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Life Inside

Love Beyond Bars: Larry and Gloria

Larry Moses and Gloria Armour first dated in their 20s. The New Orleans duo reunited in their 60s, after Moses was wrongfully imprisoned for 29 years.

Armour, a Black woman wearing dark jeans and a white long sleeved shirt with a chest cutout, and Moses, a Black man wearing an olive green T-shirt and pants, sit on a couch holding hands. A painting of blue butterflies is visible in the background.
Gloria Armour with Larry Moses at their home in New Orleans, in February 2025. Moses was wrongfully incarcerated for 29 years.
Gloria Armour with Larry Moses at their home in New Orleans, in February 2025. Moses was wrongfully incarcerated for 29 years.

The love story of Larry Moses and Gloria Armour began over a decade before the wrongful conviction that stole nearly 30 years of his life. The New Orleans couple met in their 20s, when his brother — who was dating her sister — secretly arranged an encounter. “We hit it off just right,” says Armour, now 68. “I just liked his disposition and the way he had about himself.” They dated for about five years before drifting apart. Then Moses’ nightmare began.

In January 1994, at a Ninth Ward intersection, Alma Causey and Daniel Ratliff were fatally shot during a robbery. Almost six months later, a man with serious mental illness named Frederick Stamps called the police and blamed Moses.

The state built its case on Stamps’ testimony and that of a woman who was looking out of her window during the crime. She said she’d heard the robber’s voice but couldn’t fully confirm that it belonged to Moses, whom she knew. She didn’t see the assailant’s face or even the shooting, and instead described a figure who did not match Moses’ height or build.

While no physical evidence tied Moses to the crime, and multiple witnesses testified that he had been with his family in another city, he was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in 1995. He avoided a death sentence by a single vote.

Moses tried to appeal his conviction, but was unsuccessful. He contacted Innocence Project New Orleans in 2002, and the organization took his case 20 years later. Their investigation found information that hadn’t been disclosed to the defense and called into question the credibility and accuracy of the state’s eyewitness testimony. The group also revealed Stamps’ inconsistent accounts of the crime and that he’d admitted to others that he’d set Moses up due to what he described as a romantic rivalry.

Moses’ conviction was vacated on May 25, 2023, and the charges against him were dropped a month later. He got out of prison at age 68, having served 29 years, and is currently pursuing compensation for his wrongful conviction. In this interview, edited for clarity and length, the divorced father of three recalls how he and Armour first connected, how they reunited, and why, as she says, “there’s never a dull moment” when they’re together.

Moses, a Black man wearing an olive green T-shirt and pants, sits in a blue Adirondack chair, while Armour, a Black woman wearing dark patchwork jeans and a white midriff shirt with a chest cutout, leans against a door on the porch of their apartment.
Moses lifts up a gold necklace hanging around Armour’s neck, which has a ring hanging from it.
Moses
was exonerated of two murders he did not commit and was released in 2023. Shortly after, he reconnected with Armour, whom he dated before he was incarcerated.
Moses
holds the ring he gave to Armour as a sign of being engaged, in Slidell, Louisiana, on March 10, 2025.

Gloria was 25 when I met her. I was 27, driving Cadillacs and had plenty money because I used to [do] factory work in the refinery. I recall myself being a little fast because most women liked the dudes that worked and had money. I flaunted myself. But [Gloria was] never on that thing of, Oh, you got to buy me this, and you got to buy me that. We were just in love. She always was open arms when I showed up.

Moses, a Black man, kisses Armour, a Black woman wearing gold hoop earrings, on the cheek.
Moses, a Black man, walks down a staircase with a green railing while smiling.
Moses
kisses Armour in New Orleans East.
Moses
was waiting at a bus stop in the New Orleans business district when Armour sat down beside him last summer. She recognized him, and from there, they started dating again.

I ain’t gonna tell [our breakup] story, but the last time I saw Gloria [before jail] it was a nice summer day. [Laughs.] I tried to smuggle her up, and she wasn't going for it. I said to myself, “Well, I guess I got to put in a little time coming to see her.” And then the next thing I know, I was just lifted off to jail for something I didn’t do.

What really got me in the situation was helping a friend of mine. Her boyfriend was beating her up. I stopped it and he just put the unsolved murder charges on me. The police just didn’t do a thorough investigation. I think they were just clearing the books back then. It was like, We’re just going to put you over there, and you fight your way back out.

Armour, a Black woman wearing dark jeans, a white belt and a white long sleeved shirt with a chest cutout, leans against a green wooden railing while looking at the camera.
Moses had prayed to see Gloria again while he was in prison. “I’d sit on my little bunk playing music, and I’d ask myself, “Who do I want to share my blessing with? It had to be Gloria.”

I was a bit bitter when it first happened to me. I even had to get the doctor to give me some sleeping pills after I got convicted. But then I started thinking. I took inventory of myself while I was in prison. I needed to find God. When I [did], it made me humble.

What most people don’t understand about life is lonesomeness is good for your soul, so you can find yourself. If I sat there and pitied myself, then I [couldn’t] help myself. So I just stood strong. I walked through the war saying, “I know my God got my back.” I always kept my sanity and my morals and principles when I was in prison. I used to tell [the men], “You should be fighting the system, not him.”

Armour sits in the backseat of a car, looking out a window while holding a cigarette.
A blurred view of Lake Pontchartrain, the blue sky, and the road as seen from a moving vehicle.
Armour on the way to her niece’s birthday party in Slidell, Louisiana.

I had friends getting married up in prison, but I wasn’t doing it. That would be putting my family through the same thing I was going through. They were already in jail with me, worrying any time I didn’t call. Still, I ain’t never stopped wanting to have somebody’s love. I prayed for it.

She don’t believe me, but I always thought about Gloria. When the caseworker told me I’d be getting out, I still had six months. I’d sit on my little bunk playing music, and I’d ask myself, Who do I want to share my blessing with? It had to be Gloria. But I didn’t know where she was since I had been away, and people got displaced from the hurricanes.

Moses, a Black man wearing a navy suit, and Armour, a Black woman wearing a white sweater, stand in the middle of an aisle in a church with rows of seats partially occupied by people.
The backs of Armour and Moses are visible, as they look at the podium in a church. In the background is a banner with a cross on it.
Moses
and Armour at the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans East in February 2025.
“Living
across the river, I had to get up around about 4 o’clock and fix me something to eat and go catch the bus about 6 o’clock to get to church for 9 o’clock. And I did that every Sunday morning to show my love and appreciation for what God had did for me,” said Moses.

When I finally got out of prison, I was living across the river in [a transitional] house [owned by Innocence Project New Orleans]. I could have taken Uber, but I wanted to ride the bus. I thought maybe I could recognize some of the people I’d grown up with. I used to catch the bus going down Broad. I’d get to American Street and think, My girl used to live right down the street. Well, God, will I ever bump into Gloria?

As sunlight falls on their faces through blinds, Armour puts ice in cups while Moses carries her great-niece.
Raw catfish sits on a cutting board.
Armour, second from left, stands in a room with her nephew, sister, Moses and her great-niece.
Moses, Armour and her nephew eat crawfish while sunlight shines on Gloria’s plate.
Armour
puts ice in cups at her niece’s birthday party in Slidell.
Catfish
for the festivities.
Armour’s
sister Brenda, third from the left, welcomes the family, including Armour’s nephew Cleveland, left, and Armour’s great-niece.
Moses,
Armour and her nephew eat crawfish in the evening.

Then one day on the bus stop, while I was talking to two other people, this lady comes and sits right alongside me. I looked at her name tag, and it didn’t register. I kept talking, then she said, “That you, Larry?”

I turned and said, “Larry Moses!”

Then I said, “Gloria, that’s you?” right as [her coworker] was pulling up in a truck to get her. I told her, “You’re going to have to wait. I got to get your information before you leave.”

Moses stands on a deck, smiling at and carrying Armour’s great-niece, a Black toddler wearing a small white bow and braids in her hair.
A group picture shows Moses, Armour, and her smiling family and friends standing on a deck and the deck stairs.
Left, Moses holding Armour’s great-niece in Slidell. Right, Armour’s family and friends gathered for a photo at the birthday party. Moses was warmly welcomed by her family when the couple reconnected.

It’s hard to say exactly when this was because we were so happy, we weren't paying attention to anything. But we’ve been back together for over a year and a half. We go to church on Sundays, and we go to friends’ churches. During the week, I come [home] from work, I take a shower, then me and Gloria sit in them two chairs out there and look at the interstate. Even though she can be fussy a little bit, she’s cool. We be laughing and playing with each other ‘til we go to bed. We have everything in the house we need, so this is our sanctuary. We can’t get hurt here.

We’re going to get married, [but] I don’t know exactly when. She’s set in her ways, and I'm set in my ways. Ain’t no sense in us getting married and six months later, we getting divorced or something. We’re going to make this work until the end of time. We’re like Bonnie and Clyde. That’s my baby there. That’s my all in all. God has been good to me and Gloria.

Camille Farrah Lenain is a French-Algerian documentary photographer who grew up in Paris. She relocated to New Orleans in 2013. Her photographs have been exhibited internationally, including at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, the Arab World Institute, Photoville and Les Rencontres d’Arles.

Carla Canning is an engagement journalist and associate editor at Prison Journalism Project. She previously worked on Life Inside as The Marshall Project's Tow audience engagement fellow. At the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, she created a website guide for people visiting loved ones incarcerated in New York State prisons.

Tags: The Frame New Orleans, Louisiana Wrongful Conviction Exoneration Wrongful Imprisonment Relationships Reunions Love Beyond Bars