Michael McAlister (pictured right)
spent 29 years in prison for rapes he didn't commit but was locked because he
had an uncanny resemblance to the man, Norman Bruce Derr (left) who really
committed the crimes.
UK mirror
reports;
An innocent man who
spent 29 years behind bars after being convicted of an attempted rape and
kidnapping has finally been given his freedom. Michael McAlister was cleared
after a serial rapist who had an uncanny resemblance to the 58-year-old at the
time confessed to the 1986 offence. He was granted an unconditional pardon by
Virginia's governor, wiping away the prosecution which he had campaigned
against for decades alongside family and friends.
After clearing McAlister (pictured
above now), governor Terry McAuliffe said in a written statement:
"A number of individuals in the
law enforcement community [...] have concluded that this crime was committed by
another individual, and that Mr McAlister should be freed to return to his
family and his community.
"I have reached the same
conclusion, and I have acted in accordance with the law."
Upon being reunited with his sister
and elderly mother outside Dillwyn Correctional Centre, McAlister said that the
governor was a 'special man' for giving him his freedom.
He told reporters: "It’s a
great day. It’s a wonderful day. Governor McAuliffe, he’s a special man for
being brave enough to do this."
McAlister added that his thoughts
were with the victim of the attack.
He said: "It wasn’t her fault,
and I don’t hold any hard feelings at all toward her. I hope [the attacker] can
deal with his issues as best he can."
McAlister was 29 and working as a
carpenter when he was identified by the victim in court.
The victim, a 22-year-old mum, was
assaulted in the laundry room of an apartment complex on February 23, 1986.
But she was able to partially pull
her attacker's stocking mask off during the attack, and caught a glimpse of his
face.
At the time, McAlister was known by
police following a string of alcohol-related incidents of public indecency.
He was misidentified after a police
sketch resembled his face, which helped lead to his wrongful conviction.
Shawn Armbrust,
executive director of the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, and James Bensfield
and Jonathan Kossak of the Miller & Chevalier law firm, said in a joint
statement: "We are thrilled that the governor did the right thing and
finally ended this nightmare."


No comments:
Post a Comment