MINNEAPOLIS โ A Black man who was sent to prison for life as a teenager took his first steps of freedom to the sound of ringing bells and cheering family members and supporters, hours after a pardons board commuted his sentence in a high-profile murder case.
Myon Burrellโs prosecution and harsh punishment raised questions about the integrity of the criminal justice system that put him away nearly two decades ago for the death of a young girl killed by a stray bullet. Earlier this year, The Associated Press and APM Reports uncovered new evidence and serious flaws in the police investigation, ultimately leading to the creation of an independent national legal panel to review the case.
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Last week, the panel published its findings, saying there was a โfailure to investigate that illustrates tunnel visionโ and that evidence that could have helped exonerate Burrell was either ignored or minimized.
The panel said it saw no purpose served by keeping Burrell locked up, pointing to his age at the time of the crime and his good behavior behind bars.
Burrellโs request for a pardon was denied and he will have to spend the next two years under supervised release. But it was the first time in at least 22 years that Minnesota commuted a sentence in a murder case, according the the Department of Corrections.
The release was swift. Just hours after receiving the news, he walked out the front door of Stillwater prison into below-freezing temperatures. Dozens of bundled supporters, some holding signs and balloons, surrounded Burrell while cheering โMyonโs free! Myonโs free!โ
After jumping into a waiting car, he was soon home. Friends and relatives filtered into the living room, greeting him with gifts and hugs.
โItโs just a blessing,โ he said, while standing outside on the street searching the sky for the moon and stars, which he said heโs been longing to see.
Burrell has always maintained his innocence in the 2002 killing of 11-year-old Tyesha Edwards, struck in the heart while doing homework at the dining room table with her little sister. He told Minnesotaโs Board of Pardons members Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison that his โheart goes outโ to her family. The third board member, Supreme Court Chief Justice Lorie Skjerven Gildea, recused herself, citing prior involvement with the case.
Edwardsโ death enraged the African American community in a city just emerging from some of the nationโs highest homicide rates, briefly earning it the nickname โMurderapolis.โ Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who then headed the county attorneyโs office, has used Burrellโs conviction over the years as an example of her tough-on-crime policies, most recently during a Democratic presidential primary debate last year.
The AP investigation that followed sparked national outrage and gave Burrellโs family and community organizers the ammunition they needed to get Klobucharโs attention. She called for the creation of the independent panel of legal experts. Barry Scheck, co-founder of the Innocence Project, and Laura Nirider, of Northwestern Universityโs Center on Wrongful Convictions, oversaw that effort.
Klobuchar released a statement Tuesday saying the pardon board made the right decision. She also urged a conviction-review unit to continue investigating the facts.
The yearlong investigation by The AP showed there was no hard evidence โ no gun, DNA or fingerprints โ tying Burrell to the shooting. Among other things, police did not collect a corner storeโs surveillance video, which Burrell said could have cleared him. And video footage showed the lead homicide detective offering a man in police custody $500 for Burrellโs name, even if it was just hearsay.
Officers relied heavily on a single eyewitness, who offered conflicting accounts, along with jailhouse informants, who benefited generously for testifying. Some have recanted. One had his 16-year prison sentence cut to three. Another said he had agreed to work with police on 14 other cases.
Burrellโs co-defendants said the teenager was not at the scene that day.
One of them, Isaiah Tyson, has been saying for years that he was the shooter, not Burrell.
โI will always carry the burden of what happened to an innocent child,โ Tyson said Tuesday during a call from prison, where heโs serving a 45-year sentence for Tyeshaโs killing. โBut by him being let go, itโs a huge relief for me, because Iโve been holding that this whole time. ... He was locked up for something he had no idea aboutโ
Burrell, who was 16 at the time of the slaying, appeared at his hearing via videoconference from inside the stateโs Stillwater prison. He became emotional as the board voted, and put his hand on his head and said, โThank you, thank you. I appreciate it.โ
Burrell told the board about his time in prison, saying he did not know what was going on when he was sentenced, and that he converted to Islam and became a religious leader while behind bars.
โI tried to make the best of my situation,โ he said. โI started going in and extracting medicine out of the poison. The trials and tribulations I was going through, I tried to get something out of it.โ
His request was accompanied by testimony from community leaders and letters from young men in prison, who attested to his strong character and moral leadership.
Jimmie Edwards III, Tyeshaโs brother, told the AP that he and his family were upset by the decision. He said the justice system failed his family, and media coverage and support for Burrellโs release overshadowed his sisterโs death.
โShe never got to go to her prom. She never got to go to college. She never got to go to junior high school or high school,โ he said. โHer life was taken away at 11. Whoโs the victim?โ
Gov. Walz recommended the commuted sentence, saying science has found and the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that teenage minds work differently than those of adults, and that a life sentence for a teenager is too extreme.
โWhile this board is not a fact finder, it does have the power to determine when justice is served through the power of clemency and mercy,โ he said. โWe cannot turn a blind eye to the developments in science and law as we look at this case.โ
Walz addressed the Edwards family during the hearing, saying: โWeโre not here to relitigate the crime committed against your family that took your daughter away. There is nothing I can do to ease your pain, and it will not be made better. But we must act today to recognize the law in this area has changed. Justice is not served by incarcerating a child for his entire lifetime for a horrible mistake committed many years ago.โ
New questions about Burrellโs case surfaced just before Minneapolis was thrust into the national spotlight after a police officer held his knee against George Floydโs neck outside a convenience store as Floyd gasped for breath. It was the same Cup Foods store that Burrell said could have provided his alibi if surveillance tapes had been pulled.
Floydโs death sparked racial injustice protests and put renewed focus on some law enforcement practices from the 1990s and early 2000s, when harsher policing and tougher sentencing led to the highest lock-up rates in the nationโs history. Those incarcerations hit minority communities the hardest.
Those same communities were victims of much of the gun, drug and gang violence.
Edwards III, Tyeshaโs brother, said news of Burrellโs release is especially hard after the death of his mother last year.
โWhen she lost our sister, it took her away. She was never able to recover,โ he said of his mother. โIโm glad my mom is not here to witness this, because it would just break her heart.โ
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Associated Press writers Amy Forliti and Mohamed Ibrahim contributed to this report.