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Legislators seek to ‘do well’ to unjustly imprison

Legislators seek to ‘do well’ to unjustly imprison

Robert Duboise spent 37 years after bars, including three years in the death corridor, before his exemption in 2020 in the rape and murder of a Tampa woman.

Duboise was 18 when he was arrested and 55 when he was released from the prison after the office of the state of the state of Hillsborough County concluded that his condemnation for the crimes of 1983 should be unoccupied.

The Florida Legislature in 2008 approved a law, defended by the late prosecutor and president of the State University of Florida Sandy d’Aleembre Serious crimes previously. According to the law, the exoneses found innocent by the court that the convicted are eligible for $ 50,000 for each year they served in prison. Compensation has a $ 2 million limit.

Duboise, who maintained his innocence throughout his terrible experience of a decades, was not eligible for compensation because, 17 years, he had been convicted of three unrelated serious crimes. He and his lawyers and lobbyists pro bono spent three years trying to convince Florida legislators to approve a special type of legislation known as a bill of “claim” to provide $ 1.85 million to Duboise. The legislators signed it in 2023.

Florida is the only state with an unfair imprisonment compensation program that excludes people with previous serious crimes, a restriction that makes the vast majority of exemptions in the state not eligible for payments. According to the National Registry of Exemptions, 91 people in Florida have been exempted since 1989. Five of those exoneses have received compensation.

The state representative Traci Koster, R-Tampa, is among the legislators who have tried to change the law to eliminate what is known as the provision of “clean hands”.

Koster, which sponsors a bill for the legislative session that will begin on Tuesday, said Duboise’s situation as the impulse for his interest in making the change.

“One of the first meetings that I took as an elected official was with one of these people wrongly imprisoned. And I was surprised by the level of grace that this gentleman had for our state, ”said Koster, a lawyer who was initially elected in 2020, before the Criminal Justice Subcommittee of the House of Representatives unanimously approved the proposal (HB 59) last week.

The state representative Traci Koster, R-Tampa, sponsors a bill in the next legislative session to help compensate for people who were unfairly imprisoned.

Florida Representatives House

The state representative Traci Koster, R-Tampa, sponsors a bill in the next legislative session to help compensate for people who were unfairly imprisoned.

Koster told the Chamber Panel that changing the law would help 18 exempts “who have denied compensation due to our barriers too restrictive.”

“This totals approximately 300 years of unfair imprisonment. Six of these exoneses have waited more than a decade to obtain justice, ”he said, adding that the total compensation cost for all men would be approximately $ 15 million. “And as I said during the last four years that I presented this bill, when we, as a state, we are wrong and imprisoned someone, take away their freedom, then we, as a state, need to do it well.”

The bill would also be extended from 90 days to two years per date for the exoneses to seek compensation from the State and establish a process for people who receive compensation to pay the State if they receive a civil agreement.

Duboise, 60, advocates for change.

The current law “is basically putting a goal in anyone who has been convicted of something in his life,” he told The News Service of Florida in an interview.

The story of an exonerate “should be irrelevant if they know they condemned the wrong person,” Duboise said.

People who are exonerated, like other ex-imm amates, face innumerable challenges after being released from prison. Duboise, who was released in the middle of the Covid-19 Pandemia, said it was a challenge for him to open a bank account because he lacked identification.

“I didn’t know how to use a phone or anything,” he said.

The Innocence project of Florida’s executive director, Seth Miller, whose organization was fundamental to help Duboise’s condemnation revolve and defended the 2008 law, he told the news service that state payments can help relieve the transition of exoneses to the communities.

“Our collective objective with all these men and women is to try to take them to a place of stability in all aspects of their lives. Everyone knows how financial stability is the key to everything else, ”he said.

Senator Jennifer Bradley, a Republican Republican of Fleming Island that sponsors the version of the Senate’s bill (SB 130), he said that “standardizes” compensation for the exeresses and saves them from having to pursue a bill of claim of the legislature. The special magistrates carry out exhaustive investigations of the claims law, which then have to overcome the legislative process.

“These people are obviously behind the eight ball. They have no money. They have no savings. They have lost the ability to save for retirement, have homes and build a life support. Then, they are already starting at a quite large disadvantage, “Bradley said, a lawyer, to The News Service.

Duboise’s claim bill took three years to approve. He said the legislators approved it “was very special to me.”

“I met them all once or another, and we met. They were all horrified by what happened to me. His apology mattered, ”Duboise recalled. “They were thinking that this could have happened to my son. It seemed real. “

Duboise said the money allowed him to help his sister, who has autistic children and his mother, things he always planned to do, but it took much longer to achieve it.

“It simply helps many people, but also I work every day, right?” Duboise said, a Tampa resident who is a maintenance manager for a field club in Oldsmar. “I have been since I was 18. I never learned to have fun. So, all these things that people want to do every day, I’m fine working and doing mine. “

Koster acknowledged that his proposal has not obtained enough support in the past, but continued in the hope that the legislature would sign this year.

“All I am doing is to open a door that barely cracks for these people and I’m just trying to open it a little more. And since I was chosen, it has been my mission to carry this on the finish line, ”he said.

Duboise was sentenced to death for the murder of Barbara Grams, 19. Although his sentence was then reduced to life imprisonment, it was not until 2018 that the prosecutors agreed to give the case another look.

DNA tests that were not available in the early 1980 of police who investigated the case and a forensic dentist who had testified that his teeth coincided with an alleged bite brand in the victim.

The demand was resolved last year, but the Tampa City Council voted to approve it unanimously and give Duboise $ 14 million.

Associated Press’s information was used in this report.

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