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Ledell Lee

Ledell Lee (July 31, 1965 – April 20, 2017)[2] was an American man convicted and executed for the 1993 murder of his neighbor, Debra Reese. He was convicted in 1995, and the Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the conviction in 1997, but numerous questions have been raised about the justice of his trial and post-conviction representation.[3][4][5] Issues have included conflict of interest for the judge, inebriation of counsel, and ineffective defense counsel. A request to postpone the execution in order to test DNA on the murder weapon was denied by a circuit judge. After Lee's execution, it was proven that the DNA on the murder weapon belonged to another person,[6] an unknown male.[7]

Ledell Lee
Born(1965-07-31)July 31, 1965
DiedApril 20, 2017(2017-04-20) (aged 51)
Cause of deathExecution by lethal injection
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)Rape (2 counts, unknown date)
Capital murder (October 12, 1995)
Criminal penaltyDeath sentence (October 16, 1995)
Details
VictimsDebra Reese
DateFebruary 9, 1993
Imprisoned atVarner Unit

Convictions edit

Debra Reese (September 27, 1966 – February 9, 1993), 26 years old at the time of her death, was found dead in 1993 in her home in Jacksonville, Arkansas. She had been strangled and beaten with a small wooden bat her husband had given her for protection.

Several of Reese's neighbors said they saw Lee near the house and identified him to police. He was arrested less than an hour later, allegedly after spending $300 stolen from Reese.

Lee was charged with first-degree murder, a capital offense. He was alleged to have struck Debra Reese 36 times with a tire thumper. He was convicted of first-degree murder by the jury and sentenced to death on October 16, 1995.

Post-arrest rape convictions and prosecution edit

After being charged in the murder of Reese, Lee became a suspect in other crimes. He was accused of three sexual assaults and convicted of two, the 1991 rape of a Jacksonville woman and the 1990 rape of a Jacksonville teenager.[1]

He was also prosecuted for the November 1989 rape and murder of 22-year-old Christine Lewis, a mother, in November 1989.[8] Lewis was abducted from her home. She was later raped, strangled, and eventually killed. Her body was found inside a closet at an abandoned home.[8] Lee was tried in 1994; the jury could not reach a verdict.[9] After Lee was convicted and sentenced to death for Reese's murder, county prosecutors decided against retrying him for the alleged murder of Lewis.[8]

Death row edit

Lee was placed on death row in 1995. During most of that time, he was kept in solitary confinement, with extremely limited social contact. This is customary for death row prisoners. Lee was interviewed by the BBC before his execution. He said, "my life on death row is like twilight zone".[10]

Appeals edit

Lee maintained his innocence until the time of his death. Before he was executed, Lee was working with his lawyers at the Innocence Project and ACLU to conduct DNA analysis on blood and hair evidence collected from the 1993 crime scene. It had never been previously tested in the case.[11] The state of Arkansas denied the defense request to have the analysis done.[12][13] Lee's counsel had argued that they should be allowed to locate crime scene evidence collected in 1993, including a single hair and a Converse shoe with a pinhead-sized spot of human blood on it, for modern DNA testing. They hoped testing could prove that another man had been at the crime scene, and that evidence did not match Lee's DNA.[9]

Motions edit

Lee had also filed a motion in federal court asking the court to reopen his federal case due to issues with his first counsel, particularly the failure of counsel to bring evidence of his intellectual disability. Lee wanted to present new evidence showing that he had fetal alcohol syndrome disorder, significant brain damage, and intellectual disability. Lee's family worked with him and his lawyers to try to prove his innocence.[14] During the hearing, Lee's attorney Lee Short made the case that prior counsel in the Reese case failed Lee by not insisting on modern DNA testing of the items prior to that time. He said that Lee had contacted the Innocence Project in 1996, asking for them to take up his case, but was told they didn't have the staff or funding.

Controversy over judge's conflict of interest edit

According to the ACLU:

Additionally, Lee was tried by a judge who concealed his own conflict of interest: an affair with the assistant prosecutor, to whom the judge was later married. Mr. Lee's first state post-conviction counsel introduced the evidence of the affair by calling the judge's ex-wife, who testified about the affair after opposing the subpoena. That lawyer, however, was so intoxicated at the hearing that the state moved for him to be drug tested after he slurred, stumbled, and made incoherent arguments. The inebriated lawyer also represented Lee briefly in federal court, where he raised the important claim that Lee was ineligible for execution because of intellectual disability. Lee won new proceedings because of the lawyer's drunkenness, though his representation did not improve afterward. His next lawyers failed to introduce evidence of the affair, giving up one of many of Lee's important arguments, and never pursued his innocence or intellectual disability claims.[11]

"This is a story of the judicial process gone totally wrong," Lee's lawyer said. "The kinds of attorney failures here: an affair with the presiding judge by the prosecutor, gross intoxication by defense counsel, and wild incompetence undermine our profession as a whole. Mr. Lee has never had the opportunity to have his case truly investigated, despite serious questions about guilt, and his intellectual disability."[11][5]

Throughout the legal challenges, the family of Debra Reese hoped that the execution would go through as scheduled.[14][5]

Execution edit

Lee was the first person executed in Arkansas since Eric Nance was executed in November 2005. The years of suspension have been related to court challenges to the use of lethal injections, with opponents arguing this form violated the Constitution. In addition, Europe has prohibited export of one of the drugs needed for this method.

For his last meal, Lee chose to receive Holy Communion.[15] He had no last words.[3]

At 11:44 p.m., Lee was given the lethal injection. His eyes closed three minutes later and he did not appear to show signs of discomfort, according to Sean Murphy, a reporter with the Associated Press and one of three media witnesses.[4]

Lethal injection controversy in Arkansas edit

In April 2017, Arkansas planned to execute eight death row inmates including Ledell Lee, along with Don W. Davis, Stacey Johnson, Jack Harold Jones, Jason McGehee, Bruce Earl Ward, Kenneth Williams, and Marcel Williams, before the stocks of the sedative midazolam expired at the end of April. Because Europe has prohibited export of these drugs to the United States and the major manufacturer is there, states in the US have been struggling with supplies.

A federal judge initially issued an injunction preventing the executions, but the Arkansas Supreme Court overturned the ruling. The United States Supreme Court rejected a claim that the accelerated execution schedule was "cruel and unusual punishment" under the constitution. At one point in the evening of April 20, 2017, the United States Supreme Court briefly delayed the execution as it reviewed appeals. It voted 5–4 to allow the state to proceed with the execution. On April 20, 2017, at about 11:30 p.m. CDT, the state of Arkansas was allowed to proceed with Lee's execution.

In his first vote since being appointed to the US Supreme Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch voted in favor of the execution. At 11:56 p.m. CDT, four minutes prior to the expiration of his execution warrant, Ledell Lee was executed. About 30 minutes after the high court's ruling, Lee was pronounced dead.

"The governor knows the right thing was done tonight," said J.R. Davis, a spokesman for Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, who scheduled the multiple executions. "Justice was carried out."[16] The state has proceeded with executions in order to avoid the expiration of drugs used in lethal injections. On April 24, 2017, the state executed Jack Harold Jones and Marcel Williams, in the first double execution in the United States in 17 years.[17]

Post-execution DNA testing edit

In April 2021, new DNA testing found "unknown male" DNA on the murder weapon and bloody clothes found at the scene.[18] However, the test also "found moderate support" that blood on Lee's left shoe could have belonged to Reese.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "For Ledell Lee, fighting verdict to the end futile". arkansasonline.com. April 21, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  2. ^ . adc.arkansas.gov. Archived from the original on December 15, 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Arkansas Executes Ledell Lee, State's First Inmate Put to Death Since 2005". Nbcnews.com. April 21, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  4. ^ a b Dakin Andone and Faith Karimi (April 21, 2017). "Arkansas executes death row inmate Ledell Lee". CNN. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c "DNA test may have cleared Arkansas man executed in rush to use expiring death penalty drugs: lawyer". CBC Radio. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  6. ^ He was executed for murder 4 years ago. Now someone else's DNA has been found on the murder weapon www.cnn.com, 22 May 2021
  7. ^ New DNA information emerges in Ledell Lee case, 4 years after execution www.arkansasonline.com, 30 April 2021
  8. ^ a b c TEGNA. "24 years later, Ledell Lee maintained his innocence in death of Debra Reese". WZZM-13. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  9. ^ a b Koon, David. "UPDATE Attorneys for Ledell Lee argue they should be allowed to locate, test DNA evidence collected in 1993 as part of innocence claim". Arkansas Times. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  10. ^ "'My life on death row is like twilight zone'". BBC News. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c "Death Row Prisoner Ledell Lee Seeks New Evidence to Prove His Innocence". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  12. ^ motion for testing
  13. ^ denied
  14. ^ a b TEGNA. "24 years later, Ledell Lee maintained his innocence in death of Debra Reese". WKYC. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  15. ^ Kandra, Greg (April 22, 2017). "Ledell Lee's last meal: Holy Communion". Aleteia. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  16. ^ . Time. Archived from the original on April 21, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  17. ^ "New DNA Testing Casts Doubt on Guilt of Arkansas Man Who Was Executed for Murder in 2017". Law and Crime. May 4, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  18. ^ a b Buckner, Michael (April 30, 2011). "New Testing in Ledell Lee Case Finds 'Unknown Male' DNA on Murder Weapon". KTHV-TV. CBS/Tegna, Inc. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
Preceded by
Eric Nance – 2005
Executions carried out in Arkansas Succeeded by
Preceded by
  James BigbyTexas – March 14, 2017  
Executions carried out in the United States Succeeded by
Jack Harold JonesArkansas – April 24, 2017

ledell, july, 1965, april, 2017, american, convicted, executed, 1993, murder, neighbor, debra, reese, convicted, 1995, arkansas, supreme, court, affirmed, conviction, 1997, numerous, questions, have, been, raised, about, justice, trial, post, conviction, repre. Ledell Lee July 31 1965 April 20 2017 2 was an American man convicted and executed for the 1993 murder of his neighbor Debra Reese He was convicted in 1995 and the Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the conviction in 1997 but numerous questions have been raised about the justice of his trial and post conviction representation 3 4 5 Issues have included conflict of interest for the judge inebriation of counsel and ineffective defense counsel A request to postpone the execution in order to test DNA on the murder weapon was denied by a circuit judge After Lee s execution it was proven that the DNA on the murder weapon belonged to another person 6 an unknown male 7 Ledell LeeBorn 1965 07 31 July 31 1965Blytheville Arkansas U S 1 DiedApril 20 2017 2017 04 20 aged 51 Cummins Unit Lincoln County Arkansas U S Cause of deathExecution by lethal injectionCriminal statusExecutedConviction s Rape 2 counts unknown date Capital murder October 12 1995 Criminal penaltyDeath sentence October 16 1995 DetailsVictimsDebra ReeseDateFebruary 9 1993Imprisoned atVarner Unit Contents 1 Convictions 1 1 Post arrest rape convictions and prosecution 1 2 Death row 2 Appeals 2 1 Motions 2 2 Controversy over judge s conflict of interest 3 Execution 3 1 Lethal injection controversy in Arkansas 4 Post execution DNA testing 5 See also 6 ReferencesConvictions editDebra Reese September 27 1966 February 9 1993 26 years old at the time of her death was found dead in 1993 in her home in Jacksonville Arkansas She had been strangled and beaten with a small wooden bat her husband had given her for protection Several of Reese s neighbors said they saw Lee near the house and identified him to police He was arrested less than an hour later allegedly after spending 300 stolen from Reese Lee was charged with first degree murder a capital offense He was alleged to have struck Debra Reese 36 times with a tire thumper He was convicted of first degree murder by the jury and sentenced to death on October 16 1995 Post arrest rape convictions and prosecution edit After being charged in the murder of Reese Lee became a suspect in other crimes He was accused of three sexual assaults and convicted of two the 1991 rape of a Jacksonville woman and the 1990 rape of a Jacksonville teenager 1 He was also prosecuted for the November 1989 rape and murder of 22 year old Christine Lewis a mother in November 1989 8 Lewis was abducted from her home She was later raped strangled and eventually killed Her body was found inside a closet at an abandoned home 8 Lee was tried in 1994 the jury could not reach a verdict 9 After Lee was convicted and sentenced to death for Reese s murder county prosecutors decided against retrying him for the alleged murder of Lewis 8 Death row edit Lee was placed on death row in 1995 During most of that time he was kept in solitary confinement with extremely limited social contact This is customary for death row prisoners Lee was interviewed by the BBC before his execution He said my life on death row is like twilight zone 10 Appeals editLee maintained his innocence until the time of his death Before he was executed Lee was working with his lawyers at the Innocence Project and ACLU to conduct DNA analysis on blood and hair evidence collected from the 1993 crime scene It had never been previously tested in the case 11 The state of Arkansas denied the defense request to have the analysis done 12 13 Lee s counsel had argued that they should be allowed to locate crime scene evidence collected in 1993 including a single hair and a Converse shoe with a pinhead sized spot of human blood on it for modern DNA testing They hoped testing could prove that another man had been at the crime scene and that evidence did not match Lee s DNA 9 Motions edit Lee had also filed a motion in federal court asking the court to reopen his federal case due to issues with his first counsel particularly the failure of counsel to bring evidence of his intellectual disability Lee wanted to present new evidence showing that he had fetal alcohol syndrome disorder significant brain damage and intellectual disability Lee s family worked with him and his lawyers to try to prove his innocence 14 During the hearing Lee s attorney Lee Short made the case that prior counsel in the Reese case failed Lee by not insisting on modern DNA testing of the items prior to that time He said that Lee had contacted the Innocence Project in 1996 asking for them to take up his case but was told they didn t have the staff or funding Controversy over judge s conflict of interest edit According to the ACLU Additionally Lee was tried by a judge who concealed his own conflict of interest an affair with the assistant prosecutor to whom the judge was later married Mr Lee s first state post conviction counsel introduced the evidence of the affair by calling the judge s ex wife who testified about the affair after opposing the subpoena That lawyer however was so intoxicated at the hearing that the state moved for him to be drug tested after he slurred stumbled and made incoherent arguments The inebriated lawyer also represented Lee briefly in federal court where he raised the important claim that Lee was ineligible for execution because of intellectual disability Lee won new proceedings because of the lawyer s drunkenness though his representation did not improve afterward His next lawyers failed to introduce evidence of the affair giving up one of many of Lee s important arguments and never pursued his innocence or intellectual disability claims 11 This is a story of the judicial process gone totally wrong Lee s lawyer said The kinds of attorney failures here an affair with the presiding judge by the prosecutor gross intoxication by defense counsel and wild incompetence undermine our profession as a whole Mr Lee has never had the opportunity to have his case truly investigated despite serious questions about guilt and his intellectual disability 11 5 Throughout the legal challenges the family of Debra Reese hoped that the execution would go through as scheduled 14 5 Execution editLee was the first person executed in Arkansas since Eric Nance was executed in November 2005 The years of suspension have been related to court challenges to the use of lethal injections with opponents arguing this form violated the Constitution In addition Europe has prohibited export of one of the drugs needed for this method For his last meal Lee chose to receive Holy Communion 15 He had no last words 3 At 11 44 p m Lee was given the lethal injection His eyes closed three minutes later and he did not appear to show signs of discomfort according to Sean Murphy a reporter with the Associated Press and one of three media witnesses 4 Lethal injection controversy in Arkansas edit In April 2017 Arkansas planned to execute eight death row inmates including Ledell Lee along with Don W Davis Stacey Johnson Jack Harold Jones Jason McGehee Bruce Earl Ward Kenneth Williams and Marcel Williams before the stocks of the sedative midazolam expired at the end of April Because Europe has prohibited export of these drugs to the United States and the major manufacturer is there states in the US have been struggling with supplies A federal judge initially issued an injunction preventing the executions but the Arkansas Supreme Court overturned the ruling The United States Supreme Court rejected a claim that the accelerated execution schedule was cruel and unusual punishment under the constitution At one point in the evening of April 20 2017 the United States Supreme Court briefly delayed the execution as it reviewed appeals It voted 5 4 to allow the state to proceed with the execution On April 20 2017 at about 11 30 p m CDT the state of Arkansas was allowed to proceed with Lee s execution In his first vote since being appointed to the US Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch voted in favor of the execution At 11 56 p m CDT four minutes prior to the expiration of his execution warrant Ledell Lee was executed About 30 minutes after the high court s ruling Lee was pronounced dead The governor knows the right thing was done tonight said J R Davis a spokesman for Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson who scheduled the multiple executions Justice was carried out 16 The state has proceeded with executions in order to avoid the expiration of drugs used in lethal injections On April 24 2017 the state executed Jack Harold Jones and Marcel Williams in the first double execution in the United States in 17 years 17 Post execution DNA testing editIn April 2021 new DNA testing found unknown male DNA on the murder weapon and bloody clothes found at the scene 18 However the test also found moderate support that blood on Lee s left shoe could have belonged to Reese 18 See also editCapital punishment in Arkansas List of people executed in Arkansas List of people executed in the United States in 2017References edit a b For Ledell Lee fighting verdict to the end futile arkansasonline com April 21 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 Arkansas Department of Corrections Death Row adc arkansas gov Archived from the original on December 15 2016 a b Arkansas Executes Ledell Lee State s First Inmate Put to Death Since 2005 Nbcnews com April 21 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 a b Dakin Andone and Faith Karimi April 21 2017 Arkansas executes death row inmate Ledell Lee CNN Retrieved April 27 2017 a b c DNA test may have cleared Arkansas man executed in rush to use expiring death penalty drugs lawyer CBC Radio Retrieved April 27 2017 He was executed for murder 4 years ago Now someone else s DNA has been found on the murder weapon www cnn com 22 May 2021 New DNA information emerges in Ledell Lee case 4 years after execution www arkansasonline com 30 April 2021 a b c TEGNA 24 years later Ledell Lee maintained his innocence in death of Debra Reese WZZM 13 Retrieved April 27 2017 a b Koon David UPDATE Attorneys for Ledell Lee argue they should be allowed to locate test DNA evidence collected in 1993 as part of innocence claim Arkansas Times Retrieved April 27 2017 My life on death row is like twilight zone BBC News Retrieved April 27 2017 a b c Death Row Prisoner Ledell Lee Seeks New Evidence to Prove His Innocence American Civil Liberties Union Retrieved April 27 2017 motion for testing denied a b TEGNA 24 years later Ledell Lee maintained his innocence in death of Debra Reese WKYC Retrieved June 2 2017 Kandra Greg April 22 2017 Ledell Lee s last meal Holy Communion Aleteia Retrieved April 23 2017 Arkansas Executes Death Row Inmate Ledell Lee Time Archived from the original on April 21 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 New DNA Testing Casts Doubt on Guilt of Arkansas Man Who Was Executed for Murder in 2017 Law and Crime May 4 2021 Retrieved May 4 2021 a b Buckner Michael April 30 2011 New Testing in Ledell Lee Case Finds Unknown Male DNA on Murder Weapon KTHV TV CBS Tegna Inc Retrieved May 5 2021 Preceded byEric Nance 2005 Executions carried out in Arkansas Succeeded byJack Harold Jones 2017 Preceded by James Bigby Texas March 14 2017 Executions carried out in the United States Succeeded byJack Harold Jones Arkansas April 24 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ledell Lee amp oldid 1201406935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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