The man previously convicted of killing 15-year-old honor student Hadiya Pendleton in 2013 will remain in custody as he awaits a new trial, a judge ruled Tuesday. Micheail Ward's conviction was thrown out by the Illinois Appellate Court in March 2023, after a three-judge panel ruled his videotaped confession was inadmissible, because Ward repeatedly told detectives he didn't want to talk to them.
Main Idea: A Cook County judge ruled that Micheail Ward will stay in jail while he waits for a new trial in the killing of Hadiya Pendleton.
Key Points:
A delayed retrial keeps a murder case open, which can prolong pain for Hadiya Pendleton’s family and shake trust in the justice system.
A court order for a new trial can protect due process and remind voters that convictions must rest on lawful evidence.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central accused person whose custody status and upcoming retrial are the main focus of the article.
The court action to keep Ward in custody is a major development in the story.
Victim at the center of the murder case that the article is about.
Its ruling threw out Ward's conviction and set up the new trial.
The place of custody is central to the article's current legal status of Ward.
Prosecutors are cited as opposing the new trial and seeking justice in the case.
It rejected the prosecutors' appeal, an important but secondary procedural step.
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Sign in to commentNamed co-defendant accused of helping in the killing and discussed in the case background.
Named appellate justice quoted for the ruling that excluded Ward's confession.
Mentioned in connection with Hadiya Pendleton's performance at his second inauguration.