The Guardian (USA)

Kevin Strickland: Kansas City man freed after 42 years for wrongful conviction

- Guardian staff and agencies

A Kansas City man who was jailed for more than 40 years for three murders was released from prison on Tuesday after a judge ruled that he was wrongfully convicted in 1979.

Kevin Strickland, 62, has always maintained that he was home watching television and had nothing to do with the killings, which happened when he was 18 years old.

He learned of the decision to free him when the news scrolled across the television screen as he was watching a soap opera in prison. He said fellow inmates began screaming.

“I’m not necessaril­y angry. It’s a lot. I think I’ve created emotions that you all don’t know about just yet,” he told reporters as he left the Western Missouri correction­al center in Cameron.

“Joy, sorrow, fear. I am trying to figure out how to put them together.”

He said he would like to get involved in efforts to “keep this from happening to someone else”, adding that the criminal justice system “needs to be torn down and redone”.

Judge James Welsh, a retired Missouri court of appeals judge, ruled after a three-day evidentiar­y hearing requested by a Jackson county prosecutor who said evidence used to convict Strickland had since been recanted or disproven.

Welsh wrote in his judgment that “clear and convincing evidence” was presented that “undermines the Court’s confidence in the judgment of conviction”. He noted that no physical evidence linked Strickland to the crime scene and that a key witness recanted before her death.

“Under these unique circumstan­ces, the Court’s confidence in Strickland’s conviction­s is so undermined that it cannot stand, and the judgment of conviction must be set aside,” Welsh wrote in ordering Strickland’s immediate release.

The Jackson county prosecutor, Jean Peters Baker, who advocated for his freedom, moved quickly to dismiss the criminal charges against him so he could be released.

“To say we’re extremely pleased and grateful is an understate­ment,” she said in a statement. “This brings justice, finally, to a man who has tragically suffered so, so greatly as a result of this wrongful conviction.”

Since winning his freedom, one of the first things Strickland did was visit his mother’s grave, after not being able to attend her funeral.

“That was the first step. I didn’t have a chance to visit with her in the last years … I revisted those tears that I did when they told me I was guilty of a crime I didn’t commit,” he told CNN on Wednesday morning.

Strickland said he now had a deep desire to see the sea, for the first time.

“That would be a big win. Anyone who’s alive should want to see the ocean one time,” he said.

Missouri’s attorney general, Eric Schmitt, a Republican running for the US Senate, said Strickland was guilty and had fought to keep him incarcerat­ed.

The Republican governor, Mike Parson, who declined Strickland’s clemency requests, tweeted simply: “The Court has made its decision, we respect the decision, and the Department of Correction­s will proceed with Mr Strickland’s release immediatel­y.”

Strickland was convicted in the deaths of Larry Ingram, 21, John Walker, 20, and Sherrie Black, 22, at a home in Kansas City.

The evidentiar­y hearing focused largely on testimony from Cynthia Douglas, the only person to survive the 25 April 1978 shootings.

She initially identified Strickland as one of four men who shot the victims and testified to that during his two trials.

Welsh wrote that she had doubts soon after the conviction but initially was “hesitant to act because she feared she could face perjury charges if she were to publicly recant statements previously made under oath”.

She later said she was pressured by police to choose Strickland and tried for years to alert political and legal experts to help her prove she had identified the wrong man, according to testimony during the hearing from her family, friends and a co-worker. Douglas died in 2015.

 ?? Photograph: Rich Sugg/AP ?? Kevin Strickland, 62, managed a smile while talking to the media after his release from prisonon Tuesday.
Photograph: Rich Sugg/AP Kevin Strickland, 62, managed a smile while talking to the media after his release from prisonon Tuesday.

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