“Johnny D could have never done this no kind of way, whether we was with him or not,”
she said, using the nickname Walter’s family and friends had given him. “He’s just not like
that.”
The younger woman was Walter’s niece. She continued with her rebuttal to the very idea
that Walter would need an alibi, which seemed to generate support among the crowd.
I was relieved to have the pressure off me for a moment, as Walter’s large family seemed to
be moving toward some sort of debate over whether Walter’s character rendered an alibi
unnecessary—or even insulting. It had been a long day. I was no longer sure what time it
was, but I knew it was very late, and I was wearing down. I’d spent several intense hours on
death row earlier in the day with Walter going over his trial transcript. Before my meeting
with Walter, I spent time with other new clients on the row. Their cases weren’t active, and
there were no deadlines on the horizon, but I hadn’t seen them since the Richardson
execution and they had been anxious to talk.
Now that Walter’s case record was complete, appeal pleadings would be due soon, and time
was critical. I should have returned to Montgomery directly from the prison, but Walter’s
family wanted to meet, and since they were less than an hour from the prison I had promised
to come to Monroeville.
Walter’s wife, Minnie Belle McMillian, and his daughter Jackie were waiting patiently when I
pulled up to the McMillians’ dilapidated house in Repton, which was off the main road
leading into Monroeville. Walter had told me I would know I was close when I passed a
cluster of liquor stores on the county line between Conecuh and Monroe counties. Monroe
County is a “dry county” where no alcoholic beverages can be sold; for the convenience of its
thirsty citizens, several package stores marked the boundary with Conecuh County. Walter’s
house was just a few miles from the county line.
I pulled into the driveway and was surprised at the profound disrepair; this was a poor
family’s home. The front porch was propped on three cinder blocks piled precariously
beneath wood flooring that showed signs of rot. The blue window panes were in desperate
need of paint, and a makeshift set of stairs that didn’t connect to the structure was the only
access to the home. The yard was littered with abandoned car parts, tires, broken pieces of
furniture, and other detritus. Before getting out of my car, I decided to put on my well-worn
suit jacket, even though I had noticed earlier that it was missing buttons on both jacket
sleeves.
Minnie walked out the front door and apologized for the appearance of the yard as I
carefully stepped onto the porch. She kindly invited me inside while a woman in her early
twenties lingered behind her.
“Let me fix something for you to eat. You been at the prison all day,” she said. Minnie
looked tired but otherwise appeared as I had imagined—patient and strong—based on
Walter’s descriptions and my own guesses from our phone conversations. Because the State
had made Walter’s affair with Karen Kelly part of its case in court, the trial had been
especially difficult for Minnie. But she looked like she was still standing strong.
“Oh, no, thank you. I appreciate it, but it’s fine. Walter and I ate some things on the
visitation yard.”
“They don’t have nothing on that prison yard but chips and sodas. Let me cook you