A man paroled earlier this year after serving 18 years in prison for the double murder of his father and stepmother was arrested last week for driving under the influence. Now the family of one of his victims is questioning why the Parole Board decided to release him in the first place. At the age [.]
How Mississippi’s new parole board is helping expand the state prison system by dramatically cutting approvals and threatening the most frequent pathway out of prison.
Over two dozen Mississippi lawmakers are calling for members of the parole board to reverse their decision to release double murderer James Williams, III., who is set to be released in less than one week. In a letter addressed to Chairman Jeffery Belk, 27 legislators from Mississippi’s House of Representatives.
The forced accomplice alongside James Williams III in the 2001 murder of Williams’ stepmother and father has stepped forward to protest the parole board’s release of the convicted killer. Adam White, who was 15 at the time of the murders and forced by Williams to help hide the bodies, provided.