HOUSTON — Nearly 70 years after a Texas Black man was executed in a case that prosecutors now say was based on false evidence and was riddled with racial bias, officials have declared that he was innocent in the killing of a white woman in Dallas.
Tommy Lee Walker was executed in the electric chair in May 1956 for the rape and murder of 31-year-old Venice Parker.
At the time of the trial, prosecutors had alleged Walker attacked Parker, a store clerk who was on her way home, on the evening of Sept. 30, 1953. Parker's killing took place during a time of panic and racial division in the Dallas area as there were reports that a Peeping Tom believed to be a Black man was terrorizing women, according to the Dallas County Criminal District Attorney's Office.
But an extensive review of Walker's conviction by the Dallas County Criminal District Attorney's Office, along with the help of the Innocence Project of New York and Northeastern University School of Law's Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project, found multiple problems with Walker's case.
The review found problems with statements from a Dallas police officer who claimed that Parker had identified her attacker as a Black man. But multiple witnesses denied that Parker ''did anything outside of convulse and hemorrhage exorbitant amounts of blood,'' after being attacked, Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot said during a Wednesday meeting of Dallas County commissioners that was held to ask the officials to declare Walker innocent.
During the next few months after Parker's killing. hundreds of Black men were rounded up by authorities and four months later, Walker, then 19 years old, was arrested.
Walker was subjected to threatening and coercive interrogation tactics by Will Fritz, a Dallas police captain who had been a member of the Ku Klux Klan, Creuzot said.
Walker later testified he confessed to the killing because he was afraid for his life, Creuzot said.