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Cornelius Dupree

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Ethnicity
  
African American

Name
  
Cornelius Dupree

Citizenship
  
United States

Home town
  
Houston


Criminal charge
  
Robbery – 1979

Known for
  
Miscarriage of justice

Spouse(s)
  
Selma Perkins Dupree

Criminal penalty
  
Prison

Cornelius Dupree idailymailcoukipix20110104article00CA32

Born
  
September 22, 1959 (age 64) (
1959-09-22
)

Criminal status
  
Paroled – Summer 2010 Exonerated – January 2011

Cornelius dupree exonerated in texas


Cornelius Dupree Jr. (born September 22, 1959) is an American who was declared innocent of a 1980 conviction for aggravated robbery, which was alleged to have been committed during a rape in 1979. He was paroled in July 2010 after serving 30 years of a 75-year prison sentence in Texas. Prosecutors cleared him of the crime after a test of his DNA profile did not match traces of semen evidence from the case. Dupree, who was represented by the Innocence Project, spent more time in prison in Texas than any other inmate who was eventually exonerated by DNA evidence.

Contents

Cornelius Dupree Cornelius Dupree Innocence Project

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Rape and robbery case

Cornelius Dupree DNA clears Houston man of raperobbery 30 years later Houston

On November 23, 1979, a 26-year-old woman and a male companion were the victims of a carjacking after visiting a liquor store in Dallas, Texas. The abductors drove the woman to a park nearby, where they raped her. The perpetrators decided not to kill her, but kept her rabbit fur coat. About two days later, two men were seen trying to sell the coat at a grocery store two miles away. The victims' car was found in the parking lot. Dupree and Anthony Massingill were arrested the following month because they resembled suspects from a different sexual assault and robbery case. However, Dupree did not match the description of the perpetrators of the November carjacking.

Trial and appeals

Cornelius Dupree Broken Justice Exonerees testify on behalf of reforming Texas

The 26-year-old victim picked out Dupree and Massingill from a police lineup, but her male companion did not. Dupree was charged with armed robbery and rape, but was never tried on the rape charge. In 1980, he was convicted and sentenced to 75 years in prison for aggravated robbery. Three of Dupree's appeals were rejected by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Two of the appeals were denied because he refused to admit to being a sex offender. He declined early release in 2004 in exchange for attending a treatment program for offenders because he felt it would have amounted to admitting guilt. Dupree later said, "Whatever your truth is, you have to stick with it." Dupree continued to write letters to people and organizations around the state in his bid to prove his innocence.

Exoneration

Cornelius Dupree Cornelius Dupree Jr CBS Dallas Fort Worth

In 2006, the Innocence Project took Dupree's case and carried out a forensic examination of the case evidence in 2010. He was represented by a legal team that included project co-founder Barry Scheck. Dupree was paroled in July 2010 and married his longtime fiancée Selma Perkins the day after his release. Soon afterwards, test results indicated that the evidence contained DNA from two men, neither of whom were Dupree or Massingill. Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins stated, "Our Conviction Integrity Unit thoroughly reinvestigated this case, tested the biological evidence and based on the results, concluded Cornelius Dupree did not commit this crime." Under the Tim Cole Compensation Act of Texas, the strongest compensation legislation in the United States, Dupree is entitled to $80,000 for every year in prison, which amounts to $2.4 million, plus a lifetime annuity. The money can be received in a lump sum and is not subject to federal income tax. Massingill was also absolved of the 1979 crime, but remains in prison on a different sexual assault conviction that is also being contested.

Cornelius Dupree Cornelius Dupree Jr gets his life back Friends of Justice

Between 2001 and 2011, about two dozen convictions were overturned on DNA evidence in Dallas, more than in any other county jurisdiction in the United States. In the same time period, 41 wrongly convicted prisoners were freed in the state of Texas through DNA testing, more than in any other state. The review of many cases in Dallas has been made possible because the county crime lab retains evidence for decades after conviction.

References

Cornelius Dupree Wikipedia