He Wanted to Be a Cop, Ended Up Wrongfully Imprisoned

Brian Beals, 57, spent 35 years behind bars in 'egregious' case
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 14, 2023 9:30 AM CST
He Wanted to Be a Cop, Ended Up Wrongfully Imprisoned
In this photo, Brian Beals, center, who was exonerated on a murder charge and released from a downstate prison after 35 years behind bars, hugs his sister, Pattilyn Beals, left, and niece Tamiko Beals outside Robinson Correctional Center on Tuesday.   (Laura Nirider via AP)

A Chicago man who spent 35 years behind bars for a murder he didn't commit was freed Tuesday after a judge vacated his conviction and dismissed all charges. Brian Beals, 57, struggled to find the right words to describe his feelings as he stood outside Robinson Correctional Center in Crawford County, some 210 miles south of Chicago, and embraced his sister and niece. "Relief, happiness, it was just amazing to walk out of there," he told the AP in a phone interview. "I'm ready to begin life again."

Beals was convicted in the 1988 murder of 6-year-old Demetrius Campbell. At the time, Beals, a 22-year-old student at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, was home in Chicago during Thanksgiving break. He was approached by a drug dealer and they argued, according to news accounts at the time. Attorneys say Beals got in his car and drove off. Bullets fired in Beals' direction hit two bystanders, the boy and his mother, Valerie Campbell.

Despite three witnesses describing a different offender, Beals was convicted, namely on Campbell's testimony. She said she saw Beals in the argument and believed he fired the shots. Beals maintained his innocence. Attorneys who took on Beals' case, including with the Illinois Innocence Project, found five new witnesses to corroborate that Beals was the intended target and wasn't the shooter. They also presented new photographic enhancement showing Beals' car had bullet holes in the rear bumper.

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"Brian Beals' case is one of the most egregious wrongful convictions I have ever seen," Laura Nirider, one of Beal's attorneys, said in a statement. "Brian, a college athlete who was studying to be a police officer, represented the best of his community's future—but that future was derailed." Beals has served the second-longest term of wrongful incarceration in Illinois history, according to the National Registry of Exonerations.

(More wrongful conviction stories.)

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