Kansas feels that approximetly $64,706.00 @ year, is "ADEQUATE COMPENSATION"

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Kansas feels that approximetly $64,706.00 @ year, is "ADEQUATE COMPENSATION"

Man falsely imprisoned for 17 years for crime committed by doppelganger to receive $1.1M settlement

A man who spent 17 years in prison after being falsely convicted of a crime believed to have been committed by a man who looks like him will receive a $1.1 million settlement from the state of Kansas under a new false conviction law.

The payment is part of the settlement reached Tuesday in a lawsuit Richard Anthony Jones brought against the state of Kansas for his wrongful conviction. This is the first lawsuit filed under the mistaken-conviction statute, which provides compensation to people who are wrongly imprisoned, said Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

"We are committed to faithfully administering the new mistaken-conviction statute the Legislature enacted," Schmidt said in a statement. "In this case, it was possible on the existing record to resolve all issues quickly, satisfy all of the statute’s requirements, and agree to this outcome so Mr. Jones can receive the benefits to which he is entitled by law because he was mistakenly convicted."

Jones, 42, was released from prison last year. He was convicted in the 1999 robbery of a woman in the parking lot of a Roeland Park, Kansas, Walmart store, CNN reported. Although Jones had an alibi -- he was at a birthday party at the time of the robbery and was seen by many people -- he was blamed for the crime anyway. In a trial, witnesses and the victim identified Jones as the robber.

After Jones had been in prison for many years, other inmates pointed out to him that he bore a strong resemblance to another man, The Kansas City Star reported.

After some research, Jones' attorneys learned the other man, identified by CNN as Ricky Lee Amos, went by the same first name as Jones and had lived much closer to the Walmart where the crime occurred.

Furthermore, a witness had written down the license plate number of the car involved in the robbery. The number was connected to an address where Amos had lived, according to CNN.

During a court hearing in June 2017, Jones' attorneys showed witnesses, including the victim, mug shots of both Jones and Amos. When the victim could no longer definitively identify Jones as the robber, a judge overturned his conviction and ordered his release from prison.

The statute of limitations on the crime has passed, so Amos cannot be prosecuted.

In addition to the $1.1 million, Jones was also granted a certificate of innocence, access to counseling and given permission to participate in the state health care benefits program in 2019 and 2020, the newspaper reported.

Jones doesn't have any ill will toward Amos, said attorney Alice Craig.

"I don't think so, because it's not Ricky's fault that this happened, but ultimately he was the one we believe who was responsible for the crime," Craig told CNN. "Ricky has never admitted to the crime and I think (Jones) ... was somewhat disappointed that he didn't admit to (it)."

(Maybe there are some other people who need to be held responsible for this, like maybe a Prosecutor and even a Judge.)
 
Man falsely imprisoned for 17 years for crime committed by doppelganger to receive $1.1M settlement

A man who spent 17 years in prison after being falsely convicted of a crime believed to have been committed by a man who looks like him will receive a $1.1 million settlement from the state of Kansas under a new false conviction law.

The payment is part of the settlement reached Tuesday in a lawsuit Richard Anthony Jones brought against the state of Kansas for his wrongful conviction. This is the first lawsuit filed under the mistaken-conviction statute, which provides compensation to people who are wrongly imprisoned, said Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

"We are committed to faithfully administering the new mistaken-conviction statute the Legislature enacted," Schmidt said in a statement. "In this case, it was possible on the existing record to resolve all issues quickly, satisfy all of the statute’s requirements, and agree to this outcome so Mr. Jones can receive the benefits to which he is entitled by law because he was mistakenly convicted."

Jones, 42, was released from prison last year. He was convicted in the 1999 robbery of a woman in the parking lot of a Roeland Park, Kansas, Walmart store, CNN reported. Although Jones had an alibi -- he was at a birthday party at the time of the robbery and was seen by many people -- he was blamed for the crime anyway. In a trial, witnesses and the victim identified Jones as the robber.

After Jones had been in prison for many years, other inmates pointed out to him that he bore a strong resemblance to another man, The Kansas City Star reported.

After some research, Jones' attorneys learned the other man, identified by CNN as Ricky Lee Amos, went by the same first name as Jones and had lived much closer to the Walmart where the crime occurred.

Furthermore, a witness had written down the license plate number of the car involved in the robbery. The number was connected to an address where Amos had lived, according to CNN.

During a court hearing in June 2017, Jones' attorneys showed witnesses, including the victim, mug shots of both Jones and Amos. When the victim could no longer definitively identify Jones as the robber, a judge overturned his conviction and ordered his release from prison.

The statute of limitations on the crime has passed, so Amos cannot be prosecuted.

In addition to the $1.1 million, Jones was also granted a certificate of innocence, access to counseling and given permission to participate in the state health care benefits program in 2019 and 2020, the newspaper reported.

Jones doesn't have any ill will toward Amos, said attorney Alice Craig.

"I don't think so, because it's not Ricky's fault that this happened, but ultimately he was the one we believe who was responsible for the crime," Craig told CNN. "Ricky has never admitted to the crime and I think (Jones) ... was somewhat disappointed that he didn't admit to (it)."

(Maybe there are some other people who need to be held responsible for this, like maybe a Prosecutor and even a Judge.)

Oh I agree with you there but if you ever follow, in detail, cases of innocent persons egregiously convicted and served long prison sentences the courts are really only concerned about two things. Capping the financial liability of the State to the wrongly convicted and preserving the institution of the Courts (which means Prosecutors and Judges are not held accountable for their fuck ups).

Since we have three independent branches of government there is nothing that the legislative or executive branches can do to hold Jurist or other officers of the courts accountable for incompetence, malfeseance or simply just being wrong.

Most would think it common sense that if a Prosecutor witholds exculpitory evidence and an innocent person wrongly goes to jail you would think that they should at the very least be civilly liable for that wrongful conviction if not criminally liable.

I think what would probably be fair is to sue that prosecutor in civil court for damages. I doubt the courts would permit that for obvious reasons.
 
(Maybe there are some other people who need to be held responsible for this, like maybe a Prosecutor and even a Judge.)

Maybe you should be held responsible also. You support the existence of that government. You are culpable. In any case, you certainly shouldn't be bitching about something you're responsible for supporting.
 
Maybe you should be held responsible also. You support the existence of that government. You are culpable. In any case, you certainly shouldn't be bitching about something you're responsible for supporting.

no government means no punishment for any crimes idiot
 
Texas has long led the nation in the number of people it exonerates, or clears of convictions, based on evidence of innocence. Since 2010, more than 200 people have been exonerated in Texas, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. That’s more than twice as many as any other state during the same period.

State lawmakers took a hard look at wrongful convictions after the high-profile case of Timothy Cole, a war veteran who died in prison, convicted of rape largely based off a flawed photo lineup shown to the victim. In 2009, a decade after Cole died from complications related to asthma, DNA evidence cleared him of the crime, and he was posthumously pardoned by then-Gov. Rick Perry. Since then, lawmakers have passed bills to limit the power of jailhouse informants and set up best practices for police departments conducting lineups for eyewitness identification.
 
Texas has long led the nation in the number of people it exonerates, or clears of convictions, based on evidence of innocence. Since 2010, more than 200 people have been exonerated in Texas, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. That’s more than twice as many as any other state during the same period.

State lawmakers took a hard look at wrongful convictions after the high-profile case of Timothy Cole, a war veteran who died in prison, convicted of rape largely based off a flawed photo lineup shown to the victim. In 2009, a decade after Cole died from complications related to asthma, DNA evidence cleared him of the crime, and he was posthumously pardoned by then-Gov. Rick Perry. Since then, lawmakers have passed bills to limit the power of jailhouse informants and set up best practices for police departments conducting lineups for eyewitness identification.
The Thin Blue Line.
 
These are the only two statements you should ever speak in the presence of a police officer:

"I would like to invoke the 5th amendment"

"Could I speak to a lawyer?"
 
Maybe you should be held responsible also. You support the existence of that government. You are culpable. In any case, you certainly shouldn't be bitching about something you're responsible for supporting.

Please get back to me, when you have a cognitive thought and can show you have some intelligence.
 
Please get back to me, when you have a cognitive thought and can show you have some intelligence.

You're avoiding the point. Why? Do you not support the existence of the government you're bitching about? Are you not culpable in the same way the other people you're accusing are?
 
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