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Nikki Zinger

Wrongful conviction in southwest Arkansas

Nikki has been in prison for a crime she did not commit for almost 30 years. The victim, Linda Holley, was not only her mother, but her best friend. They were each other’s caretakers, as Nikki was born disabled and required surgeries her whole life, starting when she was born, and her mother had multiple bouts with cancer. The state argued she and Daniel murdered her mother to collect a $90K life insurance policy, but that simply did not happen. They also failed to investigate a possible connection to a very similar crime that happened just five days later and a few miles down the road.

Incarcerated For:
33 Years
0 Months
8 Days
Conviction: Murder
Sentence: Life
Conviction Date: January 17, 1992
Exoneration Date: Remains incarcerated
State: Arkansas
Status: Incarcerated
Contributing Causes of Conviction: Junk science, contaminated investigation, Satanic Panic
Type of Crime: Murder by stabbing and beating
01
Nikki's Background

Nikki grew up in Magnolia, Ark., a small city that is home to Southern Arkansas University. Her father was an abusive alcoholic who was only in her life briefly. She was raised by her mother, Linda Holley.

Nikki was born with a club foot and other physical disabilities that required dozens of surgeries, starting when she was born and continuing until she was a young teenager. She was homeschooled with the help of tutors her mother hired because she could not attend school due to the perpetual recoveries from surgeries.

Despite the tough hand that was dealt to her, she had a good life with her mom. As she got older, she had babysitting jobs, worked at a nursery, listened to her favorite music, and enjoyed life.

She met Daniel Risher in 1990 and they fell in love. They listened to music together, watched movies, and, like most people in rural Arkansas, enjoyed sitting outside at the lake and taking in the day.

She was living the happiest life she ever had, up until the moment her mother was murdered. That’s when her real nightmare began.

02
The Crime

On Friday, March 8, 1990, Linda Holley’s neighbor and friend saw her at her mailbox around 5 p.m. dressed in her scrubs. Linda was a nurse and had just gotten off work. They were supposed to go shopping the next day.

After two days of Linda not answering her phone, the neighbor went to her house to check on her, only to find the back door kicked in. She immediately called Linda’s best friend, Jan Terrell. Jan arrived and called a police officer friend, Buddy Hight. Buddy then called other police, who entered Linda’s residence and found her laying in her den, brutally stabbed and beaten to death.

03
The Investigation

Once police arrived at the scene, multiple officers entered the scene cautiously, not knowing what they would find. The glass from the back door had been kicked in and officers understandably were unconcerned at that time with kicking or tracking the broken glass.

Once Ms. Holley was found murdered, they called other police and that’s when the scene turned into a mess. There are several varying accounts of which officers were in the house, when they were there, what they were investigating, who was tracking what where, etc. In short, the crime scene was not at all secured.

Police zeroed in on a theory that Nikki and Daniel killed Linda to collect life insurance money and were bound and determined to make their theory work, despite a lack of real evidence and despite Daniel and Nikki having a strong alibi.

For good measure, they also floated theories about occultism, as Daniel was a fan of heavy metal music and Nikki had posters police surmised were occult related.

Police and prosecutors also ignored a possible connection between Ms. Holley’s murder and the murder of another woman just five days later and a few miles down the road. Like Ms. Holley, the victim in that case, Bernice Rankin, lived alone and was beaten and stabbed in her residence. That case remains unsolved.

04
The Trial

Nikki and Daniel were both represented by attorneys who were out of their league when it comes to capital murder charges. Their trial lasted just three days, from jury selection to verdict.

The most damaging testimony came from Don Smith, a criminalist for the Arkansas State Crime Lab. His testimony centered around luminol and blood testimony. Luminol is a chemical that reacts when applied to various substances, including blood. The clear intention was to have the jury believe that luminol testing done on various items, including a hunting jacket, boots, and other things revealed that the substance it was reacting to was the victim’s blood. But luminol reacts to a variety of substances and does not show if the substance it’s reacting to is blood, much less human blood, and certainly not a particular person’s blood. However, this testimony was allowed at trial, ensuring Nikki and Daniel’s convictions. Recent testing on the jacket, boots, and other items proves with scientific certainty that blood was not even human. Most likely it was deer blood, as Daniel was an avid hunter.

The jury was deadlocked for a time, but eventually arrived at a guilty verdict for both Nikki and Daniel.

05
Current Status

Nikki remains incarcerated, serving a life term in the Arkansas Department of Corrections. We are developing a few promising leads through our investigation and have hired lawyers to represent Nikki.

06
How to Help

Nikki would love to hear from you! She is so curious about the world outside her walls, a world she didn’t get to experience much of even before she was convicted.

Also, small things like putting money on her commissary for basic needs such as better food, soap, deodorant, and other ‘luxuries’ would go a long way.

You can write her here:

Nikki Zinger #704283
302 Corrections Drive
Newport, AR 72112

To put money on her commissary, follow this link and click on the yellow buttons below the photo.