Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Cameron Todd Willingham -
Evidence Towards the Execution of an Innocent Man in Texas



Last Meal: Cameron Todd Willingham was among the first paintings I completed in my series of work protesting capital punishment in the United States.

Condemned to death in 1992 and executed in 2004 for the alleged murders of his three young children in a house fire, evidence of Todd Willingham's innocence was first publicly reported in the months following his death in a Chicago Tribune article in which noted fire investigators suggested the alleged arson was actually an accidental fire. Fast forward almost 5 years and David Grann's compelling New Yorker piece "Trial by Fire: Did Texas execute an innocent man?" may finally have created enough interest to have a long hoped for moratorium on executions declared in Texas - that most killing-est of states.

A Nightline report on September 17 finally brought the story to primetime television, and as you can see from the clip below, the response by Willingham prosecutor (and now Judge) John Jackson to expert interpretation of the facts is nothing short of chilling. With lawmen like this, it is a wonder that more innocent men aren't executed (and therein lies the argument for an immediate moratorium on executions in Texas, as well as throughout the United States.)



Learn more about the case and sign the petition asking Texas Governor Rick Perry to acknowledge Willingham's innocence or discover more about the particular issues informing the fight for a moratorium on executions in Texas.