Former Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau has joined two oth­er for­mer pros­e­cu­tors in fil­ing an ami­cus brief in the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of William Kuenzel, an Alabama death row inmate sen­tenced to death in 1988. New evi­dence emerged in 2010 rais­ing doubts about his guilt. According to Morgenthau’s brief, two wit­ness­es who tes­ti­fied against Kuenzel gave entire­ly dif­fer­ent accounts that did not iden­ti­fy him when they first met with author­i­ties. One of the wit­ness­es admit­ted being involved in the mur­der. Morgenthau, who retired from the D.A.‘s office in 2009 at the age of 90, asked Gil Garcetti, for­mer Los Angeles District Attorney, and E. Michael McCann, for­mer District Attorney of Milwaukee, to join him in ask­ing the Supreme Court to hear the case. The three men each served over 30 years as pros­e­cu­tor, and over­saw a total of more than 7 mil­lion cas­es. Morgenthau said he always opposed the death penal­ty and felt he had to act in Kuenzel’s case because it remind­ed him of the Central Park Jogger case, in which he helped reverse the con­vic­tions of five teenagers orig­i­nal­ly con­vict­ed of rape and attempt­ed mur­der. Of the death penal­ty, which was in place in New York from 1995 to 2007, he said, “[W]e reduced mur­der by 90 per­cent and nev­er once sought it.”

(J. Dwyer, Even at 93, He Finds a Case Too Important to Pass Up,” New York Times, March 14, 2013; pho­to, Morgenthau in 1988, D.A.‘s office). See New Voices and Representation.

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