Exoneration
Yahoo news is reporting on Texas exonerees, who are receiving $80k for each year behind bars and a lifetime annuity. Exonerees often spend decades in prison before authorities are finally convinced that it would have been completely impossible for them to have committed the crimes that put them behind bars. As the story (and a 2008 Contexts feature) makes clear, Texas is the most generous state in compensating those wrongly convicted. I can't imagine thinking that $80k/year is "generous" compensation for a year in a maximum security prison, but I suppose it beats a firm handshake and $50 gate money.
The exonerees I've met have all been more concerned with clearing their names than with financial compensation. Think about it: it is one thing to spend years or decades locked up for a crime you didn't commit; it is quite another to spend years or decades with the knowledge that your friends, family, and neighbors all consider you to be a rapist or murderer.


3 Comments:
Your post reminded me of the historical Stephen Truscott case (Canada) You may be familiar with it. It was the catalyst for the abolishment of the death penalty here. Only 14, sentenced to death, spent 10 years in prison always maintaining his innocence - really a sad case. A couple years ago his conviction was declared a miscarriage of justice but he was never declared (factually) innocent. He spent years trying to clear his name. Fortunately he was supported by a fantastic support/fan network here in Guelph. Last summer the ON government awarded him $ 6..5 mill comp. I'd see him at the supermarket with his family, he looked broken. All he wanted was for the courts to say he was innocent-not the money.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Truscott
http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/about/pubs/truscott/section8.asp
Thanks, Francesca -- I should've known more about the case already, but this is my first introduction.
Thought you might be interested -our university just announced a new program aiming to improve the justice system - named after Stephen Truscott. "The Truscott Initiative in Justice Studies."
http://www.uoguelph.ca/news/2009/10/dd_1.html
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