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William Lopez : Wrongfully Convicted man dies days before start of $124m compo case
William Lopez : New York man exonerated after 23 years in prison dies at 55

William Lopez : Wrongfully Convicted man dies days before start of $124m compo case

A New York resident wrongfully imprisoned for more than two decades has died only days before his $124m compensation lawsuit was set to begin.

William Lopez, 55, was preparing to bring a $124 million false imprisonment case on Tuesday against the city of New York, having spent 23 years behind bars, when he suffered a fatal asthma attack on Saturday morning. He had been freed only in January 2013.

The Bronx man was freed in January 2013 after a judge threw out his conviction in a 1989 murder case built on shaky evidence. Lopez was accused and eventually convicted in the shotgun killing of a Brighton Beach drug dealer. The Associated Press reports that the case, that the judge referred to as “rotten from Day 1,” relied on the testimony of two witnesses and no forensic evidence.

One witness, according to the New York Post, gave a description of the shooter that did not fit Lopez’s profile. The other witness had just finished smoking crack-cocaine when the murder took place and later recanted. No murder weapon was ever found.

“In short, the prosecution’s evidence was flimsy to begin with and has since been reduced to rubble,” federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis wrote before releasing Lopez last year.

Lopez had been working on rebuilding his life during the 20 months he was free, his brother Eugene Lopez said. He was enjoying time with his wife, trying to build a relationship with his daughter who was only 14-months-old when he went to prison and looking forward to traveling.

Money from the lawsuit against the city was supposed to help him achieve his goals.

“He wanted to do some domestic travel to other states, and to travel internationally,” Deskovic said. “He wanted to go to college and to go to law school. He wanted to set his wife up in business, and he wanted to be an entrepreneur.”

His brother said he planned to use the law degree to help others.

“My brother Bill was greatly bothered by the fact that his life was dramatically impacted by being wrongfully convicted, as well as his knowledge that many other wrongful conditions have taken place without any changes in the system,” he said.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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