New York Daily News

SLAY, IT AIN’T SO

Wrongly accused murder suspect freed after 2 years at Rikers

- BY SHAYNA JACOBS

A Trinidad and Tobago native who served two years behind bars awaiting trial for a 2017 murder walked out of a Bronx courthouse a free man after prosecutor­s moved to dismiss his case Tuesday.

Virgil Mitchell, 34, was elated after leaving the courtroom with his attorneys after his double-shooting case was formally tossed by Justice James McCarty on a strong recommenda­tion by the Bronx district attorney’s office.

Mitchell, the father of a 3-year-old boy who he hasn’t seen in two years, spoke positively about his future despite the injustice.

“I want to get back on with my life and just pick up back where I left off,” he said. “And move forward.”

Mitchell said his stint at Rikers Island did “some psychologi­cal damage,” but he vowed to “not to let it defeat me.”

“Man, I don’t wish that on nobody,” he added about his time in the notorious jail complex while his charges were pending.

At the time of his arrest in August 2017, Mitchell had been a utilities worker for National Grid for a decade and had no criminal record, according to his attorneys. He said he lost the job but is now in talks to get it back. He added that he spent “basically my whole life savings” fighting the case, and was about to buy a house when he was busted.

“I lost that option,” he said. “I lost a lot.”

Prosecutor­s took a firm stance in court that evidence pointed to Mitchell’s innocence in a Hunts Point shooting near an annual Caribbean music festival known as Moksha on June 25, 2017, around 6:10 p.m. Atiba Ramsey, 34, was killed in the gunfire. A second victim, Kenda Verwayne, now 36, was wounded.

The DA’s office began reinvestig­ating after Mitchell’s lawyers, Murray Richman and Valerie Casali, took over the case in May, conducted their own probe and shared the results with prosecutor­s.

It wasn’t long before the Bronx DA’s office saw that the wrong man was in jail.

Mitchell, who was brought into the case by an anonymous Crime Stoppers tip, was picked out in a photo array and a lineup by a single witness. But the one-witness identifica­tion was debunked and there was ample evidence that exonerates Mitchell of the crime, the DA’s office said.

An anonymous 911 caller referred to the shooter as “heavyset,” weighing about 240 pounds and about 6feet-2. Mitchell is 5-feet-9 and around 180 pounds, according to police records.

And several witnesses provided to the DA’s office by the defense, all of whom had clean records, put Mitchell inside the heavily secured Trinidadia­n festival “the entire time that they were.”

They told prosecutor­s there was tight NYPD security that day — with the use of metal detector wands. As is customary during the event known as “Holiday of Colors,” attendees were splashed with colorful paint. Prosecutor­s conceded that it is “highly likely” Mitchell’s clothes would have been drenched with paint and could not have “looked like a white [T-shirt]” which the gunman was said to have been wearing.

Prosecutor­s eventually conceded that the case against Mitchell was flimsy.

“The people’s assessment is that there is sufficient proof to support the position that the defendant is not the shooter,” prosecutor­s wrote in a dismissal memo filed Tuesday in Bronx Criminal Court.

“Virgil Mitchell’s physical attributes differ markedly from the descriptio­n provided by witnesses,” the DA’s report says. “It is difficult to imagine how Mitchell could have gotten a gun into the festival such that he could have access to it later in the day given the tight security … .”

“If you looked at it closely, you had to see the holes in the case,” Richman said after the dismissal.

The judge lauded both sides, calling the result “proof of the work the defense attorneys did,” noting he was “equally proud of the work the district attorneys’ office did in keeping an open mind … .”

Mitchell had been held without bail at Rikers on murder, assault and other charges since his arrest. In July, he was released on his own recognizan­ce while the new informatio­n was vetted.

His lawyers say another suspect was identified through palm prints found on a vehicle at the scene.

A spokeswoma­n for the Bronx DA declined to comment on whether the office is pursuing another suspect.

 ??  ?? A jubilant Virgil Mitchell hugs Murray Richman, one of his lawyers, after Bronx judge tossed murder charges against the dad Tuesday.
A jubilant Virgil Mitchell hugs Murray Richman, one of his lawyers, after Bronx judge tossed murder charges against the dad Tuesday.
 ??  ?? A relieved Virgil Mitchell (r.), with lawyers Murray Richman (l.) and Valerie Casali, hears he is to be freed Tuesday after being jailed for two years on Rikers Island, awaiting trial for a murder that the Bronx district attorney’s office admits he didn’t commit.
A relieved Virgil Mitchell (r.), with lawyers Murray Richman (l.) and Valerie Casali, hears he is to be freed Tuesday after being jailed for two years on Rikers Island, awaiting trial for a murder that the Bronx district attorney’s office admits he didn’t commit.

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