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Alton Logan Court Case

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Alton Logan was at age 28 when he was arrested and charged for a murder that occurred on January 11, 1982. The fatal shooting of Lloyd Wickliffe, who was an off-duty corrections officer passing by as a security guard, happened during a robbery attempt at a McDonald’s restaurant in the suburbs of Chicago. Mr. Logan was sentenced to life in prison even though there was no physical evidence linking him to the murder. Two other separate attorneys knew that he was innocent because one of their clients confessed to them privately that he murdered the security officer. He was an innocent person who winded up spending 26 years of his life in prison. From Alton Logan’s point of view, he did not commit the murder. His mother and brothers testified that he was sleeping at his house on the night of the murder. But from the Chicago Police Department’s point of view, they got a tip and had three eyewitnesses to identity him. But the jury convicted him with first degree murder. The person who was murdered was a part of the security department in Chicago, so the punishment was harsher. …show more content…

All his charges were dropped. The attorneys from the unrelated murder of two Chicago police officers finally were able to tell Mr. Logan’s lawyer that their client Wilson had committed the murder. Wilson had died from natural causes in prison on November 19, 2007. They explained themselves that they were ethically bound because of attorney-client privilege so they could not to reveal the confession according to the law. Since Wilson died, they were no longer legally bound to hide the

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