Man exonerated of Limerick priest’s murder 40 years after conviction

James Reyos was today exonerated for the killing of Limerick priest, Fr Patrick Ryan.

AN APACHE Native American man convicted of murdering a Limerick priest 40 years ago was today (Wednesday) exonerated of the historic killing.

Last month, Ector County District Court in Texas, USA, recommended that James Reyos’ conviction be quashed after a previous hearing in March was told of overwhelming evidence of his innocence.

Today’s ruling, exonerating Mr Reyos of the murder of Fr Patrick Ryan (49), orignally from Doon in County Limerick, was delivered by the Court of Criminal Appeals in Austin, Texas, much to the delight of Mr Reyos and members of the Innocence Project of Texas (IPTX), who spearheaded his campaign for justice.

The Ector County’s district attorney’s office – who initially prosecuted Mr Reyos – later supported the quashing of his conviction.

“We are excited to share that this morning the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that our client James Reyos is innocent,” read a statement released by IPTX.

Sign up for the weekly Limerick Post newsletter

“James was convicted in 1983 of the murder of Father Patrick Ryan in Odessa. The court’s ruling means that after more than 40 years, James’ name has finally been cleared.

“Today’s decision would not have been possible without James’ strength and bravery,” added Allison Clayton, deputy director of IPTX.

A false confession

On December 21, 1981, Fr Patrick Ryan was found murdered in a motel room in Odessa, Texas.

During the initial investigation, the police interviewed James Reyos, who was the last known person to see the Limerick cleric alive.

Mr Reyos established through multiple witnesses, store receipts, and a speeding ticket that he was in New Mexico at the time of the murder. Texas Rangers had previously verified this information and ruled him out as a suspect.

A year later, while heavily intoxicated on drugs and alcohol, Mr Reyos called 911 and confessed to the murder.

Once he was arrested, Reyos immediately recanted, however he claimed that on the day before the murder Fr Ryan forced him to perform oral sex on him at his apartment.

The State indicted and tried Reyos for the killing, and, in addition to his confession, the prosecution focused extensively on Reyos’ Apache Native American race, as well his homosexuality.

The murder trial heard claims from other witnesses that Fr Ryan had approached other men looking for sex, a charge the prosecution said was an attempt to sully the Limerick priest’s character.

Despite his airtight alibi, Reyos was found guilty by a jury who at the time said their decision was based on the confession and on Reyos’ “characteristics”.

Mr Reyos was initially released in 2004, after more than 20 years in prison. But, despite significant support from attorneys, legal scholars, and legislators who believed he was wrongly convicted, there was no legal path forward to prove his innocence because all evidence from the case was thought to have been destroyed.

Fingerprints

However, in 2022, members of the Odessa Police Department (OPD) discovered fingerprints in their archived files that had been taken from the crime scene and from Fr Ryan’s stolen car and wallet.

OPD ran the prints through the national fingerprint database, revealing the identities of the chief suspects for Fr Ryan’s killing.

The three male suspects, all of whom have since died, were individuals with criminal histories who were known to be staying at the same motel at the time of the murder.

Fr Ryan’s naked, beaten, and slashed body was discovered in the Sand and Sage Motel in Odessa, 80 miles from his Texas home, on December 21, 1981.

Police found that Fr Ryan – who was serving as Parish Priest of Denver City and Plains in Texas – had left his apartment in a hurry and had checked into the Odessa motel under an assumed name and address.

His body was repatriated back to his native Doon, where his remains were laid to rest in St Fintan’s Cemetery in the parish.

Advertisement