Ex-Sailor Declared Innocent of Murder, Rape After 33 Years in Prison
Posted: Apr 08, 2016 4:45 AM
Updated: Apr 08, 2016 4:45 AM
(NBC
NEWS) - A 60-year-old former sailor will be freed from a Virginia
prison after 33 years on Friday after the state Supreme Court
unanimously found him innocent Thursday of murder and rape thanks to new
DNA evidence.
Keith Allen Harward was convicted in 1982 of
murdering Jesse Perron of Newport News and raping the man's wife. But a
recent review by the state Department of Forensic Science failed to find
a DNA match for Harward at the crime scene — instead matching it to
Jerry Crotty, a fellow sailor on the USS Carl Vinson at the time.
Keith Allen Harward in an undated photo. Virginia Department of Corrections via Reuters
Crotty died in 2006 while serving a prison sentence in Ohio for kidnapping and burglary.
According
to court documents, Harward argued that he didn't match the description
of the murderer as a cleanshaven 19- or 20-year-old man wearing a naval
insignia of three inverted Vs. At the time of the crime, Harward had a
mustache, was a different rank with a different insignia, and was 26
years old.
He was convicted anyway and languished in prison for decades, most recently at Nottoway Correctional Center in Burkeville.
State
Attorney General Mark Herring, who joined a brief Wednesday petitioning
the Supreme Court court to issue a writ of actual innocence, called the
court's ruling "wonderful news" Thursday.
"It's just
heartbreaking to think that more than half of his life was spent behind
bars when he didn't belong there," Herring said. "The commonwealth can't
give him back those years, but we can say that we got it wrong, that
we're sorry and that we're working to make it right."
Harward's
case was pursued by the Innocence Project, a nonprofit justice reform
organization founded in 1992 by prominent lawyers Barry Scheck and Peter
Neufeld. It says it has secured the releases of 337 wrongfully
convicted people in the last quarter-century.
"We obviously are
very pleased," Olga Akselrod, Harward's attorney at the Innocence
Project, told NBC station WAVY of Portsmouth. "The DNA results prove in
this case without any question that Mr. Harward has spent 33 years in
prison for a crime he did not commit."
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