NEW YORK — After 25 years of trying to clear himself in a notorious tourist killing, Johnny Hincapie walked out of a courthouse Tuesday, his conviction overturned and his resolve intact.
He faces the possibility of prosecutors appealing the decision or retrying him in the 1990 killing of Utah tourist Brian Watkins, who was stabbed to death in a subway station as he defended his parents during a mugging that helped crystallize an era of crime and fear in the nation's biggest city.
But "I'll deal with that tomorrow. Right now, I just want to take one step at a time," Hincapie said after emerging, tears streaming down his cheeks, to hugs and cheers from relatives who hadn't seen him outside a jail or prison in a quarter-century. "I feel wonderful. I feel free!"
"It's sad that it took 25 years for the truth to uncover itself," he said. "But I thank God that now, I can start to put all of this behind me."
Hincapie says he was a bystander wrongfully swept up in the case and then was coerced into a false confession. Prosecutors said his claims aren't credible.
State Supreme Court Justice Eduardo Padro said new evidence — including new testimony from two witnesses and a co-defendant saying Hincapie wasn't involved in the crime — merited a new trial. Padro stopped short of declaring Hincapie innocent, as he and his lawyers had hoped the judge might, but agreed to release him on $1 bail while awaiting a retrial.
Prosecutors said they were weighing whether to appeal the ruling and were committed to retrying the case, if necessary.
"We regret the fact that retrying the case would subject the family of Mr. Watkins to testifying at another trial, reopening old wounds and forcing them to relive the horror of that night 25 years ago," Manhattan district attorney's office spokeswoman Joan Vollero said in a statement.