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Results tagged “altonlogan”

Now Cleared, Logan Waits For Daley Apology

After waiting for 26 years to earn his freedom, Alton Logan has learned some patience. Which is good, because we're pretty sure he'll be waiting for a while to get the official apology from Mayor Daley he's looking for. Daley was the State Prosecutor at the time Logan was convicted. Said Logan:

There's only one person whose mouth I want to hear that [apology] come out of, but I know he'll never say it... your mayor...He [Daley] was the man that signed the death certificate. That's the only apology I want. But I know I'll never get it.
Well, at least he's realistic. For his part, Mayor Daley claims to not even remember the Logan case, claiming, "I have no idea [whether an apology is warranted]. You know how many cases we had in the state's attorney's office?" Logan also plans to pursue an official pardon from Gov. Blagojevich which would qualify him for $200,000 in compensation. more ›

Logan Finally Cleared

Alton Logan was cleared of all charges today after spending 26 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit. Judge James Schreier vacated Logan's conviction, and all charges were formally dropped. "I've been telling everyone for the last 26 years I didn't do it and finally they did the right thing," Logan said. [S-T] more ›

Clock Ticking For Prosecutors In Alton Logan Case

On Tuseday, Circuit Court Judge James Schreier granted prosecutors a continuance as they decide whether or not to retry Alton Logan in the case of a January 1982 killing. Logan, who spent 26 years in prison for the crime, was released on bail in April when two attorneys came forward announcing that a recently-deceased client had admitted to the killing. Judge Schreier had previously granted the prosecution a continuance last month. While he granted Deputy Attorney General Ellen Mandeltort's new request, continuing the case until September 4, Schreier said, "I granted a motion for a new trial in April...We're getting to be four months later, and we need a simple decision as to whether the state is going to move forward with a new trial or not." Because the District Attorney's office should really put their resources towards retrying a man who has maintained his innocence for a crime that another man admitted to? more ›

Alton Logan Gets New Trial

A judge finally threw out Alton Logan's wrongful murder conviction today and ordered a retrial. The judge set Logan's bond at $10,000, and admitted that "there is a reasonable probability that [the verdict in the new trial will be] something other than 'guilty.'" [S-T]
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Revealed Secret May Mean Freedom for Inmate

Revealed Secret May Mean Freedom for Inmate

). Even less fun is rotting away in a cell for almost 26 years for a crime you didn’t commit. Now imagine that the key to your freedom was sitting the entire time locked in a box in a lawyer’s office, who couldn’t reveal it due to attorney-client privilege. That’s exactly what happened to Alton Logan. Logan, now age 54, was arrested in 1982 for the murder of a security guard at a south side McDonald’s in a robbery gone wrong. He was identified by witnesses along with Edgar Hope. A few days later, as police were hunting down Andrew and Jackie Wilson for an unrelated murder of two officers, a raid on Andrew’s suspected hiding place turned up a shotgun that tested positive as the gun used in the McDonald’s shooting. But since only two men were involved in the robbery and police conveniently had two men already in custody, charges were never filed against Andrew Wilson in that case. You might remember Wilson -- his allegations of being tortured by Jon Burge and two detectives started the snowball that led to Burge’s firing and a $1 million award by the court. But the plot twists even further -- public defenders Dale Coventry and Jamie Kunz, representing Wilson in the police shooting, received word that Hope was claiming Logan had nothing to do with the McDonald’s murder, and was pointing the finger at Wilson. When Coventry and Kunz confronted Wilson he admitted to being the trigger man. Wilson agreed to allow the lawyers to prepare a notarized affidavit of his confession, but it could only be revealed after his death. The affidavit has sat sealed in a metal box in Coventry’s office ever since. Andrew Wilson just died in November of last year -- Coventry and Kunz have now come forward with the new information, and Logan’s attorney is motioning for a new trial. Logan’s case is an example of how our justice system is for the most part effective, but far from perfect. The evidence to help exonerate someone in prison is just sitting around next to back issues of the , and there’s nothing anyone can do about it. Even if Coventry and Kunz didn’t care about reprimands and losing their license for breaking the attorney-client privilege, because of that privilege the affidavit would be inadmissible, anyway. At least that’s our hope, as the thought of these two men sacrificing Logan just for the sake of their careers is unfathomable. Can any of our law degree toting readers confirm this? [Trib] more ›

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