HomeCrimeMan's murder conviction tossed after legal technicality

Man’s murder conviction tossed after legal technicality

Terrence Lewis

A New York judge on Feb. 5, 2024 vacated the 2018 murder conviction of Terrence Lewis after it was determined Monroe County officials violated the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (IAD) Law (inset via Rochester Police Department; background via WHEC/YouTube).

A man sentenced to 22 years to life in prison for a murder suddenly found himself a free man after a New York Supreme Court judge vacated his conviction because of a legal technicality.

Judge Stephen Miller wrote in a Feb. 5 decision that Monroe County officials violated the federal Interstate Agreement on Detainer’s Law (IAD) and thus Terrence Lewis’ 2018 conviction had to be thrown out. A jury convicted Lewis in the May 26, 2015, drive-by shooting death of 29-year-old Johnny Washington in Rochester. A judge then sentenced Lewis to 22 years to life in prison.

After the murder but before state officials indicted him, a federal judge in October 2016 sentenced Lewis to five years in prison on charges relating to drug distribution. State officials indicted Lewis for second-degree murder in Washington’s death in November 2017 as he was serving his federal sentence at a correctional facility in Allenwood, Pennsylvania. Lewis was transferred to the Monroe County Jail to be arraigned on the murder charges in January 2018 and Monroe County officials returned Lewis to federal custody a few months later as he awaited trial.

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

Most Popular

- Advertisment -
Share on Social Media