did show up, it had bruises and burns not present at the crime scene,
according to photos.
Even more troubling than these extraordinary details are the facts that
make Rodney's case anything but unique. Reed is an African American man
from an economically disadvantaged background in a small Texas town with a
deep history of racial tension.
His court-appointed defense team failed to call witnesses who would attest
to the relationship between Reed and Stites, and provide an alibi for
Rodney on the day of the murder. Nor did the defense call witnesses who
saw Stites and Fennell together on the morning of the murder, and who
heard Fennell threaten to strangle Stites with a belt if she ever cheated
on him.
From the start, the Reed family has been determined to mobilize behind
Rodney. Rodney's mother, Sandra, a member of the Campaign to End the Death
Penalty (CEDP) national board of directors, has become an inspiration to
abolitionists in Texas and beyond.
The case received a significant boost in visibility with the award-winning
documentary State vs. Reed. Since the film's release, the CEDP has worked
closely with the filmmakers to host public screenings that have served as
fundraisers for the Reeds and helped to raise community awareness about
Rodney's case and the Texas abolitionist movement as a whole.
The coming weeks will be decisive in putting pressure on the CCA. But
regardless of what the court decides, the struggle will not end there.
Activists are planning a rally on September 13, at which they will deliver
signed petitions demanding a new trial for Rodney to the CCA.
The widespread publicity and energetic mobilization around Rodney's case
will not only be instrumental in saving his life, but in helping to build
a stronger abolitionist movement that can end the vile institution of
capital punishment once and for all.
To show your support, sign an online petition for Rodney. For more
information, read the Austin, Texas CEDP chapter's blog. Further
information can be found at the CEDP's national Web site.
(source: Socialist Worker)
long struggle for justice
BRYAN McCANN reports on Texas death row prisoner Rodney Reed's long
struggle for justice.
IN THE coming weeks, Rodney Reed will learn whether justice long delayed
is again justice denied. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) is
considering whether Reed, an innocent man who has been on death row since
1998, should receive a new trial.
The CCA deliberations come on the heels of a recommendation by district
court Judge Reva Towslee Corbett against a new trial for Reed. Corbett was
ordered by the CCA to hold a hearing into Reed's appeal for a new
trial--despite the fact that her father was the presiding judge at
Rodney's original trial.
The CCA isn't technically bound by her recommendation, but activists fear
it will weigh heavily in their final decision. This has given further
sense of urgency to the grassroots mobilization around Rodney's case to
demand that the CCA grant him a new trial.
Rodney Reed's case is a particularly sickening example of how rotten the
Texas death penalty system is.
Reed was sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of Stacey Stites in
Bastrop, Texas. The only piece of evidence connecting Reed to Stites is a
DNA sample taken from her body, which Rodney and his supporters say is
evidence of a well-corroborated sexual relationship between the 2.
At the time of the murder, Stites was engaged to Jimmy Fennell, a white
local police officer. Fennell failed 2 lie detector tests in which he was
asked, "Did you strangle Stacey Stites?"
Investigators never searched the apartment the couple shared, and police
returned Fennell's truck, which Stacey was driving the day of the murder,
before conducting a complete forensic analysis. Fingerprint dusting from
the truck produced only 2 sets of prints--Fennell's and Stites'. Upon
receiving the truck from police, Fennell immediately sold it.
Additionally, investigators found 2 beer cans at the scene of the crime
containing the DNA of Giddings officer David Hall and Bastrop Police
officer Ed Samela. Samela, three months into investigating the case, died
of an alleged self-inflicted gunshot wound. The defense was never made
aware of these findings.
Overall, the crime scene investigation was a fiasco. Stites' body was
missing for 2 hours before arriving at the medical examiner's office. When
it did show up, it had bruises and burns not present at the crime scene,
according to photos.
Even more troubling than these extraordinary details are the facts that
make Rodney's case anything but unique. Reed is an African American man
from an economically disadvantaged background in a small Texas town with a
deep history of racial tension.
His court-appointed defense team failed to call witnesses who would attest
to the relationship between Reed and Stites, and provide an alibi for
Rodney on the day of the murder. Nor did the defense call witnesses who
saw Stites and Fennell together on the morning of the murder, and who
heard Fennell threaten to strangle Stites with a belt if she ever cheated
on him.
From the start, the Reed family has been determined to mobilize behind
Rodney. Rodney's mother, Sandra, a member of the Campaign to End the Death
Penalty (CEDP) national board of directors, has become an inspiration to
abolitionists in Texas and beyond.
The case received a significant boost in visibility with the award-winning
documentary State vs. Reed. Since the film's release, the CEDP has worked
closely with the filmmakers to host public screenings that have served as
fundraisers for the Reeds and helped to raise community awareness about
Rodney's case and the Texas abolitionist movement as a whole.
The coming weeks will be decisive in putting pressure on the CCA. But
regardless of what the court decides, the struggle will not end there.
Activists are planning a rally on September 13, at which they will deliver
signed petitions demanding a new trial for Rodney to the CCA.
The widespread publicity and energetic mobilization around Rodney's case
will not only be instrumental in saving his life, but in helping to build
a stronger abolitionist movement that can end the vile institution of
capital punishment once and for all.
To show your support, sign an online petition for Rodney. For more
information, read the Austin, Texas CEDP chapter's blog. Further
information can be found at the CEDP's national Web site.
(source: Socialist Worker)