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The
Case
of
Peter Reilly
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In 1973, 51-year-old Barbara
Gibbons of
Falls Village, Connecticut was killed in a brutal attack in her home.
She
suffered stab wounds and broken bones. She was also sexually mutilated.
Police immediately focused their investigation on the victim's
18-year-old
son Peter Reilly.
American Justice: "A Son's
Confession"
reveals that Peter told police he came home and discovered his mother
lying
on the bedroom floor in a pool of blood. At police headquarters, alone
and without legal counsel, Reilly was detained and interrogated for
over
25 hours. He eventually succumbed to exhaustion, hunger, confusion and
grief, and confessed to the gruesome murder.
Friends and neighbors rushed to
Reilly's
side despite his confession, refusing to believe he was guilty. They
raised
money for his defense, but to no avail. Peter was found guilty and
sentenced
to 6 to 16 years. The community was outraged. Playwright Arthur Miller
alerted the national press and assembled a new defense team.
But before a new trial could
begin, the
prosecutor died. His replacement discovered evidence that led the state
to drop its case against Reilly. The case has had a poisonous impact on
Connecticut law enforcement for more than a quarter century.
Today, new controversy surrounds
the case,
as Reilly calls for DNA-testing of old evidence that may once and for
all
clear his name and move police to resume the investigation.
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