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wheezer
06-21-2008, 01:57 AM
Ex-Texas inmate exonerated in rape case pardoned

HOUSTON (AP) — A man who spent 12 years in prison for a rape that DNA evidence later proved he did not commit has been pardoned by Gov. Rick Perry, eight months after his release from prison.

Perry signed the pardon June 13, but Ronald Gene Taylor and his lawyers received notice Thursday.

"It's been hard to get restarted," Taylor told the Houston Chronicle in a phone interview from Atlanta. "Little things, like filling out a job application or renting an apartment, are hard when you have to say you are a convicted felon. Now, I am officially a free man. I am so relieved."

The governor's pardon also clears the way for Taylor to collect about $700,000 from the state if he agrees not to sue. Taylor said he is weighing his options.

Taylor, 48, was convicted in 1995 of attacking a woman in her home less than a mile from where he lived in Houston; he was sentenced to 60 years in prison. Prosecutors built a case on the victim's identification of Taylor and the testimony of a Houston crime lab analyst.

The Innocence Project, a nonprofit that defends the wrongly convicted, accepted the case in 1998 after a request from Taylor's stepfather.

As the lawyers worked, a forensics scandal at the Houston Police Department crime lab raised doubts about thousands of convictions. In 2006, a judge ordered DNA tests on evidence from Taylor's case.

The new tests led authorities to believe another man committed the rape. Roosevelt Carroll, who has a history of violent sexual crimes and is serving 15 years in prison for failing to register as a sex offender, cannot be prosecuted for the 1993 attack because the statute of limitations has expired.

Taylor became the third man acquitted after being convicted with faulty evidence from the Houston crime lab.

More inmates have been exonerated by DNA evidence in Texas than in any other state. Since 2001, DNA testing has cleared 33 Texans who spent a combined 427 years in prison, according to The Justice Project, a Washington, D.C.-based group.

Taylor moved to Atlanta after he was released in October and got married two months later. This spring he started his own lawn care business.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jQ1TmH0jzwal7gu8x0NuWzcx80eQD91E0P380

SaberGal
06-21-2008, 04:08 AM
Why doesn't another Texas case surprise me??

London Lass
06-21-2008, 07:06 AM
The case i'm particularly interested in is from Texas too!!!!! :g:

packy
06-21-2008, 08:52 AM
I wonder if that is the same lab in which they found out they were actually falsifying reports. That $700.000 won't last long although sueing may take way long. What really makes up for losing that many years of your life.

London Lass
06-21-2008, 09:43 AM
I wonder if that is the same lab in which they found out they were actually falsifying reports. That $700.000 won't last long although sueing may take way long. What really makes up for losing that many years of your life.

Falsifying reports...OMG!

wheezer
06-21-2008, 10:48 AM
I truly think that TX needs to put a Moratorium on the DP until this can all be investigated. Governor Ryan from Illinois did a lot of dumb things including some that were illegal, but, he did have enough sense to put a Moratorium on the DP after 13 men on Death Row were proven innocent through DNA.

SaberGal
06-21-2008, 02:54 PM
I truly think that TX needs to put a Moratorium on the DP until this can all be investigated. Governor Ryan from Illinois did a lot of dumb things including some that were illegal, but, he did have enough sense to put a Moratorium on the DP after 13 men on Death Row were proven innocent through DNA.

I completely agree - I don't know how Perry, in good conscience, can continue to carry out executions without a full and independent review. They have had way too many exonerations for anyone to feel comfortable with the process in Texas.

JMO