In 1987, Alfredo Domenech was accused of murder, and in 1988 he was sentenced to life in prison. He served 18 years of that sentence before his trial was reopened and the charges were dismissed.
“I still feel like it was yesterday, and every morning I
wake up and feel like it’s the same day, like I never came from that moment,”
Domenech said Tuesday on the steps of the Capitol in Harrisburg. “I’m still
stuck in the past. We need compensation to start moving on.”
Domenech was at the Capitol along with a coalition of other
exonerees and advocates — the It Could Happen to You coalition — asking
lawmakers to pass a bill that would grant state compensation for the wrongfully
convicted.
Pennsylvania is one of 13 states that does not have a
program to compensate people who serve time in prison on wrongful convictions, reported The Pennsylvania Capital-Star.
“Some of those folks lose decades of their lives behind
prison bars, missing out on milestones and memories with their loved ones and
friends, and losing out on meaningful work opportunities,” Sen. Camera
Bartolotta (R-Washington) the only lawmaker at the press conference with
Domenech. “Our time to act is right now.”
Though the exonerees received a private audience with House
Speaker Joanna McClinton (D-Philadelphia), they acknowledged it would be an uphill
battle.
Bills that would create compensation for the wrongfully
convicted have been introduced in previous sessions, but never passed.
Jeffrey Deskovic described the difficulty of reentering
society after a wrongful conviction. After serving 16 years for murder, he was
exonerated following DNA testing.
“I was always passed over for gainful employment,” Deskovic
said. “It felt like employers always wanted someone who had job experience.
They didn’t have any patience for on-the-job training.”
But fortunately for Deskovic, he was living in New York, one
of 37 states, along with Washington, D.C. with programs that provide
compensation for the wrongfully convicted.
Still, it took five years for him to see those funds, and in
that time he saw how difficult it would be for others who didn’t receive some
form of payment.
After he was compensated, Deskovic got a masters degree from
the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and started a nonprofit, the Jeffrey
Deskovic Foundation, to help other exonerees.
“There’s no amount of money that’s worth being wrongfully
imprisoned, yet compensation is an indispensable tool in terms of putting your
life back together,” Deskovic said.
Teri Himebaugh, executive director of the Philadelphia-based
Police Transparency Project, said that, in some cases, Pennsylvania’s lack of
compensation can actually cost taxpayers.
Since 2016, she said, 49 defendants have been exonerated
just in Philadelphia. With no wrongful conviction compensation law, some of
those defendants have gone on to sue the city.
Since 1992, Philadelphia has paid out over $60 million in
civil settlements.
“All in all, it is not just an ethical and responsible thing
to do to offer compensation,” Himebaugh said. “It is a financially stable and
responsible thing to do as well.”
The group is asking for a law that would allow wrongfully
convicted people to get $100,000 per year served on death row, $75,000 per year
served not on death row, and $50,000 per year of time on parole.
Last year, a bill that would have done just that was introduced by
Rep. Regina Young (D-Philadelphia). It was reported out of committee, but
tabled before a final vote on the floor.
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