"El Paso, TX--Shown by DNA testing to have been wrongly convicted of rape in 1988, Mr. Moon was released from prison at a court hearing here on Tuesday afternoon - the latest among 154 men and women in the United States exonerated by such tests....
"Mr. Moon, a four-year Army veteran, was a sophomore at the University of Texas at El Paso in 1987 when he was arrested on the rape charge. A member of the Air Force R.O.T.C., he had hoped to become a "lifer" in the Air Force and to fly fighter jets after his graduation....
"Mr. Moon and his parents were in the packed courtroom to hear the El Paso district attorney, Jaime Esparza, apologize for the wrongful conviction, for himself and for the State of Texas. With them were Barry Scheck, a lawyer from New York whose 12-year-old Innocence Project has accounted for more than half of those exonerated, and another lawyer from Mr. Scheck's office, Nina Morrison.
"I know we can't give you back your years," Mr. Esparza said, "and for that I'm extremely sorry."
"Mr. Moon responded, "I accept your apology." ...
"In Mr. Moon's case, the prosecution presented eyewitness testimony from the rape victim herself and three other women whose rapes followed a similar pattern. The rape victim picked out Mr. Moon from a photograph and police lineup, in which he was the only blue-eyed white male, a full 18 months after the attack....
David Dow, a law professor at the University of Houston, said that reforms were particularly urgent in Texas because "the pace of executions here is so much greater than in any other state."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/22/national/22release.html
"Mr. Moon, a four-year Army veteran, was a sophomore at the University of Texas at El Paso in 1987 when he was arrested on the rape charge. A member of the Air Force R.O.T.C., he had hoped to become a "lifer" in the Air Force and to fly fighter jets after his graduation....
"Mr. Moon and his parents were in the packed courtroom to hear the El Paso district attorney, Jaime Esparza, apologize for the wrongful conviction, for himself and for the State of Texas. With them were Barry Scheck, a lawyer from New York whose 12-year-old Innocence Project has accounted for more than half of those exonerated, and another lawyer from Mr. Scheck's office, Nina Morrison.
"I know we can't give you back your years," Mr. Esparza said, "and for that I'm extremely sorry."
"Mr. Moon responded, "I accept your apology." ...
"In Mr. Moon's case, the prosecution presented eyewitness testimony from the rape victim herself and three other women whose rapes followed a similar pattern. The rape victim picked out Mr. Moon from a photograph and police lineup, in which he was the only blue-eyed white male, a full 18 months after the attack....
David Dow, a law professor at the University of Houston, said that reforms were particularly urgent in Texas because "the pace of executions here is so much greater than in any other state."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/22/national/22release.html