
Duke Students Try to Reopen Fayetteville Murder
Case
Feb. 20, 2008
Lamont McKoy has
spent half his life behind razor wire for a crime he and others claim
he didn't commit.
Law students at the Duke University Innocence Project are trying to
help him demonstrate that.
McKoy was convicted in 1990 of the drug-related shooting death of Myron
Hailey in Fayetteville. Police found a Honda Accord crashed in some
trees off Rowan Street.
The car had two bullet holes in the back, and
Hailey was dead.
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Lamont McKoy
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Police said Hailey was shot during a drug deal in Haymount
Hill and drove to where he died.
"I did do some dealing in drugs in my past," McKoy said, saying that
his past led to his arrest.
Investigators found no physical evidence linking McKoy to the crime.
Instead, jurors convicted him largely based on a police interview in
which McKoy said, "I know it" and on witness testimony from Bobby Lee
Williams.
McKoy said he doesn't regret turning down a plea deal before his trial.
He said he feels that he, like Hailey, unjustly lost his life because
of the shooting.
"The lawyer was saying I wouldn't do more than six or seven months at
the time, but I didn't do (the crime)," he said. "It's a burden on me.
It's a burden on my family. I didn't murder anybody, and I just want to
clear my name."
"Having gone through this for about a year now and having seen all the
evidence, I firmly believe that he's in jail for something he didn't
do," Duke student Josh Schmidt said.
After McKoy went to prison in the Sampson Correctional Institution,
word surfaced in the community that Hailey had been shot elsewhere.
"We were notified from different family members and different people in
the streets that this murder took place in another location," said
Lamont Saxon, McKoy's cousin.
Witnesses in a separate federal drug case backed up those claims.
According to testimony in that case, Hailey was shot in Grove View
Terrace and another drug dealer, William Talley, fired the shots.
The alternate theory was rejected in an appeal of McKoy's case, but two
recently sworn affidavits bolster the argument.
A convicted drug dealer claims he saw Talley shoot at Hailey's car
after Hailey drove off without paying for some crack cocaine.
Also, Williams' former girlfriend says he admitted to her that he had
lied about seeing McKoy. The woman, whose name has been withheld for
her protection, also swears Williams, who is now dead, was paid for his
testimony in the case.
Talley is serving a federal prison sentence for drug convictions.
A spokesman for the Cumberland County District Attorney's Office said
the appeals courts found no prejudicial error in the McKoy case and
that the prosecutor considers the matter closed.
After more than 17 years in prison, McKoy said he hopes the Duke
students can reopen the case and give him back some of his life.
"I'm not angry toward anybody," he said.
Reporter: Cullen Browder
Photographers: Terry Cantrell, Richard Adkins
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