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Maylanalsubaie
Maylanalsubaie
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🚨(News & information release): A Detroit man who has spent over 22 years behind bars has had his double murder conviction vacated. LaVone Hill, convicted in 2002 for two murders the clinic says he did not commit, was freed after Wayne County Judge Patricia Fresard dismissed the charges on October 23. The decision followed an investigation by the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which uncovered significant evidence of police misconduct. “For almost 23 years, I’ve had to live with the nightmare that I may die in prison, an innocent man, based on misconduct and corruption in the Detroit Police Department, namely Sergeant Walter Bates,” Hill said following his release. “I am happy to be free, but sad for all the innocent men left behind, and for the families of the victims who were misled into believing I was the one who murdered their loved ones.” The case stems from a September 8, 2001, shooting in Detroit where two people were murdered after a dice game. A few nights later, a man detained by police on unrelated charges became the key witness in the case. Sergeant Bates coerced the illiterate man into signing a false statement implicating Hill, according to the clinic. The witness later recanted during Hill’s 2002 trial, testifying that Hill had not been present at the scene and that Bates had forced him to sign the false statement. Despite this, Hill was convicted and sentenced to life without parole. The decision to vacate Hill’s conviction came after several new pieces of evidence surfaced, including testimony from two independent witnesses who confirmed Hill wasn’t present at the dice game. Additionally, new ballistics evidence showed that a high-powered r.fle was used in the murders, rather than a handg.n as stated in the witness’s original false statement. The son of one of the victims also revealed that another man had confessed to murdering his father. Further investigation uncovered that Sgt. Bates had been suspended multiple times during Hill’s case and that he was involved in a string of bank robberies, for which he was later convicted. None of this was disclosed to Hill’s defense during the trial.
🚨(News & information release): A Detroit man who has spent over 22 years behind bars has had his double murder conviction vacated. LaVone Hill, convicted in 2002 for two murders the clinic says he did not commit, was freed after Wayne County Judge Patricia Fresard dismissed the charges on October 23. The decision followed an investigation by the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which uncovered significant evidence of police misconduct. “For almost 23 years, I’ve had to live with the nightmare that I may die in prison, an innocent man, based on misconduct and corruption in the Detroit Police Department, namely Sergeant Walter Bates,” Hill said following his release. “I am happy to be free, but sad for all the innocent men left behind, and for the families of the victims who were misled into believing I was the one who murdered their loved ones.” The case stems from a September 8, 2001, shooting in Detroit where two people were murdered after a dice game. A few nights later, a man detained by police on unrelated charges became the key witness in the case. Sergeant Bates coerced the illiterate man into signing a false statement implicating Hill, according to the clinic. The witness later recanted during Hill’s 2002 trial, testifying that Hill had not been present at the scene and that Bates had forced him to sign the false statement. Despite this, Hill was convicted and sentenced to life without parole. The decision to vacate Hill’s conviction came after several new pieces of evidence surfaced, including testimony from two independent witnesses who confirmed Hill wasn’t present at the dice game. Additionally, new ballistics evidence showed that a high-powered r.fle was used in the murders, rather than a handg.n as stated in the witness’s original false statement. The son of one of the victims also revealed that another man had confessed to murdering his father. Further investigation uncovered that Sgt. Bates had been suspended multiple times during Hill’s case and that he was involved in a string of bank robberies, for which he was later convicted. None of this was disclosed to Hill’s defense during the trial.

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