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British Man
Freed from Ohio Death Row
December 21, 2007
Kenneth Richey, a British and an
American citizen, is expected to be freed soon after spending 20 years
on Ohio’s death row for the murder of his ex-girlfriend’s 2-year-old
daughter in a 1986 apartment fire. Richey’s conviction was overturned
by a federal court in August 2007 after 15 years of appeals that cast
doubts on witness testimony and the competency of his defense attorney
at the initial trial. More recently, the original evidence presented by
arson experts was found to be based on "unsound scientific
principles," and it now appears that the fire that killed
2-year-old Cynthia Collins was accidental.
Richey will plead no contest to attempted involuntary manslaughter,
child endangering and breaking and entering. He is expected to be
sentenced to time already served. Richey’s original trial was heard by
three judges after his defense attorney advised him to forgo a jury
trial. Prosecutors stated that Richey, who maintained his innocence
throughout the trial, did in fact try to save the toddler. The judges,
however, did not take that evidence under consideration. His case
prompted intervention by Tony Blair, the Pope, the European Parliament
and Amnesty International.
Alistair Carmichael, a Scottish Member of Parliament who had campaigned
for Richey’s release, stated after he heard the news, “The reality
of somebody who is kept locked up in a cell for 23 hours a day for 19
years is quite mind-blowing. It is a dreadful, inhumane and dehumanising
system. If one man is off it, then remember there are hundreds of people
in America still enduring that dreadful situation.”
(“Kenneth
Richey to be released after 20 years on death row,” London
Times Online, December 19, 2007). See Innocence
and Representation.
Source: Death
Penalty Information Center
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