The BIGGEST Settlements Paid to INNOCENT Prisoners - YouTube

Channel: Pablito's Way

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Here are a few of the biggest payouts to innocent people!
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9 - Frederick Clay After maintaining his innocence for nearly
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four decades, Frederick Clay was freed from prison in August 2017.
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The city of Boston paid him $3.1 Million for his wrongful conviction.
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In 1979, Clay was arrested for the murder of a cab driver in Roslindale.
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The incident took place weeks after his 16th birthday, so he was considered an adult in
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the eyes of the law.
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His eventual conviction hinged primarily on the testimony of a witness named Richard Dwyer.
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There was just one problem with Dwyer's account of that fateful night: he had only identified
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Clay as the culprit after being hypnotized by the police.
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This technique has been thoroughly debunked in recent years.
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Nevertheless, it was enough for a jury to find Clay guilty, and he spent the next 38
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years of his life in prison.
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With the help of the Massachusetts Innocence Program, Clay was able to get the Suffolk
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County district attorney's office to review his case.
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They determined that Clay had not been given a fair trial, and his conviction was vacated.
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The now-53-year-old Clay was compensated with a million dollars from the state of Massachusetts.
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He was also awarded $3.1 million from Boston city officials.
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That's good money, and Clay no doubt accepted it with open arms.
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But is $4 million enough to make up for 40 years of wrongful imprisonment?
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8 - Juan Rivera After being convicted three times for a crime
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he didn't commit, Juan Rivera was finally exonerated in 2011.
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He later settled with the city of Waukegan, Illinois, for $20 million.
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The crime that stole 20 prime years from an innocent man took place in 1992.
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An 11-year old babysitter was found dead in Waukegan one summer night.
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It wasn't until a month later that Juan Rivera's 20-year nightmare officially began.
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The police received a tip that Rivera knew the identity of the culprit.
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He was brought in for an interview with investigators.
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He was charming and cooperative with the police, but something didn't add up with his testimony.
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He claimed to have been at a house party not far from the scene of the crime, where he
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witnessed someone acting suspiciously.
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After doing some digging, the police discovered that the party Rivera described never took
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place.
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The focus of the investigation shifted to Rivera.
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After being questioned for hours, Rivera eventually confessed, a confession he would later claim
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was coerced by officers who wanted to pin the crime on him by any means necessary.
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Rivera got sucker-punched with a first-degree murder charge in 1993.
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5 years later, his conviction was overturned for the first time.
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During his retrial, the prosecution relied heavily on the testimony of an 8-year old
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girl present when the crime occurred.
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Even though she was just 2-years old at the time, the jury found her identification of
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Rivera as the culprit compelling enough to sentence the man to another life sentence.
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In 2004, re-examined DNA evidence showed that it was scientifically impossible for Rivera
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to be responsible for the murder.
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His conviction was vacated once again, but prosecutors still pursued a retrial.
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Even in the face of indisputable DNA tests that cleared Rivera of any wrongdoing, he
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was somehow found guilty for a third time.
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He began yet another life sentence.
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His dreams of being a free man were shattered.
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The appellate court finally overturned his conviction for a third and final time in 2011,
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and after suing the city of Waukegan, Rivera got his hands on $20 million in settlement
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money.
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After his release, Rivera earned his barber's license and opened up his very own barber
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college in Rogers Park, Illinois.
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7 - Frank O'Connell Frank O'Connell settled with Los Angeles County
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for $15 million after he was wrongfully imprisoned for 27 years.
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O'Connell's initial conviction came in 1985.
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He was blamed for the fatal shooting of a man at an apartment complex in South Pasadena.
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He had dated the victim's ex-wife, Jeanne Lyon, which immediately made him a person
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of interest.
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If that wasn't enough, witnesses at the scene described the perpetrator as being a tall,
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white male with blonde hair.
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O'Connell matched this description perfectly, and he was positively identified by the prosecution's
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star witness, who lived in the complex where the crime had taken place.
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O'Connell was convicted and given a life sentence.
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He served 27 years of that sentence before he was exonerated of the crime with the help
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of Centurion Ministries, a nonprofit that works directly with wrongfully convicted inmates.
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During the original trial, police had reportedly withheld evidence that would have cleared
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O'Connell of the charges he was facing.
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Once that evidence came to light, he was finally set free after nearly three decades.
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O'Connell now works as a mechanic in Colorado.
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Since his release, he has spent much of his time attempting to repair his relationship
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with his son, who was only 4-years old when his dad was sent away to prison for a crime
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he didn't commit.
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6 - Craig Coley After serving nearly four decades in prison
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for the murder of his ex-girlfriend and her son, Craig Coley was exonerated in 2017 and
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granted $21 million by Simi Valley, California.
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Coley was a veteran of the US Navy, having been deployed multiple times during the Vietnam
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War.
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In 1978, he was arrested after his ex-girlfriend and her son were found dead in their apartment.
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Coley had broken up with the victim not long before her demise, which instantly made him
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a possible suspect in the eyes of the police.
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A neighbor's testimony was the final nail in the coffin.
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They claimed to see Coley in his truck outside the victim's home that fateful night.
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He was arrested the following day and immediately charged with the crime.
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Although his first trial resulted in a hung jury, he was convicted the second time around
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and found himself on the receiving end of a life sentence.
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Coley's eventual savior came in the form of new advancements in DNA testing.
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Back when he was convicted, the technology that ultimately freed him didn't exist.
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In 2017, newly discovered DNA evidence led to Coley's pardon by California governor Jerry
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Brown.
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New tests showed that Coley's DNA was nowhere to be found on the pieces of evidence originally
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used to convict him.
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Coley was 70 years old at the time of his release.
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He settled with the city of Simi Valley for $21 million in 2019.
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The 39 years he spent behind bars is the longest prison term in California for someone whose
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conviction was eventually vacated.
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It's the 14th-longest wrongful prison term across the entire United States.
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5 - Chester Hollman III Chester Hollman III spent 28 years of his
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life in prison and got $9.8 million for it after finally attaining freedom.
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In 1991, a man was mugged and shot to death by two robbers in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
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The victim's friend told police that one of the culprits wore red shorts, while the other
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one was in a blue hoodie.
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Philly police's investigation ultimately led them to Chester Hollman III, even though he
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was wearing green pants and didn't fit the description at all.
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Nevertheless, the cops brought Hollman to the crime scene, where he was positively identified
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by a homeless man with a history of drug use and mental illness.
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The police used 8 eyewitnesses to piece together what happened that night, and the homeless
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man was the only one that recognized Hollman as the man who committed the crime.
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Police were also pointed in Hollman's direction by a woman named Deirdre Jones, who had been
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with Hollman on the night of the incident and falsely claimed he was the one who shot
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the victim.
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With the testimonies of Jones and the homeless man serving as the prosecution's primary ammunition,
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Hollman was brought to trial in April of 1993 and was convicted of second-degree murder
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and robbery.
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After rotting away in jail for nearly three decades, his case was finally re-examined
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after one of the key witnesses retracted their incriminating statements.
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He settled with Philadelphia for just under $10 million after being freed from prison
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at the age of 49.
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4 - Mark Shand $27 million was awarded to a Massachusetts
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resident who was wrongfully locked away for nearly 30 years.
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Mark Shand was convicted of murder in 1987 following a fatal shooting in a Springfield
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nightclub.
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His wife, Mia, testified that she'd been with her husband on the night of the incident.
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Still, an eyewitness claimed to have seen Shand at the club that night, and he was found
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guilty.
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Shand, an innocent man, languished in prison for 27 years.
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In 2013, he was finally granted a new trial after the primary witness from the original
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trial admitted to falsely identifying Shand as the shooter.
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He was exonerated of the murder charge and given his rightful freedom.
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Even though he was finally back in the outside world, Shand said his wrongful conviction
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had a lasting impact on his life.
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It was still causing him problems even after his exoneration.
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He was turned away from jobs that discovered his conviction while conducting background
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checks, and he was forced to get a minimum wage position to pay for his family's living
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expenses.
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The Shands' bank account got a major boost when a jury ruled that Mark should be given
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a million dollars for each year he wasted away in his jail cell.
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In 2019, his $27 million prize officially arrived, and while it certainly helped pay
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the bills, nothing could properly reimburse the three decades he had already lost for
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good.
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3 - Thaddeus "T.J."
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Jimenez Thaddeus "TJ" Jimenez was awarded a certificate
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of innocence and $25 million after being wrongfully convicted of murder.
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However, not long after his pardon, he found himself right back in prison for crimes he
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actually committed.
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His first conviction came in October of 1994.
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Despite being just 13-years old at the time, Jimenez was found guilty of fatally shooting
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a teenager in front of a Honey Baked Ham store in Chicago.
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An eyewitness who watched the murder from across the street identified Jimenez as the
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guilty party.
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Even though the police had a tape-recorded confession by the actual culprit, Juan Carlos
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Torres, Jimenez was convicted, as the recording was withheld during the criminal trial.
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Jimenez got a 50-year sentence, which was reversed a couple years later.
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He was granted a retrial but once again got blamed for the crime.
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It wasn't until 2007 that he got his freedom.
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The witnesses that placed Jimenez at the scene all recanted their original testimonies, and
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in 2009, the innocent man was free at last.
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After filing a lawsuit against the city of Chicago, Jimenez was given $25 million in
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restitution.
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But by that time, he was already facing brand new drug charges stemming from his new gang
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ties.
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He was sentenced to another year in prison, but this time, he actually deserved it.
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In 2015, he was arrested yet again after shooting a former member of his gang.
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He pleaded guilty to the crime in 2016 and got 9 more years behind bars.
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In a twist of irony, the guy shot by Jimenez won a $6 million judgment against the former
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wrongful conviction poster child.
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2 - Central Park 5 After their widely publicized convictions
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that they had nothing to do with, five New York City teenagers, better known as the Central
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Park 5, reached a settlement agreement with their hometown for $41 million.
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The five wrongfully convicted teens were Korey Wise, Yusef Salaam, Kevin Richardson, Antron
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McCray, and Raymond Santana.
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There were several attacks in Central Park on the night of the incident that sent those
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five innocent boys to prison.
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On April 19th of 1989, the park was overrun by a gang of roughly 30 teenagers described
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as a "wolf pack."
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It wasn't just the jogger, Trisha Meili, who fell victim to this predatory pack of adolescents.
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A couple on a tandem bike, a cab driver, a man carrying groceries, and a male jogger
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also faced beatings at the hands of the gang, but Meili's assault sticks out from the rest
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because she was also taken advantage of by her attackers.
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While the police didn't have any hard-and-fast evidence to pin the crime on the Central Park
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5, they took the fall anyway.
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After hours of interrogation, they were coerced into confessions they would later recant.
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They were painted as the bad guys in the mainstream media before a conviction was even made.
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The Central Park 5 had already been convicted in the court of public opinion.
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Their prison terms ranged between 5 and 15 years.
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Four of them ended up serving 6-7 years, while the eldest of the group, Korey Wise, spent
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a total of 13 years in jail.
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In 2002, the actual perpetrator of the crime finally confessed while serving time for a
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separate offense.
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The Central Park 5 all had their convictions vacated, and after suing the city of New York,
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they were awarded $41 million.
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While most of the wrongfully convicted teens went on to lead normal lives following their
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release, Raymond Santana found himself back behind bars in short order.
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He eventually cleaned up his act and started working with the Innocence Project, trying
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to clear the names of innocent folks facing jail time, as he did all those years ago.
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1 - The McCollum Brothers In September of 2014, half-brothers Henry
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McCollum and Leon Brown were released from the North Carolina prison.
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They'd spent the previous three decades locked up for a crime they didn't commit.
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A few years later, they were awarded a staggering sum of $75 million for their troubles, the
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largest such payout in US history.
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McCollum and Brown were 19 and 15 years old in 1983 when they were wrongfully convicted
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and sent to death row.
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They were convicted for heinous crimes against an 11-year-old girl in Red Springs, North
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Carolina.
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The victim had been taken advantage of before her death, and the two boys were arrested
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the following day.
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The police didn't find any concrete evidence at the scene that linked the teenagers to
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the crime.
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Their pursuit of the brothers was founded on baseless rumors spread by one of the boys'
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classmates.
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After hours of relentless interrogation without any lawyers present, McCollum and Brown were
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forced to sign confessions that were pre-written by the police.
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Both boys suffered from cognitive disabilities that made it difficult for them to read and
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write, so it's safe to say they had no idea what they agreed to.
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After 30 agonizing years behind bars, a glimmer of hope emerged for the brothers in 2014.
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At the behest of the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission, newly discovered DNA evidence
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from the crime scene was examined.
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The test results confirmed what the two men insisted all along: they were innocent.
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The evidence implicated Roscoe Artis, a convicted felon who was already serving a life sentence
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for a completely different crime.
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Once McCollum and Brown were finally granted their due freedom, they were given a pretty
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hefty check along with it.
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$31 million was awarded to each of them, a million for every year they spent in prison.
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They were given an additional $13 million in punitive damages, with the record-breaking
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settlement totaling $75 million.
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Since their release, they've tried to make it crystal clear that other innocent people
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just like them are still locked up for crimes they didn't commit.
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The brothers' attorney used their liberation as an opportunity to abolish the death penalty,
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which he says would put an end to the execution of innocent individuals like McCollum and
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Brown.
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