Marvin Haynes always maintained his innocence, denying any role in the deadly 2004 Minneapolis flower shop robbery that sent him away for life when he was a teenager.
After nearly two decades behind bars, he has a chance at freedom.
Haynes, now 35, successfully lobbied to plead his case before a Hennepin County district judge, and he took the stand Tuesday. Dressed in an orange jail jumpsuit, Haynes described how he'd slept until around 3 p.m. — rousing only to bicker with his older sister — the day 55-year-old shop clerk Randy Sherer was killed inside his family business.
In his initial police interview, detectives falsely asserted that they'd found fingerprints, DNA and surveillance footage linking Haynes to the crime scene. He recalled rebuffing the accusation, thinking "it's impossible.'"
"I wasn't there," Haynes insisted before a courtroom packed with supporters. "I'm innocent, 100 percent."
In fact, no physical evidence tied Haynes to the north Minneapolis flower shop or Sherer's killing. Haynes, then 16, did not match the physical description eyewitnesses provided to investigators. And several individuals who testified at his trial have since signed affidavits recanting their statements.
The Great North Innocence Project submitted Haynes' case to the Minnesota Attorney General's Office Conviction Review Unit last year. During a two-day evidentiary hearing this week, his defense team argued that Haynes was wrongfully convicted based on faulty eyewitness identification and improper police lineups — conducted in a way that unsettled even the lead detective.
"Based on all this evidence, we are confident that... the court will have ample basis to conclude that Mr. Haynes' conviction is legally and factually defective and should therefore be vacated," Innocence Project attorney Andrew Markquart said during brief opening remarks before Judge William Koch.