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Sunday morning – CBS examines life after exoneration
Posted: September 26, 2008 3:19 pm
A feature on “CBS News Sunday Morning” this week will examine the difficult the difficult adjustment faced by the men and women who are proven innocent and freed from prison after serving decades for crimes they didn’t commit.
Interviewed on the program will be Innocence Project clients Thomas McGowan (who served 23 years in Texas for a rape he didn’t commit) and Larry Peterson (who served 16 years in New Jersey for a murder he didn’t commit). Also featured will be Beverly Monroe, who was released in 2002 after serving 10 years for a murder she didn’t commit, and her daughter, Katie Monroe, the executive director of the Rocky Mountain Innocence Center. Innocence Project Co-Director Peter Neufeld will discuss the broader issues people face after they are exonerated and the government’s obligation to provide financial compensation and social services.
Find out when the show airs in your city.
Read more about life after exoneration.
Tags: Thomas McGowan, Larry Peterson, Exoneree Compensation, Life After Exoneration
Most Nebraskan State Senators Support or Are Unsure About Compensation Law
Posted: January 5, 2009 2:00 pm
Even after three Nebraskans were found to have been wrongfully convicted and spent almost 20 years for a murder they did not commit, many state senators are undecided about compensation laws in Nebraska.
Nebraska is one of 25 states without a compensation statute. In a survey of state senators conducted by the Associated Press, 14 senators were in favor exoneree compensation, and five were against. However, 20 senators were undecided and 10 did not take part in the survey, which comes on the heels of the "Beatrice 6" case, in which Thomas Winslow, Joseph White and Ada JoAnn Taylor were cleared of all charges in the 1985 murder and rape of Helen Wilson in Beatrice, Nebraska. (Three others had also been arrested and convicted but finished serving their sentences in 1994. Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning said he intends to pursue full pardons for all six.)
According to the AP, State Senator Tony Fulton said that compensation is “the right thing to do,” adding that it should go beyond financial compensation and could include help with employment and education. However, those who voiced uncertainty about compensation in the AP survey argue that the state's current economic condition may have to take priority over compensation for the wrongfully convicted. Others, including Senator Russ Karpisek questioned where funds for compensations would come from:
“This is a tough one,” Karpisek said. “Although they should get help to start their lives over, where does the money come from? How much money would make a difference? Would the judicial system be afraid to jail people in fear of possible compensation?”
Read the full story here. (Associated Press, 12/29/08)Even when states do have compensation laws, they often fall far short of the federal standard for monetary amounts and don’t include critical state services. Click here to find out how your state stacks up.
To learn more about the need for exoneree compensation nationwide, visit our Fix the System section.
Tags: Nebraska, Exoneree Compensation, Life After Exoneration
After Exoneration
Posted: April 20, 2009 3:52 pm
When wrongfully convicted individuals are cleared and released, the media and the public usually takes notice of the injustice they suffered. On the day of their release, promises of help pour in. But in the months and years after exoneration, the attention fades. Exonerees struggle to rebuild lives interrupted by injustice, sometimes without the support of family or friends.
The lead story yesterday on CBS News “Sunday Morning” explores life after exoneration and the difficulties faced by the wrongfully convicted.
“The minute you’re falsely accused, your life is gone,” says Beverly Monroe in the CBS piece. “Your life as you know it will never be the same. You lose everything that you had in a normal life. For me it was house, job, career, income, separation from my family. You lose all of those normal basics.”
Monroe served eight years in prison before she was cleared, and was 62 years old when she was released.
In addition to Beverly Monroe’s case, the CBS report visits the cases of Innocence Project clients Larry Peterson and Thomas McGowan.
Watch the full CBS video here.
Tags: Thomas McGowan, Larry Peterson, Life After Exoneration
Screening and Discussion Tuesday in New York
Posted: May 11, 2009 6:20 pm
Innocence Project client Alan Newton, who served 21 years in prison for a rape he didn’t commit, will speak tomorrow night in Huntington, New York, following a screening of the award-winning documentary film “After Innocence.”
Newton will be joined by Innocence Project Publications Manager Elizabeth Webster at the screening. The event is open to the public and more information is available here.
Tags: Alan Newton, Life After Exoneration
Texas Increases Exoneree Compensation
Posted: May 28, 2009 1:38 pm
Texas Gov. Rick Perry signed the Tim Cole Act into law yesterday, increasing the amount of compensation the state pays to the exonerated to $80,000 per year of wrongful incarceration. The new law includes credit for tuition at state colleges and universities and will also pay $25,000 per year an exoneree spent outside of prison on parole for a crime they didn't commit – a first in the nation.
The bill is named for Tim Cole, who was posthumously exonerated this year after DNA proved that he had been wrongfully convicted in 1986. He died of a heart attack in prison in 1999 and DNA testing finally proved his innocence in 2008.
Perry, who met privately with Cole's family in April, called the bill a "necessary and appropriate measure to amend the miscarriage of justice."What's your state's compensation law? Find out here.
"You can never make these innocent men whole," said Rep. Rafael Anchia, a Dallas Democrat who sponsored the measure. "They have lost important years of their lives, they have lost spouses and children have grown up without their fathers. We can't make them whole, but we can do better."
Read the full story here. (Associated Press, 05/27/09)
Tags: Exoneree Compensation, Life After Exoneration
Five Years After Exoneration, Lafonso Rollins is Giving Back
Posted: July 20, 2009 2:26 pm
Last week, Lafonso Rollins marked the anniversary of the day he walked out of an Illinois prison after serving 11 years for a rape he did not commit. Rollins was a 17-year-old special education student in the ninth grade when he was arrested, and he was convicted based largely on a false confession he had signed, but did not write. In 2004, DNA testing was finally obtained and conclusively proved Rollins’s innocence and he was released.
Rollins spoke to ABC7 Chicago about how his false confession was coerced by police. He said: “They came on hitting on me. They kept told me they were going to wring me out to dry if I didn't tell the truth… I was scared to death.” In addition to this alleged improper treatment by police, Rollins’ case was also plagued by improper forensic analysis and reporting.
In early 2006, Rollins filed a lawsuit against the City of Chicago for violating his civil rights. He eventually settled for $9 million, and the city pledged to investigate whether the police officers and crime lab who handled his case had engaged in wrongdoing. Rollins said his mission now is to use his freedom to help others.
“This is not my lottery ticket or anything,” he said. “Keep in mind, the most important thing right now is for everybody to focus on that, OK, I made it, I'm free, you know what I'm saying? It's over with. Make sure the next guy doesn't go through this heat."
Since then, Rollins has used portions of his settlement money to help free the innocent and prevent wrongful convictions. He started a foundation called Right the Wrong Complications. In one of his first donations, Rollins gave $10,000 to benefit Northern Illinois University Law School’s Innocence Project, which had provided him pro bono legal services during his incarceration.
More recently, Rollins donated another $10,000 to the rebuilding fund of a Chicago church after he saw it burn down on television. He cited his late father, a pastor who had died during his incarnation. "My father passed, and here is a church that I can help out and here this one is," said Rollins. "I thought this would be my chance to help out.”
Other Exoneration Anniversaries:
Steven Linscott, Illinois (Served 3 Years, Exonerated 7/16/92)
Steven Toney, Missouri (Served 13 Years, Exonerated 7/16/96
Joe Jones, Kansas (Served 6.5 Years, Exonerated 7/17/92)
Perry Mitchell, South Carolina (Served 14.5 Years, Exonerated 7/20/98)
Tags: Lafonso Rollins, Exoneree Compensation, Life After Exoneration
Friday Roundup: Compensation, Real Perpetrators and the Death Penalty
Posted: January 20, 2012 1:00 pm
Tags: Ohio, Texas, Washington, New York, Exoneree Compensation, Forensic Oversight, Unvalidated/Improper Forensics, Life After Exoneration, Death Penalty, Real Perpetrator
New York Exonerees Lack Social Services
Posted: January 23, 2013 1:15 pm
Tags: New York, Korey Wise, Life After Exoneration, Fernando Bermudez


















