Bryan Hooper, Sr.

27 yEARs IN PRISON 

On September 4, 2025, Bryan Hooper, Sr., was exonerated and released from prison after spending nearly 27 years behind bars for a crime that he did not commit.

Years of passionate advocacy by his family, repeated denials in state and federal courts, and countless missed memories and milestones, eventually gave way to freedom when the true perpetrator recanted and confessed, revealing Bryan’s innocence at last.

The Crime & Investigation
The story of Bryan’s wrongful conviction began with a brutal and senseless killing. On April 15, 1998, Minneapolis police found the body of 77-year-old Ann Prazniak in a cardboard box inside of her bedroom closet in the apartment complex at 1818 Park Avenue in Minneapolis. Her cause of death was asphyxiation.

The medical examiner estimated Ms. Prazniak was killed two weeks to one month before the discovery of her body. During those weeks, neighbors observed multiple people coming in and out of the apartment, which appeared to have been used as a haven for drug use and prostitution after Ms. Prazniak’s death.

Among those who had reportedly entered the apartment were Chalaka Young (then nicknamed “Shay”) and Bryan Hooper (then nicknamed “Brome”). Police found Ms. Young’s fingerprints on pieces of tape stuck to the floor of the apartment similar to tape removed from Ms. Prazniak’s body.

Bryan’s fingerprints were found on two sandwich baggies and a beer can in the living room but, unlike Ms. Young, Bryan’s prints were not found on any objects with a direct link to Ms. Prazniak’s murder. Bryan admitted to having been in the apartment, but denied involvement in or knowledge about Ms. Prazniak’s death.

The State’s Case Against Bryan
Ms. Young was the key to the State’s case against Bryan. Police interviewed her four times over the course of a month following Ms. Prazniak’s death. In the first three interviews, Ms. Young denied any knowledge of the murder. When police came to her a fourth time and threatened her with a murder charge, she changed her story and crafted a narrative pointing the finger at Bryan. Ms. Young’s story included claims that she helped Bryan while he committed the murder of Ms. Prazniak. She told police she acted as lookout and was forced to rip pieces of tape for Bryan to use to bind Ms. Prazniak’s body. Ms. Young claimed to have heard a woman yell for help. She also stated Bryan threatened to kill her if she told anyone about what she saw. Ms. Young was facing unrelated criminal charges at the time of Bryan’s trial. Because of her cooperation with the prosecution of Bryan, Ms. Young received a shortened sentence for her charges.

In addition to Ms. Young, four additional witnesses testified that Bryan made incriminating statements after Mr. Prazniak’s death. All of four of these witnesses were given incentives. These incentives included payment of cash by a Minneapolis Police Officer and leniency in unrelated criminal matters in exchange for their testimony.

Despite the statements of these witnesses being contradictory to one another, the jury convicted Bryan of three counts of first-degree murder, and he received three concurrent life sentences.

Recantations and a Confession
Over the course of the next two decades, with the exception of Ms. Young, the four other witnesses who testified against Bryan at trial recanted. Each signed affidavits, admitting their false testimony had been incentivized by police and prosecutors. Bryan returned to court five times seeking post-conviction relief after each of these recantations. Each time he was denied.

After his fifth attempt at post conviction relief, Bryan was seemingly out of options and waiting on a miracle.

The miracle materialized on July 19, 2025. That day, while serving an eight-year sentence in a Georgia prison for aggravated assault, a recently-sober and religious Chalaka Young experienced a crisis of conscience. In a signed, handwritten statement offered with no prompting, Ms. Young unburdened herself and finally told the truth about what happened to Ann Prazniak, stating, “I am not okay any longer with [an] innocent man sitting in prison for a crime he did not commit….”

Explaining that her “soul [sic] purpose here is not to make any excuse but to take responsibility for two innocent lives that I have destroyed and…to make true amends for once in my life,” Ms. Young would go on to detail the events surrounding Ms. Prazniak’s death, taking sole responsibility for the woman’s murder. She subsequently repeated this confession to law enforcement in Georgia, to a Minneapolis Police Department Sergeant, and to loved ones on a recorded prison phone line.

Bryan and his daughter Bri’ana after he was released from prison.

Filing for a Final Time
Investigators provided this newly discovered evidence of Bryan’s innocence to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office (HCAO) Conviction Integrity Unit, and the Great North Innocence Project (GNIP) assumed representation of Bryan. On August 12, 2025, GNIP filed a petition on Bryan’s behalf asking that his conviction be vacated. The HCAO followed suit.

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Morarity said in a statement, “Ms. Prazniak’s death was senseless, and it deserves justice. But we are convinced that Bryan Hooper did not commit that crime; he has been in prison for 27 years for something he didn’t do. We can never return what was taken from Mr. Hooper in 1998 and for that, I am sorry. However, we can do the right thing today, and today we are joining the petition to vacate Mr. Hooper’s conviction.”

Bryan’s son, Bryan Jr., puts earrings in his father’s ears.

On September 2, 2025, a hearing was held in Hennepin County District Court, before Judge Marta Chou. At the hearing, GNIP and the HCAO agreed the evidence of the recantations of all witnesses against Bryan required Bryan’s convictions be vacated. GNIP Legal Director Jim Mayer asked Judge Chou to grant Bryan’s petition, vacate his convictions, and send Bryan home.

Judge Chou did just that and granted Bryan’s petition on September 3, 2025.

Bryan walked free into the arms of his children and supporters on September 4, 2025.