Politics & Government
Nebraska Lawmaker Revives Legislation To Help Omaha Man Amd Others Get A Retrial
Earnest Jackson has been in prison for more than 22 years β for a killing someone else confessed to.

By Zach Wendling
February 2, 2023
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LINCOLN β A revived legislative proposal would allow convicted defendants β including an Omaha man convicted for a 1999 killing β to file a motion for a retrial based on newly discovered evidence.
Legislative Bill 18, proposed by State Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha β a measure similar to one Wayne introduced two years ago β is the latest effort seeking the release of Earnest Jackson, who has been in prison for more than 22 years β for a killing someone else confessed to.
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βThis is not a sprint, itβs a marathon,β Tracy Jackson, Earnest Jacksonβs wife, said after the Judiciary Committee hearing Thursday. βEither way, my husbandβs coming home eventually.β
22 years in prison
Earnest Jackson and co-defendants Shalamar Cooperrider and Dante Chillous were charged in connection with the 1999 killing, but only Jackson, who was 17 at the time of the killing, was convicted of first-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison.
After Jacksonβs trial, Cooperrider confessed to the killing but argued he acted in self-defense and was found not guilty. Cooperriderβs confession then led to Chillousβ acquittal. But Jackson has remained in prison, despite multiple appeals to the Nebraska Supreme Court and Board of Pardons β who voted 3-0 in September against a pardon.
A 2012 U.S. Supreme Court allowed resentencing for all minors who had received a life sentence. Jacksonβs conviction was upheld in 2015, and he was resentenced to 60-80 years in prison. Jackson is not eligible for parole until 2029.
βCanβt even get in the doorβ
More than a dozen supporters told the Judiciary Committee that Wayneβs bill would help Jackson specifically but also any other inmates who may be in a similar situation.
Tessa Domingus told the committee that one personβs 2021 warning that Wayneβs legislation then would open the βfloodgateβ to mass prison releases was untrue, though it may be hard to tell, she said, how many people were improperly sentenced.
Wayne said all defendants have a Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, which Cooperrider used so he would not have to testify in Jacksonβs initial trial.
The State Supreme Court ruled Cooperriderβs later confession was βnewly available,β not βnewly discovered,β so a new trial for Jackson was not warranted.
Wayne said his bill would not release anyone βtomorrowβ or provide automatic βget out of jail freeβ cards or new trials. Instead, he said, it would give a judge discretion.
βBut right now based on the Supreme Court ruling, we canβt even get in the door to make that motion for a new trial based off of this evidence,β Wayne said.
A few testifiers said the bill could also help Avery Tyler. His sister, Amber Strozier, with Inclusive Communities of Omaha, said Tyler was wrongly convicted of murder allegedly in part due to ineffective counsel.
Strozier added Jackson was sentenced due to a βloopholeβ in semantics and urged Wayne to add an amendment to help her brother, too.
βJustice for Earnest Jacksonβ
Jasmine Harris, public policy and advocacy director for RISE in Omaha, said sheβs worked with Jackson and knows him as someone who helps other inmates with things like character development, employment readiness and entrepreneurship skills.
Lorene Ludy, a volunteer for the Alternatives to Violence Project, said sheβs seen Jacksonβs kindness and compassion firsthand and would be honored to have him as a teammate, neighbor or son.
βThis βJustice for Earnest Jacksonβ bill β thatβs not what itβs called, but we all know thatβs what it is β youβre in the position to take a step to improve the life of a concrete person who deserves to have his life improved,β Ludy told the committee.
State Sen. Terrell McKinney of Omaha said he has sat with Jackson in prison, most recently during Kwanzaa, and seen him working to improve himself and others while trying βto be a leader as best as possible.β
βThey might go in young,β McKinney said of inmates such as Jackson. βBut as time progresses, they mature into men and women that deserve a second chance, and in Earnestβs case, he deserves a chance. He deserves justice.β
Legislation meets opposition
Mike Guinan, criminal bureau chief in the Nebraska Attorney Generalβs Office, representing Attorney General Mike Hilgers, and Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine testified against Wayneβs bill.
Guinan said the legislation would provide a post-conviction remedy for one person, βwhich is not warranted given the facts and circumstances of that case.β
McKinney asked Guinan if he thought there was an βinjusticeβ in the case. βI donβt, and Iβd like to finish that thought,β Guinan said. βNo, thank you,β McKinney responded.
Kleine, representing the Nebraska County Attorneys Association, testified he has a βhard timeβ hearing people say Jackson is βtotally innocent.β
McKinney asked if every case Kleine tried was βfair and justified in outcomes.β
βSure,β Kleine responded, adding that no one is perfect and that he sometimes wishes he had more evidence or that opposing counsel had tried a different strategy.
βSo itβs your belief youβve never sent an innocent person to prison?β McKinney said.
βAbsolutely, never,β Kleine said.
βThereβs concernβ
Multiple senators questioned Guinan, Kleine and some of the billβs supporters on hypotheticals, asking how key details β including trial order β may have changed the outcome of the Jackson case.
But some exchanges treated the situation like βstorytime,β Nature Villegas, a friend of the Jackson family, said. They also ignored the facts, Tracy Jackson said, of a βwho goes firstβ situation that hurt her husband.
βWe have an opportunity to make this right, and itβs just that simple,β Villegas said. ββ¦ And a mistake was made by the State of Nebraska.β
Villegas and Tracy Jackson said questions from McKinney, Vice Chair Wendy DeBoer and State Sen. Carol Blood show senators are βasking the right questions.β
βYou can tell thereβs concern,β Villegas said. βThey can tell something isnβt right. And a decision needs to be made.β
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