![]() Innocence panel sets Greg Taylor free By Mandy Locke Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010
"This is not about innocent people. This is about injustice," he said. Taylor, 47, is the first person in North Carolina to be exonerated using a new process established to handle convicted people's claims of innocence. Last September, the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission voted unanimously that Taylor's case warranted further review. Three judges -- Wake County Superior Court Judge Howard Manning, District Judge Tanya Wallace of Rockingham and Mecklenberg County Superior Court Judge Calvin Murphy -- were appointed to consider Taylor's case this month. Taylor has sworn from the start that he did not kill Thomas. He and a drug partner, Johnny Beck, were targeted by police because Taylor's truck was found stuck in mud near Thomas' battered body in an isolated cul-de-sac in Southeast Raleigh. This month, Taylor's attorneys discredited evidence used to persuade a jury to convict him in 1993. Testimony showed that no blood, contrary to trial testimony, was found on Taylor's truck; an SBI agent had run the tests that would show that, but had not reported it to prosecutors in Taylor's trial. A police canine's behavior probably was misinterpreted by her master, another expert testified. A prostitute who said she saw the victim with Taylor testified that she wouldn't bet her life on her recollection. And another prostitute who testified that she saw Thomas with Taylor described a scenario that would have been physically impossible. Taylor and his family have been fighting for his release for 17 years. Every appeal failed. This hearing was his last chance to clear his name and regain his freedom. mandy.locke@newsobserver.com or 919-829-8927 |
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