Odell Barnes Jr.s last words:
"I'd like to send great love to my family members, my supporters,
my attorneys. They have all supported me throughout this. I thank you
for proving my innocence, although it has not been acknowledged by the
courts. May you continue in the struggle and may you change all that's
being done here today and in the past. Life has not been that good to
me, but I believe that now, after meeting so many people who support me
in this, that all things will come to an end, and may this be the fruit
of better judgements for the future. That's all I have to say."
In
Memory of Odell Barnes, Jr. from
Friends in Norway
Monday
February 28: Despite of this breaking new evidence - Odell was turned
down by Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles by 18-0!!
Wednesday
March 1: Barnes in final countdown on death row
Wednesday,
March 1: French politicians seek clemency for Odell Barnes, Jr.
Monday
February 28: An Update of Odell's Legal Situation from Attorney Gary
Taylor
For
Immediate Release February 27, 2000
Support
From the French President Jaques Chirac
Press
Release February 17, 2000
Please email Turid Sandberg regarding improvements of this web-page. For questions
regarding Odell Barnes Jr., please email Frances Patrick. For further
information regarding his case, please use the email addresses to the
attorneys presented on the very bottom of the Memo-page.
A substantial number of death row inmates are indeed innocent and
there is a high risk that some of them will be executed. Odell Barnes
Jr. became one of them. Odell Barnes Jr. became another victim of this
highly fallible, racist, political and arbitrary justice-system. He was
executed by the State of Texas on March 1, 2000, despite proven
innocence. Generally, the danger of executing the innocents is inherent
in the death penalty itself and the fallibility of human nature. The
danger is enhanced by the failure to provide adequate counsel and the
narrowing of the opportunities to raise the issue of innocence on
appeal.
Once an execution occurrs, the error is final. This is what the
situation for Mr. Odell Barnes Jr came to!
Too often, the reviews afforded death row inmates on appeal and
habeas corpus simply do not offer a meaningful opportunity to present
claims of innocence. After trial, the legal system becomes locked in a
battle over procedural issues rather than a reexamination of guilt or
innocence.
Despite the U.S. Supreme Court's 1972 charge to the states to
overhaul their death penalty laws to make them less arbitrary, and more
fair, innocent persons are still being sentenced to death, and the
chances remain unacceptably high that the innocent persons have been or
will be executed because of inadequate counsel, lack of meaningful
judicial review, and racial bias.
Please read the documentation offered by these web-pages, and check
in often as more information will be available shortly. Thank You!
Recommended:
The Zephyr,
February 21, 2000 Will the State of Texas Execute an Innocent Man? by
Ward S. Larkin
Justice: Denied The
Magazine for Wrongly Convicted: The Wrong Man -- The Odell Barnes
Affair
The
Houston Press - Killing
Time