Innocence Project: 2018 Was Record Year for Exonerations By Frederick H. Lowe

July 9, 2019

Innocence Project: 2018 Was Record Year for Exonerations
By Frederick H. Lowe

counts
The Innocence Project got Gregory Counts released from prison in 2018.

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Malcolm Alexander was released from prison for a crime he didn’t commit in 2018.

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The Innocence Project reported in the most recent issue of its magazine that a record nine clients were exonerated and released from prison in 2018 for crimes they didn’t commit.

Maddy deLone, the Innocence Project’s executive director, wrote in Spring 2019 issue of “The Innocence Project in Print” that the nine exonerations were most at one time in Innocence Project’s 26- year history.

Exonerations continued into 2019 with three more men being released from prison for crimes they didn’t commit.The incarcerations took a problematic toll on the 12 men who were locked behind bars for a total of nearly 300 years. “Time away from their homes, families and loved ones cannot be replaced,” deLone wrote.Gregory Counts, one of the exonerated said, “I want to jail when I was 19. I did 26 years—over half of my life in jail. I need to see the world.”

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. vacated rape, sodomy and kidnapping charges against Counts after a woman who claimed she was the victim admitted to lying.Semen and other physical evidence eliminated Counts as a suspect.Malcolm Alexander, another exoneree, said, “freedom is a new life. It’s like being reborn. It’s giving a chance to live a life I had been denied.”

The Innocence Project determined Alexander’s attorney was incompetent.Genetic testing eventually eliminated him as the rape suspect.  He left prison with a smile on his face and his black pet Labrador Retriever named “Innocent.”In another matter, New York created the first ever state-wide commission to study prosecutorial misconduct, such a failure to disclose exculpatory evidence or discrimination in jury selection.