Current:Home > MyTexas appeals court rejects death row inmate Rodney Reed's claims of innocence -AssetTrainer
Texas appeals court rejects death row inmate Rodney Reed's claims of innocence
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:28:17
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Wednesday rejected death row inmate Rodney Reed's latest innocence claims. The rejection came four years after the state's highest court issued a stay days before Reed's scheduled execution for the 1996 killing of 19-year-old Stacey Lee Stites.
Reed was arrested after his sperm was found inside Stites' body. He pleaded not guilty, and in 1998 he was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by an all-White jury.
Reed's 25-year fight has attracted support from around the world, including from celebrities such as Beyoncé, Kim Kardashian and Oprah Winfrey, as well as from lawmakers from both parties.
In a 129-page ruling, Texas's highest criminal court laid out the reasons they denied Reed's claims that he didn't commit the crime, and that the state suppressed material evidence and presented materially false testimony at trial.
Reed, who is Black, has long denied killing Stites, who is White. Reed initially said he didn't know Stites, a supermarket worker, but later said he was having an affair with her and that they had consensual sex the day before her death. He continued to maintain he did not kill her.
Reed put forth numerous applications for his innocence since his conviction, primarily focusing on Stites's police officer fiancée Jimmy Fennell as the real killer. Reed claimed Fennell killed his fiancée out of jealousy fueled by her secret interracial affair.
Both men have histories of sexual violence against women. In 2007, Fennell was convicted of kidnapping and allegedly raping a woman while he was on duty as a police officer. He spent 10 years in prison for the crime.
The court acknowledged the behaviors could add to the theory that Fennell could have killed Stites but said Reed's legal team didn't provide enough concrete evidence that would convince the court in that direction. Most importantly, Fennell's misbehaviors didn't prove Reed's innocence, the court said, and he should have focused on explaining his own history of sexual violence.
Reed has been accused of six sexual assaults — and several of those assaults bore similarities to Stites's murder, the court said. In one allegation, his legal defense was that he was having a consensual sexual hidden affair, the opinion said. These allegations showed to the court, "evidence of Reed's extraneous conduct still casts a considerable pall over his claims of innocence."
At several points in the ruling, the court cited the evidence presented by Reed and his legal team as weak and not sufficient to persuade the court.
Claims put forth by Reed's team that Fennell and Stites had an abusive and controlling relationship was not the "kind of evidence one might expect from someone claiming to be able to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, a decades-old assertion about an engaged couple," the court said.
Reed's legal team also tried to show that Stites died several hours before 3 a.m. on April 23, 1996, when she was home alone with Fennell. This would have lent credence to Reed's claim that Fennell killed Stites, however, the court said the attorneys failed to present scientific evidence of Stites' death at the new alleged times. The science underlying time-of-death determinations have not changed much since the 1998 trial, the court said, and Reed's legal team didn't produce much new evidence, relying instead on "rough visual estimates" and "secondhand descriptions."
The ruling concluded that none of the information presented by Reed "affirmatively demonstrates Reed's innocence" or show that someone else committed the crime.
Reed has more legal obstacles ahead. In April, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Reed should have a chance to argue for testing of crime-scene evidence and sent the case back to lower courts, indicating the possibility of additional hearings in the future.
Reporting contributed by Erin Donaghue
- In:
- Death Penalty
- Texas
- Rodney Reed
Cara Tabachnick is a news editor for CBSNews.com. Contact her at cara.tabachnick@cbsinteractive.com
veryGood! (1634)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Remains of U.S. WWII pilot who never returned from bombing mission identified with DNA
- Cyclone that devastated Libya is latest extreme event with some hallmarks of climate change
- Jamie Lynn Spears Joins Dancing With the Stars Season 32 Cast
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Jets turn to Zach Wilson at quarterback in wake of Aaron Rodgers' injury
- New England Revolution refuse to train after Bruce Arena's resignation, per reports
- New iPhone 15 will use USB-C chargers: What to know about Apple's charging cord switch
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Danelo Cavalcante press conference livestream: Police give updates on search for Pennsylvania prisoner
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Truck loses wheel, bounces into oncoming I-70 traffic, strikes car window and kills woman
- Journalist sues NFL, alleging discrimination and racially charged statements by NFL owners
- McCarthy announces Biden impeachment inquiry, escalating GOP probes into family's business dealings
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Boy hit by police car on Long Island will be taken off life support, mother says
- Journalist sues NFL, alleging discrimination and racially charged statements by NFL owners
- Horoscopes Today, September 12, 2023
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
What’s ahead now that Republicans are opening an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden
El Chapo's wife set to be released from halfway house following prison sentence
NASA astronaut breaks record for longest trip to space by an American
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
A man freed after spending nearly 50 years in an Oklahoma prison for murder will not be retried
Venice may be put on the endangered list, thanks to human-created climate change
Second body recovered two weeks after boat sank in Lake Michigan