Posted on 01/02/2006 10:41:52 AM PST by SmoothTalker
With less than two weeks left in Gov. Mark R. Warner's term, time is running out for him to arrange DNA testing that could determine whether Virginia sent an innocent man to the electric chair in 1992.
If the tests show Roger Keith Coleman did not rape and murder his sister-in-law in 1981, it will mark the first time in the United States an executed person has been scientifically proved innocent, say death penalty opponents, who are keenly aware that such a result could have a powerful effect on public opinion.
"I think it would be the final straw for a lot of people who are on the fence on the death penalty," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center in Washington.
A Gallup poll in October found that 64 percent of Americans support the death penalty. That is the lowest level in 27 years, down from a high of 80 percent in 1994.
Warner a potential Democratic presidential contender for 2008 hopes to complete negotiations over how the test would be conducted before his term ends Jan. 14, said spokesman Kevin Hall.
Coleman was convicted and sentenced to death in 1982 for the murder of 19-year-old Wanda McCoy, his wife's sister, who was found raped, stabbed and nearly beheaded in her home in the coal mining town of Grundy.
The case drew international attention as the well-spoken Coleman pleaded his case on talk shows and in magazines and newspapers. Time magazine featured the coal miner on its cover. Pope John Paul II tried to block the execution. Then-Gov. L. Douglas Wilder's office was flooded with thousands of calls and letters of protest from around the world.
Coleman's attorneys argued that he did not have time to commit the crime, that tests showed semen from two men was found inside McCoy and that another man bragged about murdering her. Coleman was executed on May 20, 1992.
"An innocent man is going to be murdered tonight," the 33-year-old said moments before he was electrocuted. "When my innocence is proven, I hope America will realize the injustice of the death penalty as all other civilized countries have."
DNA tests in 1990 placed Coleman within the 2 percent of the population who could have produced the semen at the crime scene. Additional blood typing put Coleman within a group consisting of 0.2 percent of the population. His lawyers said the expert they hired to conduct the test misinterpreted the results.
Four newspapers and Centurion Ministries, a New Jersey organization that investigated Coleman's case and became convinced of his innocence, sought a court order to have the evidence retested. The Virginia Supreme Court declined to order the testing in 2002, so Centurion Ministries asked Warner to intervene.
Warner's decision has been held up in part because the sample is not in the state's possession, Hall said. The evidence is being stored in a Richmond, Calif., lab by the forensic scientist who conducted the initial DNA tests, Edward Blake.
Blake, who has kept the sample frozen since 1990, has balked at returning the evidence to Virginia, arguing that testing should be conducted at his lab. He has said that Virginia has a vested interest in tests that would either confirm Coleman's guilt or be inconclusive, since a result showing Coleman was innocent could tarnish the state's criminal justice system.
Blake has also argued that transporting the fragile evidence about one-fifth of a drop of sperm could destroy it.
Warner, Blake and Centurion Ministries have been trying to negotiate an arrangement under which an independent lab would take possession of the sample and test it, Hall said.
"It certainly is the governor's desire that an acceptable procedure be hammered out before we leave office," Hall said.
If the parties cannot come to an agreement before Warner leaves, the issue will fall to Democratic Gov.-elect Tim Kaine, who supports DNA retesting in the case, said Delacey Skinner, a Kaine spokeswoman.
Tom Scott, who helped prosecute the case, said he has no objection to retesting the DNA and is confident doing so would confirm Coleman's guilt provided the sample has been properly preserved and not tampered with.
"If the integrity of the sample has been violated in some way, we're going to have an inconclusive result, which isn't going to settle anything," he said.
Scott said a mountain of evidence points to Coleman as the killer: There was no sign of forced entry at McCoy's house, leading investigators to believe she knew her attacker; Coleman was previously convicted of the attempted rape of a teacher and was charged with exposing himself to a librarian two months before the murder; a pubic hair found on McCoy's body was consistent with Coleman's hair; and the original DNA tests placed him within a tiny fraction of the population who could have left semen at the scene.
Coleman also failed a lie detector test hours before his execution.
"When you add all of this evidence together, it's a connect-the-dots case," he said. "In my mind, there just wasn't any question about it."
___
On the Net:
Death Penalty Information Center: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org
Centurion Ministries: http://www.centurionministries.org
Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Questions or Comments Privacy Policy -Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy - Ad Feedback
Sounds like someone's reversing their "Shoot first, ask questions later" policy.
I know it doesn't prove beans but I am always suspicious of "well-spoken" criminals. Note the ones that Hollywood fawns over (I have especial reference to the late and bemourned Mr. "Tookie" and that monster on death row in Pennsylvania with the Muslim name). They, too, were/are "well-spoken" but guilty as hell all the same.
So what's the big deal? He was already executed, wasn't he?
"So what's the big deal? He was already executed, wasn't he?"
I think the point is the current governor wants to handle it instead of handing it off the Democrat electee.
0.2% of Virginia's 1982 male population would be about 5,347 men.
"In March of 1981, Grundy's monotony was interrupted by the rape and murder of 19-year-old Wanda McCoy in a small, white house overlooking the bubbling waters of Slate Creek. McCoy was raped, stabbed, and her throat slashed so violently that she was practically decapitated. Police quickly focused on her brother-in-law, Roger Keith Coleman, a white coal miner who'd been jailed once for attempted rape."
Methinks Mr. Dieter is being totally delusional. Even if all of the people "on the fence" reject the death penalty, it still represents a minuscule number of the total.
Anyone who does not avoid the details of the daily horrendous crimes can think even for a moment that the death penalty is wrong.
Most normal people's reaction is the sooner the better.
The explanation is simple. In order for someone to embrace the death penalty, one only needs to accept that any imperfection in the process, resulting n a "mistake", will apply equally to themselves.
Most people, however, the overwhelming majority, would laugh at even the remotest possibility of running that risk.
The sooner the better!
Im sure the guy was a bastion of virtue. /sarc
Mumia.
Hopefully they reinstate his sentence very soon.
Not at all. Many years ago I was on the fence about the death penalty. Now that improved DNA techniques exist to definitively prove that an accused committed a crime, I'm happy with it.
I guess being only 99.8% sure is not good enough? Hell, OJ was 100% guilty and he walked.
For one thing, if he didn't do it then somebody else did and the case needs to be reopened. For another, there would be all kinds of justifiable civil liabilities involved, not least a wrongful death suit by his family.
I don't understand the business about there only being a small DNA sample, though. AFAIK, the PCR process will replicate as much DNA as they want. That objection does smell just a little odd.
Not for the death penalty it isn't. Not in my book. However, I would concede that in 1982 one could not be as sure as one can be today. DNA tests are much more accurate now and so there's a higher bar of certainty that can be reasonably expected.
PS. And rest assured that OJ would not have walked if I had anything to do with it. The fact that an obviously guilty punk walked is hardly an argument for executing the innocent, or being indifferent as to whether someone innocent of the capital crime may've been executed.
i used to be in favor of the death penalty, but I have read too much about too many prosecutors who don't care if they convict an honest man. They'd rather convict an honesat man than admit they were wrong.
Coleman also failed a lie detector test hours before his execution.
That's strong evidence. Possibly he had a partner, but he would still have deserved what he got.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.