Who Decides, Inc. http://www.whodecidesinc.org Tue, 16 Feb 2021 01:54:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/whoinc-45x45.jpg Who Decides, Inc. http://www.whodecidesinc.org 32 32 https://ejusa.org/virginia-lawmakers-vote-to-end-the-death-penalty/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/https-ejusa-org-virginia-lawmakers-vote-to-end-the-death-penalty/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/https-ejusa-org-virginia-lawmakers-vote-to-end-the-death-penalty/#respond Tue, 16 Feb 2021 01:54:06 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5200 Continue reading https://ejusa.org/virginia-lawmakers-vote-to-end-the-death-penalty/]]> I just read this article, this is great news remembering 2 of the most important story that was (if I can use the world) Honored, maybe better one, Georges Spinney, jr, also need to be reminded of this change we cannot forget the people that made a big change ( just with their voices), the voice has its power as much as an action does if somebody listens, somebody will make a change, We need to remember the one’s that paid with their lives, to make a change, Now, they need to sign and change the length of the sentence, life without parole and long penalty’s that some do not deserve, if you replace the death penalty with a life without parole for some is still too long of a sentence and again a lot do not deserve it, this is a little like changing crumbs with a cookie,it is not a perfect world? This News is great but just like in Kenneth’s case spending the rest of your life till you die and did not take a life, it is still high paying for a price, that law also needs to change ASAP

Isabelleize Kenneth Reams’s Wife

*https://ejusa.org/virginia-lawmakers-vote-to-end-the-death-penalty/

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UPDATE on Kenny’s (@justice4kreams) http://www.whodecidesinc.org/update-on-kennys-justice4kreams/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/update-on-kennys-justice4kreams/#respond Sat, 13 Feb 2021 08:40:57 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5198 UPDATE on Kenny’s (@justice4kreams) status: As of 2/10/21, Kenny has officially been moved off of death row after 27 years. The fight continues on as he challenges his life without parole sentence. He’s now waiting for a court date to be set to ask for a new trial.

kennethreams
Freekennethreams
Kenneth Reams

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create-connect-workshop-in-the-box-with-kenneth-reams http://www.whodecidesinc.org/create-connect-workshop-in-the-box-with-kenneth-reams/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/create-connect-workshop-in-the-box-with-kenneth-reams/#respond Fri, 22 Jan 2021 18:38:28 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5192 https://www.eventbrite.com/e/create-connect-workshop-in-the-box-with-kenneth-reams-tickets-136518359087

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Tonight, you will hear from Curtis Flowers http://www.whodecidesinc.org/tonight-you-will-hear-from-curtis-flowers/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/tonight-you-will-hear-from-curtis-flowers/#comments Sat, 16 Jan 2021 14:25:59 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5189 Continue reading Tonight, you will hear from Curtis Flowers]]> 60 Minutes has covered a lot of stories about flaws in our criminal justice system over the years. But we’d never heard anything like the case against Curtis Flowers. Flowers,
a Black man from Mississippi was tried six times for the same crime by the same prosecutor. He might still be on death row if not for the work of a team of reporters from an
investigative podcast. Tonight, you will hear from Curtis Flowers, the reporters who helped free him, and the prosecutor who relentlessly pursued him for more than two decades.
It began in Winona, Mississippi on a July morning in 1996. Shortly after Tardy Furniture opened for the day, the store’s owner,
bookkeeper, delivery man, and a 16-year-old were shot in the head execution-style. No one saw it happen.
Sharyn Alfonsi: When you heard about the crime and the way they were murdered, what was your reaction?
Curtis Flowers: Well, my heart dropped. The– the first thing, you know I, I felt sorry for them. Then I thought, well, I could’ve been there.
Curtis Flowers had worked at Tardy that summer for three days, delivering and fixing furniture, but he was let go after he stopped showing up.
Almost immediately after the murders, some victims’ families suspected Flowers. The police questioned him but made no arrest. Months passed. Flowers moved to Texas to live with his sister.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And there’s a knock at the door.
Curtis Flowers: And I answered it. And the next thing you know I was all up against the wall, being handcuffed. And he explained to me that,
‘We just have a warrant for your arrest back in Mississippi.’ I said, ‘For what?’ And he said, ‘Four counts of capital murder.’ Man, I said, ‘Me? Are you sure you got the right guy?’
Flowers had no criminal record and were more likely to be on stage with a gospel group than in handcuffs. There was no murder weapon. No DNA
or fingerprints linking him to the crime. But it took an all-white jury just an hour to deliberate and convict him. At age 27, Curtis Flowers was sentenced
to death and put in the Mississippi State Penitentiary known as Parchman Prison.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Were you scared?
Curtis Flowers: Oh yes.
Sharyn Alfonsi: What’s Parchman like?
Curtis Flowers: The worst thing you ever dreamed about. Yeah, like a nightmare cause, you know, you hear all kinds of noise at night, you know. Uh,
there are inmates who have just snapped. Some who have lost it. They act up all night.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And you were sitting on death row, I imagine other death row inmates were being executed.
Curtis Flowers: Yes. Yes. And that, that was nerve-wracking itself.
His conviction was appealed and overturned. But there would be five more trials for Curtis Flowers, for the same crime by the same prosecutor.
Sharyn Alfonsi: How can a person be tried for the same crime six times?
Rob McDuff: This case is unprecedented in the history of the American legal system.
Attorney Rob McDuff of the Mississippi Center for Justice joined Curtis Flowers’ legal team in 2019. In the first three trials, Flowers was found guilty,
but each conviction was overturned for prosecutorial misconduct.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And when we talk about prosecutorial misconduct, were these simple missteps? Or was it something bigger going on here?
Rob McDuff: No, these convictions were reversed because of the prosecutor’s misrepresentation of the evidence to the jury and because of his discrimination in the, a selection of the jury.
Sharyn Alfonsi: But the same prosecutor goes after Curtis Flowers again time after time. There’s nothing in our system that stops that from happening?
Rob McDuff: Unfortunately, there is not. This prosecutor was like Captain Ahab hunting the whale.
The prosecutor was District Attorney Doug Evans, who even after hung juries in trials four and five, kept going. In 2010, Evans finally got
a conviction to stick in trial six. Flowers returned to death row. Then an email changed his fortunes.
Madeleine Baran: It’s been more than three years since I got an email from a woman telling me about a man named Curtis Flowers…
Madeleine Baran is the lead reporter for American Public Media’s podcast “In the Dark.” Samara Freemark is the podcast’s managing producer.
Madeleine Baran: Right away it was like, ‘Is this possible that someone would be tried six times?’
To investigate how that happened, the “In the Dark” team descended on Winona, a town of 5,000. Most of downtown, like Tardy Furniture,
had faded away. The podcast reporters planned to stay a few months. They stayed a year, knocking on doors and interviewing hundreds of people.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Was there anything that anybody said early on that made you think, ‘Oh, well, maybe he was the guy who did this?’
Madeleine Baran: Yeah, I mean, of course, we have to assume that somebody has been convicted four times, there’s a chance he’s guilty, of course.
But the more we looked into the evidence, there wasn’t a single piece of evidence that actually held up.
The first piece of evidence to crumble was the winding route Doug Evans told jurors that Curtis Flowers walked that July morning.
Madeleine Baran: That, you know, Curtis woke up that morning, he was angry, he no longer worked at the furniture store. He wanted to kill
the people there, but he didn’t have a gun. So he walked across town, stole a gun from a car, walked home, still angry.
Left his house, walked with the gun to the furniture store, shot four people in the head, walked home.
It seemed far-fetched flowers would brazenly walk so far in broad daylight. When the podcast reporters started talking to route witnesses who claimed they saw Flowers, a pattern emerged.
Madeleine Baran: It was clear they did not, for example, pick up the phone and call the police and say, ‘I saw something suspicious,’
that they were sought out, like, months later in a lotta cases and it turned out that they felt like they needed to tell law enforcement that this happened. Or as one guy said, ‘They already told me that they knew
I saw Curtis.’
Samara Freemark: ‘They had the whole story laid out for me and all I had to do was say yes.’
Sharyn Alfonsi: Who was the most important route witness?
Madeleine Baran: Clemmie Fleming. Clemmie testified that Curtis Flowers was running away from the furniture store shortly after the murders. This is of course incredibly damning testimony if it’s true
. And she testified to it six times.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And what did you learn?
Madeleine Baran: That Clemmie was not telling the truth.
Clemmie Fleming admitted to the podcast that she didn’t remember when she saw Flowers running. In November, we spoke to her in Winona, where she still lives.
Sharyn Alfonsi: You saw Curtis running through town?
Clemmie Fleming: Yeah.
Sharyn Alfonsi: But you weren’t sure…
Clemmie Fleming: I wasn’t sure what day it was. I really, it happened but I don’t know what day it was.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Did you ever tell the prosecutors, ‘Hey, I’m not sure about the day that I saw.’
Clemmie Fleming: Yeah.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And what did they say?
Clemmie Fleming: They ain’t wanna hear that. They just wanted me to tell what I seen. They don’t wanna worry about what day I seen it.
Another key witness also recanted to “In the Dark.” Odell “Cookie” Hallmon, a career criminal, had testified that Curtis Flowers confessed to him in prison.
Producer Samara Freemark tracked down Hallmon in Parchman Prison.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And how were you talking to him?
Samara Freemark: Well, it turns out he had an illicit cell phone. He would set up a blanket fort to talk so the guards wouldn’t, wouldn’t be able to see him.
So he would sort of hang blankets up over his bunk, and hide in there.
Eventually, he admitted to Freemark that he made the story up about Curtis confessing. This is Hallmon on the phone from prison.
Hallmon on “In the Dark”: As far as him telling me he killed some people, hell, naw, he ain’t never told me that. That was a lie.
The podcast reported that after Hallmon came forward with the phony confession, he cut generous deals with prosecutors for years and avoided punishment for multiple felony charges.
While he was free, in 2016, he murdered three people and was finally sentenced to life in prison.
The revelations turned “In the Dark” into a sensation. The podcast was downloaded 42 million times. But Curtis Flowers could not listen to it.
He was on death row in Parchman Prison reading transcripts of the podcast.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And you’re reading about these witnesses finally recanting their stories
Curtis Flowers: I think my first reaction was, it’s about time (laughs). And I was just ready to go home.
As Flowers waited on death row, the podcast team continued unraveling his case by scouring closed jails and abandoned factories for clues and documents.
Samara Freemark: We had to go and search them out like we were on a treasure hunt.
Madeleine Baran: And you’re like, ‘What are those mounds in the corner, you know?’ And you’re like, ‘Oh, those are public records for this county. And then you go through it and you’re like,
‘These are covered in mouse droppings. They’re covered in mold.’
They also analyzed decades of court data that revealed prosecutor Doug Evans had a history of excluding Black people from juries at a disproportionate rate. Across all of Curtis Flowers’ trials,
61 of the 72 jurors were White. All 61 voted to convict. Those numbers reverberated far beyond Mississippi. In 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Evans and the state of Mississippi
had violated Curtis Flowers’ constitutional rights and overturned his conviction. Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that there was a “relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of Black individuals.
” Six months later, Curtis Flowers was released on bail. He walked out of jail with a monitor on his ankle, and his sisters on his arms.For the first time in 23 years he was out.Curtis Flowers:
And I’m telling you, I felt like I was floating. I was just ready to go.
In September, the ankle monitor came off. The Mississippi attorney general’s office dismissed all charges against Curtis Flowers. It wrote that “it is in the interest of justice
that the state will not seek an unprecedented seventh trial of Mr. Flowers.” In November, Doug Evans, the man who prosecuted Curtis Flowers six times, sat down with us in his office for a rare interview.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Why did you prosecute him again and again? Doug Evans: Because I knew he was guilty. And the families knew he was guilty. And the families deserve justice.
Sharyn Alfonsi: But what about now that those witnesses have changed their stories?
Doug Evans: I don’t think, know that any of them have changed their stories. Sharyn Alfonsi: Well, Clemmie, Odell. Doug Evans: But that’s not in court under oath.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Do you think that Curtis could get a fair trial when the jury is predominately White?
Doug Evans: Yes. Race has nothing to do with our part of what we do. A lot of times race gets thrown in as an excuse if there is no defense.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote there seemed to be a “relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of Black individuals.’ That’s from the Supreme Court.
Doug Evans: And I can’t understand that. Basically, what he is doing is accusing me like he was accused before he was put on the Supreme Court.
Evans says he never listened to the podcast but is convinced “In the Dark” set out to discredit his case.
Sharyn Alfonsi: The way this is being presented now was that it was a weak case. That there were no fingerprints. There was no DNA. There was no witness that puts him at the crime scene.
There’s this string of witnesses that say they saw him on the street…
Doug Evans: Oh, you’ve got a witness… that sees him walk in the front door. That’s about as close as you can get.
But over six trials no witness ever testified to seeing Curtis Flowers walk in the front door at Tardy Furniture. Evans then made another startling claim.
Sharyn Alfonsi: You would think that because the murders were so gruesome you know nobody saw him covered in blood or anything like that.
Doug Evans: Well, there were people that saw him burnin’ clothes after that, but we weren’t able to introduce that either. Ah, supposedly, they saw him burning clothes and a pair of tennis shoes.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Where did that happen?
Doug Evans: It was outside his house, in that area over there.
But in 12,000 pages of pre-trial hearings and trial proceedings that we reviewed, we couldn’t find any mention of that story. Rob McDuff, Curtis Flowers’ lawyer, said that’s because it never happened.
Rob McDuff: (Laughs) You know, it is just preposterous that Doug Evans continues to say these things. But he’s been called out on his deceptions, he’s been called out on his misconduct time and time and time again.
Curtis Flowers: I believe every case Doug Evans ever handled should be looked into. I truly do. I, I, lord knows I would hate to see this happen to someone else.
Curtis Flowers is now 50 years old. He spent nearly half his life in prison. In November, during a visit to see his family in Winona, he told us the adjustment has been slow.
Curtis Flowers: I’m so used to being in shackles, making little baby steps…
Sharyn Alfonsi: Really?
Curtis Flowers: So then when, you know, I’m turned loose and able to step as I wanna, yeah it takes a lot of wind.
Sharyn Alfonsi: You couldn’t walk normally?
Curtis Flowers: Yeah, I had to adjust to it.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Because you were always in shackles?
Curtis Flowers: Yes.
But somehow after 23 years, the former gospel singer never lost his voice.
Produced by Draggan Mihailovich and Jacqueline Williams. Broadcast associate, Elizabeth Germino. Edited by Joe Schanzer.

© 2021 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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https://arttransforms.org/events/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/https-arttransforms-org-events/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/https-arttransforms-org-events/#respond Thu, 14 Jan 2021 21:19:12 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5187 CHECK OUT #Isabelleize my ART / MY HUSBAND #KENNETHREAMS ART AND OTHER GREAT ARTIST HEREhttps://arttransforms.org/events/https://arttransforms.org/wp…/uploads/2021/01/zoom_0.mp4

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Kenneth Reams v. Stat… http://www.whodecidesinc.org/kenneth-reams-v-stat/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/kenneth-reams-v-stat/#respond Thu, 14 Jan 2021 20:22:51 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5182 https://arkansas-sc.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=4&clip_id=1120&starttime=undefined&stoptime=undefined&autostart=0&embed=1

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WHO LIVES, WHO DIES, WHO DECIDES Art by Kenneth and Isabelle Reams Descriptions by Kenneth Reams http://www.whodecidesinc.org/who-lives-who-dies-who-decides-art-by-kenneth-and-isabelle-reams-descriptions-by-kenneth-reams/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/who-lives-who-dies-who-decides-art-by-kenneth-and-isabelle-reams-descriptions-by-kenneth-reams/#respond Mon, 30 Nov 2020 03:39:00 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5180 https://wholiveswhodies.art/Art

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Did Thomas Edison Really Fry an Elephant with Electricity? http://www.whodecidesinc.org/the-execution-of-mckinleys-assassin/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/the-execution-of-mckinleys-assassin/#comments Mon, 30 Nov 2020 03:06:11 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5161 Continue reading Did Thomas Edison Really Fry an Elephant with Electricity?]]>

President William McKinley became the first president to ever appear on motion picture film in 1899 and Edison’s film crew, led by his friend and associate Edwin Porter, would make a handful of movies featuring McKinley while he was alive. But it was the execution of McKinley’s assassin, even in re-enacted form, that would bring one of the first macabre visions to early cinema, despite the fact that it wasn’t real.

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How Thomas Edison Used a Fake Electric Chair Execution Film to Fight the Electricity War http://www.whodecidesinc.org/how-thomas-edison-used-a-fake-electric-chair-execution-film-to-fight-the-electricity-war/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/how-thomas-edison-used-a-fake-electric-chair-execution-film-to-fight-the-electricity-war/#comments Mon, 30 Nov 2020 02:52:37 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5157 https://paleofuhttps://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/how-thomas-edison-used-a-fake-electric-chair-execution-1829652181ture.gizmodo.com/how-thomas-edison-used-a-fake-electric-chair-execution-1829652181

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SIGN THE PETITION FOR KENNETH REAMS NOW !!!!! http://www.whodecidesinc.org/sign-the-petition-for-kenneth-reams-now/ http://www.whodecidesinc.org/sign-the-petition-for-kenneth-reams-now/#comments Mon, 21 Oct 2019 22:05:23 +0000 http://www.whodecidesinc.org/?p=5096

FREE KENNETH REAMS! He’s been on death row for the past 26 years. He never killed anybody!

PETITION HERE

 

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