Eric Weakley, a member of the so-called “Culpeper Three” and a client of the at the University of Virginia School of Law, has received an absolute pardon.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam granted the relief Tuesday. It is the fourth pardon for a clinic client since July.
Weakley was convicted of second-degree murder in 2001 for the shooting death of Thelma Scroggins, and charged alongside Michael Hash and Jason Kloby, together known as the “Culpeper Three.” Weakley, who was 15 when the crime took place in Culpeper in 1996, falsely confessed to the murder, implicating Hash and Kloby, who were 16 and 19 at the time of the crime.
Law professor Deirdre Enright, the founding director of the Innocence Project at UVA Law and a leader of the clinic until last year, said all three men denied involvement or knowledge of the crime initially.
“The detectives began following Eric Weakley around – to his home, his work, his school – and questioned him repeatedly,” Enright said. “They showed him photos of Ms. Scroggins’ corpse, misled him about facts and pressured him for hours.

