Darien Harris walks towards his wife’s vehicle outside Cook County Jail after prosecutors dropped charges on Harris for a fatal shooting in 2011 in a Woodlawn gas station he was convicted for and was serving a 76-year long sentence, Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2023, Cook County, Ill.
Photo: Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Chicago Sun-Times via AP
Darien Harris spent more than 12 years in an Illinois prison, convicted of murder in part on the testimony of an eyewitness who was legally blind.
Harris, who was released from prison on Tuesday, was convicted in 2014 for the 2011 fatal shooting of a man at a gas station on Chicagoโs South Side.
His case is the latest in a dozen exonerations this year in Chicagoโs Cook County, where defendants have been represented by attorneys with The Exoneration Project.
โIt does seem in the past few months there have been a larger number than usual,โ said Lauren Myerscough-Mueller, a lecturer in law and staff attorney for The Exoneration Project at the University of Chicago Law School.
Since 2009, more than 200 people have been exonerated through the groupโs work, according to data from the organization.
About 150 of the convictions were tied toย former Chicago police Sgt. Ronald Watts, who regularly framed people for drug crimes they didnโt commit. Cook County Stateโs Attorney Kim Foxx said in December 2022 that 237 convictions vacated in recent years were linked to Watts and his unit.
Harris is one of four Chicago men who have been exonerated over the past few weeks.
On Dec. 14, James Soto and his cousin, David Ayala, had their murder convictions vacated after spending more than 40 years each in Illinoisโ prisons. Each had been sentenced to life in prison. Soto also was represented by The Exoneration Project.
Brian Beals, 57, was freed two days earlier after a judge dismissed murder and other charges and vacated his conviction. Beals had spent 35 years behind bars.
Harris was sentenced to 76 years in prison.
โBut I fought, and…
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