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Wrongful Conviction

#049 Jason Flom with Leroy Harris

Wrongful Conviction

Lava for Good Podcasts

True Crime

4.45.8K Ratings

🗓️ 19 March 2018

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

From the moment he was charged with rape and robbery in 1989, Leroy Harris has insisted on his innocence. In May 1983, a New Haven, CT nightclub owner was robbed at gunpoint by three young men late one night. The men stole his car, and later that evening robbed and sexually assaulted two women. Leroy became one of the numerous suspects because he was misidentified. He was tried in April 1989, six years after the crimes were committed. Despite the fact that not a single eyewitness identified Leroy as being involved in the crimes prior to the trial, all four witnesses—the two assault victims, nightclub owner, and nightclub owner’s girlfriend—positively identified Leroy for the first time in court. He was convicted of three counts of robbery and one count of sexual assault in the first degree and sentenced to 80 years in prison. Even after his conviction, he fought the verdict through five appeals. Leroy finally got the Innocence Project of New York working on his case in 2012. The Innocence Project had the Connecticut forensic lab test new DNA evidence which excluded Leroy from the male DNA on the inside of one victim’s blouse. The sexual assault charge against Leroy was dismissed, but in order to be released, Leroy Harris agreed to enter “Alford” pleas to the remaining charges in exchange for his freedom. He spent almost 30 years in prison in Connecticut.

https://www.wrongfulconvictionpodcast.com/with-jason-flom

Wrongful Conviction  is a production of Lava for Good™ Podcasts in association with Signal Co. No1.

​​We have worked hard to ensure that all facts reported in this show are accurate. The views and opinions expressed by the individuals featured in this show are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Lava for Good.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

America has 2.2 million people in prison.

0:04.9

It's just 1% as wrong.

0:06.5

That's 22,000 people.

0:08.8

That's a lot of people's lives destroyed.

0:13.2

If the system want to take you out of society,

0:18.9

they will do it.

0:20.2

No matter what laws they have to break,

0:22.4

saying that they are enforcing the laws,

0:24.5

but they are breaking the law.

0:27.3

Having to hear those people say that I was guilty of a crime

0:30.7

that I did not commit,

0:32.2

and then hear my family break down behind me

0:34.2

and not be able to do anything about it,

0:36.4

I can't describe the crushing weight that was.

0:39.9

I'm not anti-police.

0:41.5

I'm just anti-corruption.

0:44.5

A lot of times we look and we see something happen

0:47.2

to somebody and that's the first thing we say

0:49.2

that could never happen to me, but it can.

0:54.2

This is wrongful conviction.

1:08.2

My grandmother was murdered,

1:10.2

likely with a candlestick.

...

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