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News Image The urgent, futile calls to halt Marcellus Williams’s execution, explained

A 55-year-old Missouri man — who maintained he was innocent — was executed Tuesday evening, and became the latest of several recent people put to death who have renewed scrutiny of the death penalty.  In 2001, Marcellus Williams was convicted of the 1998 killing of social worker and former St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter Felicia “Lisha” Gayle, and sentenced to death. Since his sentencing, questions have been raised about how evidence in the case was handled and whether jury selection for his trial was fair.  Given these concerns, and Williams’s continued claims that he did not kill Gayle, he and St. Louis prosecuting attorney Wesley Bell called for the state to vacate his conviction. While his execution was previously delayed twice before, the Missouri governor and state Supreme Court have declined to do so again this past week, and he was killed by lethal injection Tuesday.  The outstanding uncertainty in Williams’s case — and the fact that he was put to death anyway — have put a new spotlight on capital punishment and many problems that have been cited with it.  Williams was convicted for Gayle’s murder based on the testimony of two witnesses, including his girlfriend at the time, who said she saw the victim’s purse and laptop in his car. Williams was incarcerated at the time of his conviction in the Gayle case, and his then-cellmate Henry Cole also claimed that Williams had admitted to the killing.  Williams’s counsel argues that both witnesses had other motives for singling him out, including “reward money and a bargain for shorter sentences in their own criminal cases,” according to the Washington Post. As USA Today notes, there wasn’t forensic evidence linking Williams to the crime, and his DNA was not found on the murder weapon — a knife.  Since his conviction, Williams’s counsel has called for greater investigation of the DNA that was on the knife, as well as a review of racial bias in the jury selection process. Gayle’s family has also backed clemency and the possibility of a life sentence without parole.  Previously, Williams’s counsel convinced former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens that new testing of the DNA evidence, which included DNA from another man, had the potential to exonerate him. That led Greitens to grant a stay of execution in 2017 and to convene a panel to investigate this evidence.  Attorneys have since learned, though, that the knife had fingerprints and DNA from a prosecutor who had touched the murder weapon without wearing gloves, contaminating the evidence.  Williams’s allies have also argued he faced racial bias in his trial after a former prosecutor said he removed a Black juror because of his resemblance to Williams.  Williams’s attorneys called on the US Supreme Court to grant a stay of the execution due to this evidence of bias. The Court did not do so.  The Missouri Supreme Court also declined to grant a stay, with Judge Zel Fischer citing “no credible evidence of actual innocence or any showing of a constitutional error undermining confidence in the original judgment.” The use of capital punishment has waned in recent years as concerns about how well it works as a deterrent, how humane it is, and racial disparities in death sentences have grown. According to one 2016 study in Washington State, Black defendants are four times more likely to be sentenced to death than non-Black defendants in similar circumstances. Although 27 states still allow the death penalty, 14 of those have not conducted any executions in the past 10 years, according to CNN. Executions have also dwindled since 1999, which marked a recent high when nearly 100 people were killed. In 2023, 24 people were executed across five states; currently, 24 people are expected to be executed this year. Among the concerns raised by executions is the fear that innocent people could face these sentences. Williams’s team has been adamant that his case is an example of this issue.  “Missouri is poised to execute an innocent man, an outcome that calls into question the legitimacy of the entire criminal justice system,” Tricia Bushnell, a Midwest Innocence Project attorney representing Williams, said in a statement before the execution.  According to the Death Penalty Information Center, at least 200 people who were wrongly convicted and sentenced to death have been exonerated since 1973. And per a 2014 study estimate, roughly 4 percent of the people sentenced to death are innocent.  Update, September 25, 10 am: This piece, originally published on September 24, has been updated to reflect Williams’s execution.

Crime and Courts Read on Vox
News Image Amateur Astronomer Catches Fleeting Glimpse of Secret Spy Satellite

The spacecraft is in an unusual orbit and features a different design compared to its counterparts.

Politics Read on Gizmodo
News Image A fan of AMC’s The Terror helped identify real-life crew member of doomed expedition

It’s an exciting time to be a part of AMC’s The Terror fandom. Through the efforts of one of its members, a team of researchers were able to reveal the fate of one of the men who died in the real life events depicted by the show. In a paper published in The Journal of Archeological Science: Reports, a team of anthropologists from the University of Waterloo wrote that they used DNA testing from a living descendent to identify the remains of Captain James Fitzjames, one of the real crew members of the doomed expedition. The first season of AMC’s The Terror dramatized the events of Captain John Franklin’s quest to find the Northwest Passage in 1845. During the voyage, the expedition’s two ships, the HMS Terror led by Francis Crozier and...

Entertainment Read on The Verge
News Image Amazon’s next entry-level Kindle with a brighter screen leaks

With stock of its current generation of e-readers dwindling, Amazon is expected to announce new Kindles soon, perhaps as early as next week. A Spanish retailer has a listing for a new 2024 version of the entry-level Kindle with a release date listed as September 30th, as spotted by Good e-Reader. The new Kindle will have a six-inch, 300ppi screen with improved contrast and a backlight that’s 25 percent brighter than the model Amazon released two years ago. It will also offer faster page turns and a new dark mode that inverts its monochromatic E Ink screen, but there’s no mention of it having warm screen lighting or whether it will feature the improved E Ink Carta 1200 screen that Amazon used on the 11th-gen Kindle Paperwhite that debuted...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
Almost a quarter of police stations closed in the past five years

Almost a quarter of police stations in the Netherlands closed their doors in the past five years, EenVandaag

Crime and Courts Read on NL Times
News Image I Know What You Did Last Summer Will Bring Back Another Familiar Face

Plus, Paddington In Peru director Douglas Wilson reveals some surprising filmic influences on the movie.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image Raycast is bringing its super-powerful Mac launcher to iOS and Windows

Raycast has become one of the best power-user Mac tools over the last few years. What started as a launcher — sort of a faster and better version of Apple’s own Spotlight tool — has become a way to interact with apps, manage windows, chat with AI, and much more. It’s kind of a modern take on a command line, both in how powerful it can be and in how challenging it can be to get used to. Now the company is branching out: Raycast just announced it’s planning to bring its app to both Windows and iOS in the coming months. Both are already in progress, Raycast co-founder and CEO Thomas Paul Mann tells me, and the plan is to ship sometime next year. The Windows version should look and work mostly like the Mac app, Mann says, and if anything,...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
News Image The Most Capable Open Source AI Model Yet Could Supercharge AI Agents

A compact and fully open source visual AI model will make it easier for AI to take control of your computer—hopefully in a good way.

Politics Read on WIRED Business
Tomasz Tunguz’s Theory Ventures bets $12M on Initia, the ‘iOS for web3’

The promise of blockchain to change the world hasn’t materialized. For the most part, the technology has instead enabled people to speculate on a new asset class. A big hurdle to realizing blockchain’s full potential, web3 proponents argue, is that decentralized services are incredibly hard to build. Tomasz Tunguz, best known for his popular startup […]

Business Read on TechCrunch
Ai2’s Molmo shows open source can meet, and beat, closed multimodal models

The common wisdom is that companies like Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic, with bottomless cash reserves and hundreds of top-tier researchers, are the only ones that can make state-of-the-art foundation model. But as one among them famously noted, they “have no moat” — and Ai2 showed that today with the release of Molmo, a multimodal AI […]

Politics Read on TechCrunch
Raycast raises $30M to bring its Mac productivity app to Windows and iOS

At its core, Raycast all about bringing a little order to the chaos with what it calls a "shortcut to everything."

Business Read on TechCrunch
Supabase, a Postgres-centric developer platform, raises $80M Series C

With this, Supabase has now raised a total of $196 million, including a Series B round in 2022, which was also an $80 million round.

Business Read on TechCrunch
Uber will soon offer WeRide robotaxis in Abu Dhabi 

The ride-hail and delivery giant announced a new deal to bring WeRide’s robotaxis to the Uber platform starting in Abu Dhabi.

Politics Read on TechCrunch