East Bay Times

Judge releases man in 1990 slayings of 2 hunters

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A man was released from a Michigan prison Friday after nearly 21 years, freed from a life sentence after state authoritie­s acknowledg­ed that an Ohio serial killer could have been the person who killed two deer hunters in 1990.

“A state of shock,” Jeff Titus, 71, told The Associated Press moments after walking out of a prison in Coldwater. “Not having handcuffs on or prison blues. I can't wait to get out and walk in the woods.”

Titus emerged a few hours after a judge threw out his murder conviction­s under an agreement between the attorney general's office and the Innocence Clinic at University of Michigan law school.

Titus' rights were violated at trial in 2002 when his lawyer never was informed that sheriff's investigat­ors in Kalamazoo County had gathered evidence years earlier against Thomas Dillon, the state's conviction integrity unit said.

Local prosecutor­s at the time apparently didn't know about Dillon, either. Attorney General Dana Nessel acknowledg­ed it was “powerful evidence” that might have prevented Titus from being charged.

Titus still could face a second trial, though David Moran of the Innocence Clinic suggested that was very unlikely.

Prosecutor Jeff Getting agreed that the evidence was “absolutely powerful” but said he needed more time to decide what is ahead.

Doug Estes and Jim Bennett were fatally shot near Titus' rural property in 1990. Titus was cleared as a suspect — he had been hunting deer 27 miles away — but murder charges were filed against him 12 years later, after a new team of investigat­ors had reopened the case.

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