Cameron Todd Willingham: Texas Panel Reviews Ruling That Led To Execution

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AP / Huffington Post   |  By MICHAEL GRACZYK
First Posted: 09-26-09 03:46 PM   |   Updated: 11-26-09 05:12 AM

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Cameron Willingham

CORSICANA, Texas -- More than five years after Cameron Todd Willingham was executed by the state of Texas for the deaths of his three young daughters in a fire at the family's home, a state panel will review a report concluding that the original determination of arson was faulty.

Willingham was executed in February 2004 -- proclaiming his innocence in the deaths of his three young daughters in a fire at their Corsicana home on Dec. 23, 1991.

An arson finding by investigators was key to his conviction in the circumstantial case.

The Innocence Project, a nonprofit legal organization that investigates possible wrongful convictions, questioned Willingham's guilt. Now the Texas Forensic Science Commission will review a report Friday from an expert it hired who concluded the original arson determination was faulty.

The prosecutor in the case still believes Willingham is guilty, but acknowledges it would have been hard to win a death sentence without the arson finding.

Yet Barry Scheck, co-director of the New York-based Innocence Project, sees it differently: "There can no longer be any doubt that an innocent person has been executed."

Sheck, a Huffington Post blogger, weighed in on Williinham's execution in late August. The New Yorker's David Grann recently wrote a detailed piece that cast doubt on Willingham's conviction and subsequent execution.

In 2007, Scheck's group gave its review of the case to the state commission, which then hired Baltimore-based arson expert Craig Beyler to study. Beyler concluded the arson finding was scientifically unsupported and investigators at the scene had "poor understandings of fire science."
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John Jackson, the prosecutor in Navarro County, about 50 miles south of Dallas, says the original fire investigation was "undeniably flawed," based on subsequent reviews, but remains confident Willingham was guilty of killing Amber, 2, and 1-year-old twins Karmon and Kameron.

"What people missed is that even though the arson report may be flawed, it certainly doesn't mean it arrived at a faulty conclusion," Jackson said.

"I'm an easy target," he added, shaking his head over media reports on the case "about how we're all a bunch of bozos."

The nine-member commission, created by the Texas Legislature in 2005, also will hear from others including the State Fire Marshal's Office. The panel will release its own report, probably next year and what happens then is uncertain. This is the commission's first review case; the panel is not empowered to rule on Willingham's guilt or innocence.

The commission's mandate is strictly to determine forensic negligence, panel coordinator Leigh Tomlin said.

Willingham, in an Associated Press interview about two weeks before his execution, said Amber's cries woke him around 10:30 a.m. His wife, Stacy, had left earlier to run errands.

He said he told Amber to get out of the house and approached the twins' room but couldn't get past the flames and smoke. The house had no phone, so he said he ran to a neighbor's home and "screamed to call the fire department."

He did not go back inside.

"The only way for me to get back into the house was to jump back into the flames," he said. "I would not do that."

Amber's body was found in Willingham's room. The twins were in their room.

Willingham listed other possible causes of the fire, including an electrical malfunction, an intruder who wanted them dead, or an oil lantern on a collapsing shelf.

A state fire marshal -- who has since died -- and a local fire investigator ruled it was arson, that a liquid accelerant was ignited and the blaze was set in a way to keep anyone from reaching the children. Prosecutors arrested Willingham two weeks later.

"It's all a farce," Willingham told the AP from death row.

Years later, Innocence Project investigators and now Beyler, based on notes and photos from the scene, agree with him.

Douglas Fogg stands by his conclusions as the former assistant fire chief who helped investigate the deadly blaze.

"The bleeding hearts that are against the death penalty are trying to stir everything up again," he told The Dallas Morning News last month. "They finally got someone who would say what they wanted to hear."

Other prosecution evidence was largely circumstantial: A county jail inmate said Willingham discussed his involvement in the fire and neighbors reported Willingham worried more about his car than the children as the house burned.

Jackson, the Navarro County prosecutor, said the multiple deaths -- not the arson -- made it a capital murder case. But he acknowledged that without an arson determination the capital conviction would have been difficult.

"I'm not sure the evidence would have sustained a conviction from a legal standpoint if we hadn't been able to prove a fire of incendiary arson," he said.

At trial, Willingham's wife, Stacy, testified for him during the punishment phase, denying he ever hurt her. Acquaintances, however, said she told them he'd beaten her several times, even while she was pregnant.

On appeal, courts rejected Willingham's arguments that it was improper to allow hearsay bolstering prosecutors' contentions that the children impeded Willingham's lifestyle. He denied that.

"They were great kids," he said from prison. "They were fantastic kids."

Willingham acknowledged a rocky relationship with his wife, whom he married about two months before the fire and after they'd been living together for almost three years.

"I cheated on her," he told the AP. "I was so full of myself and so dumb."

His venom from the death chamber was aimed at her as she watched his execution.

In the years following his conviction, she became convinced of his guilt, refused his request to testify for him at a clemency hearing, but did agree to his long-standing invitation to see him in prison about 2 1/2 weeks before he was scheduled to die.

"It was hard for me to sit in front of him," she said, describing their meeting to the Corsicana Daily Sun a few days later in 2004 in her most recent public comments. "He basically took my life away from me. He took my kids away from me."

Jackson said jurors who heard the prosecution's case got a more complete picture of Willingham and that the arson questions now raised are "wild speculation."

"I'm pretty ambivalent when it comes to the death penalty," Jackson said. "I guess if it raises the question of the propriety of capital punishment, I think that's a good argument for people to have.

"I'm not losing a whole lot of sleep."


Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20090926/us-texas-execution-arson/

CORSICANA, Texas -- More than five years after Cameron Todd Willingham was executed by the state of Texas for the deaths of his three young daughters in a fire at the family's home, a state panel will...
CORSICANA, Texas -- More than five years after Cameron Todd Willingham was executed by the state of Texas for the deaths of his three young daughters in a fire at the family's home, a state panel will...
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From my point of view the Cameron i s guilty, but that is being a daughter of a Texas Fire Marshall( but not the one in this cases imo).... Several red flags were, their for example the girls bodies were flat on their stomachs, because when we burn we get into a fetal pension. It also changed the law for Texas to let in the marks that wear found in the homes to not be aloud in the courts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 10/19/2009
- alkamm I'm a Fan of alkamm 47 fans permalink
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Those who favor the death penalty have to be comfortable with executing innocent people. It's just as good a deterrent if they execute an innocent person. It'll never be a rich person, or a connected person, even with faulty evidence like the clown that "proved" arson.
The New Yorker article led the reader through the evidence and then demolished it with the expert testimony of an explosives expert who'd worked for the government and cited specific tests done in Illinois (building two houses exactly alike and torching them, one with accelerants, another with multiple fires and they found that the unexamined certainties that arson investigators used were wrong in multiple ways.
The guy was innocent and Rick Perry didn't have the time to read a very respected scientist's refutation of the evidence. In other words, he ignored exculpatory evidence. He was what the Supreme Court of legalists we now have call "the fail safe" component of our judicial system. He was lynched, and the Texas commutation board should be as ashamed as Perry because they don't even meet. They call it in. If this sinks Perry, maybe the poor guy didn't die in vain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 10/05/2009
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What a sad story. If this man was innocent, which it sounds like he may be,then he was wrongly executed. I am a proud Texan and yes ,I believe in the death penalty in certain circumstances. I however do not believe it stops crime from happening. I believe that if a person commits aN extremely violent crime, crimes against children or the elderly, or murder, then the death penalty should be an option for a jury to consider. I do think that there should be evidence without a doubt that the person is guilty, and in this case it seems that the "system " has failed.Why was this not investigated prior to his execution? Was there any more damning evidence? Executing an innocent man is terrible, but this is not the first case of that, and I think we should be certain before handing down that verdict. Like having dna evidence, or witnesses that can accurately account the incident. Capital punishment is in the end final, so I think every effort should be made to investigate the case thoroughly, even after conviction, during the appeals process.Texas does execute more than any other state, but take into account the size and the population of the state versus the rest of the states.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 10/01/2009
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The New Yorker article was long and extremely thorough. It leaves no doubt in my mind that this man was innocent. I'm sure Texas has killed many innocent people in the past, but now we have conclusive proof backed by sound science instead of the voodoo they used to convict the man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 09/27/2009
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Why bother with the appellate system if it's just filled with crony hacks long on vengeance and short on detached reason? This is what happens when the court system is filled with ideological people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 09/27/2009
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This happens all the time in the "land of the free." Every single day.
Meanwhile the system certainly has NO problems releasing KNOWN pedophiles and rapist (with proof they are actually GUILTY of their crimes) back into society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 AM on 09/27/2009
- johnr49 I'm a Fan of johnr49 83 fans permalink

How many innocent people were put to death in Texas because the then governor Bush spent almost no time at all considering their requests for pardons?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 09/27/2009
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Well the bleeding hearts just wanna make a case! And they believe in crazy, hippie things like science and justice and truth. Why, that's downright unAmerican!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 AM on 09/27/2009
- Tom Payned I'm a Fan of Tom Payned 91 fans permalink
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If the Death penalty was effective in stopping crime, (which it isn't) maybe can get our elected politicians to make certain white collar crimes subject to the death penalty.

Maybe for such white collar acts as accepting money in exchange for votes that put the welfare of the public at risk, under the depraved indifference statutes found in various states penal codes.

As an example, if Senator Bacaus (or Grassley, Enzi, Nelson, etc . . . ) accepts money from United Health Care, to limit tax payers ability to get the health insurance coverage they'd been paying for but are subsequently denied the care by the corporation, the good senators & the persons who donated the money, would be subject to the same fate as befell the denied claimant. Such as death by untreated lymphoma?

Just a thought.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 AM on 09/27/2009
- Nina28 I'm a Fan of Nina28 13 fans permalink
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I'm glad they are reviewing this case. It won't bring back the reality that an innocent man was killed because he was too poor to afford a good lawyer and the law was too corrupted to stop it.

I do hope those that were involved get their day in court and spend life in the same conditions this poor soul had to endure behind good ol' Texas prison.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 09/27/2009
- hulagirrrl I'm a Fan of hulagirrrl 43 fans permalink
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You are right. I read the story in the New Yorker and felt the same way. It is scary to think that this can happen to just anybody who can not afford a good lawyer. Talking about justice for all....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 AM on 09/27/2009
- JSiobhan I'm a Fan of JSiobhan 2 fans permalink

We are all guilty as a nation in perpetuating wrongful convictions. We pressure law enforcement and prosecutors to indict and convict killers quickly with no mercy. Then we reward "law and order" politicians with our votes. God forbid if a case goes unsolved. Look at the JonBenet Ramsey murder. People were relentless in criticizing Boulder police for not bringing charges the Ramseys for killing their daughters when new evidence has emerged that pointed to an actual intruder as culprit.

We cannot guarantee infallibility in capital murders cases if humans are involved process. We, as a nation, need to get out of the business of playing God and ban death penalty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 09/27/2009

This isn't news. It's Texas. They'll "review" it with the same "vigor" they review any other type of appeal. They'll rubber stamp it as proper even if it wasn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 AM on 09/27/2009

Actually, Judge Sharon Keller is now on trial for judicial misconduct. She shut down her courtroom promptly at 5 pm on an evening she knew a person was scheduled to be executed and an appeal was most certainly forthcoming. Of course, the appeal request came too late. Time.com has an article on it if you are interested. This is kind of a big deal for Texas as you can image.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 AM on 09/27/2009

I'm aware of the story of Judge Keller. And I'm also aware that she'll probably be exonerated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 09/27/2009
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http://camerontoddwillingham.com/?page_id=6

Sign the petition to Governor Rick Perry and the State of Texas to acknowledge that the fire in the Cameron Todd Willingham case was not arson, therefore no crime was committed and on February 17, 2004, Texas executed an innocent man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 09/27/2009
- Querent I'm a Fan of Querent 69 fans permalink
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Sign a petition to Gov. Rick Perry, a man who not only hates democracy but also has never in his life admitted to being wrong? Then what? Ask Sen. Enzi to learn how to think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 AM on 09/27/2009
- futpilot I'm a Fan of futpilot 6 fans permalink

i think we should go back to having shoot outs like in the wild west.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 09/27/2009
- Garioch I'm a Fan of Garioch 37 fans permalink

Anyone who can think must acknowledge that if you have the death penalty and apply it you will eventually execute an innocent person. If you support the death penalty you support the killing of innocent people. Beyond the arguments about judicial killing you are if you support the death penalty an accomplice to murder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 09/26/2009
- kathy001 I'm a Fan of kathy001 84 fans permalink

Undeniably true.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 09/27/2009
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