UPDATE- Freed Virginia Man Works to Clear his Name

December 6th, 2011

(originally posted 9/30/11) In 1984 18-year-old Thomas Haynesworth went to the grocery store to pick up a few things for his mother. He never made it home. He was arrested by police on suspicion of committing five different rapes in the area after one of the victims identified him as the perpetrator. Haynesworth was convicted and sentenced to 84 years in prison. After DNA testing became available, tests conclusively demonstrated that Haynesworth could not have committed two of the rapes; rather, the test results pointed to a serial rapist who committed rapes in the area after Haynesworth’s conviction. The DNA results, along with strong circumstantial evidence, led a Virginia parole board to release Haynesworth from prison this past March on his 46th birthday, 27 years after he was first stopped by police.

Haynesworth is now seeking full exoneration for all five of the rapes. Since he has not been exonerated on all the prior convictions, he has to register as a sex offender and request permission to visit his nieces. In July, a three-judge panel in the Court of Appeals for Virginia requested additional briefs, rather than granting Haynesworth’s request for a writ of actual innocence. One of Haynesworth’s supporters is Attorney General Kenneth T. Cuccinelli who believes that the judges are interpreting the law governing granting writs of actual innocence too strictly. He argues that they should not focus narrowly on identifying “conclusive” exonerating evidence, pointing out that the state destroyed the DNA evidence in the other cases, and saying, “It seems paradoxical to demand ‘conclusive’ evidence from Haynesworth when the commonwealth has deprived him of the opportunity to produce such evidence.” As Haynesworth fights to clear his name, the other pieces of his life seem to be falling into place. He was offered a job soon after his release working in Attorney General Cuccinelli’s Richmond office.

Read the NYT article here.

UPDATE- Thomas Haynesworth’s long journey towards establishing his innocence is finally over. Today the Virginia Court of Appeals granted Haynesworth a writ of actual innocence, officially clearing him of any involvement in a series of rapes from the 1980s. Haynesworth spent 27 in prison for the crimes, despite always maintaining his innocence. In March, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell released Haynesworth on parole after DNA tests cleared him and instead implicated a convicted rapist from the same area named Leon Davis. Despite his release from prison, Haynesworth was still considered responsible for the crimes in the eyes of the law and had to register as a sex offender. Today’s decision officially expunges Haynesworth’s record and validates his 27-year-odyssey to clear his name.