http://freerodneystanberry.com/blog/?attachment_id=78
Dr. Wilmer Leon to Rodney: "After talking to you and to Artemesia over the years, you still have faith in the system." Rodney: "Yes, yes I do, perhaps it is a character defect." Listen to the interview for more. Rodney and I still have faith in a system that has gone out of its way to let him down. We can't be like the people who don't mind keeping innocent people in prison, we have to be change agents.
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Rodney's attorney asked during the Direct Examination if he were nervous. Rodney's response was "No, I am mad" (p. 819), Rodney could not believe that with all of the evidence procing his innocence that he was on trial. You can see why he often got testy with Jordan, even stating that what Jordan was presenting was some Kennedy conspiracy stuff ( p. 890). When you are innocent, you feel this way. Sadly, he remains in prison while others continue to make a living practicing the law.
The Prosecutor and the Criminal blog
A case with some similarities to Rodney's: "Lost Evidence Exonerates Sedrick Courtney.
"Sedrick Courtney was wrongfully convicted of an armed robbery and burglary in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and spent 15 years in prison and a year on parole before DNA testing proved his innocence. He first requested DNA testing ten years ago, but the Tulsa Police Department repeatedly claimed the evidence had been destroyed, until finally discovering they still had the evidence in their possession last year." www.innocenceproject.org
An Alabama Attorney General got involved in a Cold Case out of Prichard, Alabama when evidence was lost and or/not gathered. Again, more similarities with Rodney's case. When there is evidence of a wrongful conviction where the details are similar to a Cold Case, the Alabama Attorney General should also step in.