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Contact: Shari Silberstein 301-699-0042 office |
Prosecutors Investigate Possible Execution of an Innocent Man
Quixote Center applauds Missouri Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce for reopening investigation of Larry Griffin; calls for national halt to executions
Missouri prosecutor Jennifer Joyce announced yesterday that she would reopen the
case of Larry Griffin, who was executed in 1995 for the drive-by shooting of
Quintin Moss. Joyce told the Associated Press yesterday that attorneys for
the victim's family along with the NAACP Legal and Educational Fund approached her
with new evidence in the case, and that she was particularly moved that family
members of the victim had also expressed concern that the wrong person was
executed.
"Jennifer Joyce's decision to reopen the case of Larry Griffin is a rare
and refreshing display of justice over politics," said Shari Silberstein,
Co-Director of the Quixote Center, a national faith-based organization calling for
a moratorium on executions. "Too often, we hear stories of prosecutors who
hide evidence or refuse to acknowledge new evidence that might exonerate an
innocent person. But events in Missouri remind us that there are principled
people on all sides of the death penalty system. We congratulate Jennifer
Joyce for seeking the truth, no matter how painful."
"Sadly, Larry Griffin's case exemplifies many of the problems plaguing other
death penalty cases around the country," said Silberstein. "Problems with
incompetent defense lawyers, improper investigation, and shaky eyewitness testimony
are hardly unique. If Griffin is exonerated, Americans will face the
horrifying truth that the U.S. executed an innocent man."
"Americans want an immediate moratorium on executions while the death penalty's
flaws are studied and addressed," Silberstein continued. "A system that is
unfairly applied will continue to send innocent people to their death. No one
can live with that.
The Quixote Center profiled Larry Griffin's case in it's October 2000 report, "Reasonable Doubts: Is the U.S. Executing Innocent People?" The report featured 16 cases of people who had been executed despite compelling doubts about their guilt and is available at www.ejusa.org.
The Quixote Center is a national organization founded in 1976. The Center's Equal Justice USA program pioneered the national grassroots movement for a moratorium on executions in 1997. Nationwide, over 3,700 national and local groups, businesses, and faith communities have called for a halt to executions, including 143 local governments. (For a complete listing, see the National Tally at www.ejusa.org).
P.O Box 5206, Hyattsvillle, MD 20782 tel: 301-699-3443 fax: 301-864-2182 www.ejusa.org info@ejusa.org |