Ron Keine
State: New Mexico
Convicted: 1974
Exonerated: 1976
Race: Caucasian
DNA used in exoneration? No
Reasons for wrongful conviction:
Prosecutorial misconduct
Police misconduct
False testimony
Ron's Wrongful Conviction
Ron Keine spent 2 years on death row for a crime he did not commit, due to prosecutorial misconduct, police misconduct, and false testimony. He was one of four men wrongfully convicted of the murder, kidnapping, and rape of a University of New Mexico student in 1974. He and his co-defendants were sentenced to death, but soon an investigation by The Detroit News uncovered false testimony as being the key piece of evidence against them.
Prosecutors coerced testimony from a motel maid named Judy Weyer to create their "star witness;" after they reneged on their promises to Weyer, she fully retracted her story in a set of taped newspaper interviews. The story broke in January 1975, and a hearing for a new trial was held. Unbelievably, the judge refused to grant a new trial, and then the taped interviews with Judy Weyer mysteriously disappeared after they were handed to the prosecutor. Ron and his co-defendants remained on death row. Ron was finally released in 1976, after the murder weapon was traced to a law enforcement officer who admitted to the killing. Because of the corruption surrounding Ron’s case, the assistant prosecutor was disbarred and three sheriff detectives were fired because of their actions in the case.
Ron's Work Today
After his exoneration, Ron returned to Michigan, where he now resides and has held various positions. He was President of a real estate company in Detroit, chair of his local Republican Party, and worked with Journey of Hope. He proudly contributes to St. Jude's Children's Cancer Research by helping to organize fundraisers for the organization, and is occasionally a substitute teacher for Constitutional Law at Baker College.
Ron continues to make fighting wrongful convictions and the death penalty a cornerstone of his life. Ron says he knows the American criminal justice system "is corrupt and broken. I don’t believe the government should kill people.” He is currently on the Board of Proving Innocence, a wrongful conviction group in Michigan. With Witness to Innocence, Ron has served on the Board, as Co-Chair of the Justice After Exoneration Committee, and as a Peer Specialist, helping exonerees access services, providing financial assistance, and acting as a support system.
Ron travels the country speaking to groups about the death penalty utilizing a powerful mix of humor and pathos. In particular, he has been going to Texas annually because it is one of the worst states for the death penalty; Ron, along with fellow exonerees Shujaa Graham, Albert Burrell, and Clarence Brandley, were honored with a legislative resolution in their names. Ron has given numerous interviews to national and local media, including “Larry King Live.”
In his free time, Ron enjoys riding his motorcycle, old cars, and participating in martial arts, in which he has earned a second degree black belt. He loves to write and has been published in three languages in seven different countries.
Publications:
Execution's Doorstep by Leslie Lytle
Profiles the stories of Randal Padgett and Ron Keine
Journalist Lytle brings the capital punishment debate into sharp focus with her account of five men wrongly convicted and sentenced to death but later freed"
Contact Ron Keine at RonKeine[at]Yahoo.com to purchase a book at a discounted rate
Wrongful Convictions: A Comparative Perspective
An academic work written by Marvin Zalman
Ron Keine contributed to Chapter 9
In The Media:
2.12.17 Surviving Death Row
1.31.21 Wrongfully Convicted Death Row Exonerees Speak Out in Support of New Trial for Robert Roberson
#ImLivingProof... that we send the innocent to die.
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