After spending more than 25 years on death row for the robbery and murder of a woman in an Ohio hotel, Elwood Jones had his case dismissed by prosecutors on Friday. Jones had been released following a judge’s decision for a new trial in December 2022, citing the failure of prosecutors to provide essential evidence to his legal team years ago.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Connie Pillich announced the dismissal of Jones’ case after an extensive review of evidence and court documents. Pillich stated that the decision was made after careful consideration, highlighting the lack of conviction that Jones was responsible for Rhoda Nathan’s death.
Jones was convicted of aggravated murder, robbery, and burglary in the 1994 fatal beating of a 67-year-old woman from Toms River, New Jersey, at a Cincinnati suburb. The prosecutor’s office, under Melissa Powers, had challenged the judge’s ruling, leading to an ongoing legal battle.
Despite a recent Ohio Supreme Court ruling that sent the case back for reconsideration, Pillich deemed a new trial without adequate evidence or witnesses as futile. Her review identified issues such as the absence of direct forensic links to Jones, witness statements pointing to other potential suspects, and inadequate disclosure of investigative material to the defense before the trial.
Modern medical testing has also excluded Jones as a suspect in the case. Pillich plans to establish a Conviction Integrity Unit to investigate wrongful convictions and unfair sentencing, aiming to prevent similar situations in the future.
Jones is now the 12th death row inmate in Ohio to be exonerated, according to Kevin Warner of Ohioans to Stop Executions. Warner highlighted the public’s growing frustration with wrongful convictions and the impact of the death penalty system on families like Nathan’s and Jones’.