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David Burnett (politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
David Burnett (politician)

David Burnett (born 1942 or 1943〔(interview by Lindsey Fry ), November 2008, published 2009-06-10 (retrieved 2011-08-23): "in 1975 at age 32"〕) is a Democratic member of the Arkansas State Senate, formerly from District 15, which prior to 2013 comprised Mississippi and Poinsett counties in eastern Arkansas. Before he entered the Senate, Burnett had been a judge.〔(Biography of David Burnett ), Senate District 15〕 Burnett is notable for being the original trial judge of the West Memphis Three case.〔(WM3.org - Dan Stidham's Case Synopsis )〕
==West Memphis Three Case==
Burnett was the presiding judge in the murder trials of Jesse Misskelley and Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin, collectively known as the West Memphis Three. In February 1994 after a jury convicted Misskelley of one court of first-degree murder and two counts of second-degree murder, Burnett sentenced Miskelley, then just 18 years old, to life in prison plus 40 years. In March 1994 after a jury convicted Echols and Baldwin of three counts of capital murder, Burnett sentenced Echols to death and Baldwin, just 17 at the time, to life in prison without parole. The court sentenced Echols to death and Baldwin to life in prison.
In 2007, new DNA evidence became available that was technologically possible at the time of the crime produced evidence that hairs found at the crime did not match either Misskelley, Baldwin or Echols and possibly matched the stepfather of one of the victims. Based on this, all three defendants asked Burnett for a new trail. In September 2008, Burnett denied retrials for all three saying the new evidence was "inconclusive."
In September 2008, attorney (now judge) Daniel Stidham, who represented Misskelley in 1994, testified at a postconviction relief hearing. Stidham testified under oath that during the trial that Burnett erred by making an improper communication with the jury during its deliberations. Stidham overheard Burnett discuss taking a lunch break with the jury foreman and heard the foreman reply that the jury was almost finished. He testified Judge Burnett responded, "You'll need food for when you come back for sentencing," and that the foreman asked in return what would happen if the defendant was acquitted. Stidham said the judge closed the door without answering. He testified that his own failure to put this incident on the court record and his failure to meet the minimum requirements in state law to represent a defendant in a capital murder case was evidence of ineffective assistance of counsel and that Misskelley's conviction should therefore be vacated.
In January 2010, Burnett denied motions for all Baldwin & Misskelley to receive new trials based on inadequate representation during their original trials.
In November 2010 after Burnett had retired from the bench and had been elected to the Arkansas Senate, the Arkansas Supreme Court ordered new evidentiary hearings for all three defendants based on the new DNA evidence. The state's high court rebuked Burnett's 2008 decision not to grant Echols a new trial based on the DNA evidence.
The three were released from prison in August 2011 after all three pleaded guilty to first-degree murder using a legal mechanism called an Alford plea. An Alford plea allows the defendant to maintain their innocence while conceding that there is enough evidence to possibly convict them at trial. Under the plea deals, all three were resentenced to time-served for the murders (18 years and 75 days) and immediately released from prison. In February 2012, Burnett gave an interview stating that he was unhappy with the decision to release the pair saying "I'm not real happy with the outcome. I would have preferred to see them have a new trial," but stood by actions in the case saying "Frankly, everything I did was affirmed by the Arkansas Supreme Court."

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