Lease this WebApp and get rid of the ads.
Britta
Jeff Wood Faces Death Tomorrow for a Murder He didn't commit
Wed Aug 20, 2008 5:41am
70.212.221.154 (XFF: unknown)

Stop the Execution: Jeff Wood Faces Death Tomorrow for a Murder He
Didn't Commit
By Liliana Segura, AlterNet
Posted on August 20, 2008, Printed on August 20, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/95690/

Imagine being 14 years old and waiting to learn whether your father
is going to live or die. Only you're not in a hospital waiting room,
or anticipating dreadful news from a war zone. You are in Texas, and
your father is on death row. His life is in the hands of seven people
who will sit around a table and, in a deliberate manner, officially
decide whether he should, indeed, be strapped to a gurney and
injected with lethal chemicals tomorrow, as planned. On the narrow
chance that they decide to grant clemency, it is then up to the
governor, a man who has signed off on more executions than any other
in the country, to follow through.

This is what Paige Lynn Wood went through all day yesterday, which
also happened to be her father's 34th birthday. In the end, her worst
fears were realized: On Monday afternoon, the board decided, in a
vote of 7-0, to execute her father, Jeff Wood. Wood is scheduled to
die by lethal injection Thursday night for a murder he did not
commit. It's not just that he has a strong innocence claim, or that
his state-appointed council was completely incompetent during his
capital trial. The fact is, Wood did not kill anyone -- and no one
argues that he did. The person who committed the murder for which he
is scheduled to die was already executed, six years ago.

The Crime, an Overzealous Prosecutor and a Man Named "Dr. Death"

On New Years Day 1996, 22-year-old Jeff Wood was in on a plot to rob
a Texaco convenience store in Kerrville, Texas, along with a man
named Daniel Reneau. The store's assistant manager was an accomplice
in the robbery: He was going to help Reneau navigate the store. But
things didn't go according to plan, and in the early hours of Jan. 2,
Reneau shot their friend Kriss Keeran, who was working behind the
counter, in the face, killing him instantly.

Wood was startled when he heard the gunshot, but he reportedly helped
carry out the subsequent robbery anyway, stealing several thousand
dollars. He and Reneau were arrested within 24 hours. They confessed
to the crime, and Wood led police to the murder weapon.

While it remains unclear to what extent Wood was supposed to
participate in the robbery, what is absolutely undisputed is that
Wood had no role in Keeran's murder. According to his attorneys, he
was not even aware that Reneau was carrying a gun. After all, the
robbery was supposed to be an inside job. As reiterated in the
clemency brief filed by Wood’s defense attorneys early this month,
"Reneau -- the only person inside the store and who carried a weapon
-- alone made the decision to take Keeran's life. Mr. Wood was
outside the store in his brother's truck."

Months later, during the trial of Daniel Reneau, there was no
ambiguity over who had killed Keeran. According to Jordan Smith of
the Austin Chronicle, "the state argued that he was responsible for
Keeran's murder and portrayed Wood as little more than a sap,
steamrolled by the villainous Reneau."

Renaeu was sentenced to death in March 1997. He was executed in 2002.
Following the execution, the Dallas Morning News reported that when
"asked on death row last week to identify the shooter, Reneau had a
one-word reply: 'Me.'"

Having locked in a death sentence for Reneau, it should have defied
logic and legal ethics for prosecutors to change the story to make
Wood the real villain. But that's what happened. "At Wood's trial,"
reports Smith, "prosecutors reversed their strategy, arguing that
Wood deserved to die because he'd gotten Reneau to 'do his dirty work.'"

Wood's defense lawyers were useless. "Bowing to Mr. Wood's emotional
and irrational insistence, Mr. Wood's appointed lawyers declined to
cross-examine any witnesses or present any evidence on Mr. Wood's
behalf," his appeals attorneys argue. "Mr. Wood's trial attorneys
called Mr. Wood's actions a 'gesture of suicide.'" If anything, it
was an assisted suicide. Reports Smith, "not only did (Wood's
defense) withhold from the jury evidence of his troubled youth, but
they also failed to cross-examine any state witnesses, including the
wildly speculative testimony of Dr. James Grigson -- derisively known
by many, including colleagues in the psychiatric community, as 'Dr.
Death' for predictably offering testimony in capital cases that a
defendant would pose a danger to society, one of the questions a jury
must decide in order to impose a death sentence." (In 1995, Grigson
was kicked out of the American Psychiatric Association and Texas
Society of Psychiatric Physicians for "flagrant ethical violations.")

Thus, one year after Renaeu was given a death sentence for killing
Keeran, Wood, despite not having been present to witness the murder,
was given a death sentence for the same crime.

The Case of Kenneth Foster Jr.

The case of Jeff Wood may sound beyond the pale, even for the state
that carries out more executions than any other jurisdiction in the
country, but it is by no means the first time the state of Texas has
tried to kill two people for a murder committed by one person. In
fact, at this same time last year, Kenneth Foster Jr. faced execution
in a case with striking similarities to Jeff Wood's. Foster was
convicted and sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of Michael
LaHood Jr., despite the fact that the actual murder had been
committed by another man.

Foster was 19 years old and acting as the "getaway driver" in a
series of robberies when one of the people in the car, a man named
Mauriceo Brown, shot and killed LaHood, the son of a prominent
attorney, at the end of the night. Foster was 80 feet away -- like
Hood, waiting in the car -- when Brown pulled the trigger. He had the
windows rolled up and was unaware that a murder was taking place.
Mauriceo Brown admitted to the murder; he was executed in 2006.

Last year, Foster's life was saved by a grassroots movement to stop
his execution. At the center of the public outcry was the injustice
of a legal statute, one that, in its application, is uniquely Texan.

An Unjust Law

Foster and Wood were both sentenced under Texas's "law of parties,"
which is a twist on a conspiracy statute that allows a defendant to
be held accountable for a crime even if he or she did not commit it.
As I explained in writing about the Foster case last summer, in the
state of Texas, "this can mean sentencing someone to death even if he
or she had no proven role in a murder."

Texas's law states that "if, in the attempt to carry out a conspiracy
to commit one felony, another felony is committed by one of the
conspirators, all conspirators are guilty of the felony actually
committed, though having no intent to commit it." Defendants, the
Texas courts say, can be held responsible for "failing to anticipate"
that the "conspiracy -- in Foster's case, the robberies, for which he
was the getaway driver -- would lead to a murder.
In Wood's case, the murder was also unplanned. Thus, he too is to be
executed for "failing to anticipate" that someone would be killed.

Family Victims

As he faced execution, Foster shared something else in common with
Wood: He had a young daughter who was a courageous voice of protest
on behalf of her father. At a July 2007 rally, 11-year-old Nydesha
Foster read from an essay about her father. "They hate on my dad
because they say, 'he should have known better.' Are they following
the law to the letter? Or the letter to the law?" She continued:

I stand as a child in the light of redemption. I benefit from his
kisses and what he does even when people don't look or listen. So
what is justice? Shame on you, Texas, because this time you're really
wrong. This is my poem, my prayer, my song. That you will be known
for something other than killing and ignoring the truth. We all make
mistakes. Even you.
You can watch it here.

Like Nydesha, Paige Lynn Wood has stood in public to defend the life
of her father. Pictures of her and other family members at rallies,
making signs and approaching the governor's mansion can be found on
the Save Jeff Wood Web site. So can her poetry.

One of her poems is called "Waiting."

I sit and wait … And wonder/I have been waiting my whole life

All the time wondering … Is my daddy coming home?
One is titled "Texas Took My Dad."

My dad is not the killer/That you are led to believe he is.

He is a kind and gentle soul who only tried to do/What he believed
was best for me

... And for those of you/Who want to kill my dad …

For shame, for shame/It's you who are now to blame/for taking away my
life!


Tell Gov. Rick Perry Not to Execute Jeff Wood

Jeff Wood's supporters are urging the governor of Texas to grant a 30-
day stay of execution. Call or fax the governor today:

Phone: (512) 463-2000

Fax: (512) 463-1849



© 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/95690/

Lease this WebApp and get rid of the ads.
  • Those Who Are About to Die Your Texas death machine gets rolling once again By Jordan Smith A Nation of Laws? Scheduled for Execution Aug. 5: José Medellín There is no doubt that the crime for which... more
    • Critics have argued that Texas' use of the law of parties unconstitutionally broadens the field of death-eligible defendants; the death penalty, they argue, should be reserved for the most culpable... more
      • Illegal immigrant from Honduras facing execution By MICHAEL GRACZYK Associated Press Writer © 2008 The Associated Press Aug. 6, 2008, 11:33AM HUNTSVILLE, Texas — When Heliberto Chi showed up at a... more
        • Honduras seeks to block citizen's US execution The Associated Press Wednesday, August 6, 2008 TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras: The Honduran government says it is lobbying U.S. authorities to stop Thursday's... more
          • Order Motion for stay of execution denied http://www.cca . courts.state. tx.us/opinions/HTMLopinionInfo. asp?OpinionID=17179 Concurring Statement by Judge Price http://www.cca . courts.state.... more
            • Court clears way for another immigrant's execution By MICHAEL GRACZYK – 2 hours ago HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — An illegal immigrant from Honduras who claimed his treaty rights were violated when he was ... more
              • UPDATE: Execution of Honduran allowedBritta, Thu Aug 7 8:32pm
                UPDATE: Execution of Honduran allowed Thursday, August 7th, 2008 1:24 pm | Lyle Denniston | UPDATE 4:30 p.m. Without recorded dissent, the Supreme Court on Thursday afternoon refused to delay the... more
                • Texas executes Honduran immigrantBritta, Thu Aug 7 8:56pm
                  Texas executes Honduran immigrant after Supreme Court decides in its favor By MICHAEL GRACZYK | Associated Press Writer 7:11 PM CDT, August 7, 2008 HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) _ An illegal immigrant from... more
                  • Execution Report by Gloria RubacBritta, Fri Aug 8 2:58am
                    Fellow Abolitionists, Tonight, Texas again did the unthinkable---it ignored the international law that guarantees someone arrested in a foreign country the right to see a representative of their... more
                    • Reflections of a cold blooded murder! Heliberto Chi by Capital X Yesterday was a day I will not soon forget. About 5pm I arrived at the Walls Unit in Huntsville, Texas to protest yet another... more
                      • Texas executions break international lawBritta, Fri Aug 15 9:52am
                        Texas executions break international law By Gloria Rubac Houston Published Aug 14, 2008 11:10 PM In April, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Baze v. Rees that the three drugs used in lethal injections... more
                        • Texas Executes a Mexican Citizen Despite a Breach of the Vienna Convention: A Decision that Undermines America's International Standing and Commitment to the Rule of Law By EDWARD LAZARUS Thursday,... more
      • please help to save Jeff WoodBritta, Thu Jul 31 6:54am
        Media Advisory For immediate release: July 29, 2008 Contacts: Terri Been B.S., M. Ed, Sister of Jeff Wood mystrus@hotmail.com 254-371-5650 Scott Cobb, President Texas Moratorium Network 512-689-1544... more
        • more info about the caseBritta, Thu Aug 7 8:39pm
          My husband, Jeff Wood, is on Texas Death Row. He is sentenced for a crime that happened back in 1996. He did NOT kill anyone though. He was actually outside of the place where it all happened. He was ... more
          • Texas v Jeffery WoodBritta, Thu Aug 7 9:04pm
            Texas v Jeffery Wood http://www.texasdefender.org/index.asp The Texas Defender Service, along with attorney Scott Sullivan, has filed a clemency petition with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles... more
            • Jeff Wood executionKLM, Thu Aug 21 12:43pm
              Jeff Wood was a pissant criminal boob, and the world is better off without him. If he had chosen to get a job instead of putting himself voluntarily in a criminal undertaking, he would never have... more
              • Jeff WoodsHelonwheels, Sun Aug 19 4:27pm
                I am with you on this one! What I want to know is how come these people who fight against the death penalty are so naive to really believe stories of death row inmates? They did not get on death row... more
                • Re: Jeff WoodsAnonymous, Mon Aug 20 2:21am
                  Did u even ever think some of these people are innocent? IF it were you or someone you love were in tHat horrible place uou would feel differently
                  • Re: Jeff WoodsHelonwheels, Mon Aug 20 3:43am
                    Yes I have thoughts on both levels the question is have you? This country is out of control and it is more likely that it will get worse. Are we to stand around and watch more people become... more
            • The cousin of Kris Keeran (the murder victim) wants to save the life of Jeff Wood: "My cousin was the person killed by Danny, not Jeff. I say this as a family member who realized long ago Jeff had no ... more
              • I am sorry for your loss Amanda. But I am a bit confused about this statement posted by Jeff's sister in an article: "At no point in time did Jeff ever plan to kill anybody. Jeff was threatened by... more
              • I cannot belive I have never seen this post before now. Kriss is also a 1st cousin of mine and I think they were both responsible. Jeff is just as guilty as Daniel because he assisted in the robbery. ... more
          • What is the Law of Parties?Britta, Thu Aug 7 8:41pm
            What is the Law of Parties? Penal Code: 1.02 Objectives of Code (1) to insure the public safety through: B. the rehabilitation of thise convicted of violations of this code; and C. such punishment as ... more
            • PARTIES AND THE US SUPREME COURTBritta, Thu Aug 7 8:43pm
              PARTIES AND THE US SUPREME COURT The US Supreme Court held that imposition of the death penalty on a person who aids and abets a felony in the course of which a murder is committed by others but who... more
              • Texas Man Who Didn't Kill to Will Be Executed Jeff Wood Didn't Kill Kris Keeran, but He Is Set to Be Executed for Keeran's Death By SCOTT MICHELS Aug. 8, 2008 — Texas is scheduled to put a man to... more
                • Wood seeks reprieveBritta, Mon Aug 11 7:22pm
                  Wood seeks reprieve By Caleb Chapman The Daily Times Published August 9, 2008 Jeffery Lee Wood does not deserve to die. That’s the plea made in an application to the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole ... more
                  • Ramsey Clark's letter for JeffBritta, Tue Aug 12 8:23pm
                    Friends-- Here is the letter than Ramsey promised me he would write for Jeff. I think it is very good, very persuasive. I had to get a box of Kleenex when I read it because Ramsey mentions the case... more
                    • Ramsey Clark's letter for JeffBritta, Tue Aug 12 8:24pm
                      RAMSEY CLARK LAWRENCE W. SCHILLING 37 WEST 12TH STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10011 212-989-6613 212-979-1583 FAX August 12, 2008 The Honorable Rick Perry Governor, State of Texas State Capitol, Room 2S.I... more
                      • Wednesday, August 13, 2008 Mike Farrell Writes Letter Asking for Clemency for Jeff Wood From: Mike Farrell August 11, 2008 Ms. Rissie Owens, Chair Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles 8610 Shoal Creek... more
                        • Should murder accomplices face execution?Britta, Wed Aug 13 8:35am
                          Should murder accomplices face execution? By John Gramlich, Stateline.org Staff Writer An execution last month in Mississippi and another scheduled for this month in Texas have reignited a debate... more
                          • Defense Lawyers Try to Halt ExecutionBritta, Thu Aug 14 9:07am
                            Defense Lawyers Try to Halt Execution By Jordan Smith Since Texas reinstated the death penalty in 1976, only six people have been executed for a murder in which they did not directly participate,... more
                            • Death and TexasBritta, Thu Aug 14 3:42pm
                              Death and Texas Governor Rick Perry and his state's flawed judicial system are now executing convicts for crimes they did not Maura Kelly guardian.co.uk, Thursday August 14 2008 18:30 BST Texans - or ... more
                              • Enmund v. Florida - from WikipediaBritta, Thu Aug 14 3:49pm
                                Enmund v. Florida was a 5-4 decision in which the United States Supreme Court applied its capital proportionality principle to set aside the death penalty for the driver of a getaway car in a... more
                                • Sanders: Another execution is scheduled under flawed law-of-parties provision By BOB RAY SANDERS bobray@star-telegram.com August 17, 2008 Make a note of this name: Jeffery Lee Wood. And this date:... more
                                  • update from GloriaBritta, Mon Aug 18 7:31pm
                                    Abolition Movement Members and Friends, I just got a call from Kristin Wood and she said to let you know that the meeting with the chair of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, Rissie Owens, went... more
                                    • Texas Death Row: Where Innocence is Irrelevant On August 21, Texas will execute Jeff Wood for the murder of Kris Keeran, even though there is a consensus that Wood did not murder, intend to murder,... more
                                      • Editor's note: Please contact Gov. Perry and asked him to grant clemency for Jeff Wood ! Mailing Address Office of the Governor P.O. Box 12428 Austin, Texas 78711-2428 Delivery Address Office of the... more
                                        • Parole board rejects clemency for non-triggerman 05:34 PM CDT on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 Associated Press HUNTSVILLE, Texas - The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday rejected a clemency... more
                                          • Jeff Wood Faces Death Tomorrow for a Murder He didn't commit — Britta, Wed Aug 20 5:41am
                                            • CCA Opinion on Jeff Wood todayBritta, Wed Aug 20 2:00pm
                                              IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-75,970 JEFFERY LEE WOOD, Appellant v. THE STATE OF TEXAS ON MOTION FOR APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL AND REQUEST FOR PREPAYMENT OF FUNDS TO RETAIN MENTAL... more
                                              • Thursday, Aug 21, 2008 Posted on Thu, Aug. 21, 2008 Federal judge delays execution of condemned inmate By JUAN A. LOZANO Associated Press Writer A federal judge on Thursday delayed the execution of a ... more
                                                • Federal Judge, Chastising the Texas Courts, Orders a Stay of Execution By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr. HOUSTON — With only hours until his scheduled execution, a man won a stay Thursday when a federal judge ... more
                                                  • Jeffrey Wood loses appealBritta, Sat Mar 21 6:07pm
                                                    Condemned prisoner loses appeal A Texas death row inmate who came within hours of execution last summer has lost an appeal in a federal appeals court where his lawyers argued he's too mentally ill to ... more
                                                    • read the opinion hereBritta, Sat Mar 21 6:08pm
                                                      http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/unpub/09/09-70011.0.wpd.pdf
Click here to receive daily updates