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Courts & Crime

DNA leads to exoneration of Texas man who served 30 years

Jennifer Emily - McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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January 05, 2011 11:54 AM

DALLAS — A parolee who served more than 30 years for a crime he didn't commit was exonerated Tuesday in a Dallas courtroom.

"You're free to go," State District Judge Don Adams told Cornelius Dupree Jr., one of two men wrongly convicted in a 1979 abduction, robbery and rape in Dallas.

Dupree, who has been on parole since July, served more prison time than any other Texas inmate cleared through DNA testing.

"It's a joy to be free again," Dupree said during the hearing.

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After the hearing, the 51-year-old stood holding hands with his wife as he answered questions from reporters. He said he was having mixed emotions about today.

"I feel that words won't make up for what I lost," said Dupree, whose parents died while he was in prison.

Dupree got married the day after his release this summer. He and his wife, who declined to comment, met 20 years ago through a mutual friend while he was in prison.

Dupree, Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins and the cofounder of the Innocence Project in New York, Barry Scheck, used the occasion to stump for changes in the upcoming Texas Legislative session, especially about how witness identification is handled.

Of the 21 DNA exonerations in Dallas County, all but one involved faulty eyewitness identification.

Dupree and Anthony Ray Massingill, who was also cleared through DNA evidence, were accused in a Nov. 23, 1979, attack on a 26-year-old woman and her male friend. The robbers carjacked the victims and later ordered the man from the car. They then raped the woman at gunpoint before shoving her out of the vehicle, as well.

The rape victim wrongly identified Dupree and Massingill in a photo lineup. The male victim could not pick out either man. At trial, both victims identified Dupree as one of the men who abducted them.

Massingill, 49, will remain behind bars while authorities search for evidence to test in a second rape for which he is serving a life sentence. He could not be reached for comment.

(Emily reports for The Dallas Morning News.)

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