A previously incarcerated man is suing town of Milwaukee and members of its police power, claiming officers conspired to have him wrongfully convicted of first-degree homicide, which resulted in his being in jail for 18 years.
For near 20 years, Danny Wilber, an Oneida Nation citizen, maintained his innocence and pushed for his freedom. In 2021, a U.S. appeals court docket heard his petition. It overturned his conviction, stating that the proof used to convict him of killing David Diaz on Jan. 31, 2004, was inadequate to maintain him incarcerated.
On July 17, the 44-year-old man filed a civil rights lawsuit within the U.S. District Courtroom for the Jap District of Wisconsin.
Within the criticism obtained by Atlanta Black Star, Wilber claims that officers from the Milwaukee Police Division arrested him in February 2004 for Diaz’ killing however moved shortly to shut the case by “pinning” the crime on him. He alleges that they fabricated proof in opposition to him and hid proof that might have confirmed his innocence.
Diaz was shot behind his head in his house throughout an after occasion at a house. Wilber, who was 24 on the time, was considered one of many different partygoers on the residence on the time of the 23-year-old’s dying.
His attorneys acknowledged the division uncared for to analyze different doable suspects for Diaz’s dying.
“I firmly consider that what the (Milwaukee Police Division) did to me was deliberate, systematic and meticulously orchestrated to border and wrongfully convict an clearly harmless man,” a press release from Wilber learn.
Attorneys contend that Wilber “spent a lot of his grownup life in jail, separated from his household and buddies and robbed of probably the most primary freedoms,” regardless of medical proof displaying he couldn’t have shot Diaz based mostly on the information of the case.
“Regardless of the impossibility based mostly on the bodily and medical proof that Plaintiff Wilber may have been the shooter, the police instantly centered on him as their sole suspect as a substitute of conducting the mandatory investigation to unravel the murder and establish David Diaz’s precise killer,” the criticism states. The criticism continues, “Though the proof revealed a number of different believable suspects, the Defendants by no means investigated any of them, as a substitute directing all of their efforts in direction of pinning the crime on Plaintiff whereas looking for to discredit the proof that pointed to different suspects.”
Wilber is looking for unspecified monetary compensation from town and eight residing detectives — Gregory Schuler, Randolph Olson, Louis Johnson, Timothy Duffy, Joseph Erwin, Ruben Burgos, Michael Caballero, and Kent Corbett — who labored on the case.
A particular consultant might be appointed as a stand-in proxy for Thomas Casper, a detective who labored on the case however is now deceased. He’s additionally being “sued in his particular person capability” based mostly on his function within the case as an officer.
Along with fabricating proof, accusations in opposition to the officers embody intimidation and coercion.
Of the lawsuit, Wilber stated, “I hope that this case will carry some measure of legislation enforcement accountability in terms of the MPD’s bringing of false prices and acquiring wrongful convictions of Black and Indigenous individuals in Milwaukee.”