2 Georgia men wrongfully convicted of murder 25 years ago enjoy their first day of freedom

They were sentenced to life in prison for a murder they did not commit, but now more than two decades later, two Floyd County men are free.

Lee Clark and Josh Storey spent their first full day of freedom just looking around at everything that has changed over the past 25 years. They say it feels like a dream.

"I sat there for many years wondering if the truth was going to come out. There were times I started to lose hope," said Clark.

"I thought I would die in prison. I never thought I would see the free world again," said Storey.

AFTER 25 YEARS IN PRISON, 2 GEORGIA MEN RELEASED AFTER PODCAST UNCOVERS MANUFACTURED EVIDENCE IN MURDER CASE

Darrell Lee Clark, left, and Cain Joshua Storey, right, in 1996.

Darrell Lee Clark, left, and Cain Joshua Storey, right, in 1996. (Family photos)

Clark and Storey say a lot has changed in the world since they first went to jail more than 25 years ago. They both were 17 years old when their friend, Brian Bowling, died from a gunshot wound to the head while playing Russian roulette, but a witness testified the two men told her they killed Bowling.

The two men were convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

Thursday night, they were released from prison. Their convictions were overturned after the Georgia Innocence Project and a couple of podcasters got involved. Proof Crime Podcast uncovered new evidence showing the murder convictions were based on manufactured evidence.

"Relief that something finally worked and something actually got through the system," said Susan Simpson with Proof Crime Podcast.

READ MORE ABOUT THEIR TRIAL AND EXONERATION 

Both men spent their first full day of freedom just looking around at all that has changed. Clark said it may take a little while to adjust to life outside prison walls.

"It is a real shock. Been behind prison walls for 25 years and walk out and see how the world has changed," said Clark.

"Let me tell you something, the Lord is shining, he's shining today", said Glen Clark, Lee's father.

Both men are already making plans for their life on the outside. Clark wants to open a luxury pet hotel, perhaps have a whole chain of them. Storey wants to be a chaplain and travel.

Georgia is one of only 12 states that does not currently have a statutory compensation law to provide financial relief for years lost to wrongful conviction.

Attorneys for both men helped set up accounts that people can contribute to in order to help them rebuild their lives.

For Lee Clark:

https://bit.ly/3BpeEti

For Josh Storey:

https://bit.ly/3BrOu9b