A mentally retarded man who spent
a decade on Virginia's death row for a 1982 rape and murder received a
full pardon recently from Gov. Jim Gilmore after DNA tests cleared him
of the crime.
Earl Washington Jr., 40, whose death
sentenced was commuted in 1994, will not be released from jail. He will
continue to serve a 30-year sentence for beating a 73-year-old woman and
burglarizing her home in 1983.
Authorities also accused him of
using a gun stolen from the victim to shoot his brother, but he was never
convicted of the shooting.
The DNA tests found that semen taken
from the body of the victim, 19-year-old Rebecca L. Williams, did not match
Washington, the governor said. The tests also found that semen from a blanket
at the crime scene was that of a convicted rapist, whom authorities declined
to identify.
The two semen samples did not match.
Gilmore ordered state police to reopen the investigation into the slaying.
Washington was arrested following
the 1983 burglary and later confessed to the rape and murder of Williams
nearly a year earlier. He recanted his confession at trial, but was convicted
and sentenced to death.
In 1994, then-Gov. L. Douglas Wilder
commuted the sentence to life in prison as a result of DNA tests that showed
the presence of genetic material that belonged neither to Washington nor
the victim's husband.
That test, however, did not exclude
Washington. More sophisticated tests were able to prove conclusively that
the DNA did not belong to Washington.
At least 70 people in the United
States have been exonerated by DNA evidence since the technology became
available in the late 1980s, according to the New York-based Innocence
Project. In some cases, including that of a Texas inmate executed recently,
the tests have confirmed guilt.
Attorney Gerald Zerkin, who asked
Gilmore for the pardon, said he was disappointed that the governor did
not set a release date for Washington.
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