ALABAMA (USA): DONNIS MUSGROVE DIES ON DEATH ROW BEFORE FEDERAL COURT CAN DECIDE HIS INNOCENCE CLAIM
December 2, 2015: Donnis Musgrove, 67, White, an Alabama death row prisoner with a substantial claim of innocence, died of lung cancer on Alabama's death row on November 25, while his case was pending before a federal judge.
Musgrove's attorneys had asked U.S. District Judge David Proctor to rule quickly because of Musgrove's medical condition. Musgrove and his co-defendant, David Rogers, who previously died on Alabama's death row, were sentenced to death in 1988.
Musgrove had been convicted and sentenced to death with another man, David Rogers, for the Sept. 27, 1986 shooting of Coy Barron. Rogers and Musgrove were best friends and career car thieves, but both always denied having any role in Barron's shooting.
In May, a local judge, Tommy Nail, who as a lawyer had represented Musgroveās co-accused, said he believed both men had received a raw deal. The co-accused has since died. Jefferson County Circuit Judge Tommy Nail had said he hoped a federal review would clear Musgrove.
Nail said he always felt they were not guilty. He said the case shared "eerie" similarities with that of recent death row exoneree Anthony Hinton: both cases were tried by the same prosecutor before the same judge, and the prosecution presented questionable weapons testimony from the same ballistics expert.
The ballistics testimony in Hinton's case was contradicted by three other ballistics experts, and prosecutors decided not to retry him after saying they could not link the bullets from the crime to a gun that belonged to Hinton. Nail said the defendants in both cases also presented solid alibi evidence. Musgrove's attorneys argued that, in addition to similarly unreliable ballistics testimony, Musgrove's conviction was tainted by falsified eyewitness testimony, prosecutorial misconduct, and false testimony by a jailhouse informant who later recanted. Musgrove's attorney, Cissy Jackson, said "It was a privilege to know and represent Donnis. My husband and I have been working for his release since 1997, and we are so sorry that he did not live to be exonerated." (Source: DPIC, 02/12/2015)
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