Write a letter for Glen Edward Chapman, please.

Glen Edward Chapman It won't take you long. It will take far less time than he spent in prison, on death row, for a crime he didn't commit.

Glen Edward Chapman was recently freed from death row, where he spent 15 years. Mr Brilliant and Emma met him at a recent book reading by M*A*S*H* star Mike Farrell. Farrell was advocating against the death penalty and Chapman attended. The former prisoner now lives in Asheville, where he is trying to put his life back together.

Through many efforts by a UNC professor and a lawyer in Asheville, it was discovered that police lied and concealed evidence to get a young, poor, black man convicted. 

Police detectives lied at Chapman's 1994 trial for two deaths in Hickory. They covered up the existence of a confession by Betty Jean Ramseur's real killer, ditched the results of a photo lineup in Ramseur's case in which someone else was positively identified, hid witness statements in Tenene Yvette Conley's case that pointed to Chapman's innocence and altered other witness statements in Conley's case to make them better fit the officers' theory of guilt. Those fabricated statements were disclosed to the defense lawyers, to throw them off the track.

This gross corruption provided the prosecution with the cherry-picked evidence and false testimony and arguments it needed to try Chapman. The deceit was compounded by ineffective representation by the lawyers assigned to defend Chapman at his trial, as well as by other flaws, including forensic medical evidence that questions whether Conley's death was actually a homicide at all or was perhaps a drug overdose (since her body bore no lethal wounds).

Chapman passed a lie detector test in the Ramseur case after his arrest; his trial attorneys never arranged for him to take one in the Conley case.

When he was released, he was sent out the prison doors without compensation, without support for starting over. "He was released from death row with 10 minutes' notice, one outfit, no counseling, no money and no assistance from the state after being incarcerated for over 15 years for crimes he did not commit." As a friend who has gotten to know him here in Asheville said, he was "just let go without anything." As Nina said of him, "I know Ed and like him very much. He has a job as a dishwasher at a hotel, but could use the money to train at a job where he can make higher than minimum wage. Remarkably, he is not bitter about what has happened to him. I would like to see my friend make a fresh start. He's in his mid-forties."

Glen Edward Chapman and Mike Farrell We threw this man away once, and then once again. Let's not do it again.

A local church has been helping him get his feet on the ground. We–you and I–can help him too. Please do. If he can get an official pardon of innocence from the governor of North Carolina before he leaves office on January 20th, Ed will receive monetary compensation for each of the 15 lost years of his life. You can go to the church website and download some sample letters. Please use his full name (Glen Edward Chapman) if you write a letter to Governor Easley.

During this Thanksgiving season, let's help someone that our system failed. Can 37days readers generate thousands of letters by writing, reposting, pointing other people to this post? I think we can, from all over the world.

If you can participate, please do so before Thanksgiving Day (November 27 in the U.S.).

My deepest thanks to each of you. If we live in a flawed system, the very least we can do–I believe–is right the wrongs we discover.

(photo of Mike Farrell and Glen Edward Chapman at Malaprop's Bookstore, May 2008)

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

15 comments to " Write a letter for Glen Edward Chapman, please. "
  • Thanks, Patti, for letting “the world” know about this story. I will be sending it to my email list. How wonderful to be able to do something really meaningful for at least one victim of our so-called criminal justice system.

  • Thank you so much for making people aware of this situation. Can you explain why he didn’t already receive an official pardon? And if this Governor doesn’t sign one, can the Governor coming in to office? I agree, that it should be done, immediately. Just wondered about the Governor leaving office deadline.

    It is a tragedy in His life that should have never happen, but God has a way of using these horrible situations for a person’s good and can use it to conform/transform him into a respectful, loving men. He will be able to minister to others, with great insight and compassion. If we allow God, He loves to redeem the years that the locust have stolen and to turn the ashes in our life to something beautiful.

    I will write a letter.

  • DONE. the whole situation is asinine, and i hope that the pardon goes through. thanks, patti!

  • Anna McGough

    Patti –

    Thank you for bringing this to your readers attention. I’m sharing this with all my friends and family!

  • Becky

    How horrible. Consider it done!

  • Elisabeth

    I wanted to do something special this Thanksgiving because I’ve been fortunate in a year that has been difficult for many. I read this and knew I found it. Thank you so much Patti – you are such a leader and I appreciate how you always enlighten us.

    I’ve posted on my Facebook status so my friends can see, too.

    with gratitude for your 37 days from Paris,
    Elisabeth

  • Thanks for sharing this information so that we can try to help. What a terrible situation. I know this can generate enough letters to make this happen.

    I tried adding the trackback but Blogger doesn’t support it.

    Jean

  • i am not all that familiar with linking in typepad accounts,, so if this doesn’t come thru as a link,, i will repost it with the web address…

    and after a number of inmates on death row were found innocent, Obama worked with law enforcement officials to require the videotaping of interrogations and confessions in all capital cases.

  • well i cannot tell if it came thru or not.. i did go ahead and send off a letter to gov easley,, wrongful conviction is a subject that sets close to my heart… thank you for bringing this situation to my attention…

    i am hoping that since our president elect has some background in the research and development of strategies that would lessen the chances of wrongful conviction in the state of IL,, he will make this a focus of his when he gets in the white house… i have even emailed him my thoughts on this matter on his website,, to which i have linked in my previous post…

  • Patti, my letter is in the mail this morning thanks to prompting from Rick Hamrick.

  • Give me a call – 345-425-9534 i have radio show in NYC on FM radio – Martin

  • Hi Patti,

    Thanks for sharing this story and the actions we can take to make a difference. My mom recently found some cash and wants to ‘pay it forward’, do you know how to send a letter and funds directly to Glen? Big vugs (virtual hugs). ;-)

  • Miss Marshall

    If you feel you don’t have time to compose a letter, the church has sample ones for you and an email address that makes this really easy.

  • Thanks for bringing this to our attention. I am a supporter of The Innocence Project (http://www.innocenceproject.org/), which has freed a number of people from Death Row due to DNA testing now available. The Project is also attempting to organize support services upon their release.. and also to help them be legally exonerated; in a lot of cases, just being released doesn’t mean they are legally exonerated, making it hard to get jobs and such. Anything we can do to ease their discomfort after being robbed of years of their lives, well.. we should do it.

    Off to write a letter!

  • Perry Long, Jr.

    The State should give Mr. Chapman compensation for being wrongly convicted and all the time he served. I, as a life long resident all my 61+ years find this appalling that he has not been compensated…Please do the just thing and award him some compensation for all the lost in his life w/ family and friends and being able to live a productive meaningful life.
    Thank you,
    Perry Long, Jr.

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