Johnny Lee Gates (pictured) is free, 43 years after being sentenced to death in Georgia for a murder he has steadfastly maintained he did not commit.
On May 15, 2020, Gates entered a so-called “Alford plea” on charges of manslaughter and armed robbery, meaning that he did not admit guilt, but conceded that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him. He was sentenced to 20 years on each charge, but was credited with time served and immediately released.
“I’ve fought for 43 years for this day,” Gates said. “I always had faith it would come, even when others weren’t sure. I am an innocent man. I did not commit this crime. What happened to me is something that should never happen to any person. But I am not bitter. I thank God that I am here, and I am happy to be free.”
Gates had spent the first 25 years of his incarceration on death row. His death sentence was vacated in 2003 based on evidence of his intellectual disability. At that time, he was granted a jury trial to determine whether his intellectual impairments made him ineligible for the death penalty. When that trial concluded in a mistrial, the prosecution and defense reached an agreement to resentence Gates to life without parole.
The Georgia Supreme Court had unanimously ordered a new trial for Gates in March, finding that DNA contained on physical evidence that police and prosecutors had withheld for decades raised “significant doubt” as to Gates’ guilt. That ruling set the stage for the plea deal and Gates’ release.
Gates has maintained his innocence in the 1976 murder of Katharina Wright for more than four decades. He initially confessed to the crime, but his attorneys said that detectives coerced the confession and took advantage of Gates’ naivete and low IQ. Prosecutors withheld key evidence in the case from the defense and systematically removed African Americans from the jury because of their race.
During the appeal process, Gates’ lawyers discovered jury selection notes from seven death-penalty cases tried by his prosecutors, which showed that they had systemically excluded Black prospective jurors from every capital trial to empanel all-white or nearly all-white juries. The prosecutors’ notes from Gates’ case showed that they had tracked the race of jurors, struck every black juror they could, and repeatedly wrote derogatory comments about black people and black prospective jurors, whom they described as “slow,” “old +ignorant,” “cocky,” “con artist,” “hostile,” and “fat.” White jurors were marked with the letter “W,” while black jurors were marked with the letter “N.” A Georgia Tech mathematics professor provided expert testimony that the probability that black jurors had been removed for race-neutral reasons was infinitesimally small — 0.000000000000000000000000000004 percent.
Gates, who is black, was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death by an all-white jury in 1977. As early as 1991, DPIC had reported that Columbus prosecutors had regularly empaneled all-white juries against black capital defendants, including Gates.
Critical evidence in the case was uncovered in 2015, when two Georgia Innocence Project interns reviewed the prosecution’s case file and discovered a manila envelope that contained neckties and a bathrobe belt allegedly used to bind the victim. Prosecutors had claimed for years that no physical evidence existed in the case.
If the prosecution’s theory of the crime — which asserted that the perpetrator had acted alone and had been barehanded when he tied up the victim — was true, the killer would have left DNA from skin cells on the fabric. However, DNA testing showed that Gates’ DNA was not present on the items. The appeals court found that, while the state’s evidence of Gates’ guilt appeared strong in the absence of the DNA results, he “could have much more effectively countered” the state’s case with the now-available DNA evidence.
Claire Gilbert, one of Gates’ attorneys from the Georgia Innocence Project said, “Today, in the wake of the Georgia Supreme Court’s decision to vacate his conviction based on exculpatory DNA evidence, Johnny Gates — an innocent man — is free at last. Mr. Gates has survived the unimaginable: 43 long years in prison for a crime he did not commit, with 26 of those years on death row. We are thrilled to welcome Mr. Gates home, and to introduce him to our community of released clients.”
Bill Rankin, Georgia inmate freed after 43 years for crime he denies committing, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 15, 2020; Tim Chitwood, Columbus man freed after serving 43 years for murder he claims he did not commit, Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, May 15, 2020; Alex Jones, Man convicted of Ga. rape, murder 43 years ago pleads guilty in new trial, to be released immediately, WTVM, May 15, 2020.
Prosecutorial Accountability
Nov 07, 2024