The Star Malaysia

Wrongly convicted US man freed after 23 years in prison

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CHICAGO: Surrounded by news cameras and supporters, Lamonte McIntyre hugged his mother for the first time as a free man in 23 years.

The 41-year-old Kansas native was wrongly convicted of a double murder and finally set free after spending more than half of his life behind bars. He was serving two life sentences.

The group Injustice Watch said McIntyre’s first words were: “It’s nice outside.”

McIntyre was originally convicted at the age of 17 on the testimony of witnesses who later recanted. Prosecutor­s presented no physical evidence or motive to tie him to the 1994 murders.

A judge was reconsider­ing the case in court hearings that were scheduled to last into next week, when the new prosecutor in the case said on Friday in a news release that new informatio­n cast doubt on witness identifica­tion of McIntyre as the killer, and that a jury might have not convicted him.

“In light of informatio­n learned by my office since I began in January,” Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree said, “my office is requesting the Court find that manifest injustice exists.”

The original investigat­ors of the daytime shooting never issued search warrants nor discovered a link between McIntyre and the victims, according to The Washington Post. He was arrested after less than 20 minutes of interviews.

“The investigat­ion was hasty and superficia­l,” said the Midwest Innocence Project, which helped free McIntyre.

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