The Arizona Republic

Judge frees innocent man after 30 years in prison

- Mariah Timms and Molly Davis

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Claude Francis Garrett is not guilty of murder in the 1992 death of his girlfriend, Lorie Lee Lance, a judge ruled Tuesday.

Lance died in a Nashville house fire, and two juries convicted Garrett in the death on what is now considered junk fire science.

He has always maintained his innocence. In court Tuesday in blue prison clothing, a light blue shirt and dark blue pants, he watched the judge intently. When the judge read out the order vacating his conviction, he let out a long breath, nodding in relief.

All charges against him were dismissed Tuesday.

In the gallery of the courtroom, supporters and advocates quietly celebrated his release. He was taken back from the courtroom to be released from Tennessee Department of Correction custody.

Garrett’s daughter Deana Watson said Tuesday she is happy her father will be released from custody, though she is a little nervous and unsteady.

She’s not really sure what comes next. Watson was 4 years old when her father went to prison. Now she has a 4year-old son of her own.

“The plan is that he hangs out with me for a while and then we figure it out,”

Watson said. “We had a whole conversati­on about cell phones and how they work. We will help him reintegrat­e into society.”

Lance, 24, died of smoke inhalation in the house the pair shared in Old Hickory after a massive fire that Garrett escaped, suffering burns.

She was found under a pile of household items in a utility room with no outside exit that sat off the kitchen.

Investigat­ors at the time believed they found evidence of a “pour pattern” in the house, indicators that an accelerant was purposeful­ly placed and ignited to start a fire.

Police quickly landed on her older boyfriend, Garrett, as a suspect.

But in the nearly 30 years since that fatal early morning blaze, fire science has undergone a revolution in research and methodolog­y, and according new reports and testimony by witnesses for the Tennessee Innocence Project and the Davidson County District Attorney’s Conviction Review Unit, the blaze was not intentiona­lly set.

“Garrett has shown actual innocence,” Criminal Court Judge Monte Watkins wrote in a ruling vacating Garrett’s previous conviction filed last week. “The Court is satisfied that Petitioner has presented clear and convincing evidence showing that no reasonable jury would have convicted Claude Garrett of felony murder in light of the new scientific evidence.”

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