Rosa Jimenez Released After 17 Years in Prison (PDF)

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SuavePathos9516

Uploaded by SuavePathos9516

2021

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wrongful conviction innocence project criminal justice legal case

Summary

Rosa Jimenez was released after 17 years in prison for a crime she did not commit. The judge ruled that there was no crime committed and that Jimenez was innocent. The medical findings were supportive of an accidental death, and she was wrongfully convicted. The case involved the murder of a 21-month-old child in Jimenez's care.

Full Transcript

InnocenceProjectClientRosaJimenezReleased After17YearsinPrison Ms. Jimenez was released today after more than 17 years in prison for a crime she did not commit. Rosa Jimenez and her attorney Vanessa Potkin following her release on Jan. 27, 2021 was released this evening after more than 17 years in p...

InnocenceProjectClientRosaJimenezReleased After17YearsinPrison Ms. Jimenez was released today after more than 17 years in prison for a crime she did not commit. Rosa Jimenez and her attorney Vanessa Potkin following her release on Jan. 27, 2021 was released this evening after more than 17 years in prison for a crime she did not commit. Today, the Honorable Karen Sage of the 299th District Travis County Trial Court issued a decision in Ms. Jimenez’s habeas petition granting her relief based on false forensic testimony and actual innocence for the murder of a 21-month-old child in her care. In her decision, Judge Sage stated that, “There was no crime committed here … Ms. Jimenez is innocent,” and added, “I cannot give Ms. Jimenez justice today, but hopefully I can give her the inalienable right that she has been deprived of for far too long: her freedom.” Ms. Jimenez has always maintained her innocence and has said the child’s death was a tragic accident and not murder. Top pediatric airway specialists testified that the medical findings are supportive of an accidental death and Ms. Jimenez has been wrongfully convicted of a crime that never occurred. Approximately 40% of exonerated women were wrongly convicted of harming children or other loved ones in their care. “There was no crime committed here … Ms. Jimenez is innocent.” “I just want to say thank you to all the people that stood behind me all these years: the Innocence Project … the [Mexican] consulate, José Garza, and all those people that stood behind me,” Ms. Jimenez said following her release. “Thank you so much and I am just going to try to live my life with my kids”. Speaking in Spanish about the moment she was told she would be released, Ms. Jimenez said, “I could not even believe it until I just walked out the door and it was the first moment I felt it was true,” at a press conference this evening. “It all seemed like a dream and it’s not.” “I’m an immigrant, I’m nothing”: Why An Innocent Woman Has Been in Prison for 18 Years Earlier today, Judge Sage ordered the release of Ms. Jimenez finding that the medical evidence presented at the evidentiary hearing the day before demonstrated her innocence. Also, Ms. Jimenez is suffering from advanced Stage 4 kidney disease and is particularly vulnerable to fatal complications from COVID-19. Judge Sage recommended the Court of Criminal Appeals grant habeas relief and ordered the release of Ms. Jimenez. At the time of Ms. Jimenez’s arrest, her daughter Brenda was one year old and she was pregnant with her son Emmanuel. “Next week her daughter is getting married and I think it couldn’t be a more profound statement of everything she has missed out on, everything that was taken away from her and her family,” her attorney Vanessa Potkin said. “I could not even believe it until I just walked out the door.” “It is a huge victory for her to walk out that door. Earlier today we were told that ICE [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] officers had picked her up at Mountain View prison and had taken her in a car and said ‘we’re taking you to Mexico and doing an expedited deportation’. And today she is walking out and is going to be able to remain in Austin until she is fully vindicated and to reconnect with her children.” Ultimately, after reviewing Ms. Jimenez’s case, ICE exercised its discretion and compassion to release her. after she was released from prison after serving 17 years for a crime she did not commit. “I don’t want to go home, I want to go to church. “Her first stop after being released won’t be her home, but church. “I don’t want to go home, I want to go to church. That’s the first thing I want to do before I want to do anything else,” she said.

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