Charlotte Criminal Lawyer Brad Smith answers the question: “Do I need to hire an attorney if I have been falsely accused?”
Criminal courts use proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the highest legal standard of proof, to ensure that people are imprisoned for actually committing a crime rather than merely being suspected of committing it.
While you cannot get back the time lost from your family and ordinary life, seeking a wrongful incarceration lawsuit can help:
- Hold the state and government agencies accountable for violating your rights;
- Protect other innocent people by preventing future injustice; and
- Obtain financial compensation.
Wrongful Incarceration in North Carolina
In 1976, a man of Concord, North Carolina, was accused of raping a woman after she told the police that an unknown man had sexually assaulted her in her home. The man was sentenced to life imprisonment. As reported by the Black Enterprise, the man was recently released after 44 years in prison for a wrongfully convicted crime.
The man’s conviction was vacated by the state of North Carolina. U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge explained that the state vacated the man’s conviction after “a trickle of post-trial disclosures has unearthed a troubling and striking pattern of deliberate police suppression of material evidence.” The evidence included fingerprints and samples of semen from the crime scene that did not belong to the convicted man, but these and other details were deliberately withheld by law enforcement.
At this point, it is unclear whether the man, who was wrongfully incarcerated for over four decades, would pursue compensation from the state of North Carolina.
How can You Obtain Compensation for Wrongful Incarceration in North Carolina?
If you were exonerated after wrongful incarceration, you could be able to pursue compensation by:
- Seeking an award of statutory damage from the state of North Carolina. Under North Carolina General Statute Section 148-82, a person who was wrongfully convicted or incarcerated must file a claim with the North Carolina Industrial Commission.
- Filing a civil rights lawsuit against government entities and other defendants, including law enforcement agencies, police officers, officials, prosecutors, or others.
Under the North Carolina law, a person who was wrongfully incarcerated for a felony in a state prison or jail but has been pardoned or declared innocent after the conviction is entitled to financial compensation. In order to obtain compensation from the state of North Carolina, the exonerated individual must file a claim with the state’s Industrial Commission within five years of being issued a pardon.
In addition, a wrongfully incarcerated individual can bring a separate civil rights lawsuit in a state or federal court, regardless of whether they obtained financial compensation or not. These lawsuits have nothing to do with claims handled by the Industrial Commission. A civil lawsuit can be pursued against at-fault parties such as law enforcement agencies, government entities, and others.
If you or your loved one were wrongfully convicted of a crime or wrongfully incarcerated in North Carolina, talk to a skilled criminal defense lawyer right away. Contact our attorneys at Arnold & Smith, PLLC, to discuss the most appropriate course of action in your particular situation. Call our lawyers at Arnold & Smith, PLLC, at (704) 370-2828 to evaluate your options or fill out our contact form. Now taking cases throughout North Carolina with offices in Uptown Charlotte, Mooresville and Monroe.
The criminal defense attorneys at Arnold & Smith, PLLC make it their mission to zealously defend their clients on a wide range of criminal matters at both the state and federal levels. These matters may include any charge from traffic offenses; DWI/DUI; drug charges (from simple possession to possession with intent to distribute and trafficking); gun permit denials; weapons offenses; and property crimes (larceny, breaking and entering, robbery, fraud, embezzlement, white collar offenses); to sexually related offenses (indecent exposure; sexual assault, crimes against nature, removal from sex offender registry); and violent crimes (domestic violence; assault; manslaughter; homicide, murder). Other legal issues that Arnold & Smith, PLLC criminal clients may be facing include restraining orders, restraining order and probation violations, expungements; appeals; and immigration issues related to criminal charges. Our criminal defense attorneys are passionate about ensuring that individuals empower themselves by being informed about their constitutional rights, and stand at the ready to fight in the defense of those facing criminal charges.
Source:
https://www.ncleg.net/enactedlegislation/statutes/html/bysection/chapter_148/gs_148-82.html
Image Credit:
https://www.freeimages.com/photo/cell-phone-world-1552399
See Our Related Video from our YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/ArnoldSmithPLLC/videos
See Our Related Blog Posts:
‘West Memphis Three’ Set Free But Not Exonerated