Baltimore, MD - Nov. 25, 2015 - A 69-year-old man convicted of abducting and killing an 11-year-old girl in Northwest Baltimore more than four decades ago will receive a new trial.

Maryland's second-highest court has vacated the murder conviction of Wayne Stephen Young, who has been behind bars since 1969 for the killing of Esther Lebowitz.

"This was the result we were expecting, and I think the court made the right decision," said Young's defense attorney, Erica J. Suter.

Young has challenged his conviction numerous times over the years. His latest challenge, in 2013, was based on the so-called Unger ruling, in which the state's highest court found that improper jury instructions had rendered many convictions before 1980 invalid.

Baltimore Circuit Judge Edward Hargadon ruled in April 2014 that the Unger decision did not apply in Young's case, saying jurors received sufficient instructions more than 40 years ago, and he denied Young's request to reopen his post-conviction proceeding and have his conviction vacated.

Young then took his case to the Court of Special Appeals, which...read more at The Baltimore Sun