The West Memphis Three: 18 Years in Prison for a Crime They Didn't Commit
How satanic panic and a false confession led to the wrongful conviction of three teenagers in 1990s Arkansas
Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
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Moralsk panik og uskyldige dømte
Quick Facts
Three eight-year-old boys—Christopher Byers, Stevie Branch, and Michael Moore—went missing on May 5, 1993, after setting out on bikes around 6:00 PM in West Memphis, Arkansas. The next morning, search parties discovered their naked, bound bodies in a water-filled drainage ditch in the Robin Hood Hills subdivision. The children had been beaten and hog-tied with their own shoelaces. Byers had been castrated.
The horrific nature of the crime sparked immediate speculation about satanic ritual murder, a theory that would dominate the investigation and shape the legal outcome.
## The Satanic Panic
Chief Inspector Gary Gitchell of the West Memphis Police Department pursued leads centered on satanic cult activity. The location of the bodies—a wooded area—combined with the nudity, binding, and mutilation fueled public fears about devil worship. These concerns weren't isolated; they reflected a broader "satanic panic" sweeping the United States in the early 1990s, driven by unfounded claims of organized cult networks.
Damien Echols, then 18, quickly became a focus of suspicion. A probation officer named Jerry Driver had previously monitored Echols for juvenile offenses including burglary and sexual misconduct. When Echols admitted to practicing magic, Driver suspected him of satanic involvement—a leap without evidence that would prove consequential.
## The False Confession
On June 3, 1993, Jessie Misskelley Jr., aged 17, confessed to the murders. Police arrested all three teenagers that day: Echols (18), Baldwin (16, born April 11, 1977), and Misskelley. All were charged with three counts of capital murder.
Misskelley's confession became the cornerstone of the prosecution's case. Yet it also proved problematic: police had interrogated him for hours without legal representation present, and details in his confession contradicted established facts about the crime scene. Despite these inconsistencies, the confession provided the momentum prosecutors needed to move forward.


