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After almost 32 years, freedom

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If not for Judi Stickel, he might be there still.

More than 100 inmates have been exonerated of crimes in Illinois since 1989, and lawyers at the Center On Wrongful Convictions cannot recall another case in which they were recruited by someone in the victim’s family.

“I just wanted answers. That’s what I told him,” Stickel recalled in a recent interview. “And I kept bugging him and bugging him until he wrote me back.”

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It was hard-earned paranoia that led Davis to assume that Stickel wanted information about him so she could have him killed in prison or hurt his loved ones on the outside.

His mother and father spent their life savings on his trial. His upwardly mobile extended family on Chicago’s South Side and suburbs might have had means to help, but they had all but ignored him since his arrest.

He’d had no attorney since his last appeal in 1984. The jailhouse lawyer who’d offered to work on his case took one look at his file and promptly told inmates and guards scattered around the prison system to reserve a special place in hell for the convicted child-killer.

Davis was at Pontiac Correctional Center only a few days before inmates began calling him a pedophile. When the insults escalated into threats and assaults, he realized guards always wrote him up as the instigator.

And so Davis, who had only a juvenile arrest for auto theft on his record before he landed in prison, racked up one of the longest disciplinary records in the state.

When the “super max” lockup opened in Tamms in 1998 to house the purported most-dangerous inmates in Illinois, he was one of the first ones shipped there.

Tamms inmates spend 23 hours a day alone in a tiny, gray cell. The only respite is a daily hour-long trip to a 12-by-30-foot prison yard, with walls so high the sun can only reach your skin if they are outside at noon.

“After the first couple weeks, I didn’t even go for yard,” Davis said.

“I was like, what’s the point? Half of it has a tin roof over it, the other half has a fence over it. They just put that there to make the sky seem farther away.”

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