Detroit Brothers Exonerated in 1987 Drug Murder

A Facebook post led a new witness to come forward in the decades-old case.

ByABC News
September 26, 2013, 12:30 PM
Thomas Highers, center, hugs his attorney Valerie Newman as his brother Raymond Highers, left, appear in Wayne County Circuit Court in Detroit, Sept. 26, 2013.
Thomas Highers, center, hugs his attorney Valerie Newman as his brother Raymond Highers, left, appear in Wayne County Circuit Court in Detroit, Sept. 26, 2013.
Carlos Osorio/AP Photo

Sept. 26, 2013 — -- A judge has dropped all charges against two Detroit brothers who have spent the past 25 years in jail for a 1987 murder after a Facebook post led new witnesses to come forward.

Raymond Highers, 47, and Tommy Highers, 48, learned today that that Judge Lawrence Talon had dismissed the decades-old felony murder, assault with intent to murder and felony firearm charges against them. The brothers were arrested in 1987 in connection with the homicide of Robert Karey, an elderly marijuana dealer, that same year.

"Words can't describe this," Tommy told ABCNews.com from a family barbecues celebration today. "It's a new chapter in our lives. We always felt that this day would come. You really have to."

The judge today granted a motion for dismissal by prosecutor Kym L. Worthy, even though she says that she still believes that the brothers are guilty.

"Just as we did 26 years ago, we firmly believe in the evidence in this case," Worthy said. "We have worked diligently to bring this case to trial. With the passage of time it is an unfortunate reality that this case cannot be put back together and we must dismiss it. Sadly, in this case justice was not done."

In 1987, Robert Karey, an elderly marijuana dealer, was murdered at the back door of his Detroit home. The 22- and 23-year-old Highers brothers were convicted of the killing in a three-week trial the following year.

The key witness in their 1987 trial was Thomas Culberson, a security guard who went to Karey's home to buy marijuana on the night of the murder. Culberson said he saw two white men fleeing the scene in a car, and later identified Raymond Highers.

"We do believe that the cops hid evidence, but we can't prove it," attorney Valerie Newman said.

Thomas told ABCNews.com that he and his brother did drive by Karey's house that night, but when they arrived, police tape was covering the entrance.

"It was illicit drug activity. We had no business using," he said. "We had bought from him. It was something that we normally did, we'd see him two, three, four, times per week."

Culberson had said at their trial that he saw two men wearing shorts flee the property, Newman said. Culberson later identified Raymond in a police lineup, but Newman said the ID was inaccurate.

"They had a lot of problems with the lineup," Newman told ABCNews.com. "The witness didn't ID anyone in first, but the cops put Ray in a live lineup anyway. This ID was not accurate."

Inside the house was a large bathtub filled with marijuana, which disappeared that night, according to Newman. She says that the two white men seen fleeing the crime scene could not have been carrying that amount of marijuana as they ran from the house.

In July 2012, Circuit Judge Lawrence Talon threw out the 1988 convictions and ordered a new trial, after a 2009 Facebook post prompted new witnesses to come forward. Two of those witnesses said they saw Karey being shot by two black men at the back door of his house. The Highers brothers are white.

After a former Detroit resident, Kevin Zieleniewski, came across a Facebook post by Mary Evans about the men's life sentences in 2009, he reconnected with a former law school friend, John Hielscher, who told him decades ago that he had been at Karey's that night, and that Karey had been killed by black men, Newman said.

Hielscher agreed to testify at an evidentiary hearing in March along with his friend James Gianunzio, who was also at Karey's when the shooting happened.

Hielscher and Gianunzio testified that they were at Karey's back door when they saw armed black men approach them and heard a gunshot before they fled, according to the Free Press. Their testimony raised doubts over whether the Highers brothers were the white men Culberson saw fleeing.