John,

Last night, Texas executed our client Larry Swearingen despite credible evidence of the innocence he maintained for almost 20 years on death row and including his last moments.

His final words were a gesture of forgiveness to the state officials who took his life:

“Lord forgive them. They don't know what they are doing."

Photo: Jan. 7, 2009 Larry Swearingen at the death row facility in Livingston, Texas. (AP Photo/Mike Graczyk, File)
Larry liked to draw, play chess, and listen to the Houston Symphony Orchestra on the radio. He wrote holiday cards to the prison staff every year, and maintained both a resilient sense of hzumor and a faith that his innocence would eventually be recognized. 

This is not the first time Texas has executed someone despite overwhelming evidence of innocence, and it may not be the last as long as wrongful convictions remain widespread and the courts remain more interested in finality than truth, even with a human life at stake. 

In Larry's case, the state refused to reopen his murder conviction despite extensive evidence of innocence, which you can read about here: the absence of his DNA at the crime scene and presence of blood from another unidentified man under the victim's fingernail; forensic testimony that is scientifically baseless and would not be permitted today; and the analysis of numerous pathologists that concluded the victim's time of death occurred when Larry had been in jail for weeks because of unpaid parking tickets. 

The Innocence Project advocates for a nationwide moratorium on the death penalty because of the intolerably and unconscionably high risk of executing an innocent person—as illustrated by the 165 people exonerated in the United States after being sentenced to death. 

Today, we are thinking of Larry and his family and all those affected by the refusal to pursue the truth in this case. You can read more of our team’s remembrances of his life here.

At this unspeakably painful moment and always, we thank you for being with us in our efforts to pursue justice for our clients and seek a system where taking an innocent life is not possible 

Thank you for your support. 

—Innocence Project Team 
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Started in 1992 as a legal clinic at Cardozo School of Law, the Innocence Project is now an independent nonprofit, affiliated with Cardozo, that exonerates the wrongly convicted through DNA testing and reforms the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice.
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