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'''Ron Williamson''' ([[February 3]], [[1953]]—[[December 4]], [[2004]]) was a [[minor league]] [[baseball]] catcher who was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in 1988 in Oklahoma for rape and murder.
'''Ron Williamson''' ([[February 3]], [[1953]]—[[December 4]], [[2004]]) was a [[minor league]] [[baseball]] catcher who was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in 1988 in Oklahoma for rape and murder.


Williamson was the 41st pick in baseball's 1971 amateur draft, a second-round selection by the [[Oakland Athletics]]. He spent the 1972 season primarily with the [[Coos Bay-North Bend A's]], hitting .265 in 52 games. In [[1973]], he had a rotten year, hitting .137 for the [[Key West Conchs]] with only 13 runs produced in 59 games.
Williamson was the 41st pick in baseball's 1971 amateur draft, a second-round selection by the [[Oakland Athletics]]. He spent the 1972 season primarily with the [[Coos Bay-North Bend A's]], hitting .265 in 52 games. In [[1973]], he had a poor year, hitting .137 for the [[Key West Conchs]] with only 13 runs produced in 59 games.


[[Image:Ronwilliamson.JPG|thumb|Ron Williamson Mug Shot]]
[[Image:Ronwilliamson.JPG|thumb|Ron Williamson Mug Shot]]

Revision as of 02:27, 8 June 2007

Ron Williamson (February 3, 1953December 4, 2004) was a minor league baseball catcher who was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in 1988 in Oklahoma for rape and murder.

Williamson was the 41st pick in baseball's 1971 amateur draft, a second-round selection by the Oakland Athletics. He spent the 1972 season primarily with the Coos Bay-North Bend A's, hitting .265 in 52 games. In 1973, he had a poor year, hitting .137 for the Key West Conchs with only 13 runs produced in 59 games.

Ron Williamson Mug Shot

Williamson's life went into a tailspin after that. He became a drug and alcohol addict and suffered from mental illness, becoming depressed and living with his mother. In 1982, Debra Sue Carter, a waitress in an Ada, Oklahoma bar he frequented, was found dead. Williamson along with Dennis Fritz was cited as a suspect by the police five years later on flimsy testimony but was found guilty and sentenced to death in 1988 while Fritz was given a life sentence.

After 11 years on death row, Williamson was cleared by DNA testing, and was finally freed. He died in a nursing home of cirrhosis five years after being freed. Best-selling novelist John Grisham read his obituary in The New York Times and made him the subject of his first non-fiction book, The Innocent Man, published in 2006. The book became a bestseller.

References

  • The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town by John Grisham, Doubleday Books, 2006, ISBN 0385517238.