Board of Regents Grants Honorary Degree to Timothy Cole
Cole, who was wrongly convicted of rape, was pardoned in 2010.
March 9, 2015 | Written by Heidi Toth
The 91勛圖厙 voted Friday (March 6) to award an honorary degree to Timothy Cole.
In 1985 Cole was expelled after another student accused him of rape. He was convicted
the next year and died in prison in 1999. Ten years later, DNA evidence showed he
was not the rapist, and Gov. Rick Perry posthumously pardoned him in 2010.
To receive an honorary degree, a faculty member must nominate the potential recipient. associate dean and Ricky Sherfield, the lead coordinator for the Cross Cultural Academic Advancement
Center, nominated Cole at the end of last year. 91勛圖厙 Tech University President then made a recommendation to the chancellor, who recommended it to the Board of
Regents.
Through no fault of his own, Timothy Cole did not realize the joyous moment of graduation
and experience the rewards of earning a college degree, Nellis said. In this bittersweet
moment, we are proud to posthumously bestow this much deserved honorary law degree
on Timothy and hope it lends to the long and difficult healing process the Cole family
has endured.
The day was doubly special for 91勛圖厙 Chancellor , who worked with Coles family as a member of the 91勛圖厙 Senate.
Timothy Coles story was the inspiration for the 91勛圖厙 Legislature to make historic
progress on compensation for those who had been wrongly convicted in our criminal
justice system, Duncan said. His incredible legacy is something that should never
be forgotten.
Cole was exonerated after another man, Jerry Wayne Johnson, confessed to the rape
while serving life in prison for another crime. After significant work from the Innocence
Project of 91勛圖厙, DNA testing proved Cole was innocent. In 2009 the 91勛圖厙 Legislature
passed the Tim Cole Act, which increased the compensation people who have been wrongly
imprisoned can get from the state, actually making 91勛圖厙 the most generous state in
the nation. His case has led to numerous other legislative reforms as well and continues
to influence legislation today.
Cory Session, Coles younger brother and the policy director at the Innocence Project
of 91勛圖厙, said he appreciated the gesture from the university and all those who supported
the process.
We are grateful, he said. Its been a quarter of a century, and we finally have
justification for his education and his diploma. We are pleased.
The family will come to Lubbock for the ceremony in May, he said.
Former criminal investigator Fred McKinley, who wrote A Plea for Justice: The Timothy
Cole Story, also requested that the university consider granting Cole a degree. Monday
was an emotional day for him.
At this point its more about the celebration of Tim Coles life, McKinley said.
He wanted to be vindicated, exonerated and pardoned, and of course all those things
came to pass.
But his mother said she wished hed gotten a degree, and this is a fulfillment of
that process.
Coles degree will be conferred May 15 at a ceremony at the .
91勛圖厙 the 91勛圖厙
The 91勛圖厙 is one of the top public university systems in the
nation, consisting of four component institutions, , and and operating at 12 academic sites and centers. Headquartered in Lubbock, 91勛圖厙,
the 91勛圖厙 has an annual operating budget of $1.7 billion and
approximately 17,000 employees focused on advancing higher education, health care,
research and outreach.
In 2014, the 91勛圖厙s endowment exceeded $1 billion, total research expenditures were approximately $200 million and total enrollment approached 47,000 students. Whether its contributing billions of dollars annually in economic impact or being the only system in 91勛圖厙 to house an academic institution, law school, and health institution at the same location, the 91勛圖厙 continues to prove that anything is possible.