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West Memphis Three Awareness

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March 18, 2008: San Francisco, CA – On March 7th, 8th and 9th Texas Fear Fest (www.txfearfest.com) organizer – John Gray teamed up with Tammy Adin (coordinator for the West Memphis Three World Awareness Day) and Anje Vela (president of Music4Life) to raise funds and awareness for the West Memphis Three (www.wm3.org) — Damien Echols, Jessie Misskelley, Jr., and Jason Baldwin. The three Arkansas men, dubbed the West Memphis Three, were convicted of the 1993 murders of three elementary school children. Since their trials were chronicled by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky in the HBO documentary Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills, a groundswell of support has formed around Echols, Misskelley, and Baldwin. In July 2007 DNA evidence proved these three young men should never have been convicted. Currently more DNA is being tested as new technology is becoming available.

Actors/Actresses speaking out

Erika Anderson saw the Paradise Lost documentaries and made a statement at the event condemning the evidence that convicted the West Memphis Three, as well as the system that allowed it to happen.

“People can really judge you for what you look like and can decide how you are, I think that is what happened in this case. People are wrong and it’s because they make quick judgments and jump to conclusions,” said Anderson “These guys are innocent and I’d like to see them free.”

Anderson is an American actress who has starred in film and television. As the character Greta Gibson in the horror movie A Nightmare on Elm Street 5 became her breakthrough role. Her last movie role was in Ascension. Also appearing in TV shows such as: Silk Stalkings, Twin Peaks, and Red Shoe Diaries to name a few.

Ari Lehman (1st Jason Voorhees) also a WM3 supporter makes the following statement,

“It’s unfair when they stereotype people because of their taste and their preference ‘cause of what they like to listen to or watch, that’s absolutely Un-American,” he said.

Michael Berryman from such movies as One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Weird Science and The Hills Have Eyes had just learned of the case by participating in this weekend event.

“It appears that these gentleman didn’t get a fair shake and fair prudence. Those that advocate for people who are innocent deserve our support,” said Berryman “If they are innocent, then they need to be properly represented and have their day in court and should not be harmed in anyway. The bottom line is a lot of people throughout history have been falsely accused and railroaded. If that is the case, I am lending my support so that what the United States is based on Truth, Liberty and Justice for all can prevail and without that we lose our Nation. God Bless America!”

Future Fundraising

Social Justice team Anje Vela and Tammy Adin will be auctioning off items received from the Texas Fear Fest. Including items donated by Tuesday Knight, Kane Hodder, Mike Christopher, Norman Reedus, Ted White, Leatherface and many others. To bid on these great horror related items log onto and start bidding at: www.skeletonkeyauctions.com

This social justice team will continue their efforts in raising funds and awareness at other festivals throughout the year.

To participate in the West Memphis Three World Awareness Day – May 30 – June 3, 2008 (https://www.myspace.com/wm3worldawarenessday) contact Tammy Adin at:
tammy@mcmsys.com

To donate items to Skeleton Key Auctions contact: info@skeletonkeyart.com

Mitchell Wells

Founder and Editor in Chief of Horror Society. Self proclaimed Horror Movie Freak, Tech Geek, love indie films and all around nice kinda guy!!

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  1. For Immediate Release

    Supporters Call Judges Ruling a “Mockery”
    As the Plot Thickens in the case of the West Memphis Three

    September 12, 2008: Little Rock, AR — Following a ruling Wednesday that no new evidence would be heard in the case of the West Memphis Three, supporters of the three men maintain vehement opposition to what they call the “mockery” being made of the Arkansas legal system in this case.

    “Judge [David] Burnett’s order yesterday denying Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin a new trial, based on DNA findings, was more than just another injustice in the long and tragic history of this case; it blatantly disregarded the statute that our Legislature enacted in 2001 to ensure that citizens are not executed or imprisoned when new scientific evidence demonstrates that they are innocent,” said Capi Peck, activist for the release of the West Memphis Three.

    According to Arkansas Take Action, a non-profit organization formed to seek justice for three men convicted of the triple homicide of three young boys in 1993, the 2001 statute requires a judge to weigh all evidence regarding guilt or innocence. The statute expressly orders that a judge will consider new items of evidence not presented at the original trial to determine whether a jury of peers would now acquit a defendant. If Burnett had allowed it, the court would have heard a multitude of evidence, including the following:

    1. that none of the collected DNA matched any of the defendants, but DNA evidence points to another suspect, Terry Hobbs (stepfather of one of the victims);

    2. that witnesses placed Echols at his residence on the phone several miles away from the crime scene;

    3. that the wounds the prosecution claimed were inflicted in a satanic ritual by a survival knife found near Baldwin’s house were shown by forensic pathologists to be the result of post-mortem animal predation;

    4. that the state’s Satanic expert was a fraud, having obtained his Ph.D. through a now-defunct mail-order college, and later having written a book claiming that two girls were abducted by aliens but recalled nothing of the encounter until he, Dale Griffis, was able to extract the information through hypnosis; and,

    5. that a key prosecution witness, Anthony Hollingsworth, who testified to seeing Echols near the crime scene, had conspicuous motive to lie to prosecutors. Not only was he on probation for sexually assaulting his sister at the time of his testimony, but also recent child rape charges against him were dismissed by one of the prosecutors in the case.

    In addition, ATA co-chair Capi Peck said, “the notion that Echols’, Misskelley’s, and Baldwin’s guilt was determined by facts presented from the witness stand at trial is preposterous in light of what has been revealed as jury misconduct.” A sworn affidavit from a Little Rock attorney, hired on an unrelated matter in 1994 by original Echols-Baldwin trial jury foreman Kent Arnold, outlines the misconduct in explicit detail.

    According to the affidavit, still under seal, Arnold admitted that he had:

    1. misled the court about his opinions in order to secure his selection as a jury member;

    2. prejudged the defendants’ guilt;

    3. used a statement from Jessie Misskelley from a separate trial in the case to sway the jury to return a guilty verdict. (This despite the fact that Arnold told the Little Rock lawyer the prosecution had not proved its case and that the Misskelley statement was all they would have to go on).

    Misskelley’s statement was inadmissible in the Echols-Baldwin trial, as Misskelley had recanted and refused to testify against the other two men. The jury’s consideration of it, from what had been gleaned from news sources, and the prosecution’s “slip” in referring to it during arguments was a clear violation of the defendants’ sixth amendment rights

    “By refusing to hear the evidence not presented at the first trial, Judge Burnett has evaded, but cannot suppress, a simple truth,” Peck said. “Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin would surely be acquitted of these charges if they were tried today.

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