Two
Brooklyn men who have spent the last 21 years in prison for three
murders that DNA evidence suggests they did not commit were released
Thursday on consent of the Brooklyn district attorney.
Anthony Yarbough, 39, and Sharrif
Wilson, 37, were arrested in June 1992 in the slaying Yarbough’s
40-year-old mother, his 12-year-old sister and another 12-year-old girl
in a Coney Island housing project.
“In this case, my office examined newly
discovered scientific evidence that was not available at the time of the
trial,” Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth P. Thompson said in
statement to CNN. “My obligation under the law is to determine whether
this new information, had it been known and presented at trial, would
have been more likely than not to cause the trial jury to return a
different verdict.”
In 2013, new DNA evidence from under
Yarbough’s mother’s fingernails matched sperm from the 1999 unsolved
rape and murder of Migdalia Ruiz of Brooklyn, according to an
investigation by the Medical Examiner’s office.
Yarbough and Wilson were already
incarcerated when the 1999 rape and murder occurred, according to Adam
Perlmutter, Wilson’s attorney.
“Based on this new evidence, I believe a jury would have been more likely to return a different verdict,” Thompson said.
Zachary Margulis-Ohuma, Yarbough’s attorney, is glad justice has finally been served.
“Anybody looking at this evidence with
an open mind would see that there is no chance in the world that Tony
murdered his mother and these two little girls,” Margulis-Ohuma said.
According to Margulis-Ohuma, this case
was “easy” with such “obvious evidence of innocence.” Margulis-Ohuma
hopes Thompson will devote the resources in the future to investigate
the “harder” cases.
Yarbough was just 18, and Wilson only 15, when they were accused of murder.
Yarbough came home after a night out and
discovered the victims choked to death with electrical cords and
stabbed multiple times. The two young girls had been partially
undressed, according to Perlmutter. Yarbough’s mother, Annie, his sister
Chavonn Barnes, and Chavonn’s friend Latsaha Knox were killed.
Brooklyn detectives placed Yarbough and
Wilson into separate interview rooms and coerced false confessions from
the two teens, who were later convicted in separate trials.
Yarbough was sentenced to 75 years to life in prison.
Wilson was offered a deal by the
district attorney’s office for a nine-years-to-life sentence, but his
case was disputed after he wrote Yarbough’s family in 2005 saying that
he had lied at the trial.
Yarbough’s attorney and the district attorney’s office began revisiting the case in 2010.
Thompson came into office in January
with promises to restore justice to the wrongfully convicted. This case
is part of a review of Brooklyn killings from the 1980s and early 1990s.
“I’m feeling really blessed right,”
Yarbough said. “I was extremely anxious and nervous. I didn’t know what
was going to happen. There were so many setbacks.”
When asked about his relationship with Wilson, Yarbough said he has no animosity.
“I’m happy that he’s out. I wish him and his family nothing but the best,” Yarbough said.
Yarbough says he does not know what his next step will be. At this time, after years behind bars, Yarbough is happy to move on.
“It was hard to keep my hopes up, but God is good now, I’m out now, I’m free, thank God,” Yarbough said.
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