On July 28, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed the sched­uled August 18 exe­cu­tion of Larry Swearingen (pic­tured) in order to con­sid­er new evi­dence that might prove his inno­cence. Swearingen was con­vict­ed of the 1998 mur­der of Melissa Trotter, whose body was found in the Sam Houston National Forest. Trotter was last seen alive with Swearingen. Forensic sci­en­tists who exam­ined the evi­dence from Trotter’s body have said that she could not have been in the for­est for longer than two weeks, which means that her mur­der would have hap­pened while Swearingen was in jail for an unre­lat­ed offense. In 2007, Dr. Joye Carter, a med­ical exam­in­er who tes­ti­fied at Swearingen’s tri­al in 2000 that the vic­tim had been in the for­est for 25 days, changed her orig­i­nal con­clu­sion after review­ing new evi­dence that indi­cat­ed the mur­der hap­pened with­in two weeks of the body’s discovery.

(B. Grissom, Criminal Appeals Court Grants Rare Execution Stay,” Texas Tribune, July 28, 2011). See Arbitrariness and Innocence.

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