Greg Bright
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Greg Bright and his co-defendant Earl Truvia were convicted in 1975 of the second-degree murder of Eliot Porter in the New Orleans' Calliope Housing Project and sentenced to life without parole. At the time, Mr. Bright was 20 years-old and Mr. Truvia was 17. Until they were arrested together, they hardly knew each other.

The convictions were based solely on the testimony of a single eyewitness who said she watched Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia from her window go around the corner with a young boy and emerge without him. Unbeknownst to the jury, the coroner had placed the time of the death significantly later than the time the eyewitness said she witnessed Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia from her window.

The jury also failed to learn that the eyewitness was a paranoid schizophrenic suffering from auditory and visual hallucinations, medicating her mental illness with heroin, giving the police information in exchange for cash and testifying under a false name to conceal her own criminal history. Nor did the jury hear—thanks to the fact that the defendants' lawyers did no investigation—that there was in fact no line of sight from her window to the place she said she saw Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia.

They jury was also not informed that the State had concealed the identity of persons they considered to be likely suspects—contained in a police report from the time--from Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia for decades. In February 2002, Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia presented all of this evidence to a court in Orleans Parish, including a mass of alibi witnesses that neither of their court-appointed lawyers ever bothered to contact.

The convictions were overturned and Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia were granted a new trial.

The Louisiana Supreme Court upheld the reversal of their convictions.

On June 24, 2003, after 27 ½ years in prison for a crime they did not commit, Mr. Bright and Mr. Truvia were both released after the Orleans Parish district attorney dismissed all charges. They left prison with nothing but a $10 check each from the State of Louisiana and garbage bags full of legal paperwork.

Mr. Bright speaks around the country about his wrongful incarceration and life since prison. He can also be seen on HBO's hit series Tremé and TNT's Memphis Beat.

Blog Entries by Greg Bright

The Exonerated Deserve Justice, Not the Supreme Court's Indifference

Posted April 27, 2011 | 15:10:44 (EST)

Written with Lara Naughton

I spent 27 ½ years in Angola prison as an innocent person. When I walked out of prison, to be honest, compensation was the furthest thing from my mind. I was just happy to be free.

But seven years after proving my innocence, I haven't...

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