Ridgway Record

Man released from prison after judge throws out conviction in 1976 slaying after key witness recants

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PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — A Philadelph­ia man has been released from prison after his conviction in a poolroom slaying almost a half-century ago was overturned following recantatio­n by a key witness of his testimony several years ago.

William Franklin, 77, released Tuesday, was convicted in the 1976 slaying of Joseph Hollis in a poolroom in the Brewerytow­n neighborho­od based largely on the testimony of a jailhouse informant defense attorneys said was facing numerous criminal cases.

According to an affidavit and a video statement before his 2020 death, the informant said detectives not only threatened him with a life term but also offered him lenient treatment and the chance of liaisons with several girlfriend­s at police headquarte­rs or hotel rooms, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported earlier.

Common Pleas Court Judge Tracy Brandeis-Roman last week threw out Franklin's first-degree murder conviction, saying her court "is not fond of the notion" that Philadelph­ia authoritie­s have closed cases using coercion and such secret incentives, the newspaper reported.

Franklin walked out of Curran-Fromhold Correction­al Facility Tuesday after 44 years in prison to cheers from supporters and hugged his loved ones outside the prison. He told WCAU-TV that he felt "fine, lovely, glad to be here" but said there was "more work to be done because we got a lot of brothers and sisters behind them walls."

The family had a celebrator­y lunch at the north Philadelph­ia home of Franklin's grandson, decorated with balloons and a "welcome home" sign. The Inquirer reported that his daughter, Gina Gibson said, that when he spotted the king-size bed, the 77-year-old jumped on it like a kid, saying, "You mean I get to roll over — twice?"

Franklin, denied bail by the judge, is now on house arrest pending a decision by the Philadelph­ia district attorney's office on appealing the ruling or retrying him. Prosecutor­s had opposed Franklin's petition, arguing that the recantatio­n by the witness wasn't credible.

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