US man declared innocent after spending 48 years in prison

Image

A 71-year-old man has been declared innocent in the US state of Oklahoma after spending nearly 50 years in prison for a murder he did not commit.

Glynn Simmons, who is Black, served more time behind bars before being exonerated than any other inmate in US history, according to The National Registry of Exonerations.

Simmons was released in July after serving a total of 48 years, one month, and 18 days in prison.

Simmons and another man, Don Roberts, were sentenced to death in 1975 for the murder the previous year of a 30-year-old liquor store clerk during a robbery in Edmond, Oklahoma.

Simmons and Roberts were convicted solely based on the testimony of a teenage customer who was shot in the head during the robbery but survived.

She picked them out of a police lineup, but a subsequent investigation cast significant doubt on the reliability of her identifications.

Both men had also claimed at trial that they were not even in Oklahoma at the time of the murder.

US District Court Judge Amy Palumbo threw out Simmons' conviction in July and declared him innocent at a hearing in Oklahoma County District Court on Tuesday.

"This is a day we've been waiting on for a long, long time," Simmons told reporters. "We can say justice was done today, finally."

Roberts, Simmons's co-defendant, was released from prison in 2008, according to The National Registry of Exonerations.

Simmons may now be eligible for compensation.

"What's been done can't be undone but there could be accountability," he said. "That's what I'm about right now. Accountability."  

AFP_PIC

Related Articles

Iran Says Non-Hostile Ships Can Use Strait of Hormuz Amid War with US and Israel 

Iran has responded with repeated drone and missile strikes targeting Israel and Gulf Arab states hosting U.S. military bases.

  • World

    26-03-2026

  • 11:13AM

Trump postpones military strikes on Iranian power plants for five days

Iran had said it would completely shut the strait – a transit point for about one-fifth of the world’s oil supplies – in retaliation.

  • World

    23-03-2026

  • 12:48PM