Judge Brian Jackson yesterday "ordered that the state immediately release Mr. (Herman) Wallace from custody," according to a copy of the decision obtained by AFP.
He was left the prison in an ambulance at 7:30 pm , and now "will be able to receive the medical care that his advanced liver cancer requires," his lawyers said.
Wallace, 72, who is dying from liver cancer, is one of the "Angola three," named after a notorious prison where they were held, built on the site of a former plantation worked by slaves from Africa.
They were active in organising sit-ins and other protests to demand desegregation and better protection of inmates against abuses.
At the time, the prison had no black guards and a reputation as one of the most violent in the United States.
Wallace, who was behind bars for armed robbery, and fellow Panther Albert Woodfox, were sentenced to life after being convicted of stabbing a white prison guard to death in 1972.
A third, Robert King, was never charged but blamed for the murder nonetheless and, like Wallace and Woodfox, placed in solitary confinement. He was released after 29 years.
No fingerprints taken from the scene matched those of the men convicted of the crime, and witnesses said they were working in another part of the prison.
With his health deteriorating, Wallace wrote in July to Judge Jackson to plead for an expedited review of his case, noting that it had been three and a half years since he had filed a habeas corpus petition and no action had been taken.
Yesterday, Jackson voided Wallace's "conviction and sentence, on the ground that systematic exclusion of women from the grand jury that indicted him violated the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of equal protection of the laws."
The judge rejected an appeal from the prosecutor's office, ruling that Wallace has served four decades "under a conviction and sentence based on an unconstitutional indictment" and, given his age and poor health, was unlikely to be a "a flight risk or a danger to the public.
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