ABC News :
New York authorities have agreed to pay $US6.25 million in compensation to an innocent man who spent nearly 25 years languishing in prison for a murder he did not commit.
Jonathan Fleming, 53, walked free in April 2014 after his conviction was overturned by the Brooklyn district attorney. He had been found guilty of the August 1989 shooting of a drug trafficker despite being with his family in Orlando, Florida, at the time of the murder.
“Mr Fleming spent nearly half of his life behind bars for a crime that evidence available at the time proved he could not have committed,” New York city comptroller Scott Stringer said.
“We cannot give back the time that he served, but the city of New York can offer Jonathan Fleming this compensation for the injustice that was committed against him.”
Mr Fleming went to hospital to see his dying mother after signing the settlement, his lawyers Paul Callan and Martin Edelman said.
“The swift settlement will enable Jonathan and his family to build a new life without the painful and costly prospect of further litigation,” they said in a joint statement.
Mr Fleming had a Florida hotel receipt dated August 14, 1989 and time stamped at 9:27pm, four hours before Darryl Rush was killed in Brooklyn, about 1,600 kilometres away.
Mr Fleming’s sentence was one of dozens being re-examined by a special unit in Brooklyn headed by a Harvard law professor. Several of the cases being reviewed were investigated by retired police detective Louis Scarcella, suspected of using illegal methods to frame suspects.
New York authorities have agreed to pay $US6.25 million in compensation to an innocent man who spent nearly 25 years languishing in prison for a murder he did not commit.
Jonathan Fleming, 53, walked free in April 2014 after his conviction was overturned by the Brooklyn district attorney. He had been found guilty of the August 1989 shooting of a drug trafficker despite being with his family in Orlando, Florida, at the time of the murder.
“Mr Fleming spent nearly half of his life behind bars for a crime that evidence available at the time proved he could not have committed,” New York city comptroller Scott Stringer said.
“We cannot give back the time that he served, but the city of New York can offer Jonathan Fleming this compensation for the injustice that was committed against him.”
Mr Fleming went to hospital to see his dying mother after signing the settlement, his lawyers Paul Callan and Martin Edelman said.
“The swift settlement will enable Jonathan and his family to build a new life without the painful and costly prospect of further litigation,” they said in a joint statement.
Mr Fleming had a Florida hotel receipt dated August 14, 1989 and time stamped at 9:27pm, four hours before Darryl Rush was killed in Brooklyn, about 1,600 kilometres away.
Mr Fleming’s sentence was one of dozens being re-examined by a special unit in Brooklyn headed by a Harvard law professor. Several of the cases being reviewed were investigated by retired police detective Louis Scarcella, suspected of using illegal methods to frame suspects.