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EAT YOUR WORDS.... Mr Cobb revisit letters to the editor that reported conspiracy !!!! re-post blog strings !!! Suicide top Ten killer No Texas Style Justice for Ratcliff glas·nost Hypocrisy run amok... December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 August 08 September 08 October 08 November 08 December 08
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SWORDOFTRUTH WERE ARE YOU HAVING A DRINK WITH SURELEE YOU GEST ?
When the Blackwell case broke genius blogger who went around throwing the word truth around talking about the Advocate not being truthful as newspapers in San Antonio about Ratcliff being the murdered were are your apologizes and admissions of being ignorant and stupid like others ? Ratcliff had not even got his mother into her grave and you insignificant, stupid, ignorant words still came !!! Show yourself !!! Admit your scumness!!!! I know you sleep at night anyway... feces has to conscious.But take solace in the fact that you spell your crap better because you pieces of s@@t seem to feel that makes it all better. With a recent slue of suicides the question is how can a city with so many churches and ministers, many of whom are qualified to provide counseling , as well as a community services agency's who do counseling SO MANY SLIP BY ? When I visit town I see churches with thousands of square feet and a phone book full of M.Div's and M.ED and Ralpha credentials at churches -- why so little counseling going on ... FOR FREE to those who need it ? With so very few mentally ill walking the streets why these few are not held to the bosoms of the many "Christians " in the Town ? ARGUMENT FOR BLOG : A] IF YOU ARE GAY AN DECIDE A CAT IS NOT ENOUGH IS IT BETTER TO BE WHO YOU ARE OR DIE ? B] IF YOU ARE IN A MISERABLE MARRIAGE IS IT BETTER TO DIVORCE OR TO DIE by suicide ?
Texas man freed after 26 years in prison
By JEFF CARLTON, Associated Press WriterThu Jan 3, 6:25 PM ET Three times during his nearly 27 years in prison, Charles Chatman went before a parole board and refused to admit he was a rapist. His steadfastness was vindicated Thursday, when a judge released him because of new DNA evidence showing he indeed wasn't. The release of Chatman, 47, added to Dallas County's nationally unmatched number of wrongfully convicted inmates. "Every time I'd go to parole, they'd want a description of the crime or my version of the crime," Chatman said. "I don't have a version of the crime. I never committed the crime. I never will admit to doing this crime that I know I didn't do." District Judge John Creuzot, whom defense lawyers credited with shepherding Chatman's case for exoneration through the legal system, recommended that Texas' Court of Criminal Appeals find Chatman not guilty. With several relatives dabbing at their eyes with tissues and cheering, Chatman was released. "I really can't tell you how I feel," said his aunt, Ethel Barley. "But I can tell you it is a different feeling than I have had in a long time, just to be holding his own hand." Before the crime is officially cleared from Chatman's record, the appeals court must accept the recommendation or the governor must grant a pardon. Either step is considered a formality after Creuzot's ruling. Chatman became the 15th inmate from Dallas County since 2001 to be freed by DNA testing. He served more time than any of the other inmates, four of whom were in court Thursday to show their support. Dallas has freed more inmates after DNA testing than any other county nationwide, said Natalie Roetzel of the Innocence Project of Texas. Texas leads the country in prisoners freed by DNA testing, releasing at least 30 wrongfully convicted inmates since 2001, according to the Innocence Project. One of the biggest reasons for the large number of exonerations is the crime lab used by Dallas County, which accounts for about half the state's DNA cases. Unlike many jurisdictions, the lab used by police and prosecutors retains biological evidence, meaning DNA testing is a viable option for decades-old crimes. District Attorney Craig Watkins also attributes the exonerations to a past culture of overly aggressive prosecutors seeking convictions at any cost. Watkins has started a program in which law students, supervised by the Innocence Project of Texas, are reviewing about 450 cases in which convicts have requested DNA testing to prove their innocence. "It is time we stop kidding ourselves in believing that what happened in Dallas is somehow unique," said Jeff Blackburn, the founder of the Innocence Project of Texas. "What happened in Dallas is common. This is Texas." The hearing attracted a standing-room-only crowd that included Watkins, who was greeted warmly by two wrongly convicted Dallas men who have since won their freedom. Also there was state Rep. Terri Hodge, a member of the criminal jurisprudence committee, who promised unspecified reforms when the Legislature convenes in 2009. Chatman was 20 when the victim, a young woman in her 20s, picked him from a lineup. Chatman said he lived five houses down from the victim for 13 years but never knew her. She identified him in court as the attacker, and serology tests showed that the type of blood found at the crime scene matched that of Chatman — along with 40 percent of other black males. Chatman said he was working at the time of the assault, an alibi supported by his sister, who was also his employer. Nevertheless, Chatman was convicted of aggravated sexual assault in 1981 and sentenced to 99 years in prison. Chatman said he believes his race led to his arrest and conviction. The jury, he said, had one black member. "I was convicted because a black man committed a crime against a white woman," Chatman said. "And I was available." Chatman said he wants to work with the Innocence Project of Texas to support other people exonerated or wrongly convicted. "I believe that there are hundreds, and I know of two or three personally that very well could be sitting in this seat if they had the support and they had the backing that I have," Chatman said. "My No. 1 interest is trying to help people who have been in the situation I am in."
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