New DNA evidence raises questions of whether man executed for murder was innocent

Four years after being sentenced to death, a man who was executed for murder may be innocent. The family's attorneys have claimed that someone else's DNA has been found on the murder weapon.

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Jarryd Jaeger Vancouver, BC
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Four years after being sentenced to death, a man who was executed for murder may be innocent. The family's attorneys have claimed that someone else's DNA has been found on the murder weapon.

In 2017, Ledell Lee was executed for the 1993 murder of Debra Reese in Jacksonville, Arkansas. Convicted in 1995, Lee spent twenty-two years in prison, and maintained his innocence right up until his death via lethal injection.

According to the Innocence Project, the case against Lee was full of holes. The organization states that "No physical evidence directly connected Lee to Reese’s murder" and that "At Lee’s trial, the prosecution’s own experts admitted that the results of several of its forensic tests were ultimately 'inconclusive,' yet the prosecution inflated the significance of its test results, leading to Lee’s conviction."

The Innocence Project also writes: "Though DNA testing could have helped prove Lee's innocence and identify the actual perpetrator of the crime at no cost to the state, the court refused to hear any new evidence or allow DNA testing before executing Lee, arguing that the request came 'too late'."

The group adds that Lee's attorney was "admittedly intoxicated during several of Lee’s hearings, and struggled to present a defense and to adequately introduce and argue evidence of Lee’s innocence."

According to CNN, the Lee family's attorney "commissioned DNA testing of the handle of the wooden club that was used to kill Reese" and that "last month, they said the results showed the DNA of an unknown man" that "...appears to match DNA also found on a bloody white shirt that had been wrapped around the murder weapon."

It is estimated that around four percent of those sentenced to death are wrongfully convicted. The Death Penalty Information Center found that "Since 1973, more than 170 people who had been wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in the U.S. have been exonerated."

According to the Innocence Project, over 20 of them were freed using DNA testing similar to that being requested on Lee's behalf today."

There is no way to bring Lee back, but if the new evidence can conclusively prove his innocence, his name will be vindicated.

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