Friday, December 21, 2007

Playing of Rap Song Results in New Murder Trial

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071221/NEWS01/712210416

Finally Free

Eric Volz is free again.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22361943/

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Free Eric Volz...A Success?

The story of Eric Volz has captured the attention of thousands all over America, if not the world. Recently the Nicaraguan Appeals Court has voted in favor of Eric's innocence, however, he is not yet free. The trial judge must sign the release papers, but has yet to do so. Read more of Eric's story below.


http://www.friendsofericvolz.com/

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

WWII Vet Receives Just $725 for 15 Months of Wrongful Imprisonment

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/12/12/soldier.back.pay/index.html

Demond Brown To Be Released

In an earlier post, you were informed of a young Kentucky man, Demond Brown, convicted of killing two people in a traffic accident. On Governor Fletcher's last day, he issued a commutation and Brown will be released from prison.


From the Courier Journal:

The three commutations that Fletcher issued yesterday will result in the release of only one of the inmates: Demond Brown, an African American who was convicted in the fatal Hopkinsville traffic accident.
Brown was convicted by an all-white jury in the deaths of a white woman and her daughter, drawing protests from members of the black community.
In June 2005 the state Supreme Court upheld Brown's 2002 conviction, marking the first time the high court had sustained a wanton-murder conviction of a driver who ran a red light but was not drinking, on drugs or speeding excessively.
Jim Carter, the Hopkinsville attorney who has represented Brown, was floored last night when a Courier-Journal reporter called him to tell him that his client had been pardoned.
"Bingo! That is wonderful!" Carter exclaimed. "I was hoping (Fletcher) would do it, but I had about given up."
Carter said he had talked with associates in Frankfort about the case in hopes that they would talk with the governor, but he had not made a formal request to Fletcher.
"This is correcting a terrible wrong," he said.

Cocaine Sentencing Reduction Applied Retroactively

The reduction in sentencing guidelines for crack cocaine, it has been decided, may be applied retroactively. Some 3,800 inmates could be freed up to a year after the guidelines is enforced in March.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22203648/

Another Freed By DNA

A Georgia man has been cleared in a 1979 rape thanks to DNA testing done on hairs found at the scene.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22208000/