Earlier in September, a Nevada dis­trict judge ordered the imme­di­ate release of Ronnie Milligan, who spent over 20 years on death row. Milligan, a Navy vet­er­an, may have been wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed of the 1980 killing of Zolihon Voinski. Milligan was the only one of three co-defen­dants who was sen­tenced to death for the crime. Four years ago, the Nevada Supreme Court set new death penal­ty sen­tenc­ing pro­to­cols that tough­ened require­ments for mak­ing an inmate eli­gi­ble for the death penal­ty. The new rul­ing required the exis­tence of at least two aggra­vat­ing fac­tors, and Milligan was among a hand­ful of inmates who ben­e­fit­ed from the rul­ing. Doubts con­cern­ing Milligan’s guilt were also raised after a let­ter writ­ten by an eye­wit­ness at his tri­al, Ramon Houston, was dis­cov­ered. In the let­ter, Houston indi­cat­ed that he killed Voinski, not Milligan. The let­ter also dis­closed that Milligan, who tes­ti­fied at his tri­al that he was in an alco­holic black­out at the time of the crime, was not even at the scene when Voinski was killed. Another co-defen­dant signed an affi­davit say­ing that Milligan was not present dur­ing the killing, and that every­body involved con­spired against him when they learned he had no mem­o­ry of that day. Expressing grave reser­va­tions” about Milligan’s guilt, District Judge Richard Wagner sen­tenced Milligan to a term of life with the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole and deter­mined that Milligan was imme­di­ate­ly eli­gi­ble for parole.

(D. McMurdo, Court rul­ing frees for­mer Nevada death row inmate,” Las Vegas Review-Journal, September 24, 2010). See Innocence and Causes of Wrongful Convictions.

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