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By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press
SALEM, Ore. (AP) โ Oregonโs court of appeals reversed the murder conviction and death sentence of a Black man Wednesday, saying his defense team failed to interview a key witness who saw a White man fleeing the victimโs home.
Jesse Johnson was accused of stabbing Harriet Thompson, a 28-year-old Black nurseโs aide, to death in her Salem home in 1998. He has repeatedly claimed innocence and refused a plea deal.
Ryan OโConnor, Johnsonโs attorney during the appeal phase, said racism and police misconduct contributed to his wrongful conviction. The lawyer told Johnson of the appeals courtโs decision in a phone call to the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem.
โHeโs happy. It feels like itโs long overdue. Heโs been in prison for a long time for something he didnโt do. He said this is what heโs been waiting for,โ OโConnor said.
Johnsonโs release depends on Oregon AG
But the decision doesnโt mean Johnson will be freed immediately, if at all. OโConnor said Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum could appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court. Her spokeswoman Kristina Edmunson said they are reviewing the decision. If it doesnโt go to the Supreme Court, the Marion County district attorney could order a new trial or dismiss the charges, OโConnor said.
Johnsonโs appeal centered on a claim that his lawyers were deficient in representing him because the jury never heard that the victimโs neighbor, Patricia Hubbard, had seen a White man park his van in Thompsonโs driveway around 3:45 a.m. March 20, 1998, and go inside. Seconds later, Hubbard heard screaming coming from Thompsonโs house, a thud and then silence.
She told investigators, who found and contacted her after Johnson was convicted, that she saw the White man run from the house and a few minutes later, a Black man walk down the driveway. She did not identify him as Johnson.
The jury didnโt know all this because Johnsonโs trial lawyers failed to find Hubbard and speak to her. Police didnโt interview her either, even though on the day of the killing she had approached a police officer and said she had information, only to be told he didnโt need her help and to go home.
Case plagued with racism
Soon after the murder, another neighbor of Thompsonโs brought a Salem police detective to Hubbardโs house. When Hubbard began describing what she had seen, the detective allegedly said, twice using a racial epithet, that a Black woman got murdered and a Black man is โgoing to pay for it.โ
OโConnor said โracism and police misconduct played a significant role in Mr. Johnsonโs wrongful conviction โฆ Jesse Lee Johnson is an innocent man who has spent more than 20 years in prison sentenced to death for a murder he did not commit.โ
The appeals court said that a post-conviction court erred in concluding that the failure of Johnsonโs lawyers to properly investigate did not prejudice Johnsonโs case.
โA reasonable investigation would likely have led to finding and interviewing Hubbard, which in turn would have led to evidence and testimony that could have tended to affect the outcome of the trial,โ the appeals court said.
Appeal for innocence remains pending
Former Gov. John Kitzhaber declared a moratorium on executions in 2011, and current Gov. Kate Brown extended it, so prisoners sentenced to death are no long on death row at the Oregon State Penitentiary. Johnson was pulled from the general prison population to take OโConnorโs call Thursday in the prisonโs law library.
โBecause of COVID, theyโre not doing in-person visits and the legal calls are really booked, so we had to scramble to get a call in,โ OโConnor said. โHe wasnโt expecting this call today. Weโve been waiting over two years for this opinion to come out. It was a pleasant surprise.โ
OโConnor himself had learned of the appeals courtโs Reynoldโs ruling only by constantly checking the courtโs website, where rulings are published every Wednesday.
โSo I was in my kitchen, getting my kids ready for school and refreshing the appeals court website on my phone,โ OโConnor said. โI was so happy. Mostly it is a feeling of relief because this is the right decision under the law and itโs the just decision, and I strongly believe in Mr. Johnsonโs innocence.โ
There is also another attempt that is ongoing to prove Johnsonโs innocence.
Johnsonโs DNA wasnโt on any of the tested murder evidence. The Oregon Innocence Project has asked a court to allow additional DNA testing of crime-scene evidence in the case. That appeal remains pending.

