During the week of the DNC we reported on the unusual case of a wrongful conviction in northern Minnesota that the state’s attorney general, Keith Ellison, was attempting to make right in the face of intransigence from the local prosecutor and sheriff. What makes it unusual is that the state’s governor, Tim Walz, does not have the unilateral ability to pardon the wrongfully convicted Native American man, but he can step in and take the case away from the local prosecutor and give it to AG Ellison. With that one, small bureaucratic move, Walz can give Ellison the chance to set him free.
After reporter Ted Hamm laid out the details of the case in this report, and Jessica Burbank helped bring attention to it on social media, a number of organizations focused on criminal justice raised their hand to say they wanted to help right this wrong. They’ve joined together to sponsor a petition urging Walz to sign the papers that would empower Ellison to take this case over. They’ll present this petition to Walz a few days from now, and if we can have thousands, or tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands of people sign it, there’s a good chance that’ll be enough to get his attention.
Take a moment to check out the petition urging Tim Walz to take this simple step.
(We are not making money from the petition, but fair warning: if you sign it, you may get emails from one of the sponsors of it. They’re all good organizations and don’t sell emails, and you can unsubscribe from them, too.)
Separately, on this week’s podcast I interviewed David Sirota about The Lever’s incredible new show called Master Plan, an investigative history of the legalization of corruption. Highly recommend it.
I signed and asked Walz to pressure their campaign to do the right things on Gaza before the Dems lose the election to genocide.
Thank you for bringing up this case. I would have preferred you to have put Brian Pippitt's name in your email. Saving an innocent man, or entire beseiged peoples, has never been a priority for anyone in leadership positions in the USA. Walz may have been Harris's best option, but he's still a politician. I hope you get some positive traction on this, but, when it comes to helping release innocent prisoners, especially political prisoners, well, I"m still waiting for Leonard Peltier to walk in freedom.