James Tillman remembers the smell of steak and onions cooking at his mother’s house on the day police came for him. He thought he’d be back soon.
Instead, he spent a total of 18½ years incarcerated for a crime he did not commit.
In 2006, with the help of the Connecticut Innocence Project, DNA evidence proved his innocence, making him the first person in Connecticut exonerated through post-conviction DNA testing. Later, DNA pointed to another man, who eventually confessed in court.
James talks about refusing to plead guilty, surviving prison, holding onto faith, and learning how to live freely again.
And we meet Katie Farrell, the social worker who helped him prepare for freedom before freedom was guaranteed.
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