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Wave of support for US mother awaiting execution

Melissa Lucio

This handout picture from State Representative Jeff Leach shows Melissa Lucio (C) bowing her head in prayer during a meeting with a bipartisan group of Texas lawmakers at Gatesville Correctional Facility, Texas, on April, 6, 2022. -AFP

WASHINGTON 鈥斅The looming execution of a US mother-of-14 鈥 sentenced to death in a controversial case for the murder of her toddler daughter 鈥 has provoked backlash from celebrities like Kim Kardashian and a growing movement that reaches well beyond US borders.

Melissa Lucio is to be put to death on April 27 for the 2007 murder of her two-year-old daughter Mariah, whose body was found at the family home covered in bruises, days after falling down stairs.

Pregnant with twins at the time, Lucio鈥檚 life had been marred by both physical and sexual assault, drug addiction and financial insecurity. She was immediately suspected by police of having hit her daughter and questioned at length, just hours after the death.

After saying 鈥渢hat she hadn鈥檛 done it nearly a hundred times,鈥 at 3:00 am she made a 鈥渃ompletely extorted鈥 confession, according to Sabrina Van Tassel, director of the hit documentary 鈥淭he State of Texas vs. Melissa,鈥 which came out in 2020.

鈥淚 guess I did it,鈥 Lucio eventually told her interrogators when questioned about the presence of the bruises.

That confession was 鈥渢he only thing they had against her,鈥 said Van Tassel, convinced that 鈥渢here is nothing that connects Melissa Lucio to the death of this child, there is no DNA, no witness.鈥

During the trial, a doctor said it was the 鈥渁bsolute worst鈥 case of child abuse he had seen.

But Mariah had a physical disability which made her unsteady while walking, according to Lucio鈥檚 defense 鈥 and which could have explained her fall.

The defense also argued that the bruises could have been caused by a blood circulation disorder.

None of Melissa鈥檚 children had accused her of being violent. As for the prosecutor, he was later sentenced to prison for corruption and extortion.

鈥楳iscarriage of justice鈥

Now the documentary has sparked widespread interest, causing a whole movement to coalesce around Lucio.

Reality star Kim Kardashian tweeted to her tens of millions of followers on Wednesday that there were 鈥渟o many unresolved questions surrounding this case and the evidence that was used to convict her.鈥

And Lucio鈥檚 story has ignited media in Latin America, fascinated by the tale of the first Hispanic woman to be sentenced to death in Texas 鈥 the US state that has executed the most people in the 21st century.

In France, former presidential candidate Christiane Taubira said Lucio is probably a 鈥渧ictim of a miscarriage of justice.鈥

Even one of the jurors who sentenced her expressed his 鈥渄eep regret鈥 in an editorial published on Sunday.

Lucio is also winning support from US Republicans, traditionally defenders of capital punishment.

About 80 Texas lawmakers from both parties have demanded authorities call off the execution.

Several have been to visit her in prison. 鈥淎s a conservative Republican myself who has long been a supporter of the death penalty鈥 I have never seen a more troubling case than the case of Melissa Lucio,鈥 said one of them, Jeff Leach.

鈥楢 shock鈥

The flood has come as a 鈥渟hock鈥 for the death row inmate, her son John Lucio told AFP.

When he showed her the messages from celebrities like Kardashian, 鈥渟he couldn鈥檛 believe it.鈥

The last 15 years have been 鈥渧ery difficult,鈥 said Lucio, who was a teenager at the time of the tragedy and had 鈥渢o cope with it, knowing that I lost my sister and then my mother being charged for it.鈥

But this year 鈥渉as been the hardest because we got the execution date in January,鈥 said the 32-year-old.

He is convinced that she would never have been condemned 鈥渋f she had had the money.鈥

The case brings to light the issue of false confessions.

It is difficult to estimate how many there may have been, but according to data from The Innocence Project, which fights against miscarriages of justice, out of every four people wrongly convicted and exonerated thanks to DNA evidence, one had already confessed to the crime.

In homicide cases, that number rises to 60 percent, according to Saul Kassin, professor of psychology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

And someone who, like Lucio, has experienced trauma and violence is 鈥渓ess resistant, more likely to comply, they have less tolerance for the stress of an interrogation,鈥 and is therefore more likely to admit to a crime they did not commit, he said.

Lucio has exhausted her appeals 鈥 but her team has filed a clemency petition, typically not decided until days before an execution. Prosecutors can also withdraw the death warrant and agree to reinvestigate the case, according to the Houston Chronicle.

And if all else fails, Texas governor Greg Abbott still has the authority to delay Lucio鈥檚 death.

A strong supporter of capital punishment, he has only granted clemency once before.

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