New York
Related: About this forumNew York State To Wrongfully Convicted: It's Kinda Your Fault You Confessed
Albert Samaha
In 1996, Daniel Gristwood was convicted of attempted murder. He had been accused of viciously beating his wife in the upstate New York town of Clay. Prosecutors had presented a signed confession and the jury needed just six hours of deliberation before declaring him guilty.
But it turned out that Gristwood did not attack his wife, as state troopers had coerced a false confession. In 2003, another man, Mastho Davis, confessed to the attack, and two years later Gristwood was exonerated. In 2011, a New York Court of Claims judge ordered the state to pay him $5.5 million, citing that the coerced confession had caused the nine-year wrongful imprisonment.
New York state, however, does not think it should have to pay. The attorney general's office appealed the ruling in the Appellate Division of Rochester Supreme Court. The trial began on Wednesday.
Gristwood had discovered his wife's body when he returned home from work in January 1996. She had been beaten with a hammer, but was still living. She would be brain damaged and paralyzed. She died earlier this year.
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2014/05/daniel_gristwood_wrongful_conviction_payment_state_appeal.php
gopiscrap
(23,761 posts)hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)DetlefK
(16,423 posts)This is well near the breaking-point of the human body and mind.
Imagine doing sports until you literally fall over from exhaustion. That's what it's like physically.
Imagine being so drunk or drugged that you can no longer comprehend tasks beyond your everyday-life routines. That's what it's like mentally.
Now combine them while telling a detailed story to people who don't believe you a word.
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)The state wants to get out of paying lawsuits.