Current:Home > FinancePhiladelphia man won’t be retried in shooting that sent him to prison for 12 years at 17 -GrowthSphere Strategies
Philadelphia man won’t be retried in shooting that sent him to prison for 12 years at 17
View
Date:2025-04-24 18:40:00
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia man won’t be retried in a 2011 shooting that injured four people, including a 6-year-old girl, and sent him to prison for more than a decade at age 17, a prosecutor announced Monday.
A judge closed the case against C.J. Rice, now 30, months after a federal judge found the defense lawyer at his 2013 trial deficient and the evidence “slender.” Rice had been serving a 30- to 60-year prison term until he was released amid the federal court ruling late last year.
The case was formally dismissed Monday after District Attorney Larry Krasner decided not to retry it. While he said most of the 45 exonerations his office has championed have been more clearcut cases of innocence, he found a new look at the evidence in Rice’s case more nuanced.
“The case falls within that 15% or so (of exoneration cases) where we believe it’s murky,” Krasner said at a press conference where he was joined by defense lawyers who pushed back on that view.
The reversal hinged on a few key points. A surgeon testified that Rice could not have been the person seen running from the scene because Rice had been seriously injured in a shooting three weeks earlier that fractured his pelvis.
Rice was shot on Sept. 3, 2011, in what he described as a case of mistaken identity. His trial lawyer, now deceased, agreed to stipulate that one of the Sept. 25, 2011, shooting victims was a potential suspect in Rice’s shooting — giving prosecutors a motive — even though there was little evidence of that.
“The evidence of (his) guilt was slender. Only one of the four victims was able to identify him and she admitted that the last time she had seen (him) was at least four years before the shooting. No weapon was ever recovered,” U.S. Magistrate Judge Carol Sandra Moore Wells wrote in her October report.
Rice left prison in December, but did not attend Monday’s court hearing. His lawyers said during a news conference that the case echoes many wrongful convictions that involve faulty eyewitness identification, ineffective counsel and overreach by prosecutors.
Nilam Sanghvi, legal director of the Pennsylvania Innocence Project, said the crime should have been thoroughly investigated before trial, not years later.
“It takes courage to face the wrongs of the past,” she said, while adding “we can never really right them because we can’t restore the years lost to wrongful conviction — here, over a decade of C.J.’s life.”
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- NFL Star Josh Allen Makes Rare Comment About Relationship With Hailee Steinfeld
- EEOC hits budget crunch and plans to furlough employees
- Millie Bobby Brown Shares Sweet Glimpse Into Married Life With Jake Bongiovi
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Mark Kelly may be Kamala Harris' VP pick: What that would mean for Americans
- S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq end sharply lower as weak jobs report triggers recession fears
- Miami Dolphins, Tyreek Hill agree to restructured $90 million deal
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- 5 people wounded in overnight shooting, Milwaukee police say
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Some Yankee Stadium bleachers fans chant `U-S-A!’ during `O Canada’ before game against Blue Jays
- Olympics 2024: China Badminton Players Huang Yaqiong and Liu Yuchen Get Engaged After She Wins Gold
- Meta to pay Texas $1.4 billion in 'historic settlement' over biometric data allegations
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Boxing fiasco sparks question: Do future Olympics become hunt for those who are different?
- Florida deputy killed and 2 officers wounded in ambush shooting, police say
- Christina Hall, Rachel Bilson and More Stars Who’ve Shared Their Co-Parenting Journeys
Recommendation
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Olympic Muffin Man's fame not from swimming, but TikTok reaction 'unreal'
Noah Lyles gets second in a surprising 100m opening heat at Olympics
IOC leader says ‘hate speech’ directed at Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-Ting at Olympics is unacceptable
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Judge rejects replacing counsel for man charged with shooting 3 Palestinian college students
'We feel deep sadness': 20-year-old falls 400 feet to his death at Grand Canyon
Ticketmaster posts additional Eras Tour show in Toronto, quickly takes it down