Feb 02 2009
IPOT Seeks First Posthumous DNA Exoneration in Texas
Later this week, Innocence Project of Texas attorneys will seek out the State’s first formal posthumous DNA exoneration. Timothy Cole, who always maintained his innocence for a 1985 sexual assault, was cleared by DNA evidence after dying in prison of asthma related heart complications. His family and the rape victim have now joined together to clear his name.
The Associated Press reports:
For Tim Cole’s family, a return to a courtroom this week renews hope they’ve clung to since he was convicted of rape more than two decades ago.
Cole and his relatives for years claimed he was innocent in the rape of a Texas Tech student in 1985. But until DNA from the crime scene was tested last year, no one else believed them.
That test showed another man, already imprisoned for rape, committed the crime for which Cole was sentenced to 25 years.
His family will ask an Austin judge on Thursday to overturn the conviction, but Cole won’t be with them. He died in prison in 1999 at age 38.
Cory Session, Cole’s brother, said the DNA test served its purpose.
“That’s vindication,” Session said. “We need exoneration. We are extremely hopeful that this process will actually get him cleared.”
It would be the first posthumous DNA exoneration in Texas, according to attorney Jeff Blackburn of the Innocence Project of Texas, paving the way for a pardon by the governor and, eventually, expunging Cole’s record.
To read the rest of the article, click here. For more information about the Cole case, click here.