Lawyers for Cameron Todd Willinghams fam­i­ly recent­ly pre­sent­ed expert tes­ti­mo­ny at a court of inquiry in Texas to deter­mine whether Willingham was wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed and exe­cut­ed for start­ing a fire that killed his chil­dren. The lawyers pre­sent­ed tes­ti­mo­ny from nine experts who have reviewed evi­dence pre­sent­ed by fire mar­shals and found many crit­i­cal errors,” as one report stat­ed. Gerald Hurst, who pub­lished a report regard­ing the evi­dence in the case, argued that the evi­dence actu­al­ly sug­gests that the fire was acci­den­tal. John Lentini, anoth­er fire expert, debunked the fire marshal’s tes­ti­mo­ny at the orig­i­nal tri­al that Willingham spread accel­er­ants to fuel the fire. Lentini said that no such chem­i­cals were found and that much of the fire marshal’s analy­sis of the evi­dence did not meet [arson] stan­dards of 1991. At the end of the first day of the hear­ings, the Texas Third Court of Appeals ordered the pre­sid­ing judge not to hold fur­ther pro­ceed­ings or issue rul­ings. The appeals court has been asked to deter­mine whether a court of inquiry is the prop­er venue for this hear­ing and whether the pre­sid­ing judge, Charles Baird, should be con­duct­ing the hearing.

(J. Schwartz, Family’s Effort to Clear Name Frames Debate on Executions,” New York Times, October 14, 2010). Read more about Cameron Todd Willingham. See Innocence.

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