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Thursday, July 24, 2008
NEWS AND EVENTS
FORENSICS 411 CLE- MAY 30, 2008
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SHERMAN
TOWNSEND RELEASED FROM PRISON
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (October 2, 2007) – Sherman Townsend
was imprisoned for more than ten years for a crime he did
not commit. Years ago he convinced lawyers, professors and
law students working with the Innocence Project of Minnesota
of his innocence, but they could not find a way to prove it.
Earlier this year the true perpetrator contacted them admitting
his guilt and giving a candid, detailed and chilling account
of what transpired the night that changed Mr. Townsend’s
life. On October 2, 2007 Sherman Townsend walked out a free
man.
BACKGROUND
On August 10, 1997, at 1:43 a.m., Minneapolis
police responded to a home invasion at 1412 8th Street SE,
Minneapolis in Hennepin County. The woman living in the house
and her boyfriend were asleep in her bed when they awoke to
find an intruder on top of them in the bed. After a brief
struggle, the invader fled. Neither victim was significantly
injured, nor was anything stolen. The victims called the police,
but due to the circumstances were candid that they could not
identify the perpetrator nor give
much in the way of a description.
As police talked to the victims, another
man, David Anthony Jones, who lived in an apartment building
next door approached the police and told them that as he returned
home that evening, a man came running from the direction of
his neighbor’s house and knocked him down. He described
the man as an African American with a large build. Mr. Townsend,
an African American, was arrested nearby and brought to the
scene where Jones identified him as the man who knocked him
down. Neither victim could identify Townsend as the man who
broke into the house. Mr. Townsend was arrested and charged.
As the trial approached, the only witness
who could positively identify Townsend started to change his
version of events. Jones told a an investigator working for
Townsend’s then attorney that he could not in fact identify
Townsend as the man who ran into him that evening. He also
testified under oath at a pre-trial hearing that Townsend
was not the man. However, at trial, he did testify that Townsend
was the man who knocked him over. The victims were still not
able to identify Townsend as the man who was in their bed,
and there was no physical evidence tying him to the scene.
However, Townsend was convicted and sentenced to twenty years
in prison. At every step in the process he has protested his
innocence to anyone willing to listen.
Sherman Townsend contacted the Innocence Project of Minnesota
in when it first started accepting cases in 2002. His case
was worked on by a number of law students taking the Innocence
Clinic at Hamline University School of Law. They and their
professor, Michael Davis, believed Townsend when he said he
was innocent, and were looking at another potential perpetrator
who had been doing similar crimes in the same neighborhood.
To them, this case had all the hallmarks of a mistaken identification.
They had no idea how much darker the truth really was.
In May of this year, David Anthony Jones
– the neighbor, contacted the Innocence Project of Minnesota
as well as several other organizations. He told anyone willing
to listen that he was the true perpetrator of the crime for
which Sherman Townsend was in prison. Jones is currently in
prison himself for two different cases involving criminal
sexual misconduct. While in prison, he was shocked to find
that Sherman Townsend was still incarcerated for the crime
that Jones himself committed. Now that he had faced life behind
bars, he wanted to rectify the injustice he had done to Mr.
Townsend ten years ago.
Mr. Jones provided Mr. Townsend's attorneys,
Julie Jonas and Michael Davis, with a map and affidavits detailing
what actually occurred that evening. Working on behalf of
Mr. Townsend, the attorneys contacted the victims of the burglary
and confirmed details provided in Mr. Jones’s affidavit,
including details that were not available in the police reports
or as part of the trial record. None of Mr. Jones’s
admissions in his affidavit contradicted the victims’
recollections of the night. None of the facts developed through
Mr. Jones’s affidavit or the victims’ confirmations
implicate Mr. Townsend. Mr. Jones was the only witness to
identify Mr. Townsend before, during, or after trial. Mr.
Jones and Mr. Townsend both claim that Mr. Townsend is innocent.
On September 24 2007, Mr. Jones’s
testified under oath for nearly three hours. He gave the following
detailed and often times riveting account of what truly occurred
that August night. Jones’s apartment window overlooked
his neighbor, the victim’s home. He watched her from
his window, knew what she wore, and was sexually excited by
her. He heard her roommate leave the house in evening on August
9, 1997 and thought she was alone. He did not know her boyfriend
was present. Mr. Jones had been drinking throughout the afternoon
and evening using money he had stolen from work earlier in
the day to buy liquor.
At some point in the night, while drunk,
he went for walk to get more liquor. While on that walk he
peeped into the window of an Asian woman that he did not know.
She was partially nude and he wanted to rape her, but did
not think he could get into her home. He then decided he wanted
to rape his next door neighbor. He had gathered the supplies
he would need – duct tape and a utility knife. He wore
drawstring pants so that he would be able to get them off
easily during the rape. After cutting through a downstairs
window screen with a carpet knife, he climbed through the
window.
When he went upstairs to the second floor
to find his intended victim, Mr. Jones opened the first door
he found and fell into a closet. He then found the bedroom
and opened the door where he fell across a mattress on the
floor. He put his hands out to break his fall and grabbed
a man’s neck in the process. Mr. Jones only expected
to find his female victim in the bedroom, so he fled hoping
to avoid any confrontation with the male. He ran out the door
and across an alley to his apartment, taking an indirect route
to avoid detection. From his darkened apartment, he watched
through the windows as the police arrived and began to look
around the area.
Mr. Jones wanted to know how much the police
knew about the burglar, and so he went out and pretended to
be the concerned neighbor. As he talked to them, he decided
throw them off his trail as a suspect by concocting the story
about a man having run into him. When the police went to look
for a suspect, they placed Jones in a squad car because he
was still drunk and having a hard time standing. The police
quickly arrested Townsend who was well known to them and brought
him to the scene. Meanwhile, Jones was in the squad car and
knowing his own guilt feared he was going to be arrested.
When they asked Jones to make an identification of Mr. Townsend,
Jones lied and told police that Townsend was the man who ran
into him. In truth, he could not see the person in the spotlight
well because he was too drunk to focus.
His subsequent statements made to police,
prosecutors, and at trial resulted in numerous inconsistencies.
Those inconsistencies resulted from Jones’ inability
to remember what he initially told police and a desire to
get everyone to leave him alone and quit bothering him. Mr.
Jones also confirmed that he lied at trial when he told the
judge that he had no prior criminal convictions. In fact,
he did have felony convictions from Illinois at the time of
Townsend’s trial. Because of all of the lies he told
and the lack of other evidence Jones never thought Townsend
would get convicted and never followed up to see if he had.
When Jones saw Townsend in prison for the
crime that he in fact had committed, he was shocked. Jones
approached Townsend and told him what he had done. Jones is
extremely remorseful and wants desperately to correct this
situation as soon as possible. Jones contacted Townsend’s
attorneys among others in an attempt to set the record straight
and free an innocent man.
Soon after hearing Jones’ wrenching
testimony about the true details of the evening in question,
the prosecutor contacted Townsend through his attorneys. Townsend
was told that if he dropped his motion for a new trial, he
could be released from prison immediately. Mr. Townsend, who
had already placed his faith in the system once and lost,
accepted his release quickly and graciously. He walked out
of custody on October 2, 2007 after serving over 10 years
in prison for a crime he did not commit. He remains upbeat
and positive. He told members of the media, “I don’t
think they took my life away. I think I go from this day forward.”
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