Carter, considered a folk hero by many and immortalized in film
and song, had been battling prostate cancer for nearly three years,
Artis said. He died at home in Toronto, where he had been living
since he was released from prison in 1985.
"Those who are wrongfully incarcerated lost a champion," Artis said.
"He dedicated his life to helping the people that need the same kind
of assistance that we needed, who have been wrongfully convicted and
incarcerated."
Once a middleweight boxer who earned a world title fight in 1964,
Carter is more well known for the turn his life took after he was
arrested for a triple homicide in 1966.
That arrest, his imprisonment, and the ultimately successful battle
to free him are immortalized in the 1975 Bob Dylan song "Hurricane"
and the 1999 film of the same name, which starred Denzel Washington
as Carter.
Born in 1937 in Clifton, New Jersey, Carter ran into trouble with
the law as a teenager, serving custodial sentences for assault and
robbery, and spending two years in the army.
In his 1974 autobiography titled "The Sixteenth Round", Carter
writes of his younger years: "The kindest thing I have to say about
my childhood is that I survived it."
In 1961, he channeled his energies into boxing, turning pro and
earning a 1964 title match against world champion Joey Giardello,
which Carter lost in a unanimous decision.
His career was already in decline in 1966, when he was arrested and
charged in a June triple murder in Paterson, New Jersey. He was
convicted for the shootings along with Artis, a hitch-hiker he had
picked up on the night of the murders.
Carter's case exploded into national consciousness in 1974, when two
key witnesses recanted their testimony, sparking a series of stories
by the New York Times and making him a cause célèbre for the civil
rights movement, and prompting Bob Dylan to release "Hurricane".
He was retried in 1976 and convicted again.
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He was released for good in 1985, aided by a group of Canadian
activists, including New York-born teen Lesra Martin, after a
federal district judge ruled that his convictions "were predicated
on an appeal to racism rather than reason, and concealment rather
than disclosure." Prosecutors decided not to pursue a third trial.
Despite his release, some have raised doubts about his innocence,
claiming the facts of his case still point to his guilt.
After his release, Carter spent about 12 years as executive director
of the Toronto-based Association in Defence of the Wrongly
Convicted. He broke acrimoniously with the group in 2004.
"We have freed more than 20 people in the last 15 or 20 years — he
played a huge role in that," said James Lockyer, senior counsel to
AIDWYC and a founding director of the organization along with
Carter.
After his break with AIDWYC, Carter continued to advocate for the
wrongly convicted and also worked as a motivational speaker. He
remained close friends with Artis, the man with whom he was
convicted.
Carter is survived by two children from his first marriage to Mae
Thelma.
(Reporting by Cameron French in Toronto and Emily Flitter in New
York; editing by Chris Reese)
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