The fam­i­ly of Cameron Todd Willingham announced they will peti­tion the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to grant him a posthu­mous par­don based on new evi­dence that has emerged since his exe­cu­tion in 2004. Willingham was sen­tenced to death for the mur­der of his three chil­dren in a house­fire in 1991. At his tri­al, inves­ti­ga­tors tes­ti­fied that Willingham had inten­tion­al­ly set the fire, but lat­er devel­op­ments in the sci­ence of fire inves­ti­ga­tion have led experts to believe the fire was acci­den­tal. The oth­er evi­dence pre­sent­ed at Willingham’s tri­al includ­ed the tes­ti­mo­ny of a jail­house infor­mant who lat­er recant­ed his state­ment that Willingham admit­ted to the crime. The fam­i­ly’s peti­tion states, “[S]ince his tri­al, sci­en­tif­ic advances have shat­tered every assump­tion under­ly­ing the tes­ti­mo­ny of the two fire inves­ti­ga­tors who declared to the jury and the court that Willingham had set the fire that killed his chil­dren. In fact, today, no cred­i­ble arson expert would make such a dec­la­ra­tion.” In a state­ment, Willingham’s fam­i­ly said, It was Todd’s last wish that we help clear his name. It’s time for the state of Texas to own up to its mis­take and give Todd the jus­tice he deserves.” The Innocence Project in New York has tak­en the lead in work­ing for Willingham’s exoneration.

Just ten months after Willingham’s exe­cu­tion, Texas exon­er­at­ed Ernest Willis, who had spent 17 years on death row for a sim­i­lar crime. Willis was freed when the District Attorney of a dif­fer­ent coun­ty than Willingham’s, con­clud­ed that the fire in Willis’s case was acci­den­tal. A Texas foren­sic sci­ence com­mis­sion inves­ti­ga­tion into Willingham’s case was shut down in 2011 by Attorney General Greg Abbott, who said com­mis­sion­ers were act­ing out­side their jurisdiction.

(A. Turner, Family again tries to clear Willingham’s name,” Houston Chronicle, October 24, 2012). See doc­u­ments from the Innocence Project relat­ed to the fil­ing. See DPIC’s Executed but Possibly Innocent and Innocence. Listen to DPIC’s pod­cast on Innocene.

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