How One Man Spent 17 Years Behind Bars for a Crime He Didn't Commit

Greg Taylor's life took a devastating turn when he was convicted of murder in 1993, a crime he claimed he didn’t commit. After spending 17 years behind bars, new evidence emerged that changed everything. What really happened that night, and how did Taylor finally walk free?
A Life Interrupted
On the night of Sept. 26, 1991, Greg Taylor and his friend Johnny Beck were returning from a party when Taylor's Nissan Pathfinder became stuck in mud about 100 yards from a cul-de-sac in Raleigh, North Carolina. Early the next morning, police discovered the brutally murdered body of a young woman, Jacquetta Thomas, near the same area. When Taylor and Beck returned later that day to retrieve the truck, they were arrested at the scene. Taylor, a husband, father, and working professional, admitted that he had seen the body the previous night, but chose not to report it out of fear.
In April 1993, Taylor was convicted of first-degree murder, despite no direct evidence linking him to the crime. The case against him relied heavily on questionable testimony from two career criminals, including a jailhouse informant seeking leniency, and a claim that a spot of the victim's blood was found in the vehicle's wheel well. While Taylor maintained his innocence, he was sentenced to life in prison. Meanwhile, his friend Beck was never charged.
The Fight for Freedom
Taylor's case caught the attention of the North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence in 2005, thanks to a letter from his father. The nonprofit worked tirelessly to prove his innocence, eventually handing the case to the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission, an agency unique to North Carolina. The commission's investigation revealed several troubling facts: the blood found on Taylor's truck was from an animal, not a human, and DNA evidence from the crime scene did not match Taylor. Additionally, another inmate had even confessed to the crime.
In 2010, a three-judge panel declared Taylor innocent, and he walked free after 17 years. "I thought I was going to die in prison," Taylor said to WNCN. "But then, serendipity stepped in."
Life After Exoneration
Freedom brought its own challenges. Taylor struggled to adjust to a world that had moved on without him. Technologies like smartphones and digital cameras amazed and bewildered him, while reconnecting with family proved bittersweet. "You can't reclaim the life you had," Taylor told WNCN. "It's less reclaiming and more rebuilding."
"I missed a whole generation," Taylor told WNCN, reflecting on the years spent apart from his young daughter, who grew from a child to a married woman during his incarceration.
He received a $4.6 million settlement after suing the State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) over its mishandling of evidence. Now, Taylor's focus remains on preventing others from enduring what he did.
Advocating for Change
Taylor now speaks to law students, policymakers, and the public about the systemic flaws that lead to wrongful convictions. He has worked to push reforms, including calls for an independent crime lab and stricter oversight on the use of jailhouse informants.
"Exoneration is great, but the work doesn't stop there," Taylor told WNCN, highlighting the lack of support for exonerees. "You can't just find a support group for this. We're a very small club."
A Cautionary Tale
Greg Taylor's case highlights the serious consequences of wrongful convictions and the challenges faced by those seeking justice. His story has brought attention to flaws in the legal system and inspired calls for reform. For Taylor and others exonerated after years behind bars, freedom is just the beginning of a long road to rebuilding their lives.
References: A life, interrupted: The troubling tale of why Greg Taylor was in prison for 17 years | NC man talks about 17 years spent in prison for Raleigh murder he didn't commit | Greg Taylor: In Pursuit of Justice