Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Jailed wrongly, exonerated after 20yrs and died one year later. SMH



Some stories just makes you think otherwise shaaa... read the story the way CNN is reporting it.

When Sharrif Wilson was released after being wrongfully imprisoned for more than 20 years, he couldn't wait to have a hot slice of New York pizza.

"I feel free. I feel great right now. I'll able to do things that I [couldn't] do for the last 21 years," Wilson told

CNN the day after his February 2014 release.

His freedom was cut short.

Wilson, 38, died Saturday night at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan after suffering from breathing problems and other health issues, less than a year after DNA evidence led to his freedom, according to a statement from his attorney's office.
"They took him away from us. And we finally got him back," Fatima Wilson, Sharrif's sister told CNN affiliate WPIX.

Wilson was arrested in June 1992, along with his friend Anthony Yarbough, in the slaying of Yarbough's 40-year-old mother, Yarbough's 12-year-old sister and 12-year-old cousin in a Coney Island housing project.

Yarbough was just 18, and Wilson only 15, when they were accused of murder.

Brooklyn detectives placed Yarbough and Wilson into separate interview rooms and coerced false confessions from the two teens, who were later convicted in separate trials.

Yarbough, who was sentenced to 75 years to life in prison, also was released last year.

Yarbough's attorney and the district attorney's office began revisiting the case in 2010.

In 2013, new DNA evidence from under Yarbough's mother's fingernails matched sperm from the 1999 unsolved rape and murder of Migdalia Ruiz of Brooklyn, according to an investigation by the Medical Examiner's office.

Yarbough and Wilson were already incarcerated when the 1999 rape and murder occurred, according to Adam Perlmutter, Wilson's attorney.

"He was a healthy, young, 15-year-old-boy. And he came out a broken, morbidly obese individual whose health care wasn't really well monitored and maintained by state prison authorities," Perlmutter told WPIX.

Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth P. Thompson said his office examined "newly discovered scientific evidence that was not available at the time of the trial."


"Based on this new evidence, I believe a jury would have been more likely to return a different verdict," Thompson said.

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