Thirty-two years after a woman was brutally murdered in a Buffalo suburb, a jury said on Monday that it was unable to come to a verdict in the retrial of a man accused in the crime.
The man, Brian Scott Lorenz, had been charged with strangling the woman, Deborah Meindl, in 1993 and was convicted the next year, along with James Pugh, an associate. Both he and Mr. Pugh received life sentences, despite repeatedly declaring their innocence, and embarked on a lengthy effort to seek their exoneration.
That effort gained momentum in 2023 when the convictions of Mr. Lorenz and Mr. Pugh were set aside by Justice Paul B. Wojtaszek of New York State Supreme Court, who noted that none of the genetic material taken from the crime scene matched the defendants’ and that prosecutors had not revealed certain evidence to the defense.
Closing arguments in Mr. Lorenz’s new trial were made last week, after two weeks of jury selection and testimony. But after nearly five days of deliberation, the jury said on Monday it could not reach a verdict, even as Mr. Lorenz, imprisoned for more than three decades, sat just feet away.
“After considerable discussion, we have not been able to come to a unanimous decision,” the jury wrote, adding that “no amount” of continued deliberation would help.
Justice Wojtaszek said the parties would reconvene this month to determine how to proceed. Mr. Lorenz, 56, was composed and quiet during the trial; he did not testify. After the jury’s announcement, he shook hands with his lawyers, shrugged, and left the courtroom for his holding cell in the courthouse.
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