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Rubin “Hurricane” Carter and John Artis released from prison after serving 9 years from wrongful conviction.
1976 (Mar 20)
Rubin "Hurricane" Carter and John Artis were released from prison in New Jersey after serving nine years for murder. Carter, a former middleweight boxer, and Artis, his "casual friend," had been convicted in 1967 for allegedly participating in the fatal shootings of three people in a Patterson, New Jersey, tavern on June 17, 1966. The shootings occurred at a time of heightened racial tensions in the city and the two Black men were convicted largely on the testimony of two ex-convicts who claimed "they had seen the defendants at the murder scene with guns." But the defendants maintained their innocence and many Blacks believed they were being prosecuted and persecuted because of their race. In September 1974, the New York Times reported that Alfred Bello and Arthur Bradley, the former convicts, had recanted their testimony and claimed that "they had been pressured to lie" by Passaic County (of which Patterson is the county seat) detectives. On March 17, the Supreme Court of New Jersey unanimously reversed the convictions of Carter and Artis because "evidence beneficial to the defense had been withheld" at the original trial. This evidence "included secret promises by detectives" to Bello and Bradley "that they would be aided in unrelated criminal cases if they testified for the prosecution." On March 20, pending new trials, Carter was released on $20,000 bail and Artis was set free on $15,000 bail. Some of the bail money was provided by heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, a supporter of the campaign by the Carter-Artis Defense Committee to win a new trial for the men.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.