




Imagine spending over 30 years in a cell for a crime you didn’t commit, only to walk free just as the Thanksgiving turkey is being carved.
That’s the reality for Danny Davis, an Illinois man exonerated in November 2025 after more than three decades in prison for a murder he didn’t commit, with his freedom secured just in time for a heartfelt holiday celebration, the New York Post reported.
Back in 1992, a young Danny Davis, just 20 years old, found himself in a nightmare when he pleaded guilty to the stabbing death of Mildred Smith in her Cairo, Illinois, apartment.
Davis and his younger brother Isaac, then 17, were hauled in for questioning based on a flimsy, unsubstantiated tip.
The interrogation was anything but fair—hours of psychological torment and physical abuse, including threats that pinned blame on Isaac to pressure Danny, led to a coerced confession.
With no solid evidence, Danny was sentenced to life without parole, while Isaac also faced prison time, though he was released earlier under unclear circumstances.
An acquaintance, DeVoe Johnson, was dragged into the mess through the brothers’ forced statements, but a judge saw through the charade and found him not guilty in a separate trial, calling the confessions unreliable.
Fast forward to 2018, when DNA testing on Smith’s fingernail clippings turned up male DNA that didn’t match either Danny or Isaac—a bombshell that should have ended this travesty years ago.
Yet, the wheels of justice grind slower than a government bureaucracy, and it wasn’t until November 2024 that Danny’s conviction was vacated, releasing him from custody while a retrial loomed.
Prosecutors scheduled a retrial for December 2025 but, in a surprising move, dropped the case earlier this month without offering a shred of explanation.
“There’s no forensics tying them to the crime, no eyewitnesses, nothing like that,” said Lauren Myerscough-Mueller, Danny’s attorney, to CBS News. While some might argue the system finally woke up, it’s hard not to wonder why it took decades to admit there was no case to begin with.
“I knew we would be here at this point one day. We didn’t know how long. Man, it’s just a blessing that I don’t have to go through that,” Danny told the same outlet. His relief is palpable, but shouldn’t we be asking why the state played jury and jailer for so long on zero evidence?
Now 53, Danny marked his permanent exoneration with a well-deserved meal at Michael Jordan’s Steak House in Chicago on Monday, a far cry from prison slop.
With Thanksgiving on Thursday, he’s set to enjoy his first holiday as a free man, a moment of gratitude that no progressive policy or overzealous prosecutor can take away.
Supported by groups like the Innocence Project and the Exoneration Project, Danny’s legal team fought tooth and nail against a system that too often prioritizes convictions over truth—let’s hope this case reminds us to value justice over bureaucratic checkboxes.



