“Man Released After 25 Years on Death Row in Ohio”

A man who spent more than 25 years on death row for the robbery and murder of a woman at an Ohio hotel had his case dismissed by prosecutors on Friday. Elwood Jones was released after a judge ordered a new trial in December 2022 due to the failure of prosecutors to provide crucial evidence to his legal team years ago.

Hamilton County Prosecutor Connie Pillich announced the dismissal after a thorough review of evidence and court documents. Pillich emphasized the seriousness of the decision, stating, “I did not make this decision lightly.”

Jones had been convicted of aggravated murder, robbery, and burglary in the 1994 fatal beating of a 67-year-old woman from Toms River, New Jersey, in Blue Ash, a suburb of Cincinnati. The prosecutor’s office, under Melissa Powers, had previously contested the judge’s ruling, leading to a legal dispute that was ongoing.

Following a recent ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court that overturned the appellate court’s decision, Pillich stated that pursuing a new trial without sufficient evidence, witnesses, or modern scientific methods would be futile.

Issues highlighted in Pillich’s review included the lack of direct physical or forensic evidence linking Jones to the murder, witness statements suggesting other potential suspects that were not thoroughly investigated, and the failure to provide Jones’s defense team with essential materials before the trial. Modern medical testing also excluded Jones as a suspect.

According to police reports, the victim, Rhoda Nathan, was killed during a robbery attempt at the hotel where Jones worked. Jones’s defense team criticized the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s Office for pursuing a “win-at-all-cost” approach, leading to the wrongful conviction and decades-long incarceration of an innocent man.

Pillich announced the establishment of a Conviction Integrity Unit to examine claims of wrongful conviction and unfair sentencing using established national standards. She expressed regret that such a unit was not in place earlier, which could have expedited the resolution of Jones’s case.

Jones is now the 12th death row inmate to be exonerated in Ohio and the second in Hamilton County. Kevin Warner, executive director of Ohioans to Stop Executions, noted the growing public discontent with wrongful convictions and the flaws in the state’s death penalty system, sympathizing with both the Nathan and Jones families who suffered irreparable harm.

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