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81-Year-Old Man Exonerated More Than 50 Years After Wrongful Conviction

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP)-- More than 50 years after a wrongful conviction in a New York City killing and more than 40 years after being released from prison, a Virginia returned to a courtroom to be fully exonerated.

Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson's office on Monday asked to vacate the conviction of 81-year-old Paul Gatling, who pleaded guilty in 1964 in the shooting death of Lawrence Rothbort in October 1963.

"Paul Gatling repeatedly proclaimed his innocence even as he faced the death penalty back in the 60s,'' Thompson said. "He was pressured to plead guilty and, sadly, did not receive a fair trial.''

The move came after the retired landscaper asked the office's conviction review unit to look into his case.

Rothbort was shot in his Brooklyn home. His wife told police that a black man with a shotgun had entered the apartment and demanded money, shooting her husband when he refused. She provided a description, but no suspect was found.

Thompson said Gatling, 29 years old at the time, was questioned after another man said he saw him in the area. That man was a witness in other cases and was known to have committed perjury, and that wasn't the only thing that led to Gatling not receiving a fair trial, Thompson said.

Rothbort's wife, nine months pregnant at trial, said Gatling was the man who had killed her husband, despite not being able to identify him in a line-up before that. There was no physical evidence tying him to the crime. Defense attorneys were never given some police reports, including a description of the suspect as several years younger than Gatling.

Gatling's attorney and family pressed him to plead guilty to second-degree murder, afraid that he would otherwise face the death penalty if convicted. He agreed, and was sentenced to 30 years to life in prison in October 1964. His sentence was commuted by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller at the behest of the Legal Aid Society and he was released in January 1974.

"I wanted to be done with all of this," Mr. Gatling told the New York Times in a telephone interview last week. "I was still angry about having to spend that time for something I didn't do."

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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