by Memorie Knox
CHICAGO (FinalCall.com)�After spending half of their lives in
prison for a crime that DNA evidence confirmed they didn�t commit, Omar
Saunders, 32, Calvin Ollins, 29, and his cousin Larry Ollins, 31, were
released on Dec. 5 and embraced each other and the world for the first
time in 15 years.
The three young Black men were serving life sentences for the 1986
rape and murder of Lori Roscetti, a 23-year-old White medical student,
whose lifeless and bloody body was found near a Chicago public housing
complex. The men say they are convinced that neither the young woman�s
life, nor half of their own lives, were taken in vain, and offered their
condolences to her family in hopes that the real killers will be found.
A fourth man, Marcellius Bradford, who was also convicted in the
case, served 6-1/2 years and was released. He was given a reduced
sentence in exchange for testifying against Larry Ollins. The charges
against all four men have been officially erased, although Mr. Bradford
remains in jail on charges not related to the murder/rape.
According to police, two of the young men admitted that the four of
them attacked the young woman as she drove home from a study session.
Their motive, police say, was to get bus fare for then 14-year-old
Calvin Ollins. The men later recanted their confessions, saying they
were coerced.
A joyous reunion of freedom began when Mr. Saunders and Larry Ollins
were released from Statesville Prison in Joliet, Ill., and continued
when their lawyer drove them 10 minutes away to nearby Joliet Prison to
pick up Calvin Ollins. The men had a group hug, followed by smiles and
tears of pain and patience.
The men were taken to the Naperville, Ill., office of Kathleen
Zellner, the lawyer who spent 800 hours and $200,000 to investigate
their case. Atty. Zellner alleges that there was blatant misconduct and
misuse of power by officials in the case, and will file a civil rights
lawsuit on behalf of the men for wrongful prosecution.
While law enforcement has pledged to continue to search for the
killers, Atty. Zellner said she would sue detectives, prosecutors and
those who worked on the case in the crime lab. She will also seek
clemency for the men from the Governor.
Cook County States Attorney Dick Devine, who has publicly apologized
for the obvious mistakes made by the department, revisited the case, now
known as the Roscetti 3. Chicago�s current mayor, Richard M. Daley, was
Cook County States Attorney at the time the men were prosecuted.
In their lawyer�s office, stylishly dressed in matching v-neck
sweaters, slacks and shoes, Omar, Calvin and Larry talked with the
media, enjoyed a freedom feast, opened gifts and reunited with family,
friends and even school teachers.
They used cell phones for the first time, gazed out of the window in
awe of how the world had changed and couldn�t wait to dive into the
World Wide Web. Waking up the next day in a "real bed," they said,
hadn�t yet become a reality.
Pointing to a large scar on his bald head, Mr. Saunders, who says he
was stabbed more than 14 times in the head and hand by other inmates,
expressed how tragic their case was. Mr. Sanders said he saw Calte afor
the first time in his life 15 years ago, while standing in the
courtroom.
"Prisons aren�t designed to make anybody better and the injury to my
body is proof that it�s hell. If you know you�re innocent, there�s a
certain integrity that you have to walk with," Calvin said.
From day one, all of my concentration was on the battle to get us out
of here. I never gave up hope and I knew that if I took a step, God
would take fifty more," he said.
While incarcerated, Mr. Saunders said he used his time for personal
development, reading books on politics and history, and became intrigued
with collegiate dictionaries. Their case and the negative media coverage
that surrounded it, affected all of their families and friends, he
explained. Now the healing process must begin with those who supported
them, and with those who didn�t, he said.
"The way this woman was brutalized and murdered, you wouldn�t want to
be associated with anyone who was accused of doing a crime like that,"
Mr. Saunders said. "Years ago, I had a dream that foretold this
situation. In that dream, I talked to everyone I knew, and I looked them
in the eyes, but the part of the eye that gives them vision and focus
was gone�only the white part remained. It was telling me that I could
see what they couldn�t see.
"God foresaw what happened to Ms. Roscetti, us being framed and
freed. They got four Black teenagers and created a story that was so
brutal that Blacks and whites looked at us with anger. Poor whites,
Blacks and Latinos are now filling the prison complex. There�s something
going on in this country�s criminal justice system, and maybe this case
will shed some light on it," Mr. Saunders said.
The people who framed them didn�t care about the life of the woman
who was murdered, said Larry Ollins.
"The orchestration of our trial led me to a full understanding of
what secured our conviction. While in prison, I reflected on the
struggle of our ancestors in slavery and in civil rights. My experience
was like a resurrection. With God�s power and our endurance, I knew we
could be freed," Larry Ollins said.
The plans for their future are uncertain, except for joining the
international movement for the wrongfully convicted, said Calvin Ollins,
who half-jokingly told reporters that he�d been incarcerated throughout
Michael Jordan�s entire career.
"As I listened to and read about spirituality, I began to develop
more insight on how important it is to function at your best ability,
despite certain things beyond your control," said Calvin. "I was led to
bow down and recognize that there�s a higher power."
"Anytime you take a child and force him out into the wilderness, he
will either conform himself to the image of the beast or recognize the
Supreme Being that can deliver him from what happens on this earth. God
wanted me to go through this and I thank Him for the guidance. His grace
kept me and I�ve been blessed. My cousin Larry, Omar and I had no choice
and were forced to gravitate towards one another and come together to
figure out how to get through this wind. I value every moment. When life
is taken away from you, you value it more," Calvin said.
The men now join the growing list of those released after wrongful
convictions in Chicago-area courts. Since 1987, 13 men have been freed
from Illinois death row due to wrongful convictions, which led Gov.
George Ryan to impose a moratorium on executions and a commission to
examine the state�s capital punishment system.
Most of the men released due to wrongful convictions were Black and
Latino and many of them have received millions of dollars in
compensatory awards from lawsuits.
Photo: (L-R) Larry Ollins, Omar Saunders and Calvin
Ollins