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Man imprisoned 45 years for wife's killing is acquitted by Cleveland jury: "I've become free"

A jury acquitted an 83-year-old man Wednesday who was convicted at his first trial of killing his wife and spent 45 years in prison. The Cleveland jury deliberated for less than 90 minutes before delivering its verdict in Isaiah Andrews' second aggravated murder trial, according to the Ohio Innocence Project, which represented him.

Andrews said after the verdict that it "relieved all the weight off" him. "I've become free," he said.

"At close to 46 years, Isaiah's time served stands as the second-longest known wrongful incarceration in U.S. history," the Ohio Innocence Project said.

A couple of images from today of OIP client Isaiah Andrews, whose retrial 47 years after his wife's murder ended with a...

Posted by Ohio Innocence Project on Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Andrews had been released from prison last year after a judge ruled that prosecutors failed to tell a jury in 1975 that police had interviewed another suspect in the slaying of Regina Andrews.

Attorneys for the Ohio Innocence Project had hoped Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O'Malley would dismiss the charge against Andrews. O'Malley instead offered a plea bargain that would keep Andrews out of prison if he pleaded guilty to killing his wife.

Andrews rejected the offer, telling visiting Judge Tim McGinty, "I want justice for my wife."

Cleveland police initially arrested another man who provided an alibi for the time period when detectives initially believed Regina Andrews was killed. Detectives didn't question the man again after reconsidering their timeline. The other suspect died in 2011.

There was no physical evidence linking Isaiah Andrews to the slaying.

The new trial mostly consisted of transcripts being read from the first trial because detectives who investigated the case in the 1970s have since died.

"This was the right result today, but I don't know if he'll ever get actual justice," said Ohio Innocence Project attorney Brian Howe, who has worked for years on the case. "He should have never been convicted in the first place and he certainly never should have been retried."

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