Tag Archives: Strickland

Israel Adesanya breaks silence about Sean Strickland loss: ‘Felt like a bad dream’ – MMA Fighting

  1. Israel Adesanya breaks silence about Sean Strickland loss: ‘Felt like a bad dream’ MMA Fighting
  2. Adesanya ‘quietly confident’ he would beat Strickland in possible rematch – ESPN ESPN
  3. Israel Adesanya addresses UFC 293 title loss to Sean Strickland MMA Junkie
  4. Israel Adesanya admits how change of UFC 293 opponent may have thrown him off his game Sportskeeda
  5. Noodle-armed Israel Adesanya ‘wasn’t happy’ with performance against Sean Strickland but it ‘wasn’t that bad’ MMA Mania
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

UFC 293: Israel Adesanya vs Sean Strickland Highlights – MMAWeekly.com

  1. UFC 293: Israel Adesanya vs Sean Strickland Highlights MMAWeekly.com
  2. Daniel Cormier says Israel Adesanya shouldn’t get Sean Strickland rematch: ‘The division needs to move on’ MMA Junkie
  3. Dricus Du Plessis rips ‘amateur’ Israel Adesanya’s performance at UFC 293, wants Sean Strickland title fight … MMA Fighting
  4. Drake ‘curse’ continues as rapper loses $500K on Israel Adesanya bet New York Post
  5. What upset? Watch Sean Strickland’s sparring partner perfectly predict Israel Adesanya’s downfall at UFC 293 MMA Mania
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Israel Adesanya rips Dricus Du Plessis for ‘sore foot,’ says Sean Strickland is in for UFC 293 – Yahoo Sports

  1. Israel Adesanya rips Dricus Du Plessis for ‘sore foot,’ says Sean Strickland is in for UFC 293 Yahoo Sports
  2. Israel Adesanya: Dricus Du Plessis won’t take fight, Sean Strickland in for next title shot MMA Fighting
  3. Furious Israel Adesanya Claims ‘B—tch’ Dricus Du Plessis Bailed On UFC 293, Promotes Sean Strickland To Middl… MMA Mania
  4. Coach: Sean Strickland ‘a shoo-in’ to fight Israel Adesanya after Dricus Du Plessis, will be ready for UFC 293 backup role MMA Junkie
  5. No Du Plessis – Israel Adesanya reveals new UFC 293 title fight Bloody Elbow
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Coach: Sean Strickland ‘a shoo-in’ to fight Israel Adesanya after Dricus Du Plessis, will be ready for UFC 293 backup role – MMA Junkie

  1. Coach: Sean Strickland ‘a shoo-in’ to fight Israel Adesanya after Dricus Du Plessis, will be ready for UFC 293 backup role MMA Junkie
  2. Israel Adesanya: Dricus Du Plessis won’t take fight, Sean Strickland in for next title shot MMA Fighting
  3. Henry Cejudo weighs in on Israel Adesanya’s trash talk towards Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 290: “How far is too far?” | BJPenn.com BJPENN.COM
  4. Furious Israel Adesanya Claims ‘B—tch’ Dricus Du Plessis Bailed On UFC 293, Promotes Sean Strickland To Middleweight Title Fight MMA Mania
  5. Israel Adesanya rips Du Plessis, says Strickland is in for UFC 293 MMA Junkie
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Sean Strickland Octagon Interview | UFC Vegas 76 – UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship

  1. Sean Strickland Octagon Interview | UFC Vegas 76 UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  2. ‘He looked like a damn Michael Myers’: Pros react to Sean Strickland battering Abus Magomedov at UFC Vegas 76 MMA Fighting
  3. Sean Strickland says UFC owes him title shot: ‘I’ve f*cking paid my dues. Give me that sh*t’ MMA Junkie
  4. UFC on ESPN 48 ‘Strickland vs. Magomedov’ Play-by-Play, Results & Round Scoring Sherdog.com
  5. Sean Strickland calls for title shot after stopping Abus Magomedov in UFC Vegas 76 main event MMA Fighting
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Sean Strickland reveals newfound respect for ‘petty motherf—ker’ Israel Adesanya – MMA Mania

  1. Sean Strickland reveals newfound respect for ‘petty motherf—ker’ Israel Adesanya MMA Mania
  2. Former UFC champ Alex Pereira announces move to light heavyweight: ‘This will be better for me’ Yahoo Sports
  3. Firas Zahabi believes Alex Pereira “might never be the same” after brutal knockout loss to Israel Adesanya at UFC 287: “The way he fell” BJPENN.COM
  4. Jan Blachowicz confident he can make 185 pounds to rematch UFC champ Israel Adesanya MMA Junkie
  5. Ryan Garcia Reacts To Alex Pereira Getting Knocked Out By Israel Adesanya ‘You Can Never Get Too Eager’ BroBible
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Kevin Strickland: Thousands of people have raised more than $900K for a man who served 43 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit

Kevin Strickland, 62, was exonerated Tuesday morning after serving decades at Western Missouri Correctional Center in Cameron, Missouri. Strickland was convicted in 1979 of one count of capital murder and two counts of second-degree murder in a triple homicide. He received a 50-year life sentence without the possibility for parole for a crime that, over the years, he maintained he had not been involved in.
Senior Judge James Welsh dismissed all criminal counts against Strickland. His release makes his confinement the longest wrongful imprisonment in Missouri history and one of the longest in the nation, according to The National Registry of Exonerations.
The Midwest Innocence Project created a GoFundMe account to help Strickland restart his life, since he doesn’t qualify for help from the state of Missouri.

In Missouri, only those exonerated through DNA testing are eligible for a $50 per day of post-conviction confinement, according to the Innocence Project. That was not the case for Strickland.

As of early Thursday afternoon, donations for Strickland had topped $910,000.

The fund was created over the summer with a goal of raising $7,500, which the fund says would amount to approximately $175 dollars for every year Strickland spent wrongfully convicted.

Thirty-six states and Washington, DC, have laws on the books that offer compensation for exonerees, according to the Innocence Project. The federal standard to compensate those who are wrongfully convicted is a minimum of $50,000 per year of incarceration, plus an additional amount for each year spent on death row.

Adjusting to a new world

Strickland said he learned of his release through a breaking news report that interrupted the soap opera he was watching Tuesday.

The first thing he did after his release was visit his mother’s grave.

“To know my mother was underneath that dirt and I hadn’t gotten a chance to visit with her in the last years … I revisited those tears that I did when they told me I was guilty of a crime I didn’t commit,” Strickland told CNN’s Brianna Keilar Wednesday.

His first night out of prison was a restless one, where thoughts of returning to prison, among others, kept him awake, he said Wednesday.

“I’m used to living in a close, confined cell where I know exactly what’s going on in there with me,” he said. “And being home and you hear the creaks of the home settling and the electrical wiring and whatever else … I was kind of afraid. I thought somebody was coming to get me.”

Convicted as a teenager, exonerated as an adult

Four people were shot in Kansas City, Missouri, on April 25, 1978, resulting in three deaths, according to CNN affiliate KSHB. The only survivor of the crime, Cynthia Douglas, who died in 2015, testified in 1978 that Strickland was at the scene of the triple murder.

Douglas sustained a shotgun injury and told police then that Vincent Bell and Kiln Adkins were two of the perpetrators. But she did not identify Strickland, who she knew, as being at the scene until a day later, according to KSHB, after it was suggested to her Strickland’s hair matched Douglas’ description of the shooter. Douglas claimed her initial failure to identify him was due to the use of cognac and marijuana, according to KSHB.

But for the past 30 years, she has been saying that she made a mistake and falsely identified Strickland. According to KSHB, Douglas made efforts to free Strickland through the Midwest Innocence Project.

The two assailants she identified at the scene both pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and each ended up serving about 10 years in prison for the crimes, according to Strickland’s attorney, Robert Hoffman.

Read original article here

Kevin Strickland exonerated in triple murder case after more than 40 years in prison

Kansas City inmate Kevin Strickland has been exonerated after a Missouri judge overturned his 1979 conviction for a triple homicide on Tuesday. Retired Missouri Judge James Welsh ordered the 62-year-old, who spent 43 years in prison, be immediately released.

Welsh ruled that Strickland’s conviction should be overturned since it was not based on physical evidence but on eye-witness testimony from Cynthia Douglas, the sole survivor of the shooting, who later recanted her account. 

“It is important to recognize when the system has made wrongs and what we did in this case was wrong,” Missouri prosecutor Jean Peters-Baker said in October. 

During his time in prison, Strickland has maintained that he was not involved in the triple homicide. 

Kevin Strickland 

CBS News


“I had absolutely nothing to do with these murders. By no means was I anywhere close to that crime scene,” Strickland insisted in October during an evidentiary hearing, according to CBS affiliate KCTV.

The triple homicide occurred on April 25, 1978. Douglas was drinking and smoking with Larry Ingram, 21, John Walker, 20, and Sherrie Black, 22, at a house that was a popular hangout spot when four men entered the house and shot them. Only Douglas survived and later agreed with police that Strickland could have been one of the men, picking him out of a lineup. 

His first trial ended with a hung jury, but a second trial and jury found Strickland guilty of one count of capital murder and two counts of second-degree murder. He was sentenced to life without parole.

In 1979, Vincent Bell and Kilm Adkins confessed to being part of the group that committed the murders and told police that Strickland was not involved, according to court filings. Douglas also told multiple family members and friends that she wrongly identified Strickland. She even sent a message to the Midwest Innocence Project, according to court filings. 

Douglas died in 2015 but Peters-Baker used her multiple recantations in the appeal as evidence Strickland was wrongly convicted. Now, he is a free man.

“I’ve been in prison for 43 years. Yeah, it’s tough, it’s real tough,” Strickland said in October. “It hurts. You know, I can’t get I can’t get that 43 back. There’s nothing that they could do to make that right. My whole life is a memory of prison. I don’t know anything else.” 

Read original article here