Hamilton Journal News

Man sues Hertz over missing evidence

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A Michigan man who spent nearly five years in custody is suing a car rental company for failing to produce in a timely manner a receipt that would have proved his innocence long before he was convicted of a 2011 murder.

The evidence from Hertz was finally obtained in 2018, leading to Herbert Alford’s exoneratio­n in Ingham County last year.

Alford filed a lawsuit against Hertz on Tuesday, although the case will be slowed by the company’s bankruptcy reorganiza­tion. He is seeking financial compensati­on.

“There is no question that (Alford) would have avoided going to prison had they produced this documentat­ion,” attorney Jamie White told WLNS-TV.

Hertz had no immediate comment Wednesday.

Alford was convicted of second-degree murder in 2016 in the shooting death of Michael Adams after Hertz failed to respond to requests for records, White said.

In 2018, Hertz finally produced a receipt that showed Alford was renting a car at a Lansing-area airport at the time that Adams was shot, White said. He was killed in a Lansing neighborho­od 20 minutes away from the airport.

The conviction was thrown out and charges were finally dropped in 2020, after Alford had served nearly five years in prison and jail.

The diplomats, who said the presidenti­al statement had been approved by all 15 council members including Myanmar’s neighbor and friend China, spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of its official adoption at a council meeting expected later Wednesday. A presidenti­al statement is a step below a resolution but becomes part of the official record of the U.N.’s most powerful body.

The British-drafted statement, obtained by The Associated Press, calls for the immediate release of government leaders including State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint who have been detained since the Feb. 1 military coup.

It supports the country’s democratic transition and “stresses the need to uphold democratic institutio­ns and processes, refrain from violence, fully respect human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms and uphold the rule of law.” agent then pretended to be a 14-year-old girl and communicat­ed with Hammock.

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