The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on May 12 grant­ed a stay of Tilon Carters May 16 exe­cu­tion to con­sid­er his claim that he was con­vict­ed based on false or mis­lead­ing tes­ti­mo­ny by the State Medical Examiner” con­cern­ing the cause of the vic­tim’s death. Carter (pic­tured) was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death based upon tes­ti­mo­ny by a local med­ical exam­in­er that the 89-year-old vic­tim, James Tomlin, had died of suf­fo­ca­tion. His lawyers say that new sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that was unavail­able at the time of tri­al con­tra­dicts that tes­ti­mo­ny and sup­ports Carter’s claim that he did not inten­tion­al­ly kill Tomlin. According to a fil­ing by Carter’s attor­ney, Carter was denied due process because Nizam Peerwani, the Tarrant County Medical Examiner, pre­sent­ed mis­lead­ing tes­ti­mo­ny imply­ing that Tomlin was inten­tion­al­ly smoth­ered, though his cause of death was list­ed as smoth­er­ing with posi­tion­al asphyx­ia,” which could have been unin­ten­tion­al. In addi­tion, three oth­er experts who have reviewed the evi­dence offered opin­ions con­tra­dict­ing the find­ing that Tomlin was smoth­ered. Raoul Schonemann, Carter’s attor­ney, wrote in a court fil­ing, While the experts dis­agreed on the ulti­mate cause — whether Mr. Tomlin’s death was caused by posi­tion­al asphyx­i­a­tion or a car­diac event — they unan­i­mous­ly agreed that the evi­dence does not show that Mr. Tomlin’s death was the result of inten­tion­al smoth­er­ing.” Carter would not be eli­gi­ble for a death sen­tence if he did not inten­tion­al­ly kill the vic­tim. Schonemann also alleged that Carter’s tri­al coun­sel pro­vid­ed inef­fec­tive assis­tance by fail­ing to seek evi­dence on whether Tomlin’s death was intentional.

(M. Mitchell, Fort Worth death row inmate gets sec­ond stay of exe­cu­tion this year,” Fort Worth Star-Telegram, May 12, 2017; J. McCullough, Execution halt­ed amid claims of false evi­dence at tri­al,” May 12, 2017.) Read the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals order stay­ing Tilon Careter’s exe­cu­tion here. See Upcoming Executions.

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