People v. Daniel Saldana
Daniel Saldana spent 33 years in prison for a drive-by shooting he had nothing to do with. A co-defendant admitted in 2017 that Saldana was never involved and was not even present. That testimony sat buried for 6 years before anyone told Saldana or his lawyers. He was 22 when he went in. He was 55 when he walked out.
What Happened
On October 27, 1989, six high school students were driving in Baldwin Park after a football game when two men mistook them for gang members and opened fire. Two students were injured but survived.
Daniel Saldana, then 22 years old, was charged along with two others with six counts of attempted murder and one count of shooting at an occupied vehicle. He was convicted and sentenced to 45 years to life. He was a full-time construction worker with no prior violent history.
Saldana maintained his innocence for 33 years.
On August 31, 2017, during a parole hearing, co-defendant Raul Vidal admitted that Saldana was never involved in the shooting and was not even present at the scene. This was exculpatory evidence that should have immediately triggered a review of Saldana's conviction.
Instead, that transcript sat in a file for six years. Nobody told Saldana. Nobody told his lawyers. Nobody told the DA's office.
It wasn't until February 2023 — nearly six years later — that the Executive Officer of the Board of Parole Hearings finally provided the transcript to the District Attorney's Office. DA George Gascón's Conviction Integrity Unit investigated and confirmed: Daniel Saldana was innocent.
On May 25, 2023, Judge William Ryan vacated Saldana's conviction and dismissed all charges. He walked out of prison at age 55, having lost 33 years of his life.
Key Players
Timeline
Outcome
Daniel Saldana lost 33 years. He entered prison as a 22-year-old construction worker. He left as a 55-year-old man who missed his entire adult life — birthdays, holidays, careers, relationships — because a system that was supposed to protect the innocent failed at every level.
The co-defendant told the truth in 2017. The system took until 2023 to act on it. Six additional years of an innocent man's life, wasted because a transcript wasn't forwarded.
Why This Matters
This case isn't just about one man's 33 lost years. It's about a system where exculpatory evidence can sit in a file for six years while an innocent person remains in prison. Where the mechanism to correct a wrong exists but nobody uses it.
If Raul Vidal hadn't spoken up at a parole hearing — a hearing that wasn't even about Saldana — Daniel Saldana would likely still be in prison today. His freedom depended on a random act of conscience, not on a system designed to find the truth.
$19.1 million doesn't buy back 33 years. It doesn't return a stolen life. It just proves the system knew it was wrong and would rather write a check than fix itself.
Take Action
Demand Systemic Reform
Sources
- FOX 11: California Man Exonerated After 33 Years Reaches $19M Settlement
- LA County DA: Announces Exoneration of Man in Custody for Over 33 Years
- CNN: California Man Freed After 33 Years
- CBS News: California Man Cleared and Freed After 33 Years
- NSBHF: Baldwin Park PD Pays $19.1 Million for Wrongful Conviction
- National Registry of Exonerations: Daniel Saldana