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Annie Shaver / March 30, 2026

New Report Reveals Ohio Death Penalty System’s Wrongful Conviction Crisis

For Immediate Release – COLUMBUS, OH -March 30, 2026

“It turns out Ohio has a massive wrongful conviction problem, far worse than anyone imagined,” commented Kevin Werner, executive director of Ohioans to Stop Executions. “Attempts to restart executions will result in the execution of innocent people, and no one wants that,” he said. 

The comprehensive report details the cases of 12 men who were sentenced to death and later proven innocent. Elwood Jones of Hamilton County became the 12th death row exoneree in Ohio. Mr. Jones spent 30 years on death row for a crime he did not commit. 

“They tried to execute me six or seven times, and I didn’t do it,” said Elwood Jones, who was exonerated in December 2025. “They care more about a conviction and hiding what they did than the truth,” said Jones. “There are more people on death row who are innocent.” 

The report lifts nine examples of current death row prisoners with compelling innocence claims, though the report notes the nine examples are not exhaustive.

The report also identifies 12 “shadow exonerations”—cases where the state sought the death penalty but the defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment before their innocence was established. In addition to 24 death penalty cases that resulted in exonerations, the report covers five examples of “near misses” involving individuals whose death sentences were commuted due to concerns about innocence on the eve of execution. 

Key Findings from the Report:

  • Systemic Failure Rate: Ohio has executed 56 people while exonerating 12, a ratio that equates to a 20% error rate.
  • Official Misconduct: Misconduct by police or prosecutors was present in 11 of the 12 death row exonerations. Brady violations, or the intentional withholding of exculpatory or impeaching evidence, were the most common form of misconduct.
  • Racial and Geographic Disparity: The report highlights egregious racial bias, such as the case of Charles Tolliver, where prosecutors used 11 of 12 peremptory challenges to strike Black jurors.
  • Plummeting Use: Capital indictments in Ohio have dropped from a peak of 171 in 1984 to an average of just 14 per year over the last five years. In 2025, there were zero new death sentences in the State.

The report concludes the death penalty in Ohio is a system defined more by its capacity for error than its pursuit of justice. 

The report comes as Governor Mike DeWine contemplates what he may do with respect to Ohio’s death penalty. Mr. DeWine has not allowed executions since his term in office began in 2019. 

The report is available here.

Filed Under: Featured, News

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