By Danny Aeberhard

BBC News



The governor of the US state of Texas, Rick Perry, has posthumously pardoned a man who had died in jail after being wrongly convicted of rape.

It is the first time Texas has issued a posthumous pardon.

In 1986, Tim Cole was sentenced for the rape of a student. He always maintained he was innocent, right up to his death.

He had spent 13 years in prison when he died of an asthma attack in 1999. His innocence was proved by DNA tests nearly 10 years later.

FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

More from BBC World Service

Mr Cole spurned an offer of early parole as it would have meant accepting guilt.

Years after his death, his family demanded DNA tests after they received a letter from a convicted rapist confessing to the crime.

It transpired the man had confessed earlier. He had sent letters to court officials four years before Mr Cole died - but the admission was never followed up.

Mr Perry said he hoped it would give Mr Cole's family a measure of peace.

Mr Cole's mother told the BBC she was ecstatic on hearing the news - as her son had always wanted to be exonerated.

He had written in a letter that he always believed in the justice system, even if the justice system had not believed in him.