State-funded report reveals Texas may have executed innocent man
A 1991 house fire in Corsicana, Texas, that sent three infant girls to their deaths and their father to the execution chamber was incorrectly ruled an arson, and may have in fact been accidental, says a report from a top fire scientist.
The report from renowned fire expert Craig Beyler, requested by the Texas Forensic Science Commission, casts doubt on death penalty supporters’ insistence that there are sufficient safeguards to prevent the innocent from being put to death. It will also likely raise new calls for the abolition of the death penalty.
The state of Texas executed Cameron Todd Willingham by lethal injection on February 17, 2004, for the deaths of his daughters Amber, 2, and twins Karmon and Kameron, aged one. Willingham protested his innocence to the end.
If the Texas Forensic Science Commission accepts Beyler’s findings, “it could lead to the first-ever declaration by an official state body that an inmate was wrongly executed,” reports the Chicago Tribune.
The Tribune first brought national attention to Willingham’s case in 2004, 10 months after the 36-year-old went to his execution. In an investigative article, the paper reported that the forensics analysts it had hired had found that “Willingham was prosecuted and convicted based primarily on arson theories that have since been repudiated by scientific advances. According to four fire experts consulted by the Tribune, the original investigation was flawed and it is even possible the fire was accidental.”
“There’s nothing to suggest to any reasonable arson investigator that this was an arson fire,” arson expert Gerald Hurst told the Tribune. “It was just a fire.”
But Beyler’s report goes even further, saying that the prosecution “relied on bad science, unproven theories and personal bias” in its pursuit of Willingham. The Austin American-Statesman reports:
Beyler’s report, requested by the Texas Forensic Science Commission, listed more than a dozen instances of improper analysis and mistaken conclusions provided by two fire officials during Willingham’s capital murder trial.
Most damaging was testimony that burn patterns on the home’s floors proved that an accelerant was used to start three different fast-burning fires that doomed the children — a conclusion not supported by the facts or by fundamental scientific analysis, Beyler wrote.
WEIRD SCIENCE
Beyler’s report singles out the investigative work of Manuel Vasquez of the State Fire Marshal’s Office, who told jurors that “most of the 1,200 to 1,500 fires he had investigated were arsons — a statistic that ‘far exceeds any rational estimate’ and reflects his ‘predisposition to find arson in his cases,’” the Statesman quotes Beyler’s report.
The testimony Vasquez provided was “hardly consistent with a scientific mind-set and is more characteristic of mystics or psychics,” Beyler wrote, according to the Houston Chronicle.
The Statesman provides a list of forensic testimony in the case, as challenged by Beyler:
• Melted aluminum: Vasquez testified that wood burns at 800 degrees, meaning an accelerant must have been used to reach the 1,200 degrees necessary to melt an aluminum threshold.
On the contrary, Beyler said, accelerant fires are no hotter than wood fires, and both can reach 2,000 degrees.
• Floor patterns: Vasquez and Fogg testified that “puddle configurations” and burn patterns on the floor could only have been caused by burning liquids.
In reality, Beyler said, such patterns are typical in rooms — like those in the Willingham home — that were fully involved in a fire.
• Crazed glass: Vasquez determined that a severely cracked porch window indicated a fast, hot fire due to accelerants.
“In fact it is much more likely that any crazing resulted from the application of water to hot glass during firefighting,” Beyler wrote.
Vasquez will not be able to respond to the charges of malfeasance against him, as he died in the 1990s.
“The only other evidence of significance against Willingham was another inmate who testified that Willingham had confessed to him,” reports the Houston Chronicle. “Jailhouse snitches are viewed with skepticism in the justice system, so much so that some jurisdictions have restrictions against their use.”
POLITICAL MOTIVATIONS?
As the Tribune noted in 2004, “before Willingham died by lethal injection … Texas judges and Gov. Rick Perry turned aside a report from a prominent fire scientist questioning the conviction.”
That has led many commentators to question whether there was a political motive behind the decision to send Willingham to his death.
“The errors in the forensics were discovered with plenty of time before the execution date, but Governor Rick Perry declined to intervene … and — to further his own career as a ‘tough on crime’ politician — allowed an innocent man to die by lethal injection,” opines JR at the Daily Kos blog.
NO ANGEL
“I am an innocent man convicted of a crime I did not commit,” Cameron Willingham said as he was being strapped into his deathbed. “I have been persecuted for 12 years for something I did not do.”
But then Willingham added, to his ex-wife: “I hope you rot in hell, bitch.”
It’s a side of Willingham that likely made it hard for jurors to sympathize with the defendant. The Clark County Prosecutor’s Web site points out that Willingham had “a history of violence. He [had] been convicted of numerous felonies and misdemeanors, both as an adult and as a juvenile, and attempts at various forms of rehabilitation have proven unsuccessful.”
That his neighbors testified against him didn’t help, either.
“Neighbors of Willingham testified that as the house began smoldering, Willingham was ‘crouched down’ in the front yard, and despite the neighbors’ pleas, refused to go into the house in any attempt to rescue the children,” the Clark County Prosecutor’s Office states. “Willingham’s neighbors testified that when the fire ‘blew out’ the windows, Willingham ‘hollered about his car’ and ran to move it away from the fire to avoid its being damaged.”
According to the Tribune, one juror “said she would have found Willingham guilty even without the arson finding solely because he did not try to save his children.”
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Texas takes pride in executing innocent people as Bush was in the business of murder when he was Governor and moved up to do the same as President. You have to remember Satan has no heart or soul and those who follow him have none either. Justice Scalia feels the Leaders have the right to kill people and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Look how Americans justify killing millions of Iraq people and kidnapping hundreds of men/woman/children holding them without charges for 7 years while torturing/rape/even murdering some. We have proven we are the real Axis of Evil and others need to catch up with us. Now President Obama is trying to bring back the US Human Rights Values/Morals we have 8 years ago but the Republicans/KKK are fighting tooth and nail to keep Evil Alive. Now minorities are worth less then animals as we see Michael Vick went to jail for abusing animal but if a black person is killed you jut might get a medal.
Should we doubt this? These are the “folks” that are forcing the teaching of religion in their schools. The world is flat. Repent!
What good is a scientific examination of the facts in Texass? Texass is Christs own country, everybody knows that science is just a Communist ruse to let murders go free! After all he was arrested by good Christian police. Wasn’t he? Guilty as charged!
NOW YOU KNOW WHAT THEY MEAN BY “TEXAS TOAST”.
What we need is a law mandating that if an innocent is executed by the state, that the prosecutor, the presiding judge, and the sitting governor at the time, if living, should immediately be put to death by the same method. That may seem drastic, but it sure would cut down on the number of executions, especially the number of executions of people innocent of the crimes for which they were killed.
Bush and Perry got great kicks out of seeing prisoners killed under their watch, and maybe some of them deserved it. But as long as there was a shred of doubt as to the guilt of even one of the one the State put to death, there should have been no executions at all.
Texas has most likely executed more innocent men than guilty ones.
Many are tricked in to confessing and then executed. Few are afforded a decent defense.
Florida isn’t far behind.
I’m sure the little baby Jesus will sort this out. God bless Governor Rick for his faithful murder of those convicted.
sonny
Please turn down any health care that comes your way. A lack of medicine to stop those voices in your pee brain will help you to jump off of a bridge a lot quicker.
I have no doubt that sonny was being sarcastic. Otherwise he wouldn’t have referred to execution as “murder.”
And we have a problem with what is happening in other parts of the world.
Everyone take a deeeeep breath, because if there is a God, and I’m not saying there is one, he is going to bring more SHIT down on America than george bush or dick cheney could ever dream of.
Texas reall1y seems to delight in executing people. I bet Texas has executed many that were innocent of the crimes for which they were convicted–this particular case was just one they couldn’t sweep under the rug.
And isn’t it comforting to note that Texas jurors will find a person guilty of a capital offense punishable by death without any supporting evidence–just because?
You couldn’t pay me enough to live in Texas.
Given sociopaths like Gov. Goodhair and the previous dork whose political careers are made over the actual bodies of innocent people, does anyone think that this man is the only innocent man executed in the last ten years in Texas? There is the case of some poor slob (”poor” being the operative word) who was “identified” as a killer by some woman from across the parking lot at night in the rain. Other people testified that he was with them at the time of the killing, and the workers at the 7/11 where it happened were ready to testify that when the killer walked by them, he didn’t look anything at all like the person convicted and executed. They didn’t testify because the court appointed dork assumed the guy was guilty and did no research into the case. The appellate courts said that he should have introduced that evidence during the trial, and now it was too late. Said dork had to take his bar exam over 13 times in order to pass.
Then I am sure there are many others just as egregious given the Texas legal system. The State criminal court has been overturned by the Supreme Court more times than all other similar courts put together. Once they were even overturned twice in the same case. It gives you an idea of what chance a poor person has in Texas.
dennycrane
Please try to sharpen up that old wit so you will recognize satire when you see it.
Thank you texasaggie
So, that means that not only did he suffer with his kids dying, then he got executed! Is that correct?
sonny
I was just practicing up……
Nothing like a state that has an express lane to the electric chair! Walkin’ the Green Mile….
Can you imagine it, being killed in such a humiliating manner after losing your children. I can see the evil Chimp smiling while watching it on tv. How fucking horrific. Disgusting, fucking redneck animals. You can bet all executioners in the US are neocons as real people would not have anything to do with it. At least they don’t humiliate you here, just stand you up in front of a firing squad. I’ll take that any day over their “humane” execution. Humane for who? The asswipe pulling the switch?
Remember, the cops can frame you up any time they wish. I remember a conversation with my lawyer about this. He told me “You sure as hell don’t think that just because you are innocent you will be found not guilty.”
When he said the pledge of allegiance he would yell at the end “WITH LIBERTY AND JUSTICE FOR THOSE WHO CAN AFFORD IT!!!”
Robert S. Finnegan
Southeastasiaindependentmedia
rsfinnegan@gmail.com
Jakarta
This is somewhat what I am going through now - just not the death penalty…. yet
let me not joke about that…. I am dealing with an issue due to profiling that just is sickening me and I am fighting it, and now finding myself facing jail time for a left turn signal - amazing. I am more guilty NOW that I am fighting them. You are right when you say that just because you are innocent you will be found not guilty… i am really worried about facing jail time for trumped up charges… the usual thing you see lately…. I made the cop MAD that I questioned him, so now I have to pay for my insolence….
A majority of nations of the United Nations Organization general assembly have voted for the abolition of the death penalty, calling the death penalty an affront to human dignity.The USA was not one of those nations,however,the trend in the world is definetly going in the direction of abolition. One can regret of course that things often take more time than one might like. The success to date of individuals and groups worldwide engaged in the cause of abolition cannot be denied.
Texas;
Please leave the Union as Chuck Norris stated you would. You folks are murderers and don’t belong in the United States. Rick Perrry is also the governor who stated that he was a born again Christian, and yes, he believed if other people were not “born again” they were going to hell. I imagine that has a lot to do with his decisions on clemency. Like Bush, it seems that Texas still lives in the dark ages and kills for the sheer pleasure of “showing how tough they are.”
My God, what a disgrace to the United States Texas is; I also remember that when a woman was getting ready to be executed, when Bush reviewed her clemency request, he actually laughed about it and made fun of her. Texas should be their own country - then they can be sanctioned and treated like the pariah they are, and those that revel in the death of others, whether they are innocent or guilty, can then be charged with crimes against humanity and hauled before The Hague.