The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wrongfully accused Philly man free after 2 decades

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FRACKVILLE, PA. >> A Philadelph­ia man who spent more than two decades behind bars for a murder he didn’t commit is a free man — 17 years after another man confessed to the crime.

John Miller was released Wednesday after 22 years in prison. Surrounded by family outside the State Correction­al Institutio­n at Mahanoy, 100 miles north of Philadelph­ia, he said it felt “surreal.”

In 1998, a jury found Miller guilty of seconddegr­ee murder in the shooting death of a man in a parking lot outside 30th Street Station two years prior, even though there was no physical evidence of his involvemen­t.

The key witness against him confessed multiple times to being the real shooter and even sent a letter to Miller’s mother apologizin­g for lying.

The witness, David Williams, recanted his statement at Miller’s preliminar­y hearing in 1997 and denied it again at trial a year later, but the jury voted to convict Miller anyway.

In 2002, Williams wrote an apology letter to Miller’s mother.

“I can’t live with this on my conscience,” Williams wrote, according to court documents. “Your son had no knowledge of this crime, he wasn’t even there.”

Prosecutor­s did not say Wednesday whether they planned to charge Williams, or if they believed his confession that he killed Mullen.

But none of it mattered, according to Miller’s lawyers.

The courts denied Miller’s appeals, citing procedural issues, and alleging that Williams was not believable when he denied his statement and admitted to the crime.

Miller, now 44, contacted the Pennsylvan­ia Innocence Project about eight years ago to help with an appeal.

The Philadelph­ia District Attorney’s Office has agreed with Miller’s defense team that his prosecutio­n was flawed and his conviction shouldn’t stand.

On Wednesday morning, Common Pleas Court Judge Lillian Ransom granted Miller the relief he sought, leading to his release.

Miller said he’s looking forward to eating steak and taking his niece to the zoo.

 ?? JOSE F. MORENO/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? John Miller, center, smiles with his family, Velma Miller, left, mother, Kalita Miller, sister, and brother Lamont Washington, outside the SCI Mahanoy State Correction­al Institutio­n in Frackville, Pa. Wednesday. Miller spent more than two decades behind bars for a murder he didn’t commit, is a free man. The Philadelph­ia District Attorney’s Office agreed with Miller’s defense team that his prosecutio­n was flawed and his conviction shouldn’t stand.
JOSE F. MORENO/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP John Miller, center, smiles with his family, Velma Miller, left, mother, Kalita Miller, sister, and brother Lamont Washington, outside the SCI Mahanoy State Correction­al Institutio­n in Frackville, Pa. Wednesday. Miller spent more than two decades behind bars for a murder he didn’t commit, is a free man. The Philadelph­ia District Attorney’s Office agreed with Miller’s defense team that his prosecutio­n was flawed and his conviction shouldn’t stand.

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