lindaromas
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Skalnik claimed on the stand that Dailey confessed the murder to him in jail, offering lurid details of the grisly stabbing. Dailey, now 73, denied in an exclusive TV interview to ABC News that he had ever had a conversation with Skalnik, much less confessed to a known jailhouse snitch.
He said the prosecutor "absolutely has an ethical, professional, and legal responsibility not to mislead that jury." Dubin added that "failure to do so means a fraud on the court, means that this conviction cannot stand." The testimony of Skalnik was pivotal in Dailey's conviction for the brutal murder of Boggio.
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Attorney says jury didn't hear key information in death row case
A man who has been on death row in a Florida prison for more than 30 years is seeking to have his conviction vacated based on new reporting by ABC News.abcnews.go.com
According to court records, one of Dailey’s Attorneys visited Florida inmate Jack Pearcy at the Sumter Correctional Institution in December, just days before Dailey's execution delay expired.
Pearcy is the co-defendant in the case. He was also found guilty of Shelly Boggio’s murder, but he was given life in prison instead of death. Over the years, he has admitted to being the sole killer. And he did so again just before Christmas.
On Dec. 18, 2019, Pearcy he "voluntarily" signed another declaration claiming that he alone killed the young girl and that Dailey was not involved.
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'I committed the crime alone': Inmate claims man on death row is innocent of 1985 murder
Dailey was convicted for the murder of 14-year-old Shelly Boggio out of Pinellas County, Florida, but another man says he is the killer.www.firstcoastnews.com
The Florida Supreme Court has affirmed a lower court’s decision upholding the conviction and death sentence of James Dailey, whose lawyers have argued that he is innocent of a 1985 murder of a teenage girl in Indian Rocks Beach.
In an opinion Thursday, the state’s highest court rejected several claims from Dailey’s defense, including arguments that his conviction should be overturned based on a 2019 affidavit signed by his codefendant, Jack Pearcy, that included a statement in which Pearcy took sole credit for the crime. Pearcy later claimed the statement in the document was untrue and refused to testify when called to court in March 2020.
Six of the court’s seven justices concurred with the ruling. Justice Jorge Labarga dissented.
In his own opinion, Labarga noted that there is no forensic evidence linking Dailey to the murder of 14-year-old Shelly Boggio, and that the state’s case against him hung on the testimony of three jailhouse informants who claimed he’d made incriminating statements while awaiting trial.
The dissent noted concerns about the reliability of jailhouse informant testimony. It also noted 30 people have been exonerated from Florida’s death row since 1972.
“Thirty people would have eventually been put to death for murders they did not commit,” Labarga wrote. “This number of exonerations, the highest in the nation, affirms why it is so important to get this case right.” Florida Supreme Court upholds James Dailey’s death sentence