'I've Been Fighting This 27 Years': Man's Murder Conviction Dismissed

Johnny Tallbear had been convicted in 1991 slaying
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jun 11, 2018 4:14 PM CDT
After Nearly 3 Decades Behind Bars, Man Released Thanks to DNA Testing
Johnny Tallbear, right, celebrates outside the Oklahoma County Courthouse with one of his attorneys, Karen Thompson, left, in Oklahoma City, Monday, June 11, 2018, after Judge Glen Jones ordered his release due to new DNA evidence.   (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

An Oklahoma City man who was sentenced to life in prison for the 1991 slaying of a homeless man was released Monday after testing on DNA recovered at the crime scene failed to match him, the AP reports. A judge vacated the sentence and dismissed the case against Johnny Tallbear, 61, and ordered his immediate release. Tallbear, who said his birthday was last Friday, expressed wonder at the cellphone he was handed to speak to an AP reporter after he finished a brisket taco at a downtown Oklahoma City restaurant. "How do you use these things?" Tallbear asked when given the phone by Innocence Project attorney Karen Thompson. Speaking about new technology, such as cellphones, Tallbear sounded in awe. "It's about everything," he said. "You being gone three decades, everything changes."

Tallbear was convicted in 1992 in the beating death of a homeless man who has never been positively identified. He maintained his innocence, and reports at the time said Tallbear screamed at the jury when his conviction was announced. Tallbear, who raised his arms skyward in joy as he exited the courthouse, said he feels a "very great sense of relief. I've been fighting this case for 27 years, ever since they put the handcuffs on." Thompson said the Innocence Project took the case at Tallbear's request and after examining evidence, including blood samples that were recovered at the scene and kept by the local crime laboratory, but failed to match Tallbear. Thompson said she did not know whether Tallbear will sue the state for wrongful conviction, and Tallbear said only that his next step is to seek a congressional investigation into Oklahoma's prison and judicial systems.

(More wrongful conviction stories.)

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