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Death row exonerees deliver letter asking Gov. Abbott to stop Rodney Reed execution

“It is unconscionable that we would execute a human being when DNA evidence is available that has not been tested.”

AUSTIN, Texas — A group of death row exonerees delivered a letter to Gov. Greg Abbott on Friday, calling for him to stop the execution of Rodney Reed.

Reed was found guilty of Stites’s 1996 murder in Bastrop County. Reed and his supporters have maintained his innocence, saying key evidence, such as the murder weapon, has never been tested for DNA.

RELATED: Beyoncé joins growing list of celebrities pushing to stop execution of Rodney Reed

Prosecutors, though, stand by their case and the guilty verdict, and numerous Appeals Court decisions have gone in the state’s favor, including a U.S. Supreme Court decision not to review his case.

“The issues present in Mr. Reed’s case are frighteningly similar to the issues that led to each of our wrongful convictions,” the letter reads. “What our cases do not have in common with Mr. Reed’s case is untested DNA evidence. Many of us are alive today because of post-conviction DNA testing.”

RELATED: Austin bishop, Texas pastors call on Gov. Abbott to stop execution of Rodney Reed

Juan Melendez, exonerated in 2001 after 17 years on death row, and Shujaa Graham, exonerated in 1981 after three years on death row, hand delivered the letter on Friday around noon. Melendez and Graham are part of Witness to Innocence, an organization composed of and led by exonerated death row survivors and their family members.

RELATED: Austin news station vandalized with message of support for Rodney Reed

“I myself was the first person to be exonerated from a death sentence based on DNA evidence,” said Witness to Innocence executive director Kirk Bloodsworth. “It is unconscionable that we would execute a human being when DNA evidence is available that has not been tested.”

In the United States, 166 people have been exonerated after a wrongful conviction and death sentence.

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