A Chicago man has been cleared of murder charges after it was revealed that his conviction relied on testimony from a witness who was legally blind.
Darien Harris, who had been in prison for 12 years, was released from jail on Tuesday after a judge vacated his conviction.
Mr Harris was 18 when he was arrested for the 2011 murder of Rondell Moore at a gas station. He was convicted in 2014, just before his high school graduation, and was sentenced to 76 years in prison.
Now 30, Mr Harris walked free just shortly after 18:00 local time on Tuesday.
At the time of Mr Moore’s murder, the only video evidence in the case showed a man - whose identity was difficult to determine - get out of a car, run across the screen and then fire shots off camera.
Mr Harris, who had no prior criminal record, was later picked out of a line-up by Dexter Saffold, the main witness of the shooting, and then charged and convicted.
His lawyers have since sought to reopen the case after Mr Harris discovered that Mr Saffold was legally blind - a fact that was not mentioned during the trial.
Mr Harris made the discovery in 2019 with the help of another inmate and some research.
In an interview with CBS in 2019, Mr Saffold confirmed that he was indeed legally blind, saying that he has glaucoma.
Four years later, in July, Mr Harris was exonerated by a Cook County judge. He was kept in custody while prosecutors planned to retry him, but they have since abandoned their case.
A shocking miscarriage of justice …