The Star Malaysia

Dog’s discovery frees man of sex crime

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SALEM (Oregon):

The discovery of a black Labrador named Lucy led to the unravellin­g of a criminal case against an Oregon man who had begun serving a 50-year prison sentence.

Joshua Horner, a plumber from the central Oregon town of Redmond, was convicted on April 12, 2017, of sexual abuse of a minor.

In the trial, the complainan­t testified Horner had threatened to shoot her animals if she went to the police about the alleged molestatio­n, and said she saw him shoot her dog, killing it, to make his point.

Six months after a jury convicted Horner in a verdict that was not unanimous, he asked the Oregon Innocence Project for help. The group took up his case.

When the group raised concerns in April about the case with Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel, he agreed to work with them.

Horner insisted he never shot the dog.

Finding the dog would show the complainan­t had lied under oath.

An Oregon Innocence Project volunteer and an official from Hummel’s office searched for it.

The black Lab had reportedly been given away.

The investigat­ors were sniffing on the trail, but they had trouble tracking down the purported dog’s owner.

“They made a couple trips around Deschutes County; he was not there,” said Steve Wax, legal director of the Oregon Innocence Project.

“We heard he was in Seattle. Then we learned he had a place on the Oregon Coast.”

It was there, in the town of Gearhart northwest of Portland, that the pair finally found Lucy after her owners agreed to rendezvous at a golf course.

Lucy was identified by an undisputed chain of custody and her looks.

 ?? — AP ?? Four-legged evidence: Horner with his wife Kelli after the hearing in Bend and Lucy in Gearhart, Oregon.
— AP Four-legged evidence: Horner with his wife Kelli after the hearing in Bend and Lucy in Gearhart, Oregon.
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