Chicago Sun-Times

ACCUSED KILLER WROTE TO BOY’S FAMILY, WRONGLY CONVICTED MAN

Wanted to say sorry to relatives of 6- year- old, wrongly convicted man; families say letters haven’t arrived

- Staff Reporters BY RUMMANA HUSSAIN AND FRANK MAIN

Osborne Wade allegedly took a 6- year- old boy into a garage to molest him and stabbed him to death in 1992, authoritie­s say.

For decades, they say, Wade, 42, walked the earth free, while an innocent man rotted in prison for what happened.

But in May, Wade — locked up for failing to register as a convicted murderer who stabbed a man to death in 1994 — gave a videotaped confession to killing the boy, prosecutor­s say.

He wanted to do one more thing: apologize.

So Wade wrote letters to the family of Lindsey Murdock, the boy he killed, and to Mark Maxson, who spent more than two decades behind bars for a crime he didn’t commit, prosecutor­s said.

Representa­tives of the Murdock family and Maxson said they haven’t received letters yet.

“There could be no greater tragedy that I’ve seen in my 14 years on the bench,” Cook County Judge James Brown said at Wade’s bond hearing Wednesday, ordering him held without bail. “It’s beyond belief this kind of situation could happen.”

Wade told authoritie­s he saw Lindsey in an alley on the Far South Side in the summer of 1992 and took him to an abandoned garage to molest him and stabbed him with a long object he found in the garage, Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney Ethan Holland said.

Wade was previously arrested in the Nov. 4, 1994, stabbing death of Joseph Stephens, who was 18. Wade pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 22 years in prison in April 1997, court records show.

On May 1, 1997, he unsuccessf­ully tried to withdraw his plea, saying, “I do not deny being the one who committed the fatal act, but I did not intend for death to be the result of my actions.”

“Petitioner suffered from mental illness as a result of his crime and associated with taking another’s life, one of whom was nearly a family member and had lived with petitioner,” he wrote.

Wade allegedly killed Lindsey about two years before he killed Stephens.

Lindsey was reported missing on Aug. 29, 1992. His strangled and stabbed body was found the next day under debris and near his clothes in the garage in the 10700 block of South State.

At the time, Maxson told a TV reporter he bought potato chips for Lindsey at a liquor store and told him to go home on the day the child disappeare­d.

Police interviewe­d Maxson and said they were suspicious of his changing stories. Police said he confessed that he sexually assaulted and killed the boy in the garage after smoking crack and drinking beer. Detective Cmdr. Robert Bea- vers said Maxson thought that “by being helpful he would throw us off his trail.”

At Maxson’s sentencing in 1994, Judge Daniel Locallo said Maxson possessed a “malignant heart” and needed to be removed from society, even though Maxson insisted he was innocent and no physical evidence linked him to the crime.

Maxson continued to claim that detectives punched and kicked him during their interrogat­ions and that he was coerced into giving a confession. In 2013, the Illinois Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission found Maxson’s allegation­s were credible.

Recent DNA testing showed that the blood found on Lindsey’s clothes did not match the child’s or Maxson’s. The DNA profile was submitted to a law enforcemen­t database last year and revealed a match to Wade, authoritie­s say. Earlier this week, prosecutor­s asked Judge Thaddeus Wilson to vacate Maxson’s conviction. Maxson was released from Stateville Correction­al Center on Tuesday.

Lindsey’s father, Lindsey Murdock Sr., said the news that authoritie­s now believe Wade was his son’s killer is leaving him emotionall­y drained.

He said the FBI recently came to his home and showed him a photo lineup to see whether he could identify Wade, who had lived nearby in 1992. Murdock said he couldn’t pick Wade out because he never knew him.

“I am living it over and over again,” he said. “I was just horrified finding out my son died. I went to the morgue to identify my son’s body, and they told me what was done to him. I am thinking about it again 24 hours a day.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States