Paul “Greg” House, who spent twenty-two years on Tennessee’s death row before his exoneration in 2009, died at the age of 63 on March 25, 2025, from complications of pneumonia following years of living with multiple sclerosis. His case was one of the rare cases to meet the stringent “actual innocence” exception to habeas rules that today prevent many other petitioners from even presenting their claims of innocence in court.
Mr. House was sentenced to death in 1986 for the 1985 murder of his neighbor in Union County, Tennessee. At trial, prosecutors presented testimony from two witnesses placing Mr. House near where the victim’s body was discovered. They also presented a pair of his jeans which contained blood that matched the blood type of the victim. The evidence, though circumstantial, was enough to convict him. However, Mr. House always maintained his innocence.
During Mr. House’s appeals, new evidence emerged, including multiple witnesses who implicated the victim’s husband in her murder. Blood evidence analysis also revealed inconsistencies. A former Tennessee Medical Examiner testified that blood samples used by prosecutors were contaminated and unreliable, and that the blood on Mr. House’s jeans was likely from a missing vial of blood taken from the victim after she died. Finally, after more than a decade in prison, advanced DNA testing revealed that physical evidence collected from the scene implicated the victim’s husband — directly contradicting testimony presented at trial.
“I am convinced that we are faced with a real-life murder mystery, an authentic ‘who-done-it’ where the wrong man may be executed.”
In June 2006, reviewing a decision from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, the United States Supreme Court held that no reasonable juror would have convicted Mr. House beyond a reasonable doubt had they been presented with the new DNA evidence. Mr. House remained incarcerated while state prosecutors planned a retrial. He was released on bond in 2008 thanks to the largess of an anonymous donor. Upon release, Mr. House expressed his simple desires: “I’m looking forward to going home and eating some chili verde with pizza.”
Prosecutors ultimately dropped all charges against Mr. House in May 2009, and his mother Joyce described their elation as “floating around here on Cloud Nine,” while also adding that justice for her son had been greatly delayed. Following his exoneration, Mr. House joined Witness to Innocence, an anti-death penalty organization made up of former death row prisoners and their families. Stacy Rector, executive director of Tennesseans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, who worked for many years with Mr. House and his mother, recalled his honesty and candid nature, including his occasionally “salty” criticism of the legal system. In a statement, the Federal Defender Services of Eastern Tennessee also praised the tireless advocacy of Mr. House’s legal team and his mother Joyce: “Although Mr. House spent far too many years wrongly convicted and facing execution, he was able to spend 17 years after his release with Joyce and his other family. He died peacefully with the knowledge that his innocence had been recognized.”
Travis Loller, Paul House, who spent two decades on Tennessee’s death row before he was freed, has died., Associated Press, March 31, 2025; Cases: Paul House, Innocence Project, n.d..