Current:Home > InvestBetty Tyson dies at 75, spent 25 years in New York prison before murder conviction was overturned -AssetScope
Betty Tyson dies at 75, spent 25 years in New York prison before murder conviction was overturned
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:54:48
Betty Tyson, a woman who spent 25 years in prison for a 1973 murder until being exonerated on the basis of new evidence, has died in upstate New York, her sister said Wednesday.
Tyson, 75, died at a Rochester hospital on Aug. 17 following a heart attack and will be laid to rest Friday, said sister Delorise Thomas. Thomas noted her sister had recently marked a milestone, having spent as much time in freedom after her incarceration as she had behind bars.
“It felt good. She was free,” Thomas, 72, said by phone from her Rochester home, where Tyson also lived. “She enjoyed herself, going out driving, playing cards, going out to different parties ... She enjoyed her life.”
Tyson was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison in February 1974 for the death of Timothy Haworth. The Philadelphia business consultant had left his Rochester hotel around midnight on May 24, 1973, apparently to look for a prostitute, and was found strangled with his necktie in an alley the next day.
In May 1998, a judge overturned Tyson’s murder conviction, ruling that the police had withheld exculpatory evidence.
Tyson had entered prison at age 25 and was just shy of her 50th birthday when she was released, by then the longest-serving female inmate in the state of New York.
While in prison, Tyson let go of her rage and found solace in the Bible, she told The Associated Press in 1999, about 18 months after leaving Bedford Hills Correctional Facility north of New York City. As a model inmate, she counseled women with AIDS, earned a printer’s apprenticeship, led aerobics classes and became known as “Mom” to younger inmates.
“All that bitterness and anger left me in the late ’70s,” Tyson told AP. “I wasn’t a goody two-shoes, but the fact of the matter is, I didn’t kill anybody.”
Tyson had grown up fatherless in a family of eight children, dropped out of school at 14 and turned to prostitution to feed a heroin habit. She and another prostitute, John Duval, were convicted of Haworth’s murder on the basis of confessions they said were beaten out of them by police, and on the testimony of two teenage runaways, one of whom revealed long afterward that the same officer had terrorized him into lying.
Tyson’s conviction was overturned after a previously unknown police report was discovered which documented that the other teenage witness said he had not seen either Tyson or Duval with the victim. Duval’s conviction was overturned in 1999.
Tyson received a $1.25 million settlement from the City of Rochester but would struggle financially after prison. Unable to find work as a printer, when she spoke with AP she was earning $143 a week cleaning a day-care center.
“She was a very kind person. She helped anyone that needed help,” Thomas said Wednesday. “I tried to tell her, ‘You know you can’t help everybody, now.’ She did. She did as much as she could.”
In the months before her heart attack, Tyson had spent time with an ailing older sister, who died in April, Thomas said, and a younger sister who died less than a month ago. She loved her big “crazy family,” Thomas said.
“We all get together and laugh and talk about the old times and eat good food,” Thomas said, “talk about our mother.”
Their mother, Mattie Lawson Buchanan, died of emphysema just five months after Tyson’s release.
veryGood! (669)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- UK Carbon Emissions Fall to 19th Century Levels as Government Phases Out Coal
- This opera singer lost his voice after spinal surgery. Then he met someone who changed his life.
- Which type of eye doctor do you need? Optometrists and ophthalmologists face off
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Woman, 8 months pregnant, fatally shot in car at Seattle intersection
- House rejects bid to censure Adam Schiff over Trump investigations
- Americans Increasingly Say Climate Change Is Happening Now
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- House Bill Would Cut Clean Energy and Efficiency Programs by 40 Percent
Ranking
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- The Truth Behind Paige DeSorbo and Craig Conover's Confusing AF Fight on Summer House
- 5 Reasons Many See Trump’s Free Trade Deal as a Triumph for Fossil Fuels
- Surge in Mississippi River Hydro Proposals Points to Coming Boom
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Video shows man struck by lightning in Woodbridge Township, New Jersey, then saved by police officer
- Woman, 8 months pregnant, fatally shot in car at Seattle intersection
- New York City Is Latest to Launch Solar Mapping Tool for Building Owners
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Brian 'Thee beast' fights his way to Kenyan gaming domination!
Trump’s EPA Halts Request for Methane Information From Oil and Gas Producers
Famed mountain lion P-22 had 2 severe infections before his death never before documented in California pumas
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Millions of Google search users can now claim settlement money. Here's how.
NYC Mayor Eric Adams Calls Out Reckless and Irresponsible Paparazzi After Harry and Meghan Incident
Study Finds Rise in Methane in Pennsylvania Gas Country