DNA tests may prove Roger Coleman is innocent of murder. The bad news is it won't help Roger Coleman because the state of Virginia executed him 13 years ago for the murder and rape.
Original Article
Posted 12/22/2005 10:36 PM Updated 12/22/2005 10:41 PM
DNA tests could show if Va. executed innocent man
By Richard Willing, USA TODAY
Virginia's governor is preparing to order DNA tests that could show that a coal miner executed for a rape-murder in 1992 did not commit the crime.
If the tests, which Democratic Gov. Mark Warner is expected to order before he leaves office in mid-January, clear Roger Coleman, death penalty opponents say it would be the first time in the history of the American death penalty that an executed convict is scientifically shown to be innocent.
"The final argument (of death penalty advocates) is that no innocent person has been executed," said Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty Information Center, a Washington, D.C., group that seeks to end capital punishment.
"If you find an innocent man who has been executed, that's a final nail through that," Dieter said.
Ellen Qualls, a spokeswoman for Warner, said the governor's office has "basically worked out" details of how tests will be conducted with Coleman's representatives and with a California lab that has held evidence from the crime scene for about 15 years.
She said a decision on testing will be made shortly.
Forensic Science Associates of Richmond, Calif., performed DNA analysis before Coleman's execution, using a now-obsolete technique. The tests could not exclude Coleman as the killer, but could not say definitively that he committed the crime.
DNA tests developed since that time could exonerate Coleman or confirm his guilt.
Coleman, a coal miner in Grundy, in southwest Virginia, was convicted of the 1981 rape-murder of Wanda McCoy, his sister-in-law.
He claimed innocence from the start, testifying at his trial that he was elsewhere at the time the crime occurred.
Several witnesses gave evidence that tended to support his alibi.
Because Coleman's lawyers missed a filing deadline, appeals court judges did not see additional evidence suggesting that another man raped and murdered McCoy.
Coleman's execution was opposed by Pope John Paul II. Coleman protested his innocence to the end, and predicted that he would "eventually" be exonerated.
Michael McGlothlin, a Grundy lawyer who prosecuted the case, remains convinced of his guilt.
McGlothlin's version: The miner was a likely suspect, having been convicted four years earlier for an attempted rape. Coleman's alibi was countered by other witnesses. The other man Coleman's supporters say could have been the killer was investigated and found to have a different blood type than the rapist.
"I'm in favor of testing which can resolve difficult matters, but I'm also in favor of facts," McGlothlin said."
"Because the facts are inconvenient for Mr. Coleman, that doesn't make them any less factual," he said.
John McAdams, a political science professor at Marquette University and death penalty supporter, says opponents will incur a "major hit to their credibility" if DNA tests confirm Coleman's guilt.
http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20051223-084350-8423r
DNA test could show executed man innocent
RICHMOND, Va., Dec. 23 (UPI) -- Virginia Gov. Mark Warner plans to order DNA tests that reportedly could show a man executed for rape and murder in 1992 was innocent.
If the tests, which Warner is expected to order before he leaves office in mid-January, clear Roger Coleman, death penalty opponents say it would be the first time an executed convict is scientifically shown to be innocent.
"The final argument (of death penalty advocates) is that no innocent person has been executed," Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty Information Center, a Washington group that seeks to end capital punishment, told USA Today.
"If you find an innocent man who has been executed, that's a final nail through that," Dieter said.
Forensic Science Associates of Richmond, Calif., performed DNA analysis before Coleman's execution, using a now-obsolete technique that could not exclude Coleman or say definitely that he did it.
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