Worst
adjective
Superlative of bad : of the lowest quality, or the most unpleasant, difficult, or severe:
That was the worst meal I’ve ever eaten.
“It was the worst moment of my life,” she admitted.
He is my worst enemy.
The newspaper commissioned a series of articles on the worst excesses of the fashion industry.
He’s his own worst critic .
This is one of the worst natural disasters ever to befall the area.
The government’s economic policies have led us into the worst recession for years.
I’m not exaggerating – it was the worst meal I’ve ever eaten in my life.
Cambridge Dictionary
Worst case scenario: in het slechtste geval
1 Finding freedom in an art museum | Ricky Jackson | TEDxMet
1 okt. 2015
2 Innocence Project Interview – Marvin Anderson
19 jun. 2007
3 Innocence Project Interview – Dwayne Dail
29 apr. 2008
4 This is what freedom looks like after decades in jail
21 apr. 2015
5 “Finally Free” – The Tony Wright Story
15 nov. 2017
6 IL Innocence Project wins release of Decatur man
24 nov. 2016
7 Dean Cage — The Life After Innocence Project
11 feb. 2009
8 Innocence Project – Chris Ochoa
4 mei 2007
9 Innocence Project Interview – Steven Barnes
1 apr. 2009
10 Celebrating 25 years of the Innocence Project
23 mei 2017
11 Jailed for 12 years: Andrew Mallard’s wrongful murder conviction | Australian Story
26 jun. 2019
When Pamela Lawrence was murdered in her Perth shop in 1994, police focused their investigation around one suspect, Andrew Mallard.
He quickly became the victim of a miscarriage of justice, spending 12 years in jail for a crime he didn’t commit.
Andrew Mallard’s family fought successfully to release him, enlisting then WA Shadow Attorney-General John Quigley and journalist Colleen Egan who uncovered a trail of deception and police misconduct.
ABC’s Australian Story talks to the friends who stood by him until his untimely death in April 2019.
About Australian Story:
Putting the “real” back into reality television, Australian Story is an award-winning documentary series with no narrator and no agendas — just authentic stories told entirely in people’s own words. Take 30 minutes to immerse yourself in the life of an extraordinary Australian. They’re sometimes high profile, sometimes controversial, but always compelling. It’s television guaranteed to make you think and feel. New episodes are available every Monday
IMPORTANT VIDEO
12 LoA Celebration of Freedom & Justice — May 18, 2010 The Exonerated
20 mei 2010
13 Ronald Taylor – Innocence Project Interview
7 apr. 2009
14 – “12 Years Taken From Me”: Help End Wrongful Convictions
14 aug. 2007
15 Innocent man freed after 32 years
17 mrt. 2017
16 Wrongfully convicted man cleared after 28 years in prison
18 okt. 2014
17 Wrongfully convicted Missouri man released from prison after nearly 18 years
15 mei 2018
18 “I Didn’t Know What the Sky Looked Like Any More”: Ricky Jackson Exonerated After 39 Years in Jail
26 nov. 2014
IMPORTANT VIDEO: There was something wrong with the trial
19 Ricky Jackson and Kwame Ajamu on their Exonerations
14 mrt. 2015
20 He Served the Longest Sentence of Any Innocent U.S. Inmate (360°)
Back to menu MPORTENT CONTENT Listening recommended Must
7 dec. 2018
21 Ricky Jackson Interview release
22 Man Wrongfully Imprisoned for 39 Years
MarKsMaN’s News
Gepubliceerd op 21 nov. 2014
Ricky Jackson – who at one stage faced the death penalty – calmly stands before looking skywards and hugging his legal team
This is the humbling moment a man who spent 39 years in jail after being wrongly convicted of murder is set free.
Ricky Jackson, 57, appears to mouth ‘thank you’ after being cleared, looks to the heavens, and then gratefully embraces his legal team before being led from the court room.
He was convicted along with two others for the 1975 murder of Harold Franks, a Cleveland-area money order salesman, after 12-year-old Eddie Vernon testified he saw the attack,
according to court documents.
However, when Vernon – now 53 – recanted his evidence and told authorities he had never actually witnessed the crime.
With no other evidence linking Jackson to the killing, in March lawyers for the Ohio Innocence Project filed a motion for a new trial after.
Vernon had told a pastor he was on a school bus at the time of the murder, which other witnesses confirmed.
Jackson is the longest-held U.S. prisoner to be exonerated, an lawyer for the Ohio Innocence Project said.
The two other men convicted alongside him, brothers Ronnie and Wiley Bridgeman, have also filed for a new trial.
Ronnie Bridgeman was released in 2003, but his brother remains in prison.
Jackson was originally sentenced to death but that sentence was vacated due to a paperwork error.
The Bridgemans remained on death row until Ohio declared the death penalty unconstitutional in
1978.
Man free after 39 years
23 The Most Painful Way To Become A Millionaire
20 mrt. 2015
24 Man Wrongfully Imprisoned for 39 Years
15 mei 2017
About The Doctors:
The Doctors is an Emmy award-winning daytime talk show hosted by ER physician Dr. Travis Stork, plastic surgeon Dr. Andrew Ordon, OB-GYN Dr. Jennifer Ashton, urologist Dr. Jennifer Berman and family medicine physician and sexologist Dr. Rachael Ross.
The Doctors helps you understand the latest health headlines, such as the ice bucket challenge for ALS and the Ebola outbreak; delivers exclusive interviews with celebrities dealing with health issues, such as Teen Mom star Farrah Abraham, reality stars Honey Boo Boo and Mama June and activist Chaz Bono; brings you debates about health and safety claims from agricultural company Monsanto and celebrities such as Jenny McCarthy; and shows you the latest gross viral videos and explains how you can avoid an emergency situation. The Doctors also features the News in 2:00 digest of the latest celebrity health news and The Doctors’ Prescription for simple steps to get active, combat stress, eat better and live healthier.
Now in its eighth season, The Doctors celebrity guests have included Academy Award Winners Sally Field, Barbra Streisand, Jane Fonda, Marcia Gay Harden, Kathy Bates and Marisa Tomei; reality stars from Teen Mom and The Real Housewives, as well as Kris Jenner, Caitlyn Jenner, Melissa Rivers, Sharon Osbourne, Tim Gunn and Amber Rose; actors Jessica Alba, Christina Applegate, Julie Bowen, Patricia Heaton, Chevy Chase, Kristin Davis, Lou Ferrigno, Harrison Ford, Grace Gealey, Cedric the Entertainer, Valerie Harper, Debra Messing, Chris O’Donnell, Betty White, Linda Gray, Fran Drescher, Emmy Rossum, Roseanne Barr, Valerie Bertinelli, Suzanne Somers; athletes Magic Johnson, Apolo Ohno and Danica Patrick; musicians Tim McGraw, Justin Bieber, Clint Black, LL Cool J, Nick Carter, Kristin Chenoweth, Paula Abdul, Gloria Gaynor, La Toya Jackson, Barry Manilow, Bret Michaels, Gene Simmons and Jordin Sparks; and celebrity chefs Wolfgang Puck, Guy Fieri and Curtis Stone.
25 Prison exoneree Ricky Jackson: Death row ‘is not a place fit for human beings’
14 apr. 2015
26 Men Wrongfully Convicted Of Murder Open Up About Exoneration | TODAY
27 – 3 Men Exonerated After Spending 36 Years In Jail For 14-Year-Old’s Baltimore Murder
28 Three Baltimore Men Exonerated After 36 Years Behind Bars For A Wrongful Murder Conviction
29 nov. 2019
Three men who served 36 years in a Maryland prison were freed Monday after new evidence exonerated them in the killing of a Baltimore teen in 1983.
Alfred Chestnut, Ransom Watkins and Andrew Stewart were arrested on Thanksgiving and accused of killing 14-year-old Dewitt Duckett in the hallway of Harlem Park Junior High School over his Georgetown jacket.
Baltimore States’ Attorney Marilyn Mosby said that a re-investigation produced new evidence and testimony from witnesses that proved they were innocent.
Watch the 11.26.19 edition of #RolandMartinUnfiltered https://youtu.be/rPSEkb3e73A
29 Otis Johnson – Innocent in prison for 40 years
19 dec. 2016
Otis Johnson spent nearly 40 years in prison for a crime he has never admitted to. An attempted murder on a police officer on May 5th 1975. There was a severe lack of evidence and his court appointed failed to interview possible key witnesses in the case.
A gun was used against him that did not have any fingerprints on it, 7 out of 9 pictures in a photo line-up did not include a person in a tan jacket, like Otis wore the day he was arrested. His lawyer was also not present during the line-up.
His lawyer never interviewed or sought after a person that lived in apartment 1D at 1975 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd. That person called 911 at 11:58am on May 5th describing a man in a beige coat in the hallway of the building, selling drugs and possibly armed. When asked for further information he/she couldn’t say.
Otis was arrested a few blocks away, and about 30 minutes after an officer had been shot that responded to the 911 call. He was standing on the corner of Mt. Morris Park West and 121st street, just standing there and talking to people.
Since Otis was released he has worked with and received help from numerous organizations in Harlem, NY that aim to fight Mass Incarceration. He constantly puts the needs of others ahead of his own, and when asked why he does that, he simply says:
“It was the way I was raised, to think of my family, friends and my community.”
Imprisoned: The Man in a Tan Jacket. Otis Johnson, 40 years in prison for a charge he denies
9 dec. 2019
30 Finding my family after 44 years in prison | Al Jazeera Close Up
31 Man who spent 37 years in prison for 1983 Tampa murder may be freed Thursday due to DNA evidence
27 aug. 2020
3 DNA clears man who served 37 years in prison for 1983 crime
28 aug. 2020
32 Politics of Death Row | Fault Lines
9 sep. 2010
With the US continuing to execute prisoners, Fault Lines presenter Josh Rushing looks at the politics driving capital punishment in the US.
Eighty per cent of the executions the US carries out occur in a handful of states in the South – where it is popular for politicians to run “tough on crime” campaigns.
Fault Lines travels to Oklahoma — which executes more prisoners per capita than any other state in the country. Josh Rushing gained rare access to Oklahoma’s death row and the prisoners there.
But across the US, there is a slow, but significant shift in America’s attitude towards the death penalty.
DNA testing and, in some states, a willingness by judges and prosecutors to revisit old capital cases have led to many well-publicised exonerations of death row inmates.
Since 1973 over 130 innocent people have been released from death row after establishing their innocence. The possibility of getting it wrong may have made juries nervous to hand out the death penalty … preferring life without parole.
And while the US is still very much pro-death for capital offences, that support has dropped to 65 per cent in 2006, down from 80 per cent in 1994.
People and organizations featured in this film include: Edith Shoals, Michael Selsor, Carol Anderson, Frank Keating, Richard Dieter, Jim Fowler, Constance Johnson, Greg Whilhoit, Commissioner Justin Jones, Oklahoma State Penitentiary, Death Penalty Information Center, Oklahoma Department of Corrections.
33 JFL Prank: Car Wheel thief