For near­ly two decades, Dennis Halstead, John Kogut, and John Restivo main­tained their inno­cence in the 1985 mur­der of 16-year-old Theresa Fusco. Although DNA test­ing in the 1990’s cast doubt on their guilt, the men remained in jail in New York because a judge deemed the tests not reli­able enough to over­turn the con­vic­tions. Now the men have been freed from prison after pros­e­cu­tors joined defense attor­neys in ask­ing a sec­ond judge to vacate the con­vic­tions based on more sophis­ti­cat­ed DNA evi­dence show­ing that semen found on the vic­tim’s body was from anoth­er man. The new tests were con­duct­ed on behalf of The Innocence Project at the Cardozo School of Law in New York City, which uses DNA tech­nol­o­gy to help free the wrong­ly con­vict­ed, and Centurion Ministries of New Jersey. Following the release of Halstead, Kogut, and Restivo, dis­trict attor­ney Denis Dillon not­ed that the men did­n’t get a fair tri­al, but he said that the state is still con­sid­er­ing whether it will retry the men for the murder. 

(New York Times, June 12, 2003). See Innocence.

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