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After almost 32 years, freedom

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In March, an appellate judge ordered a new trial for Davis. Champaign County prosecutors, weighing the new evidence against their 32-year-old case file, dismissed the charges.

A judge ordered Davis released immediately, catching his legal team and family by surprise. He had no ride home from prison.

“I hadn’t been around people in 14 years, and they were talking about putting me on a bus,” Davis said.

When a jail administrator unlocked his handcuffs and shook his hand, Davis estimates it was the first time he had made contact with another human being in four or five years. He had no idea how he would fare on a crowded Greyhound bus for seven hours.

Davis recalls walking through the tunnel-like hallways of Tamms to a section of the prison he had never before visited. He walked through a waiting room and outside the prison walls and saw his father.

“We hugged, boy,” Richard Davis said. “I just told him, ‘At last. You’re free.’ ” And Andre Davis replied, “I’m free.”

In the end, the DNA evidence proved the most compelling factor in his successful appeal, and Stickel had been happy to pass on the heavy lifting after years on the case. Northwestern lawyers and students eventually were able to dig up all the documents Stickel had found, and more.

A week after he was released, Northwestern hosted a welcome home luncheon for Davis in a conference room overlooking Lake Michigan at the law school.

As Davis walked to the front of the room to take a seat beside the podium, he looked out at a small crowd of friends and relatives, law students and fellow exonerated inmates. He took little notice of the slim blonde woman seated in the front row until his lawyer announced her name: Judi Stickel.

Stickel had seen only Davis’ prison mug shot, and she had moved on from working on his case to pestering authorities in Champaign County to charge someone else in the case. As she listened to the speakers, Andre Davis became a real person in her mind for the first time.

“Listening to everyone talk I was thinking about what I’d done since I was 19,” she said. “All the things he had missed, all the things he didn’t get to do.”

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