Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Echols has one child by his ex-girlfriend Domini Teer. Their son was born on September 12, 1993, while Echols was awaiting trial. [25] In 1996, Echols met his future wife Lorri Davis, a landscape architect who learned about the case after seeing Paradise Lost in New York and wrote him a letter. [20]
West of Memphis is a 2012 New Zealand-American documentary film about the West Memphis Three that was directed and co-written by Amy Berg, and produced by Berg, Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson, and Damien Echols (who is the primary subject of the film) and his wife, Lorri Davis.
From prison in 1999, he married landscape architect Lorri Davis. On August 19, 2011, Echols, along with Baldwin and Misskelley, was released from prison after their attorneys and the judge handling the upcoming retrial agreed to a deal.
Produced by Echols, his wife, Lorri Davis, and filmmaker Peter Jackson, "West of Memphis" is a searing indictment of the criminal justice system that shines a light on the dangers of institutional ...
The names of the three teens convicted - Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley - would come to be known as the West Memphis Three. Leveritt's book revolves around the central idea that the three teenagers' convictions stemmed from "Satanic panic" rather than actual evidence. The book also focuses on one of the victim's stepfathers ...
Samantha Davis, the wife of Star Wars and Harry Potter actor Warwick Davis, has died aged 53. Warwick announced the news in a statement shared to the BBC, revealing she had died on March 24.
Despite Lori being in the public eye, she manages to keep her romance with mainly Dan out of the spotlight. Nonetheless, she still marvels at how well they work together, both in business and in ...
Echols' wife Lorri Davis brought the Carters a gift of three paper roses made by Damien in prison and representing each of the West Memphis Three. In return, they wrote "Anything Made of Paper" for Echols, its title alluding to the fact, as a death row inmate, Echols could only send and receive gifts made of paper.