Man freed after wrongful conviction

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CHICAGO – After spending almost two decades in jail for a rape and murder he didn’t commit, Robert Taylor walked out of an Illinois prison a free man Thursday with just one word to describe the feeling: Beautiful.

“I’m still getting used to it,” he told The Associated Press by phone shortly after leaving Stateville Correctional Center. “I knew it would come.”

Taylor, 34, was among three men serving prison time for the 1991 rape and murder of a 14-year-old suburban Chicago girl whose convictions were vacated Thursday after DNA evidence linked another man to the crime.

Five were convicted in total; prosecutors said they planned to vacate the convictions of the two others who’ve already served prison sentences.

The men were convicted as teenagers in the rape and murder of Cateresa Matthews of Dixmoor, which is about 20 miles south of Chicago.

She disappeared after leaving her grandmother’s house in November 1991 and her body was found weeks later near a highway with a gunshot wound to the mouth.

The murder went unsolved for about a year. Then in 1992, the teens were arrested. Two signed confessions and agreed to testify against the others for shorter prison sentences, even though attorneys said there were inconsistencies in their testimony and DNA evidence taken from the girl did not match any of the five teens.

Prosecutors reopened the case this year after new DNA testing linked a convicted rapist to the crime. He has not been charged in Matthew’s killing, but remains under investigation and is serving prison time in Cook County for a drug offense, authorities said.

Those in the courtroom Thursday were stunned.

“It’s truly unexplainable,” said Taylor’s attorney Josh Tepfer, who works for Northwestern University School of Law’s Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth. “It’s one of the most tragic injustices in this state’s history. It’s five kids who were wrongfully convicted ... while a true perpetrator went on and lived a criminal lifestyle.”

The prosecutors’ move came after years of legal battles for the three men — Taylor, Jonathan Barr, 34, and James Harden, 36.

“He’s lost his childhood. You can’t put a price on that,” said Craig Cooley, a staff attorney with the New York-based Innocence Project, who represented Barr. “He’s angry at what happened, but he’s forgiven and is moving on.”

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