Dark, scowling, perpetually angry; Derrick Allen is the Sonny Liston of wrongly convicted men in North Carolina.
Like Liston, the heavyweight boxing champion who lost a storied 1964 title bout to Muhammad Ali, Allen’s fight for justice has received a begrudging recognition.
And although his 54-year sentenceโof which he served 13 years after he was convicted for raping and murdering a two-year-old girlโwas vacated by Durham judge Orlando Hudson in 2009, Allen, like Liston, is still viewed with suspicion by the authorities.
As the INDY previously reported, although Allen is a free man, he is still imprisoned by his past.
Nearly 15 years have gone by since his release and Allen has not received a pardon of innocence from Governor Roy Cooper that would make him eligible for financial compensation.
Officials with Cooperโs office say only that Allenโs petition is still pending.
Allen recently pinned his hopes on what appeared to be a potential loophole in a 2012 law that might have granted him financial compensation without a pardon from the governor.
That hope vanished when Duke law professor Jamie Lau with the schoolโs Wrongful Convictions Clinic said Allen was not eligible because Judge Hudsonโs decision to vacate his sentence preempted a potential declaration of innocence from the stateโs Innocence Commission.
โThe law in question does not make Mr. Allen eligible for compensation,โ Lau stated in an email. โIn order to avail oneself of the law, you must have your charges dismissed after a declaration of innocence by the three-judge panel. Mr. Allenโs charges were dismissed by prosecutors in Durham County, not as a result of a decision by a three-judge panel, so he is not eligible for compensation.โ
Catherine Matoian, an associate director of investigation with the innocence inquiry commission, stated in an email to the INDY that, based on state law, โthe Commission is unable to consider Mr. Allenโs case.โ
Because Mr. Allenโs charges were dismissed, there is no conviction the Commission would be able to investigate,โ Matoian added.
The state of North Carolina freed Allen, but gave him little else to successfully reenter society.
โThey wrote me a check for no more than a $100 that was in my account,โ Allen says. โThat was basically it.โ
Allen stewed in jail for 15 months after his sentence was vacated. Hudson let him out on an unsecured bond.
Allen says he attended mental health sessions with a psychologist at Duke that his attorney recommended.
โThe state of North Carolina didnโt have anything to do with it,โ Allen says.
Nor did the state provide job training and placement.
Housing?
Allen says the state gave him, โabsolutely nothing.โ
Allen thinks the stateโs failure to provide him with basic resources left him without the means to establish meaningful relationships.
โNo one wants to be around a person who is needy,โ he says. โNo one wants to be around a person who does not have anything.โ
Allen, 44, does not have a relationship with his 11-year-old son. He says heโs behind in child support and that his sonโs mother wonโt see him. He says prison has changed him in ways others canโt understand and that he finds it hard to build trust with women.
โI ainโt got no female friends,โ he explains. โWhat female wants to be friends with a man accused of rape?โ
Allen does not have a job, or a safe, stable, secure home. He sells soaps and colognes out of the trunk of the car where he lives and sleeps. He canโt make a dime right now. His car is broken down. He doesnโt have the $400 for repairs.
โI need rotors and brakes,โ he says. โThe battery is dead.โ
For nearly three years, Allen has needed a root canal. The six or seven dentist offices heโs visited have all refused to treat him due to issues with his insurance.
One often hears about wrongly convicted people who publicly express no remorse or bitterness after spending decades in prison.
Thatโs not Allen, not by a longshot.
โIโm bitter as hell,โ he says. โHow do you experience employment discrimination, housing discrimination, how do you experience these discriminations and not feel bitter? The American Dream is to have a house, a job, and enjoy the luxury of being an ordinary American citizen. Iโm a citizenโฆitโs [made me] bitter.โ
Prior to going to prison, Allen dreamed of becoming a lawyer. He attends Guilford Technical Community College. He wants to earn a paralegal degree.
Sometimes, Allen thinks about Darryl Hunt, another wrongly convicted man, who like him, was only 19 when he was sentenced to life in prison for the rape and murder of Deborah Sykes, a newspaper copy editor in Winston-Salem.
In 2004, Hunt was exonerated and released from prison.
In 2007 he settled a lawsuit with the city of Winston-Salem and was awarded one million dollars.
In 2016, Darryl Hunt died by suicide inside of a locked vehicle stopped at a shopping center parking lot.
โI donโt want to die like Darryl Hunt, asleep in his car,โ Allen says.ย
Follow Durham Staff Writer Thomasi McDonald on Twitter or send an email to [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected].ย
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