Paul Gatling wipes away tears at Brooklyn Supreme Court on May 2, 2016. Mark Lennihan/Associated Press |
81-year old Virginia man known as Paul Gatling was on Monday exonerated of murder that he was alleged to have committed about 52 years ago.
“There’s a lot of water gone under the bridge, but the bridge is still standing,” Gatling said after the proceedings.
Gatling was sentenced to 30 years to life in prison in October 1964 for the murder of one Lawrence Rothbort who was a Brooklyn artist. After spending 9 years, he was commutated by Governor Nelson Rockefeller thanks to lawyer, Malvina Nathanson from the Legal Aid Society; and was released in January 1974 on parole.
Two
years ago, Gatling happened to see an article in a local newspaper
about the Brooklyn district attorney’s efforts to identify wrongful
convictions.
He
called on the lawyer who handled his commutation, and was told to write
to the District Attorney. He did so, and an inquiry was set up which
led to his exoneration on Monday.
“I
wanted to be done with all of this. I was still angry about having to
spend that time for something I didn’t do,” Gatling said in an
interview.
Gatling
was convicted after the deceased’s wife identified him as the killer
among 3 other suspects. From the investigations, Court papers said that
the detectives directed her to pick “the tall one” (Gatling) among the
suspects. His lawyers forced him to plead guilty in the middle of the
trial, as it was clear that he was faced with the possibility of being
sent to the electric chair.
“The
cops told me they would make sure I was convicted and the lawyers said
they were going to execute me. I was a young black man. With the white,
pregnant wife in front of an all-white jury pointing me out, it was
over,” Gatling siad.
The investigation by the Conviction Review Unit later discovered that the said wife was having an affair with a musician named Leon Tolbert who told investigators that he overheard her telling the deceased that she will kill him if he ever hit her again.
Investigators
had to dig up case files from the city archives and track down copies
of police reports on microfiche at 1 Police Plaza. They found that
Gatling had been denied many of the legal protections that defendants
take for granted these days — the presence of a lawyer during
questioning, for example.
Gatling
says that now that he has been cleared, he wants to cast his vote in
the November presidential elections, which has been denied him before he
passes away. He lamented the fact that he couldn’t vote in America’s
first black president.
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