US man, tried six times for murder, freed on bail

Curtis Flowers (pictured March 2019) was convicted in 2010 for the July 1996 people of four people in a Mississippi furniture store, but he maintains his innocence

Washington (AFP) - An African-American man who has been tried six times for a quadruple murder he says he did not commit left prison on bail Monday ahead of a potential seventh trial.

Curtis Flowers, 49, was convicted in 2010 and sentenced to death for the July 1996 murders of four people in a furniture store in Winona, Mississippi, where he had briefly worked until being fired.

The US Supreme Court in June threw out his most recent conviction, saying the exclusion of black jurors was unconstitutional.

The nation's highest court did not examine the guilt or innocence of Flowers but whether the district attorney deliberately sought to keep black people off the jury.

Pending a decision from local authorities on Flowers' new trial, his lawyer filed an application for probation.

A judge accepted the request on Monday, on the condition that Flowers wear an electronic bracelet and pay a $250,000 bond, according to a copy of the decision seen by AFP.

Curtis was tried five separate times for the crime before his 2010 conviction and has spent nearly half his life behind bars.

Three convictions were thrown out on appeal because of prosecutorial misconduct, and two trials ended in a hung jury.

US law forbids someone from being tried twice for the same offense, but since the cases were eventually inconclusive, Flowers could be tried again.

Flowers was arrested several months after the murders, when two witnesses said they saw him near the scene of the crime. He has maintained his innocence.

Lawyers for Flowers had argued before the Supreme Court that district attorney Doug Evans, who prosecuted all six cases and is white, rejected potential black jurors in what amounted to racial discrimination.

Liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor said Evans had shown an extraordinary "passion for this case" by putting Flowers repeatedly on trial.

The case gained national prominence after it was the subject of a podcast called "In the Dark" by American Public Media.

© Agence France-Presse