North Carolina
Related: About this forumPardoned brothers would pay lawyers $400K under settlement
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) A federal judge has rejected a deal allowing lawyers for two wrongfully imprisoned men to claim $400,000 of a $1 million settlement with investigators.
Judge Terrence Boyle issued a written order denying the settlement agreement for half brothers Henry McCollum and Leon Brown, men with low IQs who wrongly spent three decades behind bars for the killing of an 11-year-old girl. The settlement amount was revealed in newly unsealed documents after a coalition of news organizations asked that they be released.
Boyle's order from Wednesday also names a court-appointed advocate for McCollum because of the judge's concerns about his competency. The order notes that a settlement agreement can be filed again once the advocate gets involved. A lawyer previously arranged for Brown to have a similar advocate.
McCollum and Brown, who were released from prison in 2014 because of DNA evidence and later pardoned, had filed a civil lawsuit alleging local and state authorities violated their civil rights. They notified the court in April that they had reached a settlement with the town of Red Springs and two of its former investigators.
Read more: http://www.journalnow.com/news/state_region_ap/pardoned-brothers-would-pay-lawyers-k-under-settlement/article_66227355-0b6a-5726-95ce-8463b56ba4a6.html
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)TexasTowelie
(116,496 posts)but a 40% payout does seem excessive. Considering the difficulty that both men will have finding employment, the $300K that they will receive won't last that long.
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)time invested, other income sacrificed, etc., even googled briefly and didn't find comment. But the judge knows and is sticking his finger in, so you're probably right. These poor men. I really, really hope they receive investment counseling. Income from a settlement wisely invested might support them for life.
I wondered if through some legal twist or deal they might qualify for the SS they were denied to opportunity to pay into, or some other government assistance. SS for these situations seems even more unlikely than before, given what I didn't find (like howls of outrage from the far right), but I did learn older prisoners can't collect SS while in prison, only once they're released.