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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
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DNA Evidence Could Exonerate Man Executed in Tennessee

The nonprofit Innocence Project believes DNA evidence may exonerate a man who was executed 13 years ago in Tennessee.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Sedley Alley was strapped to a gurney and put to death in Tennessee in 2006, convicted of killing a 19-year-old woman two decades earlier. Alley had confessed to the slaying of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Suzanne Collins, but later said his confession was coerced. Now, the nonprofit Innocence Project hopes DNA evidence may be used to exonerate the man 13 years after his execution.

Since the early 1990s, 22 death row inmates around the United States have been absolved of crimes through DNA evidence. If the Innocence Project succeeds with Alley, it will be the first time anyone has used such evidence to exonerate a person who already has been executed.

Collins was stationed at the former Memphis Naval Air Station in Millington when she went jogging in a nearby park on the night of July 11, 1985. Her body was discovered early the next day. She had been beaten, raped and mutilated.

Shortly before Alley was led to the execution chamber and given a lethal injection on June 28, 2006, Innocence Project co-founder Barry Scheck sought DNA evidence testing. But the request was denied and Alley, who had spent two decades on Tennessee’s death row, was put to death at age 50.

That might have been the end of the story if Scheck had not received a call this year from investigators in St. Louis. He said they wanted to discuss a possible connection between Collins and Thomas Bruce, who is jailed in Missouri, charged with sexually assaulting two women and killing a third at a Catholic Supply store there about a year ago. Scheck said investigators told him Bruce attended the same avionics course as Collins in Millington, Tennessee.

Scheck reached out to Alley’s daughter, April Alley, who agreed to petition for DNA evidence testing on behalf of her father’s estate.

April Alley witnessed her father’s execution along with her brother. They had their hands up against the glass as he spoke his last words, telling them he loved them and to "stay strong."

April Alley has been reluctant to talk about her effort to get DNA testing, but when she filed the petition in May, she spoke to reporters briefly.

"Watching my father die was so painful," she said. "I'm hoping I can get the answer, one way or another, that I want."

Shelby County Criminal Court Judge Paula Skahan heard arguments in the case in October and promised to rule on the petition Monday.

Memphis prosecutors oppose the testing. Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich said in an email after the petition was filed that Sedley Alley’s case and conviction were repeatedly scrutinized by the courts over 21 years, and his guilt was established with "absolute certainty."

At the October hearing, Assistant District Attorney Steve Jones said the state’s DNA analysis law allows only the person convicted of the crime to request testing. He argued that even if DNA from a third party were found on some of the evidence, it would not prove Sedley Alley was innocent. Alley was convicted based on "a combination of factors that corroborated his confession," Jones said.

Scheck has said Alley’s confession did not match the crime scene evidence. For example, Alley said he hit Collins with his car, but Collins had not been run over.

In court last month, Scheck said it was a matter of justice to test the DNA evidence, and that the court has the power to order the testing. Evidence they want tested includes of men’s underwear recovered at the scene.

"April Alley wants to know the truth. She has the courage to seek the truth,” Scheck said at the hearing. “DNA testing can ... provide that truth."

Categories / Civil Rights, Criminal, Government, Technology

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