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Accomplice to be executed in Texas

AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 14 (UPI) -- A Texas man won’t know until two days before his execution date whether he will die for a killing all agree he didn’t commit, it was reported.

Kenneth Foster Jr. is scheduled to be executed on Aug. 30, two days after the Texas Board of Pardons issues a decision on commutation, ABC News reported Tuesday.

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Foster and Mauriceo Brown were tried together in the death of Michael LaHood in 1997. Brown, who admitted shooting LaHood while Foster, then 19, sat in a nearby car, was executed last year.

Foster was charged under a state law that makes no distinction between the perpetrator of a crime and an accomplice, allowing Foster to be put to death for a shooting he did not commit, ABC reported.

"This type of case rarely, if ever, ends up with a death sentence imposed," said John H. Blume, a law professor, and director of Cornell University's Death Penalty Project.

Foster’s remaining hope relies on a recommendation of commutation from the Board of Pardons and Paroles to Gov. Rick Perry, who has presided over 159 executions -- more than any other U.S. governor in history, ABC said.

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