John,
Nearly 26 years after she was wrongfully convicted for the 1995 murder and robbery of her landlord, Renay Lynch was finally exonerated today in Buffalo, NY.
A post-conviction re-examination of crime scene fingerprint evidence — which law enforcement had previously withheld from the defense — pointed to another tenant of the victim as the likely perpetrator of the crime. Renay was released in Jan. 2022 and now becomes the 250th person to be freed by the Innocence Project.
Please take a moment right now to read more about Renay’s story and share the news of her exoneration with your friends and family on social media. [[link removed]]
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On May 19, 1995, a local landlord in Amherst, NY was found stabbed to death in her apartment. Initially, the investigation focused specifically on people who were known to have disputes with the landlord over property and money. But after 18 months, the murder was still unsolved.
Police began talking to Renay who was a tenant of the victim, and they initially viewed her as an informant who might help them break open the case. In late 1996, they narrowed their focus to a man named Kareem Walker, who Renay knew. She was helping them gather information around him, but as their efforts continued to fail, eventually police told Renay that in order to arrest Kareem, they “needed [her] to be there at the murder.” So they used coercive interrogation techniques known to elicit false confessions.
After hours of rigorous questioning and threats of perjury charges and prison, Renay told investigators what they wanted to hear. And though she quickly recanted her confession and has always maintained her innocence, she was wrongly convicted.
Renay’s case highlights many common causes of wrongful conviction: a coerced false confession; the fabricated testimony of an incentivized informant; and police misconduct — specifically withholding key crime scene evidence from the defense.
“Today is bittersweet. Ms. Lynch lost the last 26 years of her life to a wrongful conviction because of systemic flaws that continue to exist in the criminal legal system,” said Susan Friedman, Renay’s Innocence Project attorney.
Renay reflected on her time wrongfully incarcerated and said, “I have waited 26 years for this day to come. That’s days without seeing my children grow up, days without holding my grandchildren, days that I will never get back. I’m grateful to finally have this weight lifted.”
Learn more about Renay’s case and how the perfect storm of contributing factors led to her wrongful conviction. [[link removed]]
Thank you so much for your support,
— The Innocence Project Team
P.S. If you’d like to support Renay as she rebuilds her life after nearly 26 years of wrongful conviction, check out her Amazon Wish List now. [[link removed]]
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The Innocence Project works to free the innocent, prevent wrongful convictions, and create fair, compassionate, and equitable systems of justice for everyone. Founded in 1992 by Barry C. Scheck and Peter J. Neufeld at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University, the organization is now an independent nonprofit. Our work is guided by science and grounded in anti-racism.
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