Saturday, 24 January 2026

On January 21, 2026 in Dallas, Texas, something powerful happened. The Dallas County Commissioners Court declared Tommy Lee Walker innocent 70 years after the state executed him for the 1953 death of Venice Parker, according to the Innocence Project. Walker was just 19 years old when he was arrested, and officials now say his case was shaped by racial bias, unreliable evidence, and a coerced confession. Back then, Dallas was gripped by fear during a racially charged “manhunt,” and police arrested hundreds of Black men while searching for answers. Walker said he did not do it, and he had a strong alibi because he was at the hospital for the birth of his son, Edward Lee Smith. But investigators focused on him anyway, and the review found the interrogation tactics and trial failures were deeply unfair. For Walker’s family, this was a wrong finally being made right and brought into the open. Smith spent decades carrying the pain of losing his father he barely got to know while the world believed a lie. Tommy Lee Walker was always innocent. And while this verdict can't bring him back, his name is finally cleared, and his innocence is restored. (Photo: Courtesy of Shelby Tauber for the Innocence Project | Hayes Collection, Dallas Public Library)

On January 21, 2026 in Dallas, Texas, something powerful happened. The Dallas County Commissioners Court declared Tommy Lee Walker innocent 70 years after the state executed him for the 1953 death of Venice Parker, according to the Innocence Project. Walker was just 19 years old when he was arrested, and officials now say his case was shaped by racial bias, unreliable evidence, and a coerced confession. Back then, Dallas was gripped by fear during a racially charged “manhunt,” and police arrested hundreds of Black men while searching for answers. Walker said he did not do it, and he had a strong alibi because he was at the hospital for the birth of his son, Edward Lee Smith. But investigators focused on him anyway, and the review found the interrogation tactics and trial failures were deeply unfair. For Walker’s family, this was a wrong finally being made right and brought into the open. Smith spent decades carrying the pain of losing his father he barely got to know while the world believed a lie. Tommy Lee Walker was always innocent. And while this verdict can't bring him back, his name is finally cleared, and his innocence is restored. (Photo: Courtesy of Shelby Tauber for the Innocence Project | Hayes Collection, Dallas Public Library)

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