Man freed after 25 years behind bars for murder he didn't commit

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Attorneys with the California Innocence Project petitioned for Solorio
Attorneys with the California Innocence Project petitioned for Solorio's release, arguing that his conviction was based on faulty eyewitness identification practices (Image: AP)

A man who spent 25 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit was exonerated and released by a judge on Thursday after prosecutors agreed he had been wrongly convicted.

Miguel Solorio, 44, was arrested in 1998 for a fatal drive-by shooting in Whittier, southeast of Los Angeles, and eventually sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. Superior Court Judge William Ryan overturned Solorio's conviction during a Los Angeles court hearing that Solorio attended remotely.

Attorneys with the California Innocence Project petitioned for Solorio's release, arguing that his conviction was based on faulty eyewitness identification practices. In a letter last month, the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office said it had "confidently and definitively" concluded that Solorio is entitled to be released.

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The Innocence Project said the case against Solorio relied heavily on a now-debunked method of identifying a suspect that results in contaminating the witnesses' memory by repeatedly showing photos of the same person over and over.

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Man freed after 25 years behind bars for murder he didn't commitMule Creek State Prison in Amador County

In Solorio's case, before it was in the news four eyewitnesses shown his photo did not identify him as the suspect, and some even pointed to a different person. But rather than pursue other leads, law enforcement continued to present the witnesses with photos of Solorio until some of them eventually identified him, his lawyers said.

"This case is a tragic example of what happens when law enforcement officials develop tunnel vision in their pursuit of a suspect," said Sarah Pace, an attorney with the Innocence Project at Santa Clara University School of Law. "Once a witness mentioned Solorio's name, law enforcement officers zeroed in on only him, disregarding other evidence and possible suspects, and putting their own judgment about guilt or innocence above the facts."

The district attorney's letter noted that "new documentable scientific consensus emerged in 2020 that a witness's memory for a suspect should be tested only once, as even the test itself contaminates the witness's memory."

The state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has up to five days to process Solorio's release from Mule Creek State Prison southeast of Sacramento.

Abigail O'Leary

Crime, Murder trial, Prisons, Murder, Santa Clara University

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