Bronx man freed after 23 years when attempted murder conviction overturned faces return to prison


A Bronx man who spent 23 years in prison and has been free for two years after his attempted murder conviction was overturned, has filed an emergency clemency petition with Gov. Hochul following a decision by an appeals panel to reinstate the judgment, records show.

Andre Brown, 48, now faces the unusual situation of upending a life he has been building since his release amid the looming possibility he will be sent back to prison for shooting and wounding two people in January 1999 — a crime he steadfastly maintains he did not commit.

Brown had already served 23 years of a 40-year sentence before he was freed in December 2022.

Bronx DA Darcel Clark has declined thus far to support a resentencing that might take into account the many years he has already served, troubling questions about the case evidence and documented errors by Brown’s trial lawyer — leading to the request for Hochul to intervene, said Jeffrey Deskovic, one of Brown’s lawyers.

Bronx DA Darcel Clark is pictured at Hazel Duke's funeral at Mother A.M.E. Zion Church in Harlem on Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (Barry Williams/ New York Daily News)
Bronx DA Darcel Clark is pictured at Hazel Duke’s funeral at Mother A.M.E. Zion Church in Harlem on Wednesday. (Barry Williams/ New York Daily News)

On Wednesday afternoon, Clark agreed to a one-month stay in proceedings so the clemency review can take place, the DA’s office confirmed. A court hearing slated for Thursday has been postponed until April 17.

“Andre has already served 23 years in prison, and it’s doubtful he would have received a 40-year sentence today,” said Deskovic.

“This case is not like someone is granted clemency while on the inside. Here, he’s been home for two years and has done extraordinary work in the community. What is there to be gained by reincarcerating him? He’s an asset to society and we’re going to lose out because of it.”

The clemency plea also has the backing of the Innocence Project, which investigates wrongful convictions.

Matt Janiszewski, a spokesman for Hochul, declined to comment on the clemency petition. Brown and his lawyers met with an official in Hochul’s clemency office on Tuesday.

Jeffrey Deskovic is pictured outside White Plains courthouse in 2007. (Andrew Savulich / New York Daily News)
Attorney Jeffrey Deskovic. (Andrew Savulich / New York Daily News)

Since his release, Brown has worked at a Westchester County-based nonprofit, where he founded a GED program and a chess club, Deskovic said. He has also worked with at-risk youth, in part running a book club, in New Rochelle City Court. He is married with a stepdaughter and a stepson.

Before he went to prison his only work experience was a brief stint at Crate & Barrel, he said. He was a model prisoner, took a range of business classes and got a certificate as a paralegal behind bars and when he was freed he says he wanted to give back.

“One of my goals was to go back into Black and Brown communities and help give them a new way of life and a new way of thinking,” he told The News.

“I am totally innocent of this crime. There is a third party shooter, and we have the identity of this person,” Brown said. “There are two individuals who were shot, but I am also a victim because I am an innocent person who was caught up in this.”

Leave a Comment