The wheels of justice grind slow, but they grind exceedingly fine:
A Texas man declared innocent Tuesday after 30 years in prison had at least two chances to make parole and be set free ”” if only he would admit he was a sex offender. But Cornelius Dupree Jr. refused to do so, doggedly maintaining his innocence in a 1979 rape and robbery, in the process serving more time for a crime he didn’t commit than any other Texas inmate exonerated by DNA evidence.
“Whatever your truth is, you have to stick with it,” Dupree, 51, said Tuesday, minutes after a Dallas judge overturned his conviction.
Dupree might have gotten out in 2004 if he had just agreed to submit to a re-education program for sex offenders that required the “4 R’s:” recognition, remorse, restitution and resolution. He couldn’t do it; couldn’t recognize or show remorse for a crime he did not commit. Now the DNA evidence has exonerated him.
Like so many others who have been wrongly convicted, Dupree’s verdict rested almost entirely on eyewitness testimony. Eyewitnesses sound good and are often quite sincere, but unfortunately their testimony is not anywhere near as reliable as people tend to think it is. In Dupree’s case, only one eyewitness fingered him; the other did not. And yet he served thirty years.
It is always upsetting to hear something like that. But it is always good to know that an innocent person has finally been freed. And it helps that the state of Texas will be paying Dupree over two million dollars, tax-free, for his pain, although it will never be able to give him those thirty years back.
