Current:Home > NewsCOVID relief funds spark effort that frees man convicted of 1997 murder in Oklahoma he says he didn't commit -Clarity Finance Guides
COVID relief funds spark effort that frees man convicted of 1997 murder in Oklahoma he says he didn't commit
View
Date:2025-04-18 15:10:23
Greenwood, Ark. — Ricky Dority spends most of his days playing with his grandchildren, feeding chickens and working in the yard where he lives with his son's family.
It's a jarring change from where he was just several months ago, locked in a cell serving a life prison sentence at Oklahoma's Joseph Harp Correctional Center in a killing he said he didn't commit. After more than two decades behind bars, Dority had no chance at being released - until he used his pandemic relief funds to hire a dogged private investigator.
The investigator and students at the Oklahoma Innocence Project at Oklahoma City University, which is dedicated to exonerating wrongful convictions in the state, found inconsistencies in the state's account of a 1997 cold-case killing, and Dority's conviction was vacated in June by a Sequoyah County judge.
Now, the 65-year-old says he's enjoying the 5-acre property in a quiet neighborhood of well-to-do homes in the rolling, forested hills of the Arkansas River Valley outside Fort Smith. "If you're gone for a lot of years, you don't take it for granted anymore."
Dority is one of nearly 3,400 people who have been exonerated across the country since 1989, mostly of murder convictions, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. In Oklahoma, there have been more than 43 exonerations in that time, not including three new exonerations this year.
Only one of many
The cases underscore a serious problem facing a judicial system in which many old convictions resulted from overworked defense attorneys, shoddy forensic work, overzealous prosecutors and outdated investigative techniques.
The problem is particularly acute given Oklahoma's history of sending people to death row, where 11 inmates have been exonerated since 1981. The issue has pushed a Republican-led legislative panel to consider whether a death penalty moratorium should be imposed.
In Oklahoma County, Glynn Ray Simmons was freed after spending nearly 50 years in prison, including time on death row, in a 1974 killing after a judge determined prosecutors failed to turn over evidence in the case, including a police report that showed an eyewitness might have identified other suspects.
And just this week, Perry Lott, who served more than 30 years in prison, had his rape and burglary conviction vacated in Pontotoc County after new DNA testing excluded him as the perpetrator. Pontotoc County, in particular, has come under intense scrutiny for a series of wrongful convictions in the 1980s that have been the subject of numerous books, including John Grisham's "The Innocent Man," which he produced into a six-part documentary on Netflix.
The most common causes of wrongful convictions are eyewitness misidentification, misapplication of forensic science, false confessions, coerced pleas and official misconduct, generally by police or prosecutors, according to the Innocence Project, a national organization based in New York.
How Dority was convicted
In Dority's case, he said he was railroaded by an overzealous sheriff and a state prosecutor eager to solve the killing of 28-year-old Mitchell Nixon, who was found beaten to death in 1997.
Investigators who reopened the case in 2014 coerced a confession from another man, Rex Robbins, according to Andrea Miller, the legal director of the Oklahoma Innocence Project. Robbins, who would plead guilty to manslaughter in Nixon's killing, implicated Dority, who at the time was in a federal prison on a firearms conviction. Dority said he knew he didn't have anything to do with the crime and found paperwork that proved he had been arrested on the day of the killing.
"I thought I was clear because I knew I didn't have anything do with that murder," Dority said. "But they tried me for it and found me guilty of it."
Jurors heard about Robbins' confession and testimony from a police informant who said Dority had changed bloody clothes at his house the night of the killing. They convicted him of first-degree murder and recommended a sentence of life without parole.
When Dority's fate began to turn
After years in prison, while most inmates spent their federal COVID-19 relief check in the commissary, Dority used his to hire a private investigator, he said. Bobby Staton had mostly investigated insurance fraud, but he took on the case and realized quickly that it was riddled with holes, Staton said.
He eventually turned to the university's Oklahoma Innocence Project, which assigned a law student, Abby Brawner, to help investigate.
Their investigation turned when Staton and Brawner visited Robbins in the maximum-security Oklahoma State Reformatory in Granite and he recanted his statement implicating Dority.
"It was pretty intimidating," Brawner said. "Especially when you're going in to meet someone who doesn't know you're coming and doesn't want to talk to you."
Brawner and Staton also learned the informant didn't live at the home where he told investigators Staton showed up in bloody clothes. When the actual homeowner testified at a hearing this summer, the judge dismissed the case.
Dority's original attorneys were ineffective for not discovering the informant didn't live at the home, the judge said, giving prosecutors 90 days to decide whether they will retry him. That three months has been extended, and prosecutors have said they intend to ask the judge for more time for DNA testing. Dority, confident in his innocence, said he's not concerned about additional forensic testing.
Sequoyah County District Attorney Jack Thorp and former Sheriff Ron Lockhart did not respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press. But Assistant District Attorney James Dunn, who is overseeing the case and was not in the office when it was originally prosecuted, said he agreed with the judge's dismissal after hearing the homeowner's testimony and learning a witness "was not credible."
"The last thing I want to see is an innocent person in prison for a crime they didn't commit," Dunn said. "Because that means the person who actually did commit the crime, or those persons, are still out there."
Meanwhile, Dority is learning to use a smartphone and the television remote control, he said. He's thankful to Staton and the Innocence Project and says his case proves others are wrongfully imprisoned in Oklahoma.
"After they've done what they've done to me, I know there are people in that prison who are innocent that need to be out and need help getting out," he said. "If they hadn't gotten me out, I'd have been in there for the rest of my life."
- In:
- Wrongful Convictions
veryGood! (82)
Related
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- What is Bodhi Day? And when do Buddhists celebrate it?
- John Lennon was killed 43 years ago today: Who killed him and why did they do it?
- Pregnant Ciara Decorates Her Baby Bump in Gold Glitter at The Color Purple Premiere
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Rebels in Congo take key outpost in the east as peacekeepers withdraw and fighting intensifies
- Who Is Benny Blanco? Everything to Know About Selena Gomez's Rumored Boyfriend
- NBA In-Season Tournament semifinals: matchups, how to watch, odds, predictions
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Food makers focus on Ozempic supplements and side dishes
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Alan Hostetter, ex-police chief who brought hatchet to Capitol on Jan. 6, sentenced to 11 years in prison
- Bloodshed, fear, hunger, desperation: Palestinians try to survive war’s new chapter in southern Gaza
- New York Yankees World Series odds drastically improve after Juan Soto trade
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- ‘Oppenheimer’ will get a theatrical release in Japan, after all
- Virginia expects to wipe out pandemic unemployment backlog next summer
- Best movies of 2023: ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Fallen Leaves,’ ‘May December’
Recommendation
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
How Ian Somerhalder and Nikki Reed Built Their Life Away From Hollywood
See Peach Fuzz, Pantone's color of the year for 2024
CosMc's: McDonald's reveals locations for chain's new spinoff restaurant and menu
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
California expands insurance access for teens seeking therapy on their own
App stop working? Here's how to easily force quit on your Mac or iPhone
A Jan. 6 rioter praised Vivek Ramaswamy at his sentencing for suggesting riot was an ‘inside job’