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tv   Death Row Stories  CNN  March 27, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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will be found. the worry i have is, it may not solve the mystery. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com on this episode of "death row stories," a white woman is brutally murdered. >> blood splattered on the walls. >> the scene was just unbelievable. >> and a black man is arrested. >> his fingerprint was found. there were a number of hairs on the victim's bed. >> after a death sentence a law intern has her doubts. >> there was something wrong. i started seeing what the lies were. >> the case begins to unravel. >> there are those that have a hidden agenda. >> is it a fair trial
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if somebody lied? >> corruption is the theme of the day almost. >> there was no way i would let this case go. >> there's a body in the water. >> he was butchered and murdered. >> many people proclaim their innocence. >> in this case there are a number of things that stink. >> this man is remorseless. >> he needs to pay for it with his life. >> the electric chair flashed in front of my eyes. >> get a conviction at all costs. let the truth fall where it may. >> good evening. welcome to carolina. tonight we're coming to you from the city of greenwood, a diverse city and one that has the distinction of having the widest main street in the world. >> greenwood is a very small community. everybody seems to know everybody. we're related to everybody here. it is very tight knit. when the news came out about this horrendous murder, it was
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devastating. >> on a cold monday morning in 1982, the bruised and beaten body of 75-year-old dorothy edwards was discovered in this upscale home. >> dorothy edwards was just a loved woman in the community. she had been horribly killed. >> dorothy was known as a graceful and charming woman with a beautiful singing voice and a wonderful sense of humor. [ sirens ] >> the next door neighbor, mr. holloway, had noticed a couple of newspapers piled up and he went over to check on her. >> january 19th, 1982, inside the home holloway told police he found signs of struggle everywhere. a heavy glass ashtray on the
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living room floor, shallered. a pair of bloody ice tongs. dorothy edwards was found dead in her closet. >> the brutality of the crime scene, the blood, the way the body was, the stab wounds post mortem was just totally unbelievable. >> dorothy's body had 52 wounds, 11 broken ribs and abrasions on her vagina. >> the state forensic tape gathered what evidence was found inside the home. hair samples were found on the bed. blood at various places. outside there were some fingerprints. >> in a crime scene wiped clean of fingerprints, police believe the killer made a mistake. a thumbprint found on the backdoor. dorothy's neighbor james holloway told police that edward lee elmore, a 23-year-old handyman worked for dorothy from time to time. although he had never been convicted of a felony, police
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matched his fingerprints from other misdemeanor arrests and issued a warrant to bring him in. accusing him of murder and rape, among lesser charges. greenwood police went looking for elmore 36 hours after dorothy's body was found. >> i was working second shift with the detective division and the call came in saying the suspect was at ex-girlfriend mary's apartment. i went up and knocked on the door. >> the encounter was not what the detective expected. >> i told them that we had a warrant for his arrest. and i told him it was for murder. his demeanor at that time was so nonchalant. just, oh, okay, which is totally out of context for anybody i've ever dealt with before in a situation like that. no outburst or violent behavior. just, like, oh, well. >> police took hair and blood
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samples and placed them in the county jailhouse. even elmore's public defender had doubts about his innocence. >> many people will proclaim constantly their innocence and i cannot remember mr. elmore vociferously proclaiming his innocence and i got the feeling that there might be something for him to hide. >> elmore's case came to trial only 82 days after his arrest. prosecutors say dorothy had been killed saturday night when elmore was alone and had no alibi. >> you want to find out whether or not mr. elmore had any alibis. we found none. mr. elmore was not very cooperative. he wouldn't hardly talk to me. >> police found small spots of blood matching dorothy's blood type on elmore's pants and shoes. back in the '80s, dna analysis had not been developed. when dna was available it came
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back positive that it was the victim's blood. >> prosecutors also told the jury that dozens of elmore's pubic hairs were found on dorothy's bed. and finally, prosecutors presented james gilliam. a prison inmate who claimed to have heard elmore confess to the crime while in jail. >> that came out of nowhere. that just rocked me. mr. elmore told gilliam that i went down there to rob the lady and she started screaming and i killed her. that was the lynchpin. >> the jury took less than five hours to reach a verdict. elmore was convicted and sentenced to death. but the conviction was overturned on appeal. >> there was one juror who was reluctant to impose the death penalty. the trial judge went into the jury room and put pressure on the holdout juror to impose the death sentence. >> a new trial was ordered.
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same prosecutor, same defense attorneys, same outcome. a third trial was held to reconsider the sentence and again, the decision was unanimous. 36 jurors had determined that edward elmore should be put to death. 11 years later, a 34-year-old law student named diana holt came to the south carolina death penalty resource center as a summer intern. one of her first assignments was reviewing elmore's case. >> the first time i saw the name, i was reading through the transcript. >> diana started having suspicions that the conviction and trial wasn't fair. she was troubled that there were no expert witnesses and rarely challenged any of the prosecution's evidence. diana knew that an incompetent defense was grounds for an appeal.
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>> i felt like there was something wrong. i needed to meet eddie and give him an eyeball up and down. size him up. >> and who she met wasn't what she expected. >> meeting him, it's just this biggest, sweetest smile and he's so docile and gentle and quiet and happy. happy. how is he on death row and happy? it just didn't make any sense. there was no way i was going to let elmore's case go.
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the light ♪ >> when you trust god, no matter how bad it looks, it's not as bad as it seems because god is still in control. >> bishop spearman was pastor to edward lee elmore, the man accused of murdering dorothy edwards. >> i come to know edward in the late '70s. i pastored his home church. and his mother and i were best of friends. they didn't have a whole lot. >> one of 11 siblings, elmore's father was killed by a hit-and-run driver when elmore was 2. he grew up in dire poverty. >> he had a low i.q. i was a special ed teacher so i knew that he was slow.
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and when i went to greenwood jail and i spoke with him, he really didn't know why he was there. that bothered me. >> a hard worker, elmore got by on odd jobs like cleaning gutters and washing windows, including for dorothy edwards. when dorothy was murdered, age old fears and recrimination surfaced in the community. >> i know race plays a role when it come to the justice system. in greenwood, there are those that still have their agenda, but it is a hidden agenda. >> i'm positive that race played a factor in edward lee elmore's trials. make no mistake, i think that was because he was the black guy that they say killed an older white woman. >> searching through elmore's original trial, diana found potential grounds for appeal. her first target was public
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defender, geddes anderson, who seemed utterly unprepared to take on the case. >> i asked him, when did you start working on the case? eight dies before the trial began. that's zero time. you can't even read all of the evidence and assess it and crunch it. >> in retrospect perhaps i should have asked for more time. i never have proclaimed to be the best lawyer that ever graced the courtroom. >> overworked and underpaid, mr. anderson also had a reputation as a drinker. >> that's fair. that's a fair accusation. i have had certain, i guess you could say problems with it but i can say this categorically. i was totally clear-headed and not drinking during those trials, everyone one of them. on the other hand, i could go out on occasion. i'm not as bad as i used to be. >> in contrast, prosecutor
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william t. jones iii, known as willie t. was considered a master of the courtroom. >> willie t's track record spoke for itself. he lost very few. he was very dramatic. i've seen that man cry in front of the jury. >> mr. jones in the courtroom could probably outperform sir lawrence olivier. let's put it that way. >> he could overpower you, overcontrol you. he was not beyond saying things that he couldn't prove if they weren't challenged. >> early in the first trial anderson challenged jones by objects that a single thumbprint was not enough to arrest elmore. >> in order to obtain an arrest warmth, the police obtain an upside down thumb print on the back outside door frame. that's exactly consistent with cleaning the windows. cleaning the door. that is not probable cause in anywhere else in america that i'm aware of. but willie t. said, oh, well i'm
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glad you brought that up. the forensic pathologist let us know that she had located negroid pubic hairs on the victim's chest and abdomen. the defense shut their mouths and sat down. >> if elmore's hair had in fact been found on the body, this was a new and explosive claim, a claim that went unchallenged by geddes anderson. >> did you ask to see that evidence? >> you would have to look at the transcript to see. i don't know whether i did or not. >> awording to the transcript, you did not ask to see that evidence. why would you not have asked to see that evidence? that seems pretty important. >> well, i don't know how to answer that. i guess you'll have to take some non-answer to that question. >> mysteriously the pubic hair willie t. said was found on the body was never entered into evidence. as opposed to the hairs on the body, a separate group of 49 pubic hairs found on the bed
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also raised diana's doubts. >> a lot of people saw the 49-some pubic hairs allegedly collected from the victim's bed as the most damaging evidence against mr. elmore. but this item of evidence was a plain baggy like you put your kid's sandwiches in when you're packing their school lunch. not sealed with red evidence tape that says "evidence, do not tamper." this did not have that on there. >> the evidence bag contained 49 hairs. a number diana found suspiciously close to the number of hairs police pulled from elmore after his arrest. >> there was from what i understand about, 50 to 60 hairs that were collected, either being combed or pulled. >> but if elmore's hair had been found at the crime scene of the nearly 100 crime scene photographs, not a single photo showed hairs on the bed. >> any kind of evidence you collect at a crime scene, the
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first thing you do is photograph it. >> there was no pictures of the hair on the bed. there was pictures of everything except the most crucial evidence in the case. it became obvious to me something wasn't right. >> the only photo of the bed shows it covered with police camera equipment, contaminating any evidence. the question became, where did the hairs in the baggy come from? >> there was no question they pulled those hairs from his body. they pulled a lot of them. and i don't think they were ever on the bed. i believe it was planted. >> diana was starting to see a pattern. >> there was all this ineffective assistance of counsel. there was no basis of probable cause to arrest mr. elmore anyway. and there was no list of negroid pubic hairs in the original police inventory. there was no item like that. >> as diana dug deep entire the case, a new suspect began to emerge. she thought the next door
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neighbor who discovered dorothy's body had acted suspiciously. >> really? he put his gloves on before he went to open the door? that grabbed me right away.
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save hundreds on beautyrest. or choose $300 in free gifts with stearns & foster. the triple choice sale ends sunday at sleep train. in order to get a new trial for edward lee elmore, diana needed to find grounds to appeal when she finally read what elmore said in the original trial, she felt more determined than ever to fight back. >> i started reading eddie's testimony and it got me, yeah. and the more it went along, the more it got me.
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>> i remember when he was cross examined. for a long time, edward didn't say anything or testify. he just sat there as if, why am i here? why i am a going through this? >> you want the court to believe you're always there quiet, don't you? >> you asked me something. i answered. >> you want them to always believe you're real quiet and polite. yes, sir, no, sir. isn't that right? >> no, sir. >> he didn't understand what he was talking about. didn't understand how to defend himself or what to say. >> why did you hit her with this ashtray? >> i didn't hit her with it. >> why did you stick her with this knife? >> i didn't stick her with no knife, sir. >> tell us how it felt when she reached down and jerked these pubic hairs out of that area. hurt you, didn't it? >> she didn't jerk them off me. i was not there. >> she tried to get off the bed and get out of there. >> i wasn't there, sir. >> and you caught her and started pounding her with your fist. didn't you? >> no, sir. >> stomach and all? >> no, sir. >> did you kick her? >> no, sir.
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i was not there. >> that's all i have to ask you. >> in his closing argument to the jury, willie t. portrayed elmore as a sadistic killer who tortured his victim before beating her to death. but diana thought the depiction was highly prejudicial and the evidence riddled with holes. she also thought elmore had done well under the circumstances. >> even under withering cross-examination by the brilliant willie t., mr. elmore said what he has always said. i didn't do it. >> in order to solve the mystery of who did murder dorothy edwards, diana began looking for alternate suspects and she found one in the neighbor who discovered the body. james holloway. >> i read the testimony of james holloway and my head just about spun off my little spindly neck. i was like, wow! >> holloway had spent an unusually long period of time at
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the crime scene before calling the police. >> he goes inside dorothy edwards' house. he sees that wall of blood for the first time. but he doesn't call police. he decides that he's going to go to the other side neighbor and get her to come in the house with him. so he is at the closet door again and he decides to put gloves on. and then opens the door and lo and behold, there she was. really? he put his gloves on before he went to open the door? >> diana was also suspicious that holloway immediately told police who the perpetrator could be. >> he told law enforcement, you know, there was a boy here a couple weeks back who washed her windows. and if you get me her checkbook, i can get his name for you. and that was edward lee elmore. that boy. >> even more surprising was that the police allowed holloway, a possible suspect, to clean the
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crime scene the day after dorothy's body was found. >> law enforcement turned the crime scene over to jimmy holloway to clean up. he could do whatever he wanted in there. there was no law enforcement presence watching what happened. there was no preservation of the crime scene. >> diana needed answers so she drove 90 miles to greenwood, south carolina, and showed up unannounced at james holloway's front door. >> mrs. holloway answered the door. she led me into the den and he was sitting on his big overstuffed recliner. i introduced myself and he proceeded to tell me, well, you know, really, the only one that could kill her and get away with it was me, the way she trusted me.
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>> that was one of the toughest moments in my career of not reacting. holy -- he also told me that law enforcement suspected him because all the neighbors had told law enforcement that he and dorothy had been having an affair for the last 30 years. he told me that dorothy was supposed to go out of town that weekend because she claimed that this guy in north carolina was going to propose to her this weekend. but somehow she didn't get to go on that trip to north carolina that weekend. >> diana realized if holloway was having an affair with dorothy, the motive could be jealousy and holloway's detailed description of what might have happened also raised a rred fla for diana. >> he then starts telling me the story of what happened in her house as though he was an eyewitness. she was just sitting there on
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her settee watching tv. he just came in and he started on her. it took her a good 20 minutes to die. he just went on. and you didn't -- there wasn't any nudging or prompting. he was relishing talking about all of the things. it was a gully washer of dumbfoundedness that day. >> diana's suspicions about james holloway were never pursued. he passed away in 1994. by 1995, elmore had been on death row for more than 13 years, and he had seen many of his fellow inmates put to death. elmore's survival would depend on diana getting him a new trial. a process diana would launch only 98 days after passing her bar exam.
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by 1995, diana was ready to present evidence pointing to edward elmore's innocence to a state court in south carolina. the goal was to get a new trial for elmore. diana would be join by chris jensen for what would be her first hearing as a lawyer. >> she was very fierce. she had not the slightest doubt
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about eddie elmore's innocence. she was determined to make sure that i did my job. >> the state was represented by donald zelenka who reportedly once argued that women who had abortions in the third trimester could be executed for murder. and elmore's fate would be decided by judge ernest kinard. one of the first witnesses called was james gilliam, the inmate who said elmore confessed to him in jail. in the small town of greenwood, both elmore and gilliam knew bishop spearman. and before the hearing, gilliam told spearman the truth. >> james gilliam and i go back i guess all our life. one night he called me and he will me, i lied and my conscience is bothering me. >> gilliam said he made a deal with the prosecutor to testify against elmore in exchange for release from prison. with elmore facing the electric chair, he felt bad about what he
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had done. >> i said, james, make it right. i got excited. i felt like once this come out, that ed would be free. >> gilliam said the testimony that i gave in these prior trials was false. that he made up this story to try to get better treatment for himself on his criminal sentence. >> gilliam would go on to state that the only thing elmore had ever said was that he didn't kill dorothy edwards. but diana's team also felt they needed to refute dorothy edwards' time of death which the medical examiner had placed on saturday night during the only hours elmore had no alibi. diana hired forensic expert jonathan arden. >> in my opinion the victim died in the early afternoon on sunday. that time frame makes sense with the rigor mortis, the lack of decomposition. but when the state medical examiner was asked, why did you recommend that the time of death
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be 65 hours prior to the time of discovery? given all the evidence of the rigor mortis, the lack of decomposition, she said under oath, because that's what they told me. that's when the police told me they thought it happened. >> even with all the evidence in elmore's favor, diana and jensen knew biggest hurdle would be explaining the blood on elmore's pants to the court. >> blood that was supposedly found on pants and shoes matched the blood type of mrs. edwards. this was difficult testimony to rebut. >> as jensen cross-examined the state's blood expert, she made a key discovery. evidence lists showed elmore's panther had passed through eight different people before the trial. >> i jumped out of my chair. i start whispering to chris jensen, ask him what this means and who these people are and what that is supposed to represent. >> one name on the list jumped out at diana. thomas henderson was a state
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police agent who grew up across the street from dorothy edwards and james holloway and was friendly with both. >> tom henderson had nothing to do with forensic investigation at all. nothing. he wasn't supposed to be involved in the case any way. because these were people he knew his whole life long. >> there was really no reason for him to have removed these things from the laboratory. we were arguing that this evidence had in all likelihood been tampered with and quite conceivably that mrs. edwards' blood had been put on the garments. >> it would now be up to the judge to rule whether or not elmore deserved a new trial. the decision would take four months to come down. >> we presented all this great evidence. we're very excited. we're stoked. then comes the judge's order and the cover letter said, edward lee elmore may well not be guilty. but that will be for an appellate court to find.
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>> the judge had left elmore's fate up to other judges to decide. >> i became literally became hysterical. completely sobbing, running, i threw it at john blume. and he was, what the hell is the matter with you? >> john blume had assigned elmore's case to diana as an intern. >> i was stunned. i had really expected that he would grant relief because they had presented a compelling case of mr. elmore's innocence. >> diana was discovering that proving mr. elmore's innocence was not enough. to get a new trial, elmore's team would have to prove that elmore's constitutional rights had been violated. >> a person can be innocent but as long as they get a fair trial, that's all they're entitled to. well, that begs the question. is it a fair trial if somebody has lied? >> diana's team immediately appealed the judge's decision to
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the south carolina supreme court. in the meantime, the state prosecutor, donald zelenka had discovered that diana had a secret that if exposed to destroy her career and damage elmore's case. he would soon call her to a deposition. >> he asked, have you ever done anything in the course of your life that would reflect poorly on the legal profession? and i said, yes.
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while edward lee elmore sat on death row waiting for his appeal to move forward, diana holt took on other death penalty cases. in one she was able to get a last-minute stay of execution. he dug through her past looking for anything to get her off the case. in april 2000, he called her to a deposition. >> it was at the attorney general's office. there were six attorneys across the table from me and all of them lined up like this. looking. don zelenka asked, have you ever done anything in the course of your life that would reflect
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poorly on the legal profession? and i said, yes. >> diana feared if her story became public it would ruin her reputation and destroy elmore's chances for a new trial. ♪ in 1975 at the age of 17, diana ran away to new orleans with a few friends. >> it was a horrible time. my sister had been taken away by the state of texas. it had to do with sexual abuse that i suffered. i was 17. i didn't know how to deal with stuff like that. so i left. i met these three people. went to new orleans with them and after a little bit, i wanted to go home. i didn't have any money and there was a plan. so i went to the french quarter, started talking to this guy.
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and the ruse was that i would exchange sex for money. we left bourbon street together, got in his car and one of the two guys came in. he got on the passenger side. i was scrunched in the middle. >> diana's friend pulled a gun and demanded money. the driver gave them $60. they jumped out of the car and ran. >> made it about three blocks. pulled over by the new orleans police department, up against the wall. the victim was a u.s. marshal. it's like dumb and dumber a little bit. what do you expect from an air head 17-year-old. i pled guilty to armed robbery and off i went to the louisiana correctional institute for women. one day, the prosecutor in my case came to the prison to visit and he said, i just want you to
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know that you don't have to be what you did that day, and you can make it, and you can be somebody. and i'm still -- why wouldn't every prosecutor want to do that? >> diana began studying in the prison's law library, researching cases of fellow inmates and sending letters to the presiding judges. she even had one woman's sentence reduced. >> doing the few things that did that made an impact, it was like i want more of that. i want to do more of that. i want to help people like that >> a model prisoner, diana was released in october of 1977 with a full pardon.
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the whole episode became a distant memory until donald zelenka confronted her with it nearly 25 years later. >> i was like, you know what? you opened the door. i'm walking through it. let's do this. i'm going to tell it all. not just the part you want to hear. >> the judge in the case visibly disgusted by zelenka's tactic disallowed the deposition. diana could continue her fight for elmore's life. at elmore's trial, the prosecutor had claimed that negroid hair had been found on dorothy edward's body. when the defense petitioned to see the hair, it had gone missing. now 16 years later, the hair suddenly turned up. >> the prosecution has an obligation to turn over to the defense anything which is favorable. in this case, they didn't do it at the time of trial. >> as it turns out, none of the hairs were negroid at all. they were all caucasian hair, and they did not belong to mr. elmore.
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>> that should be sufficient to warrant a new trial. >> we got all excited to ask the judge to set a hearing. it was december 21st. we were going to have christmas beyond all christmases. >> on december 21st, 2000, a new hearing was held. if a new trial were to be granted, elmore could be released on bail and join his family for the holidays after more than 18 years on death row. judge ernest kinard presided, the same judge who had stated elmore may well be not guilty. >> lab corps has sent us a report indicating there are hairs from someone other than dorothy edwards and there were no hairs of anyone of african-american descent. >> he acknowledged the evidence should have been given to the defense but argued only one of the hairs found on dorothy's
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body had sufficient dna to read. >> we do not dispute the materials from the victim's body at the time of the autopsy. one hair, not hairs. one hair. >> it was merely another hair in the bedroom of mrs. edwards. >> this is a completely different case than what the jury heard. in the final analysis, the question really is if not now, when? if this is not enough to grant somebody a new trial, then when is post conviction relief ever appropriate? >> unexpectedly, rather than adjourn and read the filings before ruling, the judge issued his decision on the spot. >> all motions are denied. >> the judge said, one hair is not enough. i'm out of here. >> in this case, there are a number of things that stink and if you look at it as a whole, it doesn't just stink, it reeks. >> an execution date was set for elmore. he was placed in a high security
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lockdown cell while awaiting his date with the electric chair. now a mere three weeks away. >> i tried my hardest to get him ready for it. and he called me one day and he said, are they going to kill me? i think i told him in the most simple terms could i tell him, that they were going to have to take me out first.
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after 22 years on death row, edward elmore was in lockdown, a special holding cell for inmates awaiting execution. with only 23 days to go, diana filed a last-minute appeal and got a stay of execution. but this was only a temporary solution. if elmore was to survive, they would need a new strategy. >> the supreme court issued a landmark death penalty decision. >> and a supreme court decision from 2002 gave them an opportunity. >> in a stunning reversal, of course, the u.s. supreme court ruled executing mentally disabled criminals is unconstitutional. >> the question was whether
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elmore was in fact mentally disabled. >> he was tested. and the state department of disabilities and special needs finds that edward lee elmore is mentally retarded. >> elmore's death sentence was commuted to life in prison. after nearly 28 years, elmore was finally leaving death row. [ screaming ] >> sorry, that's exactly what i did. i get mr. elmore on the phone. i say, eddie, you're going to be leaving death row. "i'm not going to die?" no, well, not there. >> elmore's life had been spared. but diana hadn't fought for years to see elmore die behind bars. her team had one last hope to get him a new trial. the u.s. fourth circuit court of appeals would be the highest court ever to hear elmore's case. >> the fourth circuit has the reputation of being the most
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conservative federal appellate court in the country. so we felt our chances of prevailing were very slight. >> in yet another face-off with donald zelenka, the fourth circuit's three-judge panel heard oral arguments in september of 2010, and remarkably, they came down hard on zelenka. >> the time of death, we were locking it down because the defendant was seen at 9:30 heading towards that direction. >> locking down the time of death based on his alibi. i thought you locked down time of death by science. >> the judge have moral righteous indignation in their voices and what they're saying. >> you put in evidence there was hairs found on the bed there was a big part of the conviction? >> yes, it was. >> not one photograph was taken of the bed where these hairs were supposed to be. does that make sense? >> well, i don't know. >> do you think that makes a difference now that we know he is mentally retarded? >> no, not at all. >> in this case, this is just a constellation of problems. >> even though the judges seem to be raising some serious questions, i came out of the argument feeling negative about
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our prospects. i didn't think the court had much incentive to overturn his conviction. >> we didn't hear anything for month after month. 14 months went by. and then i get an e-mail in my inbox. heart stops. i start hyperventilating. i clicked on it, and the opinion is 190-something pages long. and where is the good part? >> the most conservative appellate court in the nation had ruled 2-1 that elmore deserved a new trial. >> everyone in the death penalty community, what happened? we don't win like that, and not there. but we did. >> the state was reluctant to retry the case, knowing the evidence the defense had unearthed could implicate both police and prosecutors. so they offered elmore a plea bargain. >> and the prosecutor asked is there anything short of outright
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dismissal of all charges that we can do to settle this matter? and i said, in fact there is. he goes free at the bond hearing, and he is going to continue to say the truth he said all of these years, i'm innocent. and the prosecutor said, okay. >> but the plea required that elmore say in open court that the state could likely prove their charges against him at a trial. it wasn't the exoneration they were hoping for, but it would mean freedom. >> new tonight, he was once on death row. now he is a free man. after 30 years, edward elmore was released from prison today. >> oh, thank the lord. give me a minute -- i'm a little overwhelmed right now. >> i mean, so excited. i couldn't hardly speak. locked up all them years something i didn't do, and comes along, she believed in me.
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>> were you afraid of dying? >> not in a way, but like i say, i knew the truth would eventually come out, right. so that's -- that's kept me going. it kept my faith right, and just taking it one day at a time. that's all you can do, you know, and hope and pray that everything come out all right. >> mr. elmore had been incarcerated for 11,000 days. the judge told mr. elmore that he had exhausted his sentence and he was free to go. you are free to go, mr. elmore. >> we could walk him out that door of the courtroom and down those steps as a free man. and that was -- i'm sorry. that was the best moment of my life as an attorney.
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>> elmore moved back in with his sister, and has begun the process of adjusting to a world very different from the one he left. >> there you go. >> so much had changed, you know, since -- trying to get used to everything. still trying to adjust to things. it's so technical, right, phones and computers and l that stuff. it's really, really hard. i'm trying to learn how, you know. i'm trying to cope with it. >> eddie's case taught me a lot of things about our justice system. it taught me to be distrustful, skeptical. geography can make the difference. money, of course. gender, of course. race is the one that is just a dagger to the heart. but it also taught me to never give up on it. that even 30 years later, someone will listen.
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as long as you don't give up, justice is possible. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com

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