Current:Home > Markets3 Pennsylvania men have convictions overturned after decades behind bars in woman’s 1997 killing -Wealth Evolution Experts
3 Pennsylvania men have convictions overturned after decades behind bars in woman’s 1997 killing
View
Date:2025-04-13 16:34:14
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Pennsylvania judge has overturned the convictions of three men imprisoned for decades in the 1997 slaying of a 70-year-old woman even though their DNA never matched that found at the scene, but they will remain in prison while a prosecutor decides whether to appeal.
The Delaware County judge on Thursday ordered new trials for Derrick Chappell — who was 15 when he was arrested — and first cousins Morton Johnson and Sam Grasty.
“This case never should have been prosecuted. These guys never should have been charged. The evidence always was that they were innocent,” Paul Casteleiro, Grasty’s lawyer and legal director of the nonprofit Centurion, said Friday. The prosecutors, he said, “just ran roughshod” over the defendants.
The three were charged and convicted in the death of Henrietta Nickens of Chester, who told her daughter in her last known phone call that she was about to watch the 11 p.m. news. She was later found badly beaten, with her underwear removed, and her home ransacked, with blood on the walls and bedding.
The three defendants — all young people from the neighborhood — were convicted even though DNA testing at the time showed that semen found in the victim’s body and on a jacket at the scene did not match any of them, Casteleiro said.
He called the prosecution’s various theories of the case “preposterous.” To explain the lack of a DNA match, he said, they argued that the victim perhaps had consensual sex before the slaying, or that the three defendants brought a used condom to the scene, he said. Yet Nickens was chronically ill and had no known male partners, he continued.
“They just ran this absurd story and got juries to buy it,” Casteleiro said.
Common Pleas Court Judge Mary Alice Brennan at a hearing Thursday threw out the convictions and set a May 23 bail hearing to determine if county prosecutors will seek a new trial.
District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer plans to review the case next week before making a decision, a spokesperson said Friday.
Calls to lawyers for Johnson and Chappell were not immediately returned Friday. The Pennsylvania Innocence Project also worked on the case.
The men are now in their 40s. All three filed pro se petitions in federal court over the years saying they were wrongly convicted, but the petitions were denied.
veryGood! (2221)
Related
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- We're not the only ones with an eclipse: Mars rover captures moon whizzing by sun's outline
- 49ers players say they didn't know new Super Bowl overtime rules or discuss strategy
- Spin the Wheel to See Ryan Seacrest and Aubrey Paige's Twinning Moment at NYFW
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Executive producer talks nailing Usher's intricate Super Bowl halftime show
- Online dating scams peak ahead of Valentine's Day. Here are warning signs you may be falling for a chatbot.
- Arizona Republicans challenge Biden’s designation of a national monument near the Grand Canyon
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Workplace dating: Is it OK to play matchmaker with co-workers? Ask HR
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Race to succeed George Santos in Congress reaches stormy climax in New York’s suburbs
- Photos: Taylor Swift's super great, amazing day celebrating the Chiefs at Super Bowl 58
- New gun laws take effect on one-year anniversary of Michigan State University shooting
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Tom Brady Weighs In on Travis Kelce and Andy Reid’s Tense Super Bowl Moment
- Wreckage of merchant ship that sank in 1940 found in Lake Superior: See photos
- Video shows deputies fired dozens of shots at armed 81-year-old man in South Carolina
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
'I Love You So Much It's Killing Us Both' is a rare, genuinely successful rock novel
WWE's Maryse Mizanin to Undergo Hysterectomy After 11 Pre-Cancerous Tumors Found on Ovaries
The secret to lasting love? Sometimes it's OK to go to bed angry
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
More than 1,000 flights already cancelled due to storm, was one of them yours? Here’s what to do
Chiefs fans are hoping for a Taylor Swift appearance at victory parade. But her schedule is tight
The wife of a man charged with killing his 5-year-old daughter says she still cares about him