More infor­ma­tion has emerged about the wrong­ful con­vic­tion of Anthony Graves (pic­tured), who was exon­er­at­ed from Texas’s death row in 2010. Prosecutor Kelly Siegler, who had tried many cap­i­tal mur­der cas­es and sent 19 peo­ple to death row as a Harris County assis­tant dis­trict attor­ney, and Otto Hanak, a state troop­er and Texas Ranger for 28 years, were brought into the case after an appeals court found that the orig­i­nal pros­e­cu­tor, Charles Sebesta, had with­held state­ments from the defense and elicit­ed false tes­ti­mo­ny. It was orig­i­nal­ly thought that Siegler would retry the case against Graves. According to pros­e­cu­tor Siegler, Sebesta used eth­i­cal­ly ques­tion­able tac­tics to per­suade a co-defen­dant to tes­ti­fy against Graves. Sebesta also vio­lat­ed the rules of evi­dence by intro­duc­ing only a par­tial tran­script of a taped inter­view of the co-defen­dant and not intro­duc­ing the actu­al tape. During her inves­ti­ga­tions, Siegler was nev­er able to find the tape of the inter­view. When the co-defen­dant faced exe­cu­tion in 2000, he admit­ted that he lied about Graves’s involve­ment in the crime. After review­ing 19 box­es of evi­dence and inter­view­ing more than 50 wit­ness­es, Siegler and Hanak inde­pen­dent­ly con­clud­ed that Graves was not guilty. Siegler said, There came a time I believed he was inno­cent, but I want­ed Otto to arrive at that on his own. One morn­ing he came in and said, I don’t think he did it.’” Hanak added, In all these years I’ve been in this busi­ness, I nev­er thought I would be par­ty to sav­ing some­one who was on death row.” The orig­i­nal pros­e­cu­tor, Charles Sebesta, plans to take out full page ads explain­ing his side of the sto­ry. We’ve got some things on Siegler that when push comes to shove, we’ve got things that are going to sink her ship,” he said.

(H. Rice, How Siegler unmade case,” Houston Chronicle, December 16, 2010). See Arbitrariness and Innocence.

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