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Black Man in Chicago Released From Prison After his Twin Brother Confesses to Murder

Kevin Dugar was sentenced to 54 years in prison for a murder his twin brother confessed to

A Chicago Black man who spent nearly 20 years in prison for a fatal shooting in 2003 has been released after his identical twin brother confessed to the murder years earlier, according to NBC News.

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Kevin Dugar was convicted in 2005 and sentenced to 54 years in prison for the shooting of a rival gang member. The gunman shot at three people in Uptown Chicago in March 2003, killing two people.

In 2013, Dugarโ€™s twin brother, Karl Smith, confessed to carrying out the murder in a letter to Dugar.

From NBC News:

Initially, the admission had little impact on Dugarโ€™s case, with a judge ruling in 2018 that Smithโ€™s confession was not credible and declining to offer his twin a new trial, according to The Chicago Tribune.

Smith had been denied an appeal himself as he was serving out a 99-year sentence for a home invasion that saw a child shot in the head. Prosecutors questioned the motives behind his confession, telling the judge that he only came forward after a court upheld his own conviction for attempted murder, the Chicago Tribune had reported at the time.

A lawyer with the Northwestern Pritzker School of Lawโ€™s Center on Wrongful Convictions took Dugarโ€™s case back to court, however. And now, after Tuesdayโ€™s ruling, he will have a second chance to prove his innocence.

Safer said he hoped the case, which he described as a โ€œmade-for-TVโ€ tale, would not have to go to court again.

โ€œWe are hopeful that the (Cook County) stateโ€™s attorney will drop the case against Kevin and then do what they will, but drop the case against Kevin because heโ€™s innocent,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s clear that heโ€™s innocent, but if they persist we will go to trial and we will vindicate him at trial.โ€

According to Dugarโ€™s lawyer, Ronald Safer, Dugar has been spending time with his family since his release as he still comes to terms with his brotherโ€™s confession.

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