Mr. Guerrero was immediately troubled by the trial. The defense attorney representing Ms. Mejia was someone Guerrero had never, in all his years at the courthouse, seen conduct a trial. The second chair was a civil attorney, not a criminal one. Across from them sat, in Mr. Guerrero’s view, the most aggressive prosecutor in the office. “I saw something that went wrong inside that courtroom with that trial, and I saw it right away … I realized that no one else was going to step up and try to correct what went wrong,” he said.
For years after the trial, Mr. Guerrero said nothing for fear of losing his job.
“[But] this thing kept eating me up. I kept thinking, if I don’t do anything, this lady is just going to sit there in prison for the rest of her life. Somebody needed to step up,” he said.
At the end of 2015, Mr. Guerrero retired. And for the first time, he felt free to try and help Ms. Mejia, whose story he’d never forgotten.
He had heard of the Innocence Project through a case that had come through his courthouse. He knew, as he put it, that if anyone had the kind of agency he was looking for, New York City would have it. So he called directory information, got a number, and dialed. That call set the wheels in motion, and both the Innocence Project and the Conviction Integrity Unit of the Travis County District Attorney’s Office reinvestigated her the case, leading to Ms. Mejia’s exoneration this year.
Ms. Mejia spent more than two decades behind bars, separated from her children and everything she knew — all while maintaining her innocence and her faith. She is free now, but the work of rebuilding a life doesn’t happen overnight.
“I just want to keep moving forward. I want to be happy,” said Ms. Mejia. “I want an opportunity to establish a relationship with my kids and get to the point where they call me mother.”
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