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This title in other editionsExit to Freedomby Calvin C Johnson
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:"With God as my witness, I have been falsely accused of these crimes. I did not commit them. I'm an innocent man." In 1983 Calvin C. Johnson Jr. spoke these words to a judge who later handed down a life sentence for rape and related crimes. Johnson spent sixteen years behind bars before he was freed in 1999 after DNA testing conclusively ruled out the possibility of his guilt. Exit to Freedom is the unforgettable story of Johnson's unrelenting quest for justice against incredible odds and under circumstances that threatened to shred his dignity and hope. As Johnson recalls his trial and long journey toward freedom through five Georgia prisons, he also speaks candidly about everything from his middle-class childhood in Atlanta to the reasons he came to be a rape suspect to the steadfast support of his family. This is also a story of faith: how Johnson found it in prison and how, he believes, it played a role in his release. At the point in his prison term when Johnson thought that he had exhausted all avenues of appeal, DNA-based forensics began to make headlines. Eventually his case was taken up by the Innocence Project, the nonprofit legal clinic renowned for overturning convictions through DNA testing of evidence. Years of delay followed, but Johnson eventually became the sixty-first convict to be exonerated with the Innocence Project's help. His is the only first-person account of a wrongful conviction overturned through DNA testing. However disturbed readers may become by this portrait of a justice system undermined by its own cynicism, Johnson himself feels no bitterness toward his accusers. In a book that offers many lessons about freedom, that may be the most important one of all. Book News Annotation:Calvin C. Johnson was convicted of rape in 1983 and was kept in
prison on a life sentence until DNA evidence cleared him in 1999. In
this memoir, he recounts how he came to those circumstances, the
horrors of life in prison, and his efforts to prove his innocence
with the aid of the Prisoner Legal Counseling Project, the Innocence
Project, and others. Much of the material, as might be expected, is
devoted to the many strategies—physical, mental, and
legal—necessary to even survive in Georgia's prison system.
Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) Synopsis:Johnson tells the moving story of how he survived 16 years in Georgia prisonsbefore being exonerated on the basis of DNA evidence. About the AuthorCalvin C. Johnson Jr. lives and works in the Atlanta area. He is on the board of the Georgia Innocence Project. Greg Hampikian is a professor at Boise State University with a joint appointment in the biology and criminal justice departments. He is also director of the Idaho Innocence Project. Barry Scheck is cofounder of the Innocence Project.
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