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'I want justice for everybody' | Ray Cromartie's brother vows to continue fight to get DNA evidence tested, clear executed inmate's name

Ray Jefferson Cromartie was pronounced dead at 10:59 p.m. Wednesday.

JACKSON, Ga. — Though the Georgia death row inmate may have been executed by the state, the brother of Ray Cromartie, known as "Jeff" by family, vows that the fight to clear his name is not over. 

On Wednesday, Nov. 13, Georgia put Cromartie to death with a lethal injection. The 52-year-old was pronounced dead at 10:59 p.m. 

Cromartie had been convicted and sentenced to die for the April 1994 slaying of Richard Slysz at a convenience store in Thomasville, near the Georgia-Florida line. 

RELATED: Georgia executes death row inmate for ‘94 store clerk killing

Cromartie's family had been fighting to get the courts to test DNA evidence that wasn't part of the original case. And over the weekend, a key witness came forward and changed his statements about what happened, saying he didn't think Cromartie was the trigger man. 

"He said his conscious has been bothering him all these years and he had to tell the truth," Cromartie's brother Anthoney told 11Alive over the phone from his home near Atlanta, following news the US Supreme Court declined to halt the execution

"When he tells the truth, the judge still denied him, saying it was just too late - what kind of justice is this?" Anthony asked. "When a man comes forward and says this man is not the trigger man, I don't know. What kind of justice system do we have?" 

Anthoney went on to add that even the family of the victim, Richard Slysz, has been asking for the DNA evidence to be tested - without success. 

RELATED: At the last minute, eyewitness says death row inmate likely wasn't the shooter

"She said she didn't want an innocent man executed for killing her father - lets make sure the right person is charged with the crime," he said. "Nobody has really cared about my brother since they won, so it's just like, we're still going though this now ... and he's innocent. And evidence is showing that he's innocent. But the judicial system still won't pay attention and take heed to what's going on, even with the new evidence."  

Though the outcome was not what Anthoney and family had hoped for, he vowed to continue fighting to clear his brother's name. He said he plans to still have the DNA evidence tested. He also plans to file a wrongful death lawsuit against the state of Georgia and the city of Thomasville "as soon as possible."

"I am still going to be an advocate. I am fighting for my brother to show that he did not commit this crime," he said. "We are going to find out what is the real truth and take it back to court and ensure that my brother's name is proven not guilty of the crime."

"I want justice for everybody," Anthoney emphasized. 

Cromartie was the 52nd inmate put to death by lethal injection. There are presently 44 men and one woman under death sentence in Georgia. 

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