/ 4 May 2003

Death row man is saved at lastminute.com

Martha Lane Fox, co-founder of travel firm Lastminute.com, was so affected by the story of Ryan Matthews, and the shoddy evidence that marred his trial, that she paid for his legal team to conduct DNA tests which have cleared Matthews of the crime and pointed the finger at the true killer.

”I was alarmed to discover that this apparently innocent young man was under sentence of death,” Lane Fox said.

”I knew that a relatively small amount of money could assist with the investigation that was required for his appeals — money that would not be provided by the state, and money that his family could not afford.”

His lawyers and supporters say the then-schoolboy Matthews was in the wrong-coloured car at the wrong time when he was arrested on a warm spring evening in Bridge City, Louisiana in 1997.

Out for a drive with a friend, the pair had the misfortune to be some 20 minutes from the scene of a botched robbery where shopkeeper Tommy Vanhoose had been shot dead. Witnesses told police a short, masked gunman had escaped in a grey Oldsmobile Monte Carlo or Ford LTD driven by a second man. Six-foot-tall Matthews, then 17, and his friend were pulled over in their grey Pontiac some hours later.

Two dubious identifications were the sum total of the evidence against Ryan. In 1999, aged 19, he was convicted and sentenced to death.

Matthews, young, mentally retarded and innocent, has been a timely illustration of the arbitrariness of the death penalty. Amnesty International points to the fact that only the US and Iran execute minors and 10% of all 3 500 US Death Row prisoners are estimated to be mentally ill.

The DNA evidence demonstrating Matthews’s innocence matches another man, Rondell Love, who was arrested and convicted of a killing several months after the death of Vanhoose and just half a mile from the Bridge City store.

The new evidence funded by Lane Fox, who heard of the case through her involvement with anti-death penalty campaign Reprieve, is now with the courts but impending release means little now to Matthews.

He is suffering from a seizure disorder which has led to significant ‘cognitive decline’ due to brain irritation from the seizures. While the disorder is controllable with medication, on two occasions while in prison his medication was withheld and the resulting seizures have left him with long-term brain damage. – Guardian Unlimited Â