The Florida Supreme Court has direct­ed that Ralph Daniel Wright, Jr. (pic­tured) be acquit­ted of the mur­der charges for which he was sen­tenced to death in 2014, mak­ing him the 159th per­son exon­er­at­ed from death row in the United States since 1973

On May 11, 2017, the court unan­i­mous­ly vacat­ed Wright’s con­vic­tions for the mur­ders of his ex-girl­friend and their son, rul­ing that the pure­ly cir­cum­stan­tial” evi­dence against him was insuf­fi­cient to con­vict. A major­i­ty of the court joined a con­cur­ring opin­ion by Justice Charles Canady hold­ing that no ratio­nal tri­er of fact could have found … beyond a rea­son­able doubt” that Wright was the killer. 

Prosecutors accused Wright of mur­der­ing Paula O’Conner — a white woman with whom he had an affair — and their 15-month-old son Alijah sup­pos­ed­ly to avoid a child sup­port oblig­a­tion and … main­tain a bach­e­lor lifestyle.’ ” The court not­ed that none of the evi­dence pre­sent­ed at tri­al direct­ly tied Wright to the mur­ders” and that the vic­tim’s young-adult daugh­ter, who had a volatile rela­tion­ship with the vic­tim, also had a finan­cial motive, hav­ing received more than $500,000 in life insur­ance ben­e­fits as a result of her moth­er’s and half-brother’s deaths. 

Much of the state’s case relied on the pres­ence of a black mil­i­tary glove in the home of the mur­der vic­tims. While Wright, a mem­ber of the Air Force, had access to that type of glove, the State could not prove that Wright ever wore the glove, that he left it on Paula’s couch, that it came from MacDill [the base where Wright was sta­tioned], or that it was even used in the murders.” 

DNA tests by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement report­ed the results as incon­clu­sive, but inde­pen­dent analy­sis by the DNA Diagnostic Center and Bode, the pri­vate labs hired by the defense and pros­e­cu­tion, respec­tive­ly, exclud­ed Wright as a con­trib­u­tor of the DNA found on the glove. The DNA analy­sis did not test for the pres­ence of the vic­tim’s daugh­ter, whom police did not investigate. 

Wright was con­vict­ed of the mur­ders, and the tri­al court sen­tenced him to death after a bare 7 – 5 major­i­ty of the jury vot­ed to rec­om­mend the death penal­ty. The Florida Supreme Court lat­er declared death sen­tences based upon non-unan­i­mous jury rec­om­men­da­tions to be unconstitutional. 

Wright is the 27th per­son to be exon­er­at­ed from death row in Florida. Nineteen of the 21 exon­er­a­tion cas­es from Florida in which the jury vote is known have involved a non-unan­i­mous jury rec­om­men­da­tion of a death sen­tence or a judi­cial over­ride of a jury rec­om­men­da­tion of life.

Citation Guide
Sources

B. Farrington, Court Orders Death-Row Inmate’s Release; Calls Evidence Weak, Associated Press, May 11, 2017; C. Osowski, Florida Supreme Court revers­es mur­der con­vic­tion of for­mer MacDill Airman Ralph Wright, WFLA, May 112017.

Read the Florida Supreme Court’s opin­ion in Ralph Daniel Wright, Jr. vs. State of Florida, No. SC14-2410 (May 112017).