Byron Halsey, a New Jersey man who spent more than 20 years in prison before being exonerated by DNA testing in the rape and murder of two Plainfield children, has filed a lawsuit against authorities.
Exonerated by DNA
Byron Halsey
Halsey spent more than two decades in state prison before being exonerated by DNA testing for the brutal rape and murder of two New Jersey children. Now he's filing a federal civil rights suit.
AP / The Star-Ledger
Alton Logan
Logan spent 26 years in prison for fatally shooting a security guard in 1983. In 2007, an attorney for another man who admitted that he had committed the crime came forward with the truth. He was officially declared innocent in April 2009.
AP
Antonio Beaver
He served more than a decade in prison because blood found on an attack victim was not presented in his trial. Once testing proved him not guilty, all charges were dropped in 2007. Unfortunately, he landed back in jailafter crashing his car while drunk.
Innocence Project
Calvin Johnson
DNA from a rape kit did not match Johnson's. He was set free in 1999 after nearly 16 years in prison. He later wrote a book about his ordeal.
John Bazemore / AP
Darryl Hunt
Darryl Hunt was convicted twice of a 1984 North Carolina murder. After DNA results proved his innocence in 1994, it still took 10 years of legal appeals to exonerate him.
Innocence Project
Donte Booker
After serving 15 years on a rape conviction, Booker was exonerated on Feb. 9, 2005, after DNA evidence on the victim's clothing pointed to someone else. In 2007 he was accused of a second rape, of which he was found not guilty by a jury in 2008.
Innocence Project
Floyd Brown
Brown was freed in 2007 after 14 years behind bars. Authorities locked up the mentally disabled man without a trial in 1993 and lost or destroyed key criminal evidence that could have freed him years ago.
Innocence Project
Herman Atkins
Atkins was convicted in 1988 of robbery, rape, forcible oral copulation and for using a handgun. After test results were returned, Atkins was released from prison in February 2000, after spending 12 years in prison. He has since gone to college, married, and dedicated his life to helping those who have been wrongly convicted.
Innocence Project
James Lee Woodard
Woodard spent more time in prison than any other wrongfully convicted inmate in U.S. history -- 27 years. DNA testing in the murder and rape of his girlfriend ultimately overturned his conviction in 2008.
AP
James Waller
In 2006, 23 years after his conviction of rape, DNA from a rape kit that had never been presented was found not to belong to Waller. He was pardoned by Texas governor Rick Perry in 2007.
Innocence Project / AP
Although Halsey had confessed to the brutal 1985 murders of his live-in girlfriend's 7-year-old daughter and her 8-year-old son, he maintains that the confession was coerced. According to the Star-Ledger:
While "still suffering the effects of alcohol," Halsey was taken to the Plainfield police station the day after the crime and "questioned aggressively and in an accusatory manner for the next 12 hours," according to his lawsuit. No evidence was found on his clothing, and Halsey made no admissions, but the following day he was interrogated for another 12 hours until he signed a detailed confession, the lawsuit states.SOURCE
The case of Halsey, 48, brings the number of post-conviction DNA exonerations in the United States to 238 since 1989.
Black men make up an overwhelming majority of those who have been freed through DNA evidence, according to the Innocence Project, a nonprofit organization that worked on the Halsey case and provides research and legal help for prisoners seeking to have their cases overturned by DNA evidence.
This year alone, 12 innocent people who were convicted have been exonerated, according to the Innocence Project.
Last month, former Tennessee death row inmate Paul House had all charges dropped in his 1986 murder conviction after DNA tests on key evidence failed to match House.
In upstate New York, Steven Barnes served nearly 20 years in prison for a murder he did not commit. He was freed last month after a DNA examination of the murder victim found evidence from another person.
Once a wrongly convicted prisoner gets through the years of legal appeals and court appearances to unearth the evidence needed to be freed, he often finds getting compensated (if there is any just compensation for losing years of freedom) for the wrongful conviction difficult.
There is no federal standard for compensation, so the wrongly convicted find themselves at the mercy of a patchwork of state laws that determine whether they'll be compensated at all and if so how much.
Halsey is seeking unspecified damages in the suit after serving 22 years. He had faced the death penalty after his conviction in 1985.
After numerous appeals, DNA evidence from the case was released in 2006. It was discovered that DNA taken from the crime scene matched Halsey's neighbor and co-worker Clifton Hall. Hall is scheduled to stand trial for the murders in September.
Meanwhile, Halsey struggles to reintegrate into society. When arrested, he was 24 years old and held a steady factory job, according to the Star-Ledger. After his release, an attorney on his case said he struggled to find work and reconnect with family. He now has a job at Newark Airport and lives alone.
"He's done everything he can in his power to make the transition, but the littlest things are hard, [his attorney] said. "He is understandably angry."SOURCE



Comments: (126)
Add a comment
By: pete staff on 6/08/2009 3:35PM
Police always look to bully thier way on the line of least resitances. They have lots of time to use while on the cities payroll. The truth does not come in play. With thier minds are already made up.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Doug Smith on 6/08/2009 3:43PM
Hooray for the "Innocents Project"! I'm sure there are hundreds more unjustly imprisoned folks out there! Keep up the good work!
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Mike on 6/11/2009 8:34PM
If Mr. Halsey is reading these comments, this is for him.
To start, if it matters to you, I'm white. I want to say that I believe you should be angry beyond my comprehension for what has happened to you. First and foremost, though, don't let this anger lead you to do something stupid or regrettable. If you do, you'll have been victimized by your situation once again. Second, I don't know if the interogators or prosecution was racially motivated, but if so, please be angry with those people and not certain 'groups' based on their personal defects. Most smart men understand that there is not a race, religion, or country that does not have its share of pitiful individuals that don't even deserve to be classified as human. Third, be pissed and get as much as you and your attorneys can get out of the cases you plan to bring against them. Fourth, after you've done what you can, think about the people involved who still give you pain when you think about what they've done. Then work to forgive them and I believe your own mind will rest easier. If your situation arose because of those people being just plain evil, understand that you can only do so much. After it's out of your hands, let a higher power take care of what needs to be done against them and what needs to be done for you to live peacefully for a long and fulfilling life.
Fifth, although I have no involvement in any way with this travesty, I am truly sorry that you have been so terribly wronged. Good luck sir, and may peace and happiness come to you.
Mike
Orange, CA
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: big poppy on 6/08/2009 3:40PM
if he had NOT confessed, i would have been more receptive to his lawsuit... but since he confessed, no sympathy... even when being grilled for hours, all he had to say was, "i want a lawyer!", and all questions would have ceased...
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Michelle on 6/08/2009 3:46PM
The poor guy. I'm sure he must have been under a huge amount of pressure to confess to something he didn't do. I've seen the police in action where they LIE to get a conviction and support each other in the lie. They call this the blue curtain. Somewhere along the way SOME police get off track.
Not all of them but there are enough to make life hard on a person if they want to.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: kiki on 6/08/2009 3:51PM
I think that they should HAVE to give these people minimum wage for 24 hours a day (time in prison) for the amount of time spent in prison. With Helsey that would be a little over 11 million dollars. It doesn't take away ALL that he has had to endure, but it would set him for life if he didn't squander it.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Mike Hunte on 6/08/2009 9:58PM
His girlfriend said he did it but that's ok?????
I think he should stay in jail because I'm sure he's guilty of something. 90% of the crimes!!!!!! Their guilty of something.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Susan Williams on 6/09/2009 12:09AM
Are you GOD. You are so wrong in your comment.
You disgust me.
My Savior died on the cross because of people like you.
Report This
By: royce0869 on 6/09/2009 12:30AM
Mike I think you should go to prison, because I THINK you may have committed a crime and are guilty of something. How fair is that?
Report This
By: gayle on 6/08/2009 3:59PM
so what happens to those who forced the confession?? do they get off scott free? Instead of continueing to look for the right person they went after an easy fix. The man was influenced by alcohol and tired from no sleep for what like 3 days? I understnad pressure to get things done and closed but get the right people. Follow thru. Bless this man for being strong to continue his fight to be free.
Reply to this Comment | Report This