Uncategorized
Three Baltimore Men Exonerated After Nearly Four Decades in Prison

By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior Correspondent
@StacyBrownMedia
Alfred Chestnut, Ransom Watkins and Andrew Stewart recently were released and exonerated after spending 36 years in prison for a crime they didn’t commit.
The men were teenagers when they received a life sentence in 1984 after being convicted of murdering 14-year-old DeWitt Duckett in Baltimore.
“Everyone involved in this case – school officials, police, prosecutors, jurors, the media, and the community – rushed to judgment and allowed their tunnel vision to obscure obvious problems with the evidence,” said Shawn Armbrust, executive director of the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, which represents Watkins.
“This case should be a lesson to everyone that the search for quick answers can lead to tragic results,” Armbrust stated.
DeWitt reportedly was shot in the neck following a dispute over a jacket as he walked to class at Harlem Park Junior High School in Baltimore.
Marilyn Mosby, the Baltimore City State’s Attorney, reopened the case earlier this year because of lingering questions and recent revelations of corruption in the city’s police department that allegedly stretched back for decades.
Chestnut also sent a query to the city’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which the Washington Post said included exculpatory evidence that he uncovered in 2018.
An assistant prosecutor who worked on the case in 1984 reportedly said that prosecutors had no reports at the time that would have cast doubt on the guilt of the three men.
Following their conviction, court records were sealed, and it wasn’t until a year ago, that Chestnut had successfully obtained the related documents through a freedom of information request.
According to the District Attorney’s office, the police records revealed that several witnesses told authorities that the person responsible was an 18-year-old who immediately fled the scene and dumped his weapon.
Instead, the Baltimore police focused their investigation on Chestnut, Watkins, and Stewart. The alleged shooter was fatally shot in 2002.
“On behalf of the criminal justice system, and I’m sure this means very little to you, gentlemen, I’m going to apologize,” Circuit Court Judge Charles Peters told the men at a hearing on Monday, November 25.
Peters said the men are entirely exonerated

Black Community Opinions5 days agoTrending In America: Record-high Share Of 40-Year-Olds Never Married
Black History4 days agoFrom Segregation to Superchips: The Hidden Architect of Modern AI
Black Business News6 days agoBlack-Owned Minnesota Businesses Protest ICE Violence And Occupation
Black Community Opinions1 week agoFrom Civil Rights To ICE Raids: Trump’s Unchecked Power, Policies Put Every U.S. Community At Risk
Hampton Roads Community News7 days agoCrump and Obama: Top Black News Makers Of The 21st Century
Black Community Opinions7 days agoWake Up, America. The Tyranny Is Real
Black Community Opinions6 days agoBlack America Must Pay Attention to Global Power
Civil5 days agoVA250’s Carly Fiorina: “True Love of Country Means Knowing the Whole Story”













