These stories just keep popping up all over the country – this time, it was in New York, where David Mcallum was finally released and the indictment against him was dismissed – 29 years after he had been imprisoned for killing a man and dumping his body in a park.
Mcallum and another man, Willie Stuckey, who was also exonerated Wednesday, died in prison in 2001.
The men were both 16 in 1985 when they confessed to abducting and slaying a man, leaving him in a Brooklyn park with a single bullet wound to the head.
Both convictions essentially hinged on two videotaped confessions investigators now believe were fed to them by detectives. Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson is referred to this era in the Brooklyn Police Department as a “legacy of disgrace” inherited from his predecessor, Charles Hynes. “I think the people of Brooklyn deserve better, and I think we should not have a national reputation as a place where people have been railroaded into confessing to crimes they did not commit.”
DA Hynes has denied there was a pattern of misconduct among prosecutors when he was district attorney, as his opponent alleged during last year’s campaign. Mr. Thompson defeated Mr. Hynes in that race.
McCallum and Stuckey both recanted their confessions before trial and continued to proclaim their innocence after conviction and sentencing. Mr. McCallum was repeatedly denied parole because he refused to admit to the killing, his attorney Oscar Michelen said.
Even with the confessions, the case against Messrs. McCallum and Stuckey was riddled with inconsistencies. Neither of the boys had driver’s licenses, nor had they ever taken drivers education, yet they confessed to taking a Buick for a rambling ride through Brooklyn before abandoning it near where the body was discovered.
The witness who first led police to Mr. Stuckey told police he had left his gun with his aunt for safekeeping and that she had lent it to Mr. Stuckey. But when investigators tracked down the aunt earlier this year, she denied ever having allowed her nephew to leave a gun with her, and she later confronted him at a family get-together, Mr. Thompson said.
“We’ve come to the conclusion that these statements were not the voluntary recollection and admissions,” prosecutor Mark Hale told the judge before Mr. McCallum’s indictment was vacated, adding that they were the product of “improper suggestion, improper inducement and possibly coercion.”
Mr. McCallum had many champions in prison, including ex-boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, himself wrongly convicted of murder, and a Canadian film crew who spent Wednesday composing a new ending to their just-released documentary, “David & Me.”
Mr. Thompson said the victim’s family was “heartbroken” by the decision. “They want to know who killed their son,” he said, pledging to continue the search for Mr. Blenner’s killer.
Mr. McCallum’s case is the 10th to be cleared by the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office since Mr. Thompson took office in January. About 30 have been reviewed and more than 100 remain.
“There may be more,” Mr. Thompson said. “We keep getting letters and phone calls, and we’re going to look at any credible claim of wrongful convictions.”
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