gut;1459390 wrote:Agreed with everything you wrote. But I'd point out that $150k was a fraction of what he got/will get. Between the legal expenses and lost income during the trial years she might have otherwise been entitled to in a divorce, I think that is a reasonable amount.
But there should also be some sort of statute of limitations. 5 years is a lot different than 24 years later. That's what gives me pause. Otherwise I think it's likely they drained their savings and probably sold their house or took out a second mortgage to pay his legal defenses, money she COULD have gotten if she had filed for divorce.
Also, while $2M plus an annuity might be the correct "calculation" for lost wages, that award seems light given the 24 years of false imprisonment (i.e. no punitive damages). And what absolute crap to be convicted primarily on eye witness testimony (he must not have had a very good or high-priced legal team).
$150k is what she was awarded, I'm curious how much she actually sued for.
And I don't think being the spouse of someone in jail is nearly as taxing on a person as opposed to actually being in jail, so I'm not sure if "half" is the correct benchmark. But then again, that time period would have been during the marriage so half of his is hers. Still doesn't seem right though under that theory.
I think it depends on what the rationale for the compensation is. If the compensation is for lost wages, then yes, she has a legitimate argument for some compensation. But if the rationale is for time served, then she didn't serve any, so she shouldn't receive it. That is unless the divorce law would consider compensation that comes after the divorce for something that happened during the marriage (extremely late back pay or settlement of a suit) as part of the marital property. It does bring to light that maybe the lawmakers should add a provision for some kind of award for spouses of wrongly incarcerated as well.
As far as his conviction, before DNA and even still with all that we know, eye witness testimony was/is very powerful in a court room. Unfortunately it's believability in the mind of jurors is disproportionate to it's accuracy.