Innocent Man Spent 30 Years in Prison, Died a Year After His Release. Now the State Might Finally Pay
Louisiana denied modest financial compensation to Glenn Ford because he couldn't prove his "factual innocence."

In 2014, Glenn Ford walked out of prison

after spending 30 years on death row for a murder he didn't commit, only to die of cancer a little more than a year later.
Louisiana law allows for exonerated ex-prisoners to receive compensation of up to $330,000 (which wouldn't even be all that much if it were a life insurance policy), but Ford was denied the right to collect what little money the state legally owed to him, because he could not prove he was "factually innocent."
That's right, you're innocent until proven guilty before a trial, but if falsely convicted AND exonerated in Louisiana, you must prove your innocence after the fact.
The man who put Ford on death row, former Caddo Parish prosecutor A.M. "Marty" Stroud III, wrote in an a letter to the Shreveport Times last year that during the trial, "I was arrogant, judgmental, narcissistic and very full of myself. I was not as interested in justice as I was in winning."
Stroud says he relied on "junk science" in prosecuting Ford, and that after learning of the results of a 2013 investigation into the murder in question, he believed Ford likely shouldn't have even been arrested at all. Stroud pleaded for Ford's forgiveness, begged the state to do the right thing by compensating him in full, and even repudiated the death penalty itself.
Ford is gone now, but there's new hope that his family may yet enjoy some justice. The News Star reports:
State Rep. Cedric Glover has filed a bill that would provide compensation to the family of the late Glenn Ford, who was released from prison after serving 30 years on death row after being wrongly convicted of a Shreveport murder.
Glover, who is on his second stint as a state legislator after serving as mayor of Shreveport, told Gannett Louisiana:
I couldn't in good conscience return to this body and not try to address what I believe is a grave injustice and a misinterpretation of the law.
Most reasonable folks find it an injustice that he and his family wouldn't qualify for this compensation…It's something highly regrettable, and it's incumbent on me to step forward and offer a legislative remedy.
It's absolutely tragic and preposterous that all a person whose life was stolen from them is entitled to is $330,000. But if Glover's bill passes, at least Ford's family can take heart that the state paid, however pathetically, for the crime it committed against their departed loved one.
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"Ford is gone now, but there's new hope that his family may yet enjoy some justice."
Not in this life they won't.
"Stroud pleaded for Ford's forgiveness, begged the state to do the right thing by compensating him in full, and even repudiated the death penalty itself."
...and volunteered to serve a 30-year sentence himself?
And not in a federal tennis prison. Oh, no...
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The prosecutor deserves the punishment that would have been inflicted upon his innocent victim.
Or to at least have his bank accounts emptied and transferred to the family.
Well he shouldn't have gone and gotten himself wrongly accused!
I couldn't in good conscience return to this body and not try to address what I believe is a grave injustice and a misinterpretation of the law.
Fuck.
You.
You wrongfully prosecuted the guy and you think it would be a grave injustice for somebody else to not pay for your crime? How's about you do something that keeps this shit from happening over and over and over? Introduce some real penalties for prosecutorial (and police and judicial) misconduct and fund the public defender's office the same as the prosecutor's for starters.
Lawyers write laws, and you think they are going to make rules to punish themselves?
The guy who said that was not the same guy who prosecuted Ford.
If you can't do the time, don't get falsely accused and wrongly convicted of the crime. Or, alternately, if you do the crime, make sure you're a prosecutor so you don't do any time.
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I'm not sure how the state gets to limit their own liability in this way. It is kinda like a company putting limits on their product liability. "Sure, our mower has a tendency to throw of the blade and cut off legs, but our limited liability policy clearly states you are only entitled to a free replacement blade."
Should the federal courts be the ones to decide when a state is the defendant? It seems like a pretty extreme home court advantage for the state, having their own courts deciding their liability.
Well, to an extent, private corporations do have limited liability. At least the favored ones who donate to the right people do. Regulations act as liability shields for corporations all the time. Individuals don't get to sue. The government is the final word there.
The state can grant itself that power because FYTW. There's no real logic behind it.
Simple. We're talking about law here, not justice. They're the sovereign. Rex non potest peccare.
Not according to the 11th Amendment.
I don't see anywhere in the article where Marty stepped up and paid the family himself.
The State is the root of all evil.
Anyone involved with putting this man in jail should be thrown in jail for life.
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