"Every part of you is screaming. Because usually when someone is saying something about you that is not true, your first instinct is to defend yourself...
"I couldn't do that. I was scared because of where I was [a court room], and I knew that if I would have got up and started yelling, they would have tackled me or handcuffed me or sprayed me...
"I kind of had the sense to know, I had to just sit there and take it. But there was a part of me that thought 'they're going to get up there and they're going to look at me and realise they got the wrong person'... they got up there and said the complete opposite.
"I was so in shock by the whole situation, I couldn't make sense of it."
***
These are Evaristo Salas Junior's words, as told to Australian podcaster Jack Laurence for his show One Minute Remaining.
They are words that were said down a phone-line from prison just last year, as Salas served his 26th year behind bars for a crime he didn't commit.
It's a story that starts with a troubled childhood.
Aged seven, Salas was kicked out of the troubled home he lived in with his mother and siblings in Sunnyside, Washington State, because she decided she couldn't handle him anymore and surrendered him to foster care.
He ended up under his step-father's roof, which was a much more stable home. But his dad worked long hours, and left to his own devices, Salas found himself joining a local gang alongside many other young people in town. He was just 10.