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US boxer Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter dies | US boxer Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter dies |
(35 minutes later) | |
US former boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, whose wrongful conviction for murder caused an international outcry, has died at the age of 76. | US former boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, whose wrongful conviction for murder caused an international outcry, has died at the age of 76. |
He died on Sunday at his home in Toronto, Canada, his friend and former co-defendant John Artis, confirmed. | He died on Sunday at his home in Toronto, Canada, his friend and former co-defendant John Artis, confirmed. |
Carter spent 19 years in prison for three murders in New Jersey in 1966. | Carter spent 19 years in prison for three murders in New Jersey in 1966. |
The alleged racial motivations behind the incarceration became well-known in Bob Dylan's song Hurricane, several books and a film. | The alleged racial motivations behind the incarceration became well-known in Bob Dylan's song Hurricane, several books and a film. |
Artis said Carter had died in his sleep, following a battle with prostate cancer, AP news agency reported. | Artis said Carter had died in his sleep, following a battle with prostate cancer, AP news agency reported. |
Carter was charged with the murder of three white people in New Jersey in 1966. | |
He was convicted on the evidence of two white prosecution witnesses, who were attempting to commit a burglary near the location of the murders. | |
The witnesses recanted their statements in 1974, and Carter was briefly freed in 1976 after the guilty verdicts were overturned. | |
The case made Carter a high-profile figure in the civil-rights movement, and famous campaigners including Bob Dylan and Muhammad Ali expressed their support for him. | |
However, he was retried and convicted again in 1976. One of the prosecution witnesses withdrew his recantation, the New York Times reported. | |
'Heaven and hell' | |
Carter was freed for good in 1985, after a federal judge overturned his convictions. | |
Judge H Lee Sarokin said Carter's convictions had been "predicated on an appeal to racism rather than reason, and concealment rather than disclosure". | |
Following his release, Carter moved to Toronto, and campaigned for the rights of those wrongfully convicted. | |
In an opinion piece for the New York Daily News in February this year, Carter thanked Judge Sarokin for freeing him. | |
"I lived in hell for the first 49 years, and have been in heaven for the past 28 years. To live in a world where truth matters and justice, however late, really happens, that world would be heaven enough for us all." |