Curtis Crosland of Philadelphia spent over 30 years in prison for a murder he didnât commit. Now, after a review of his case, heâs a free man once again.
CNN reports that the 60-year-old Croslandâs conviction was overturned in June with help from the Philadelphia Conviction Integrity Unit. In 1991, he was found guilty of the 1984 murder of local store owner Il Man âTonyâ Heo based on testimonies from two witnesses who later recanted their statements.
Suggested Reading
Not only that, but the CIUâs review of Croslandâs case also found that Philadelphiaâs police department and district attorneyâs office had the evidence that proved his innocence on file the whole time. There was also no evidence, physical or otherwise, that connected Crosland with Heoâs murder.
From a CIU news release announcing Croslandâs exoneration:
Citing the CIUâs âexhaustive and dedicated investigationâ of this case, the federal court agreed that evidence regarding the lack of credibility of two prosecution witnesses was not turned over to defense counsel at the time of trial, as is constitutionally required, nor was evidence disclosed by the Commonwealth that showed the Philadelphia Police investigation initially focused on another suspect.
Crosland told CNN that his case is another sign that the countryâs criminal justice system needs reform.
From CNN:
He maintained his innocence while in prison and filed multiple petitions, acting as his own lawyer, which he says he learned to do while studying law books in the prisonâs library.
âYou have poor, indigent men that have no access to have a good defense. The system should be designed that every man be treated equally,â Crosland said.
Crosland said he went to court every year during his time in prison to assert his innocence, but faced closed doors from the courts. âI donât think I ever had a full nightâs sleep, but I always told myself the day Iâm exonerated Iâm going to get my full nightâs sleep,â he said.
Crosland said his faith in God kept him strong â but that prison was still a âhellishâ struggle every day.
The CIU said Croslandâs case was the 22nd exoneration the unit has supported since its creation in 2018. Data from the National Registry of Exonerations shows that he is among 67 others who have been exonerated so far in 2021.
According to the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, government misconduct and false testimonies from informants are two of the six most common reasons behind a wrongful conviction in the United States.
Rodney Everett and Delores Tilghman, the informants who provided the false statements that led to Croslandâs conviction, told the Philadelphia Inquirer that they felt the police coerced them into lying.
From the Inquirer:
âIt was just very brutal. They threaten you. They will use your family and they will tell you what they will do to your family, taking your kids,â said Everett, who testified at Croslandâs preliminary hearing but said he repeatedly tried to recant. âWhen you tell the truth, they donât care. Theyâll accept the lies, but they wonât accept the truth.â
Everett refused to testify at Croslandâs trial, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, but his earlier statement was read into the record. After Croslandâs conviction was overturned, Everett was granted immunity to testify at the second trial but recanted on the stand.
Yet Crosland was convicted again by a second jury.
As for Tilghman, she said detectives came to her home and woke her up, threatening to arrest her if she didnât testify.
âIt was him or me,â she said. âThey were threatening me with putting me in jail. … They can make that happen. I seen them make his life disappear with one witness.â
She said sheâd long regretted her role in the case and was glad to learn of Croslandâs release.
The Inquirer reports that the evidence found by the CIU putting the credibility of the informants in question included a failed polygraph test and a statement from Everettâs wife saying he had identified someone else as Heoâs killer.
More from the Inquirer:
âTo me, itâs a case that has all the telltale signs of a wrongful conviction,â CIU supervisor Patricia Cummings said. âYou have a case that was cold. Then you have snitches involved wanting something in their case, and then the historical lack of understanding and appreciation of [disclosure requirements].â
Itâs a sad truth that there are likely countless other wrongfully convicted people incarcerated in the countryâs penal system. Over 2,800 have them have been exonerated since 1989, according to the data from the National Registry of Exonerations, with an average of nine years of their lives lost behind bars.
But Crosland told CNN that heâs not wasting any time in getting caught up with his loved ones after being away for so long:
He has now returned home to his five children, fiancĂ©e and 32 grandchildren. âItâs a great feeling to still be dad, to be wanted and desired, and open arms to receive you, thatâs been the greatest part of being exonerated, that I come home to a loving family that wants and needs me,â said Crosland.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.