News-Record.com

The North Carolina Piedmont Triad's top go-to source for News
A service of the News & Record, Greensboro, North Carolina

Home

Thinking Out Loud

« Low-hanging fruit? | Main | Issues and answers »

My 'reunion' with Darryl Hunt

This week's column.

What didn't kill Darryl Hunt made him stronger.

Imprisoned for nearly 19 years for a crime he did not commit, Hunt stared hopelessness in the face time and again and refused to give up.

But that was only the beginning. Once DNA evidence and another man's confession cleared him three years ago in the 1984 rape and murder of newspaper copy editor Deborah Sykes, Hunt dedicated his life to helping others who might be wrongfully convicted.

When I saw him during a speech at N.C. A&T two weeks ago he was a much different man from the skinny 19-year-old I interviewed in the Forsyth County Jail 23 years ago. He was shy and tentative in those days and spoke barely above a whisper. But he looked me in the eye and made it clear: "I did not do this."

At A&T he sported a neatly trimmed beard and a close haircut, and wore a sport jacket and turtleneck. He stepped forward and smiled and gave a 20-minute speech without one single note.

He cited his own life story as an example of what was wrong with the criminal justice system. He spouted statistics and rattled off in precise detail the circumstances of half a dozen present-day cases similar to his own.

"This is going on everywhere,'' he said. "And any time the system fails, it affects us all."


Always smiling, never raising his voice, he revisited the pain he had suffered — the failed appeals, the taunts and death threats from prison guards. When asked by an A&T student which prison was the worst, Hunt didn't hesitate: All of them. "There aren't any good ones."
Still, he considers himself blessed. After all, he is a free man, one of the exonerated. "We are the fortunate ones," he said.

He was focused, passionate, self-assured, a far cry from the nervous teenager I'd met in 1984, with the big, puffy Afro and the faded jeans.

He now heads the Darryl Hunt Project, a nonprofit that lists three primary goals as its mission:

• to help individuals "who have been wrongfully incarcerated";
• to help ex-offenders adjust to life outside of the prison system;
• and "to advocate for change in the justice system, so innocent people won't spend time in prison."

Hunt's story is familiar to many of us now. In 1994, when DNA evidence ruled out his involvement in Sykes' rape, a judge still denied him a new trial. In 2004, investigators traced the DNA to another man, Willard Brown, who ultimately confessed to the murder. Hunt was freed in December 2004 and later received a pardon from Gov. Mike Easley.

Way back in 1984, the era of Reagan and Jehri curls, I had been the first journalist to interview Hunt. And I was nervous. We sat in a small, yellow cinderblock cubicle not a whole lot larger than a phone booth. We talked for more than three hours and I tried, over and over, to catch him in lies and inconsistencies. I couldn't.

I thought about that day when I got a chance to hug Hunt and shake his hand following his speech.

This was an odd reunion between two men who sort of knew each other but really didn't. Yes, I had been the only journalist to interview Hunt before his trial in 1984. I even had testified in his sentencing hearing.

And I had seen and spoken to Hunt since his release, but only briefly. There were always crowds of well-wishers and, well, journalists like me.

This time there was more time.

We addressed each other as if we were old friends. He joked about his supersized '80s Afro and chuckled about my vain attempts to catch him in a lie in our jailhouse interview.
He mentioned that he sees the prosecutor in his first trial, former Forsyth County District Attorney Donald K. Tisdale, almost every day. As it happens, Tisdale's law office is near Hunt's in downtown Winston-Salem. Hunt said Tisdale tends to look the other way when approaching him on the street.

Hunt said prison sets you up for failure by taking away your ability to think for yourself.

He said he thanks God every day for all the twists of fate and circumstance that kept him alive and led to his freedom. For instance, he was one juror's vote away from the death penalty in his original sentencing. He might never have lived to see DNA evidence prove his innocence.
Life is so different now for Hunt. If it was Monday, which it was, he was just getting back from Seattle. Before that, it had been Tucson. And before that, Chicago.

Still, he said, visions of prison life persist, especially at night. "I still wake up in the middle of the night and sit on the side of the bed and wait for the guard to tell me I can go to the bathroom," he said.

Darryl Hunt refuses to forget where he has been and what he has endured because he doesn't want to. And because he can't.

Comments (10)

To report abuse of the comment feature on this site, please use the feedback form at the bottom of any page.

Doug Johnson said:

Great Story! My heart goes out to him.
God Bless

Anonymous said:

I applaud Mr. Hunt for his positive attitude and for working to prevent others from suffering the injustice that he experienced.
May he live a long and healthy life and enjoy the love of family and friends.

Skeet Club Savage said:

Just saw your front page picture of the mayoral debate and I don't know if Yvonne heard, but according to the latest directive, camo fatigues are not to be worn outside of combat.

Do you think somebody should tell her?

Vanessa said:

Hey Skeet Club Savage, stick to the story you dumb asshole! What a terrific triumph for Darryl.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

sharon said:

I just finished watching the HBO special about Mr.Hunt. I am amazed at the ignorance of the justice system Mr. Hunt had to deal with. I am also
disgusted to Know that Mr. Tisdale is still allowed to practice law and also Mr. Bowmen is still working for the state. I have traveled through the south many times an found majority of the people to be polite an friendly. But I have seen the ugly side as well, just a small example is the graffiti claiming the south will rise again. After watching Mr. Hunts story an the type of justice that is served in the south I pray to GOD that those words never come to be true.

Post a comment

Users who post comments to this blog tacitly agree to observe the News & Record Online Service Terms of Use and Content Submission Agreement. Comments which do not adhere to the terms of this agreement may be removed and the submitter may be banned from further participation. Please use the feedback form at the bottom of any page to report abuse of this feature.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Search

Channels
Font Size
Tools
Question, Comment or Suggestion? Please contact us.

News & Record and NRinteractive

200 E. Market Street, Greensboro, NC 27401 (336) 373-7000 (800) 553-6880
1813 N. Main Street, High Point, NC 27262 (336) 883-4422
203 E. Harris Place, Eden, NC 27288 (336) 627-1781
4213 S. Church Street, Burlington, NC 27215 (336) 449-7064

Copyright (C) 2008 News & Record and Landmark Communications, Inc.