As he
put 25 years of prison time served for a crime he didn't commit, Monday marked
the first day in the rest of Darryl Pinkins' life.
The
63-year-old Indiana father walked out of Lake County jail after spending just a
month shy of a quarter-century behind bars after he was convicted in 1991 for
what prosecutors said was his participation in a horrific 1989 gang rape.
After
years of unflinchingly maintaining his innocence, Pinkins was set free thanks
to one of the newest innovations in DNA analysis.
The
technology is so new, in fact, that Pinkins is the first inmate ever set free
with its help.
"It
feels like this day was - was meant to be. And I know it was," Pinkins
told reporters outside the jail after friends and family greeted him in a
tearful reunion. "This is a new beginning."
One of
the emotional family members waiting for Pinkins was his son, who hadn't even
been born.
Pinkins
maintained during his 1991 trial that he'd been in bed with his wife when
prosecutors said five men raped a woman for hours after the victim identified
him as one of her attackers.
"I
stood back as an innocent man watching it fold out before me, and it wasn't
right," Pinkins said.
For decades, Pinkins continued to campaign to
have his name cleared.
"Until
recently, there was no technology that could really do what I call, dissects
DNA mixture," Fran Watson, Pinkins' attorney with the Indiana Innocence Project
told reporters.
The
new technology is a DNA analysis program called TrueAllele. The process can be
used to tease out the DNA of individuals from DNA mixtures.
"Once
they explained to us what DNA was, we told them to bring the test on because we
know where we were," Pinkins said.
After
the test, Pinkins found himself cleared of the rape conviction and Lake County
prosecutors have declined to put him back on trial.
"We
were 100 percent certain that we did in fact have the right person,"
Bernard Carter, Lake County prosecutor said. However, "when you look at
the evidence that stands now, it would be an injustice for us to even attempt
to try Mr. Pinkins. We would not convict him."
Reference: msn
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