
Freed inmate hopes to help others who are innocent
By MARGARET STAFFORD – September 2, 2008
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A man released from prison after a judge ruled
that his 1984 murder trial was constitutionally flawed said Tuesday he
hopes his case will convince the public that this country is jailing
innocent people.
Darryl Burton was convicted in 1985 of capital murder and armed
criminal action and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of
parole for 50 years. He was released from the Jefferson City
Correctional Center on Friday.
During a news conference Tuesday, Burton said he believes there are
thousands of other innocent people in U.S. prisons.
"I come to prison thinking that is an isolated incident, I'm the only
person this has ever happened to," Burton said. "I thought, justice
just don't goof up like this, not in American justice, or what I term
American injustice. But it does happen in more cases than we know."
Burton, 46, of St. Louis, was convicted despite the lack of physical
evidence or any motive tying him to the fatal gas station shooting in
June 1984 in St. Louis. He was convicted solely on the testimony of two
men who claimed they saw the shooting.
One of those witnesses, Claudex Simmons, lied during Burton's 1985
trial when he testified that he had been convicted of a crime only
twice. In reality, his criminal record included at least seven felonies
and five misdemeanors.
The failure to disclose Simmons' complete criminal history to the jury
violated Burton's right to due process, Cole County Circuit Judge
Richard G. Callahan said in his Aug. 18 ruling throwing Burton's
conviction.
The judge gave the state 15 days to decide whether to retry Burton.
Prosecutors in St. Louis decided Friday not to retry Burton and he was
released.
That came as a pleasant shock to Burton, attorneys and investigators
who had been working on his case for eight years. Burton said the
warden told him personally that he was being released and offered to
have him driven to St. Louis.
"I told him I'd walk to St. Louis if what you're saying is for real,"
Burton said. "It was just surreal. You wait on these days, you wait and
wonder and see other cases on the news. For me, I just said 'my day
will come.'"
His attorneys and a clergyman who had befriended him drove him to St.
Louis to be reunited with his family.
Attorney Cheryl Pilate joined Burton in hoping the case would highlight
the difficulty of exonerating innocent inmates.
Many wrongful convictions are won on "snitch" evidence from criminals
seeking deals and weak eyewitness evidence, she said.
"His story is dramatic yet all too common," Pilate said. "There are
hundreds if not thousands of people just like him still sitting in
prison."
Burton maintained his innocence from the beginning and relentlessly
tried to get help, writing an estimated 600 to 700 letters and filing
numerous appeals on his own. In 2000, his attorneys began working on
the case with the help of Centurion Ministries, a national organization
that provided investigators and money to help exonerate Burton.
Burton said he is not bitter but said prosecutors should not be allowed
to offer "snitches" deals for testimony.
"The system we have in arguably the best country on Earth is locking up
its citizens because someone wants to get a conviction," Burton said.
"It becomes a game. And you're dealing with people's lives. ... We can
do better than what we have done with our system of justice. We have
to."
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