Hurricane was the number one contender for the Middleweight Title, until he was falsely accused, and convicted of murder. . Carter refused to behave like other prisoners. This stemed from his belief that he was not a criminal; therefore, he should not be treated like one. He did not eat the prison's food and wear prison garb. He rarely left his cell and concentrated mostly on reading books and writing. In 1974, he published "The Sixteenth Round", his version of the events that led to his incarceration. He gained celebrity from it, and Bob Dylan wrote a song entitled "Hurricane" that chronicled Carter's case and his suffering. In 1976, Carter was retried after a brief period of being on parole. Both of the earlier key witnesses had changed their stories. Nevertheless, the result was the same. Carter and Artis were returned to prison after a second conviction. Over several years Carter's lawyers fought for hearings to show that Carter had been denied a right to a fair trial. Finally in 1985, Federal District Judge H. Lee Sarokin freed Carter after Sarokin wrote that the convictions were based on racial prejudices and not facts. He was recently the subject of a movie starring Denzel Washington...THIS IMAGE COMES WITH A FULL CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICITY FROM AUTHENTICATED AUTOGRAPHS . REFERENCE NUMBER AA-0038138