Английская Википедия:Harlem Park Three
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use American English Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox criminal The Harlem Park Three were a trio of American students, Alfred Chestnut, Andrew Stewart, and Ransom Watkins, who were falsely accused of murdering ninth grader DeWitt Duckett at Harlem Park Junior High School in the Harlem Park neighborhood of Baltimore in 1983 and sentenced to life in prison. They served 36 years in prison before being exonerated in 2019. After being exonerated, the trio sued the Baltimore Police Department in 2020, accusing the department of coercing witness statements. In 2023, they settled for Шаблон:US$, the largest settlement in Baltimore history.
Murder of DeWitt Duckett
Around 1:25 pm on Friday, November 18, 1983, 14-year-old ninth grader DeWitt Duckett, alongside two other students, was walking to the cafeteria of Harlem Park Junior High School through a quiet hallway. While going to the cafeteria, Duckett, who was wearing a Шаблон:US$ Georgetown University jacket, was approached by an armed man and two other people and asked to take off his jacket. While Duckett was taking off his jacket, the man pointed his gun at the students with Duckett, who ran away. As they were running away, the man shot Duckett in the right side of his neck. The two people with the man walked away and did not participate in the robbery or shooting. After being shot, Duckett ran upstairs, through the cafeteria, and collapsed in front of the doors to the administration offices. He was taken to the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center and was pronounced dead at 3 PM. It was the first murder in the history of Baltimore City Public Schools.[1][2]
Investigation and trial
After Duckett's death, the primary witness was Ron Bishop, one of the students with Duckett when he was murdered. School staff also reported that three non-student 16-year-olds, Alfred Chestnut, Andrew Stewart, and Ransom Watkins, were in the building earlier in the day. The murder investigation was assigned to veteran Baltimore Police Department detective Donald Kincaid. The day after the shooting, Kincaid went to Chestnut's and Watkins's houses for questioning. Chestnut was wearing a Georgetown jacket during the questioning, and they both maintained their innocence and Chestnut stated the jacket was his. Kincaid took pictures of all three suspects.[1]
Soon after taking their pictures, Kincaid went to Bishop's house and showed him 11 pictures of potential suspects. He recognized Chestnut, Stewart, and Watkins from elementary school but did not single out a suspect. This repeated twice. Duckett's funeral was held and was attended by then-Councilman and future U.S. Representative Kweisi Mfume. The afternoon of the funeral, Kincaid was informed of another potential witness, a 13-year-old girl who was interviewed in a conference room and identified Chestnut, Stewart, and Watkins. That evening, officers picked up Bishop without his parents. He was placed in a small room with Kincaid and a photo array. Kincaid was accusatory and threatened that Bishop would not be allowed to leave and could be charged with being an accessory to murder if Bishop did not tell who did it. A total of four witnesses (including Bishop) said that Chestnut, Stewart, and Watkins did the murder. The next day, Thanksgiving (November 24), they were arrested on charges of murder, armed robbery, and handgun violations.[3][4] On May 28, 1984, Chestnut, Stewart, and Watkins were all found guilty of felony murder.[1][5]
Exoneration
Шаблон:Quotebox In 2018, Chestnut, following years of attempts, received the investigative reports from Duckett's murder. He noticed one of the leads said that a person named Michael Willis, who had been shot dead in 2002,[6] was reported to have been at the school when the murder happened, was armed, and wore a Georgetown University jacket to a skating rink later that day. In 2019, Chestnut sent a five-page letter to State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby. The letter landed on the desk of Lauren Lipscomb, a prosecutor who led the unit for wrongful convictions. She re-investigated the case due to the trio insisting on their innocence during the entirety of their imprisonment. She thought the case against the trio was strong, but she noticed that, when cross-examined, the witnesses could not testify to any details beyond their claim that the trio did it. In June, she received another letter from Chestnut with the investigative reports.[1]
In the summer, Bishop, who was now 50 years old, received a letter from Mosby's office about the case State v. Alfred Chestnut, et al. The letter frightened Bishop who initially did not respond, thinking that he could be arrested for lying under oath or a fabricated crime, but he convinced himself that he would respond.[1]
On August 8, 2019, he walked into Lipscomb's office and told about how his friend was killed, how he had been threatened by Kincaid, and how he lied in court. The other witnesses were interviewed, and they all confessed that they were coerced by Kincaid.[1]
On November 22, 2019, Mosby, alongside Lipscomb, visited the trio in their prisons to announce that they were freed. Three days later, they were taken to a courthouse where Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge Charles Peters apologized to the trio and set them free.[1][6] In March 2020, the Maryland Board of Public Works voted to pay $2.9 million to each of the three men following their exoneration.[7]
Lawsuit against the Baltimore Police Department and settlement
Шаблон:Quotebox In 2020, after being exonerated, the trio sued the Baltimore Police Department, Kincaid, and two other police officers, accusing them of coercing statements to support a manufactured narrative.[8][9] In 2023, the Baltimore Board of Estimates approved a Шаблон:US$ settlement outside of court between the trio and the Baltimore Police Department, the largest in Baltimore's history. In the settlement, the trio receives Шаблон:US$ each and their attorneys receive a total of Шаблон:US$.[10][11]
References
External links
Шаблон:Baltimore Police Department
- Английская Википедия
- Trios
- Coercion
- 1980s in Baltimore
- 1983 in Maryland
- Police misconduct in the United States
- 1983 crimes in the United States
- Overturned convictions in the United States
- Baltimore Police Department
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