Wrongful execution is a miscarriage of justice occurring when an innocent person is put to death by capital punishment. Cases of wrongful execution are cited as an argument
by opponents of capital punishment, while proponents suggest that the
argument of innocence concerns the credibility of the justice system as a
whole and does not solely undermine the use of death penalty.
A number of people are claimed to have been innocent victims of the death penalty. Newly available DNA evidence has allowed the exoneration and release of more than 20 death row inmates since 1992 in the United States, but DNA evidence is available in only a fraction of capital cases. Others have been released on the basis of weak cases against them, sometimes involving prosecutorial misconduct; resulting in acquittal at retrial, charges dropped, or innocence-based pardons. The Death Penalty Information Center (U.S.) has published a list of 10 inmates "executed but possibly innocent". Of all executions in the United States, 144 prisoners have been exonerated while on death row.
In the UK, reviews prompted by the Criminal Cases Review Commission have resulted in one pardon and three exonerations for people executed between 1950 and 1953 (when the execution rate in England and Wales averaged 17 per year), with compensation being paid.
A number of people are claimed to have been innocent victims of the death penalty. Newly available DNA evidence has allowed the exoneration and release of more than 20 death row inmates since 1992 in the United States, but DNA evidence is available in only a fraction of capital cases. Others have been released on the basis of weak cases against them, sometimes involving prosecutorial misconduct; resulting in acquittal at retrial, charges dropped, or innocence-based pardons. The Death Penalty Information Center (U.S.) has published a list of 10 inmates "executed but possibly innocent". Of all executions in the United States, 144 prisoners have been exonerated while on death row.
In the UK, reviews prompted by the Criminal Cases Review Commission have resulted in one pardon and three exonerations for people executed between 1950 and 1953 (when the execution rate in England and Wales averaged 17 per year), with compensation being paid.
Specific examples
Australia
Colin Campbell Ross was hanged in Melbourne in 1922 for the murder of 12-year-old Alma Tirtschke the previous year in what became known as the Gun Alley Murder. The case was re-examined in the 1990s using modern techniques and Ross was eventually pardoned in 2008, by which time capital punishment in Australia had been abolished in all jurisdictions—the last execution taking place in 1967.
People's Republic of China
Wei Qing'an (Chinese:
魏清安, 1961–1984, 23 years old) was a Chinese citizen who was executed
for the rape of Kun Liu, a woman who had disappeared. The execution was
carried out on 3 May 1984 by the Intermediate People's Court. In the
next month, Tian Yuxiu (田玉修) was arrested and admitted that he had
committed the rape. Three years later, Wei was officially declared
innocent.
Teng Xingshan (Chinese:
滕兴善, ?–1989) was a Chinese citizen who was executed for supposedly
having raped, robbed and murdered Shi Xiaorong (石小荣), a woman who had
disappeared. An old man found a dismembered body, and incompetent police
forensics claimed to have matched the body to the photo of the missing
Shi Xiaorong. The execution was carried out on 28 January 1989 by the Huaihua
Intermediate People's Court. In 1993, the previously missing woman
returned to the village, saying she had been kidnapped and taken to
Shandong. The absolute innocence of the wrongfully executed Teng was not
admitted until 2005.
Nie Shubin (Chinese:
聂树斌, 1974–1995) was a Chinese citizen who was executed for the rape and
murder of Kang Juhua (康菊花), a woman in her thirties. The execution was
carried out on April 27, 1995 by the Shijiazhuang
Intermediate People's Court. In 2005, ten years after the execution,
Wang Shujin (Chinese: 王书金) admitted to the police that he had committed
the murder.
Qoγsiletu or Huugjilt (Mongolian:qoγsiletu, Chinese:呼格吉勒图, 1977-1996) was an Inner Mongolian
who was executed for the rape and murder of a young girl on June 10,
1996. On December 5, 2006, ten years after the execution, Zhao Zhihong (Chinese: 赵志红) wrote the Petition of my Death Penalty admitting he had committed the crime. Huugjilt was posthumously exonerated and Zhao Zhihong was sentenced to death in 2015.
Ireland
Harry Gleeson was executed in Ireland in April 1941 for the murder of Moll McCarthy in County Tipperary in November 1940. The Gardai withheld crucial evidence and fabricated other evidence against Gleeson. In 2015 he was posthumously pardoned.
Taiwan
Chiang Kuo-ching (Chiang is the family name, Chinese: 江國慶,
1975–1997) was a Taiwan Air Force private who was executed by a
military tribunal on August 13, 1997 for the rape and murder of a
five-year-old girl. On January 28, 2011, over 13 years after the
execution, Hsu Jung-chou (Chinese: 許榮洲), who had a history of sexual
abuse, admitted to the prosecutor that he had been responsible for the
crime. In September 2011 Chiang was posthumously acquitted by a military
court who found Chiang's original confession had been obtained by
torture. Ma Ying-jeou, the Republic of China's president, apologised to Chiang's family.
United Kingdom
- In 1660, in a series of events known as the Campden Wonder, an Englishman named William Harrison disappeared after going on a walk, near the village of Charingworth, in Gloucestershire. Some of his clothing was found slashed and bloody on the side of a local road. Investigators interrogated Harrison’s servant, John Perry, who eventually confessed that his mother and his brother had killed Harrison for money. Perry, his mother, and his brother were hanged. Two years later, Harrison reappeared, telling the incredibly unlikely tale that he had been abducted by three horsemen and sold into slavery in the Ottoman Empire. Though his tale was implausible, he indubitably had not been murdered by the Perry family.
- Timothy Evans was tried and executed in March 1950 for the murder of his wife and infant daughter. An official inquiry conducted 16 years later determined that it was Evans's fellow tenant, serial killer John Reginald Halliday Christie, who was responsible for the murder. Christie also admitted to the murder of Evans's wife, as well as five other women and his own wife. Christie may have murdered other women, judging by evidence found in his possession at the time of his arrest, but it was never pursued by the police. Evans was posthumously pardoned in 1966. The case had prompted the abolition of capital punishment in the UK in 1965.
- George Kelly was executed in March 1950 for the 1949 murder of the manager of the Cameo Cinema in Liverpool, UK and his assistant during a robbery that went wrong. This case became known as the Cameo Murder. Kelly's conviction was overturned in 2003. Another man, Donald Johnson, had confessed to the crime but the police bungled Johnson's case and had not divulged his confession at Kelly's trial.
- Mahmood Hussein Mattan was executed in 1952 for the murder of Lily Volpert. In 1998 the Court of Appeal decided that the original case was, in the words of Lord Justice Rose, "demonstrably flawed". The family were awarded £725,000 compensation, to be shared equally among Mattan's wife and three children. The compensation was the first award to a family for a person wrongfully hanged.
- Derek Bentley was a mentally handicapped young man who was executed in 1953. He was convicted of the murder of a police officer during an attempted robbery, despite the facts that it was his accomplice who fired the gun and that Bentley was already under arrest at the time of the shooting. The accomplice who actually fired the fatal shot could not be executed due to his young age, and served only ten years in prison before he was released.
United States
University of Michigan law professor Samuel Gross led a team of experts in the law and in statistics that estimated the likely number of unjust convictions. The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
determined that at least 4% of people on death row were and are likely
innocent. Gross has no doubt that some innocent people have been
executed.
Statistics likely understate the actual problem of wrongful
convictions because once an execution has occurred there is often
insufficient motivation and finance to keep a case open, and it becomes
unlikely at that point that the miscarriage of justice will ever be
exposed. For example, in the case of Joseph Roger O'Dell III, executed
in Virginia in 1997 for a rape and murder, a prosecuting attorney argued
in court in 1998 that if posthumous DNA results exonerated O'Dell, "it
would be shouted from the rooftops that ... Virginia executed an
innocent man." The state prevailed, and the evidence was destroyed.
Chipita Rodriguez was hanged in San Patricio County, Texas in 1863 for murdering a horse trader, and 122 years later, the Texas Legislature passed a resolution exonerating her.
Thomas and Meeks Griffin were executed in South Carolina
in 1915 for the murder of a man involved in an interracial affair two
years previously but were pardoned 94 years after execution. It is
thought that they were arrested and charged because they were viewed as
wealthy enough to hire competent legal counsel and get an acquittal.
Joe Arridy
(April 15, 1915 – January 6, 1939) was a mentally disabled American man
executed for rape and murder and posthumously granted a pardon. Arridy
was sentenced to death for the murder and rape of a 15-year-old
schoolgirl from Pueblo, Colorado. He confessed to murdering the girl and
assaulting her sister. Due to the sensational nature of the crime
precautions were taken to keep him from being hanged by vigilante
justice. His sentence was executed after multiple stays on January 6,
1939, in the Colorado gas chamber in the state penitentiary in Canon City, Colorado.
Arridy was the first Colorado prisoner posthumously pardoned in January
2011 by Colorado Governor Bill Ritter, a former district attorney,
after research had shown that Arridy was very likely not in Pueblo when
the crime happened and had been coerced into confessing. Among other
things, Arridy had an IQ of 46, which was equal to the mental age of a
6-year-old. He did not even understand that he was going to be executed,
and played with a toy train that the warden, Roy Best, had given to him
as a present. A man named Frank Aguilar had been executed in 1937 in
the Colorado gas chamber for the same crime for which Arridy ended up
also being executed. Arridy's posthumous pardon in 2011 was the first
such pardon in Colorado history. A press release from the governor's
office stated, "[A]n overwhelming body of evidence indicates the
23-year-old Arridy was innocent, including false and coerced
confessions, the likelihood that Arridy was not in Pueblo at the time of
the killing, and an admission of guilt by someone else." The governor
also pointed to Arridy's intellectual disabilities. The governor said,
“Granting a posthumous pardon is an extraordinary remedy. But the tragic
conviction of Mr. Arridy and his subsequent execution on Jan. 6, 1939,
merit such relief based on the great likelihood that Mr. Arridy was, in
fact, innocent of the crime for which he was executed, and his severe
mental disability at the time of his trial and execution."
George Stinney,
a 14-year old black boy, was electrocuted in South Carolina in 1944 for
the murder of Betty June Binnicker, age 11, as well as Mary Emma
Thames, age 8. The arrest occurred on March 23, 1944 in Alcolu, inside
of Clarendon County, South Carolina. Apparently, the two girls rode
their bikes past Stinney’s house where they asked him and his sister
about a certain type of flower; after this encounter, the girls went
missing and were found dead in a ditch the following morning. After an
hour of interrogation by the officers, a deputy stated that Stinney
confessed to the murder. The confession explained that Stinney wanted
to have intercourse with Betty, so he wanted to kill Mary to get Betty
alone; however, both girls fought back and that is when he killed both
of them. This case still remains a very controversial one due to the
fact that the judicial process showed severe shortcomings. An example
can be made out of this case by showing how the judicial system does
not always properly orchestrate.
He was the youngest person executed in the United States. More than
70 years later, a judge threw out the conviction, calling it a "great
injustice."
Carlos DeLuna
was executed in Texas in December 1989 for stabbing a gas station clerk
to death. Subsequent investigations cast strong doubt upon DeLuna's
guilt for the murder of which he had been convicted.
His execution came about six years after the crime was committed. The
trial ended up attracting local attention, but it was never suggested
that an innocent man was about to be punished while the actual killer
went free. DeLuna was found blocks away from the crime scene with $149
in his pocket. From that point on, it went downhill for the young
Carlos DeLuna. A wrongful eyewitness testimony is what formed the case
against him. Unfortunately, DeLuna’s previous criminal record was very
much used against him.
The real killer, Carlos Hernandez, was a repeat violent offender who
actually had a history of slashing women with his unique buck knife, not
to mention he looked very similar to Carlos DeLuna. Hernandez did not
keep quiet about his murder; apparently he went around bragging about
the killing of Lopez. In 1999, Hernandez was imprisoned for attacking
his neighbor with a knife.
Jesse Tafero
was convicted of murder and executed via electric chair in May 1990 in
the state of Florida for the murders of two Florida Highway Patrol
officers. The conviction of a co-defendant was overturned in 1992 after a
recreation of the crime scene indicated a third person had committed
the murders.
Not only was Tafero wrongly accused, his electric chair malfunctioned
as well – three times. As a result, Tafero’s head caught on fire. After
this encounter, a debate was focused around humane methods of
execution. Lethal injections became more common in the states rather
than the electric chair.
Johnny Garrett
of Texas was executed in February 1992 for allegedly raping and
murdering a nun. In March 2004 cold-case DNA testing identified Leoncio
Rueda as the rapist and murderer of another elderly victim killed four
months earlier. Immediately following the nun's murder, prosecutors and police were certain the two cases were committed by the same assailant. The flawed case is explored in a 2008 documentary entitled The Last Word.
In 2015, the Justice Department and the FBI formally acknowledged
that nearly every examiner in an FBI forensic squad overstated forensic
hair matches for two decades before the year 2000.
Of the 28 forensic examiners testifying to hair matches in a total of
268 trials reviewed, 26 overstated the evidence of forensic hair matches
and 95% of the overstatements favored the prosecution. Defendants were
sentenced to death in 32 of those 268 cases.
Russia
Aleksandr Kravchenko was executed in 1983 for the 1978 murder of nine year old Yelena Zakotnova in Shakhty, a coal mining town near Rostov-on-Don.
Kravchenko as a teenager, had served a prison sentence for the rape and
murder of a teenage girl but witnesses said he was not at the scene of
Zakotnova's murder at the time. Under police pressure the witnesses
altered their statements and Kravchenko was executed. Later it was
found that the girl had been murdered by Andrei Chikatilo, a serial killer nicknamed "the Red Ripper" and "the Butcher of Rostov", who was executed in 1994.
Exonerations and pardons
Kirk Bloodsworth
was the first American to be freed from death row as a result of
exoneration by DNA evidence. Kirk Bloodsworth was a Marine before he
became a waterman on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. At the age of 22,
he was wrongly convicted of the murder of a nine-year-old girl; she had
been sexually assaulted, strangled, and beaten with a rock. An
anonymous call to the police claiming that the witness had seen
Bloodsworth with the girl that day, and he matched up with the
description from the police sketch. Five witnesses claiming that they
saw Bloodsworth with the victim, as well a statement in his testimony
where he claimed that he “had done something terrible that day that
would affect his relationship with his wife”, did not help his case. No
physical evidence connected Bloodsworth to the crime, but he was still
convicted of rape and murder which led to him receiving a death
sentence.
Ray Krone
is the 100th American to have been sentenced to death and then later
exonerated. Ray Krone was convicted of the murder of Kim Ancona,
thirty-six year old victim in Phoenix, Arizona. Ancona had been found
nude, fatally stabbed. The physical evidence that the police had to
rely on was bite marks on Ancona’s breasts and neck. After Ancona had
told a friend that Ray Krone, a regular customer, was going to help her
close the bar the previous night, the police brought him in to make a
Styrofoam impression of his teeth. After comparing the teeth marks,
Krone was arrested for the murder, kidnapping, and sexual assault of Kim
Ancona on December 31, 1991. At the trial in 1992, Krone pled
innocence, but the teeth mark comparison caused the jury to found him
guilty and he was sentenced to death as well as a consecutive twenty-one
year term of imprisonment. Krone’s family also believed that he was innocent, which led them to spend over $300,000 in order to fight for his freedom.
In the UK, reviews prompted by the Criminal Cases Review Commission
have resulted in one pardon and three exonerations for people that were
executed between 1950 and 1953 (when the execution rate in England and Wales averaged 17 per year), with compensation being paid. Timothy Evans was granted a posthumous free pardon in 1966. Mahmood Hussein Mattan was convicted in 1952 and was the last person to be hanged in Cardiff, Wales, but had his conviction quashed in 1998. George Kelly was hanged at Liverpool in 1950, but had his conviction quashed by the Court of Appeal in June 2003. Derek Bentley had his conviction quashed in 1998 with the appeal trial judge, Lord Bingham, noting that the original trial judge, Lord Goddard, had denied the defendant "the fair trial which is the birthright of every British citizen."
Colin Campbell Ross (1892–1922) was an Australian wine-bar owner executed for the murder of a child which became known as The Gun Alley Murder,
despite there being evidence that he was innocent. Following his
execution, efforts were made to clear his name, and in the 1990s old
evidence was re-examined with modern forensic techniques
which supported the view that Ross was innocent. In 2006 an appeal for
mercy was made to Victoria's Chief Justice and on 27 May 2008 the
Victorian government pardoned Ross in what is believed to be an
Australian legal first.
U.S. mental health controversy
There has been much debate about the justification of imposing capital punishment on individuals who have been diagnosed with mental retardation.
Some have argued that the execution of people with mental retardation
constitutes cruel and unusual punishment as it pertains to the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution. While the U.S. Supreme Court
interpreted cruel and unusual punishment to include those that fail to
take into account the defendant's degree of criminal culpability, it did not determine that executing the mentally retarded constitutes cruel and unusual punishment until 2002.
In 1986, a US Supreme Court decision ruled that it is
unconstitutional to execute someone who does not understand the reason
for or the reality of his or her punishment, this decision was upheld in
a 2002 decision. Despite the supreme court decision, Texas did not
implement legislation for this until 1999. There have been at least 25
individuals with documented diagnoses of paranoid schizophrenia, bipolar
disorder, and other severe persistent mental illnesses executed in the
state of Texas, despite them seeking treatment before the commission of
their crimes, but were denied care. The US Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals has never found a death row inmate incompetent for execution,
however, in 2007, the US Supreme court decision Panetti vs Quarterman,
the justices ruled that “the Fifth Circuit’s incompetency standard is
too restrictive to afford a prisoner eighth amendment protection.
This issue was first addressed in the case of Penry v. Lynaugh, in which Johnny Paul Penry had filed a habeas corpus
petition in federal district court that claimed his death sentence
should be vacated because it violated his Eighth Amendment rights. His
reasoning was that he suffered from mental retardation, and numerous
psychologists had confirmed this to be factual, indicating that his IQ ranged from 50 to 63 and that he possessed the mental abilities of a six-and-a-half-year-old.
Penry's petition was denied by the district court, whose decision was
subsequently affirmed by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Penry would
later appeal to the Supreme Court, who ultimately ruled in a
five-to-four decision that the Eighth Amendment to the United States
Constitution did not categorically prohibit the execution of persons
with mental retardation. Following the 1989 Penry ruling, sixteen
states as well as the federal government passed legislation that banned
the execution of offenders with mental retardation.
Penry was overruled in 2002 by Atkins v. Virginia, which held that the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment
precluded the execution of the mentally handicapped, but the Supreme
Court left the definition of mentally handicapped as something to be
determined by the states.
In 2014, the Supreme Court ruled in Hall v. Florida that states cannot rely solely on an IQ test in determining whether a borderline mentally handicapped person can be executed.
Judicial murder
Judicial murder is the unjustified use of capital punishment. The Oxford English Dictionary describes it as "death inflicted by process of law, capital punishment, esp. considered to be unjust or cruel".
An early case in which charges of judicial murder were raised was the Amboyna massacre
in 1623, which caused a legal dispute between the English and Dutch
governments over the conduct of a court in the Dutch East Indies that
had ordered the execution of ten English men accused of treason. The
dispute centered around differing interpretations of the legal
jurisdiction of the court in question. The English believed that this
court had not been competent to try and execute these EIC members, and
so believed the executions to have been fundamentally illegal, thus
constituting "judicial murder". The Dutch, on the other hand, believed
the court to have been fundamentally competent, and wished to focus
instead on misconduct of the particular judges in the court.
Another early use of the term occurs in Northleigh's Natural Allegiance of 1688; "He would willingly make this Proceeding against the Knight but a sort of Judicial Murder".
In 1777 Voltaire used the comparable term of assassins juridiques ("judicial murderers").
The term was used in German (Justizmord) in 1782 by August Ludwig von Schlözer in reference to the execution of Anna Göldi. In a footnote, he explains the term as
- "the murder of an innocent, deliberately, and with all the pomp of holy Justice, perpetrated by people installed to prevent murder, or, if a murder has occurred, to see to it that it is punished appropriately."
In 1932, the term is also used by Justice Sutherland in Powell v. Alabama when establishing the right to a court-appointed attorney in all capital cases:
Let us suppose the extreme case of a prisoner charged with a capital offense who is deaf and dumb, illiterate and feeble minded, unable to employ counsel, with the whole power of the state arrayed against him, prosecuted by counsel for the state without assignment of counsel for his defense, tried, convicted and sentenced to death. Such a result … if carried into execution, would be little short of judicial murder.
Hermann Mostar (1956) defends the extension of the term to un-premeditated miscarriages of justice where an innocent suffers the death penalty.