Glenn Ford (October 29, 1949 - June 29, 2015) was convicted of murder in 1984 and released from Angola Prison in March 2014 after full release. Ford was born in Shreveport, Louisiana. He is the longest convicted convict in the United States to be fully released before his death. He was denied compensation by the state of Louisiana for his false beliefs.
Video Conviction and exoneration of Glenn Ford
Capture
Isadore Rozeman, 58, was found dead in his jewelry store on November 5, 1983, by the Shreveport police who had been told by Dr. A. R. Ebrahim that the store seems to be a mess. Rozeman has been killed with one gunshot wound to the back of his head. Glenn Ford, Rozeman's man page, was known to be around the store at the time of the murder and identified by many in court. He is known with Jake and Henry Robinson after the crime, showing the material stolen from the crime scene and Jake's.22 caliber gun. A Ford acquaintance testified that he had a.38 pistol at his waist in the morning of the crime, the same caliber bullet found at the scene. The police initially could not find evidence of crime at Ford's residence, but found the remains of a gunshot wound in his left hand (he was left-handed). Ford was immediately taken into custody. The evidence, however, was found in Henry Robinson's possession, as well as a pawnshop receipt on behalf of Ford from the date of the murder.
Maps Conviction and exoneration of Glenn Ford
Conviction
Ford was assigned two lawyers by the state because of his inability to pay his own lawyer. Both are selected from the alphabet list of lawyers from local bar associations. The main lawyer is an oil and gas lawyer who has never tried a case, criminal or civil, before becoming a judge. The second lawyer has been out of law school for only two years and worked at an insurance company on a slip and falling case. Prosecutors can take advantage of the defense experience and use the capacity of a peremptory challenge to keep African Americans from the jury, so all Caucasian jurors with Caucasian judges. Ford was convicted and sentenced to death by a jury without a murder weapon linking him to crime, and with evidence from a secret informant detained.
Barry Scheck of the Project Innocence has picked up accusations that racism plays a role in belief, when he faces a truly Caucasian jury despite living in a community that is at least half African American. He went on to state that this is part of a broader pattern in the American legal system, and that a uniform jury tends to negotiate less than a variety of jurors drawn from different backgrounds. He goes on to say that "various jurors are more likely to challenge each other, and are less likely to fall back on what might be unconscious stereotypes."
Ford was sentenced to death by electricity at the Louisiana Correctional Center in August 1988.
Exoneration
In 2000, the Louisiana high court ordered a trial of Ford's claim that the prosecutor oppresses evidence that might indicate Jake and Henry Robinson were responsible for the killing (both initially involved in the crime).
In 2013, an unidentified informant told the prosecutor that Jake Robinson claimed to have shot and killed Rozeman. This caused the Ford legal team to file a motion to vacate his convictions and penalties in March 2014, stating that "reliable evidence... supports the finding that Ford was not present at, or participants in, the robbery and murder of Isadore Rozeman." District Judge Ramona Emanuel's country canceled his belief in the same month.
Ford is one of at least 150 people convicted in the United States who were later released and released.
Life after release
Immediately after his release from prison, Ford was diagnosed with pulmonary metastatic carcinoma. She enters care home care under the supervision of Johnathan Thompson (of Connick v. Thompson fame) and his organization Awakening After Liberation in New Orleans, LA.
Ford disappeared on the night of April 22, 2015, after a sharp change in mental condition, possibly due to his physical illness. The police started the search and she was found the next day, covered in blood and without the memory of the show.
Ford qualified for a $ 313,000 settlement under Louisiana law, but the judge rejected an appeal for the fund, stating that he may have a role in an early crime because he already had items stolen when caught. Ford knew the robbery would happen and did not stop it, according to the 60 Minutes program aired September 4, 2016. Next, he tried to destroy the evidence by mortgaging the items taken in the robbery and trying to find a buyer for the murder. weapons used by Ford men were involved in the killing, according to Caddo Parrish District Judge Katherine Dorroh. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/30/glenn-ford-restitution_n_6972158.html The trial of the state is pending.
Ford died under hospital treatment on June 29, 2015, due to complications from lung cancer.
Controversy
After knowing that Ford is innocent, A.M. "Marty" Stroud III, the prosecutor for the Caddo Parish District Attorney's office in the Ford case, regretted his role in belief. He has stated that he believes Ford has an unjust trial in which key evidence is suppressed by police and prosecutors and that Ford's lawyers do not have the financial resources or experience of criminal law to conduct a viable defense. He feels that if he has done his job properly by then, and all the evidence has been properly gathered, "they will not even be able to catch Glenn Ford, let alone try him for a crime."
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia