Judge frees men imprisoned for 24 years, saying prosecutors withheld evidence
National Security
Judge frees men imprisoned for 24 years, saying prosecutors withheld evidence
By
Shayna Jacobs
March 5, 2021 at 6:51 p.m. EST
NEW YORK Three men convicted of murdering an off-duty police officer and a business owner nearly 25 years ago were released from prison Friday after a judge declared they were wrongfully convicted because evidence that may have exonerated them was "deliberately withheld" from their lawyers.
The arrests in 1996 of George Bell, Rohan Bolt and Gary Johnson were heralded by then-New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, who had vowed days before their apprehension that justice would be served swiftly, lawyers for the men say. But on Friday, Queens County Supreme Court Judge Joseph Zayas said the prosecutors who secured their convictions had suppressed information that others may have committed these crimes.
Speaking via video from Green Haven Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison north of New York City, the three men thanked those who worked to earn their freedom. ... After I was convicted for capital murder, I couldnt fathom or wrap my mind around how God would allow the justice system I believed in to fail me in such a tragic fashion, said Bell, who confessed to authorities in connection with the shooting deaths of New York police officer Charles Davis and another man, Ira Epstein, whose check-cashing store in Queens was robbed the morning of Dec. 21, 1996.
Although Bell and Johnson, then 19 and 22 years old, respectively, both confessed, they had been subject to coercive interrogations and their statements bear all the hallmarks of the false confessions that resulted in wrongful convictions in the past, according to a motion filed earlier Friday by private attorneys and public defenders involved in the effort to overturn their convictions.
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Julie Tate in Washington contributed to this report.
Shayna Jacobs
Shayna Jacobs is a federal courts and law enforcement reporter on the national security team at The Washington Post, where she covers the Southern and Eastern districts of New York. Follow
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