OneEyedDiva
SF VIP
- Location
- New Jersey
I'm glad to see that those wrongfully convicted are being released and compensated. But, I still think they should get one million for each year they were incarcerated. I had no idea there had been so many wrongful convictions (acknowledged ones at least)! I have no doubt, however that many confessions are coerced or forced.NYT - "The city [NYC] settled 953 cases in 2024, and the highest payouts included five settlements that cost at least $15 million each. Two were from the wrongful convictions of James Irons and Thomas Malik, who in 1995 were charged with the murder of a subway clerk.
After spending three decades behind bars, Mr. Irons and Mr. Malik were exonerated by a judge who found that the police had elicited false confessions from them. Both were awarded about $16.3 million last year.
Image
![]()
Thomas Malik, left, and James Irons were freed after years behind bars. Police investigators had elicited false confessions from them.
The Police Department noted that around 64 percent of the cases settled in 2024 were wrongful convictions and at least half of those were around two decades old."
Last edited: