Willie Manning, Mississippi Death Row Inmate, Granted New Trial

Death Row Inmate In Mississippi Granted New Trial
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FILE-The Mississippi Supreme Court blocked the Tuesday, May 7, 2013 execution of death row inmate Willie Jerome Manning, shown in this Sept. 16, 2010 Mississippi Department of Corrections provided photograph taken at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman, Miss. Manning had been set to die by injection shortly after 6 p.m. CDT at the state prison for the 1992 slayings of two college students. The court said the execution should be delayed until it rules further on the case. The FBI has said in recent days that there were errors in agent's testimony about ballistics tests and hair analysis in the 1994 case. (AP Photo/Mississippi Department of Corrections)

The Mississippi Supreme Court has ordered a new trial for death row inmate Willie Manning after it found the state withheld evidence that would have been favorable to Manning's defense.

Manning, 46, has been on death row since he was convicted and sentenced to death in 1996 for killing 90-year-old Emmoline Jimmerson and her daughter, 60-year-old Alberta Jordan, during a robbery attempt. The women were found bludgeoned to death, their throats slit, at a Starkville, Mississippi apartment complex in 1993.

"[T]he State violated Manning’s due-process rights by failing to provide favorable, material evidence," wrote Presiding Justice Michael K. Randolph in the majority opinion of the court's 7-2 ruling Thursday.

Manning's case now goes back to trial court.

His appeal centered around the withholding of a series of index cards with notes from the crime scene investigation. Starkville Police investigators canvassed the apartment complex where the women were killed and recorded the results of those interviews on the cards. According to Manning's defense attorneys, information on the cards shows that the apartment from which the state's key witness claims to have seen Manning enter the victims' home was actually vacant at the time.

That witness, Kevin Lucious, is serving two life sentences without parole in Missouri. He was the only eyewitness to testify that he saw Manning enter the victims' apartment; no witnesses testified to seeing him leave, according to court records. The Supreme Court's ruling states that the index cards don't list Lucious or his girlfriend as a resident of any of the apartments that were canvassed during the investigation, though a dissenting judge noted that Lucious was known to frequent the apartment complex and was "likely squatting" in the unit.

The cards weren't provided to the district attorney's office or to Manning's defense attorneys, according to the decision.

"There is no question that defense counsel would have had the opportunity to meaningfully impeach Lucious’s testimony that he lived in the apartment at the time of the crime and saw Manning enter the victims’ apartment," Justice Randolph wrote. "Any attorney worth his salt would salivate at impeaching the State’s key witness using evidence obtained by the Starkville Police Department."

In addition to the Jimmerson and Jordan murders, Manning is also accused of killing Mississippi State University students Jon Steckler and Tiffany Miller in December 1992, the Jackson Free Press reports.

Manning was scheduled for execution on May 7, 2014 for the Steckler and Miller murders. Just four hours before he was scheduled to die, the state Supreme Court granted a stay of execution, but did not give their reason, The Atlantic reports.

Manning has maintained his innocence in both cases.

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Before You Go

Capital Punishment Methods Through History
Lethal Injection(01 of17)
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Until 2010, most states used a three-drug combination: an anesthetic (pentobarbital or sodium thiopental), a paralytic agent (pancuronium bromide) to paralyze the muscle system, and a drug to stop the heart (potassium chloride). Recently, European pharmaceutical companies have refused to sell drugs to the U.S. for use in lethal injections, requiring states to find new, untested alternatives. (credit:AP)
Gas Chamber(02 of17)
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Gas chambers, like this one pictured at the former Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City, Mo., were first used in the U.S. in 1924. In the procedure, an inmate is sealed inside an airtight chamber which is then filled with toxic hydrogen cyanide gas. Oxygen starvation ultimately leads to death, but the inmate does not immediately lose consciousness. (credit:AP)
Electric Chair(03 of17)
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The first electric chair was used in 1890. Electrodes attached to an inmate's body deliver a current of electricity. Sometimes more than one jolt is required. (credit:AP)
Hanging(04 of17)
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Hanging was used as the primary method of execution in the U.S. until the electric chair's invention in 1890. Death is typically caused by dislocation of the vertebrae or asphyxiation, but in cases when the rope is too long, the inmate can sometimes be decapitated. If too short, the inmate can take up to 45 minutes to die. (credit:AP)
Firing Squad(05 of17)
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This Old West-style execution method dates back to the invention of firearms. In a typical scenario in the U.S., the inmate is strapped to a chair. Five anonymous marksmen stand 20 feet away, aim rifles at the convict's heart, and shoot. One rifle is loaded with blanks. (credit:AP)
Beheading(06 of17)
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Decapitation has been used in capital punishment for thousands of years. Above is the chopping block used for beheadings at the Tower of London. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Guillotine(07 of17)
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Invented in France in the late 18th century during the French Revolution, the guillotine was designed to be an egalitarian means of execution. It severed the head more quickly and efficiently than beheading by sword. (credit:Kauko via Wikimedia Commons)
Hanging, Drawing and Quartering(08 of17)
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A punishment for men convicted of high treason, "hanging, drawing and quartering" was used in England between the 13th and 19th centuries. Men were dragged behind a horse, then hanged, disemboweled, beheaded, and chopped or torn into four pieces. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Slow Slicing(09 of17)
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Also called "death by a thousand cuts," this execution method was used in China from roughly A.D. 900 until it was banned in 1905. The slicing took place for up to three days. It was used as punishment for treason and killing one's parents. (credit:Carter Cutlery/Wikimedia Commons)
Boiling Alive(10 of17)
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Death by boiling goes back to the first century A.D., and was legal in the 16th century in England as punishment for treason. This method of execution involved placing the person into a large cauldron containing a boiling liquid such as oil or water. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Crucifixion(11 of17)
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Crucifixion goes back to around the 6th century B.C.used today in Sudan. For this method of execution, a person is tied or nailed to a cross and left to hang. Death is slow and painful, ranging from hours to days. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Burning Alive(12 of17)
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Records show societies burning criminals alive as far back as the 18 century B.C. under Hammurabi's Code of Laws in Babylonia. It has been used as punishment for sexual deviancy, witchcraft, treason and heresy. (credit:Pat Canova via Getty Images)
Live Burial(13 of17)
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Execution by burial goes back to 260 B.C. in ancient China, when 400,000 were reportedly buried alive by the Qin dynasty. Depending on the size of the coffin (assuming there is one), it can take anywhere from 10 minutes to several hours for a person to run out of oxygen. (credit:Antoine Wiertz/Wikimedia Commons)
Stoning(14 of17)
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This ancient method of execution continues to be used as punishment for adultery today. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Crushing By Elephant(15 of17)
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This method was commonly used for many centuries in South and Southeast Asia, in which an elephant would crush and dismember convicts as a punishment for treason. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
Flaying(16 of17)
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Records show flaying, the removal of skin from the body, was used as far back as the 9th century B.C. (credit:Michelangelo/Wikimedia Commons)
Impalement(17 of17)
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Records show this execution practice used as far back as the 18th century B.C., where a person is penetrated through the center of their body with a stake or pole. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)