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Man convicted of killing Michael Jordan’s father to be paroled

Daniel Green, left, and Larry Demery are surrounded by Robeson County deputies after their 1993 arrests in connection with the murder of James Jordan. At trial, Demery said Green shot and killed Michael Jordan's father during a robbery attempt. Demery will be released on parole in three years, state officials announced on Aug. 19, 2020. (Gary O'Brien/Charlotte Observer/TNS)

Larry Demery, one of two men serving life in prison for murdering NBA star Michael Jordan’s father in 1993, will be released in three years, state officials announced Tuesday.

Demery was sentenced in 1996, along with childhood classmate Daniel Green, for the shooting death of James Jordan, who was sleeping in his car in Robeson County, N.C.

He was spared the death penalty when his attorneys argued that he did not pull the trigger and felt remorse over the crime. Demery pleaded guilty and turned state’s evidence against Green, who denied the crime and is still seeking his release.

In a short statement, the state Post-Release Supervision and Parole Commission announced it had approved Demery for a vocational and scholastic program known as MAPP, or Mutual Agreement Parole Program. His release date is set for Aug. 6, 2023.

As a rule, the commission does not discuss reasons for granting parole. But Demery was sentenced under different guidelines. Convicts serving life sentences for murder are no longer eligible for parole unless their crimes were committed before Oct. 1, 1994.

James Jordan was shot on July 23, 1993.

Green has long sought a hearing to prove his innocence and seek a new trial, which a North Carolina judge rejected last year. His attorney Christine Mumma, director of the North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence and a candidate for state attorney general, said that effort continues.

She said Tuesday that Green and Demery were sentenced very differently, allowing for Demery’s release to be considered.

At the time, she said, Demery had a longer criminal record including robbery and felony assault. But though Green’s prior record was shorter, Demery was to serve his sentences concurrently rather than consecutively as did Green.

That arrangement was not allowable by state law at the time, she said, so Demery’s charges were consolidated in 2008. Having release as an option suggests a quid pro quo.

“I am absolutely confident there was a deal,” she said.

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© 2020 The News & Observer

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