In 1985, Webb was married and living in
Jaffrey, New Hampshire, where she became active in the
Baptist church. After confessing to her pastor, she decided to recant her earlier testimony against Dotson. Securing a lawyer, John McLario, she contacted the
Cook County State Attorney's office and admitted to fabricating the charges in 1977 to cover up a possible pregnancy after having consensual sex with her boyfriend, claiming to have panicked at the thought of being thrown out of her foster parents' house. Webb's recantation was dismissed at first by state prosecutors and the Cook County District Attorney's office. Local interest in the matter surged after McLario contacted the
Chicago Tribune and
WLS-TV, with sympathy solidly on Webb and Dotson's side. In a hearing held at the Markham Branch Court on April 4, Dotson was released on bond. At a hearing on April 11, however, Judge
Richard L. Samuels, faced with confusing evidence, revoked the bond and ordered Dotson back to prison. McLario and Webb then took their case to the national media. News editors found Webb a photogenic subject, and she attracted nationwide attention after a cover story on the April 21 edition of
People. Succumbing to political pressure from the media frenzy and resulting publicity, Illinois Governor
James R. Thompson personally presided over Dotson's clemency hearings on May 10, which were televised live at the
State of Illinois Center in Chicago. After three days, Thompson commuted Dotson's sentence. == Aftermath ==