Chicago Woman Exonerated After Eight Years in Prison

11.07.17 By Innocence Staff

Chicago Woman Exonerated After Eight Years in Prison

A Chicago woman was exonerated of a 2009 murder on Thursday after spending eight years unjustly behind bars.

Kerry Masterson, a client of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, was acquitted at a retrial after her codefendants recanted their original testimony that she was involved in the crime.

Following the murder of a convenience store owner in May of 2009, police arrested Beatrice Rosado and Elvin Payton, who had recently been evicted from an upstairs apartment by the shop owner. The couple told police that Masterson was involved in the crime, and despite eyewitness accounts placing a slim Hispanic man at the scene, Masterson was convicted and sentenced to 58 years in prison.

Rosado and Payton now say that the third suspect was a male gang member and that they would have faced violent gang retaliation had they implicated him, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Masterson was granted a retrial because she was denied an eyewitness identification expert witness at her original trial. On Thursday, an expert witness described how the circumstances of Masterson’s identification made it likely that she was wrongfully convicted.

The jury found Masterson not guilty on Thursday after less than three hours of deliberation.

Read the Chicago Sun-Times coverage here.

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Joseph Riley November 8, 2017 at 4:38 am Reply   

I’m happy that this gross misjustice was corrected by this. New verdict & unfortunate that true to form, this occurred in the 1st place because of the Tendency of Prosecutors to overlook & pass over quite often the truth due to expediency in their often rush to Procecute the most convienent individuals!

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