Glynn Simmons, 71, who was released in July after prosecutors agreed that key evidence in his case was not turned over to his defense lawyers, was ruled innocent Tuesday.

“This court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the offense for which Mr. Simmons was convicted, sentenced and imprisoned… was not committed by Mr. Simmons,” according to the ruling by Oklahoma County District Judge Amy Palumbo.

The ruling makes Simmons eligible for up to $175,000 in compensation from the state for wrongful conviction and opens the door for a federal lawsuit against Oklahoma City and law enforcement involved in Simmons’ arrest and conviction, defense attorney Joe Norwood said Wednesday.

Compensation, though, is likely years away, Norwood said and Simmons is currently living on donations while undergoing treatment for cancer that was detected after his release from prison.

“Glynn is having to live off of GoFundMe, that’s literally how the man is surviving right now, paying rent, buying food,” Norwood said. “Getting him compensation, and getting compensation is not for sure, is in the future and he has to sustain himself now.”

  • @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    Given how long he was in prison this is close to edging the death penalty in the slowest most painful way possible. Which is by keeping you incarcerated until the day you die…

    • Herbal Gamer
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      91 year ago

      I’d take the chair before spending 50 years in prison, especially if I didn’t even do anything.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I have no words…

    Edit: It always amazes me when small government advocates who believe government is fundamentally incompetent rant and rave about the necessity and righteousness of government being able to death penalty you (or the “right” people)…

  • KptnAutismus
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    171 year ago

    now imagine he was executed for it. you can free a man after 50 years, but you can’t revive him.

      • Flying Squid
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        161 year ago

        I’m sure the people on the reservations are decent. Impoverished, but decent.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        We have very lax medical marijuana laws, a dispensary on every corner, and cheap weed.

        We sure do have a lot of willfully stupid people, though.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          It would be nice if you’d amend those lax medical marijuana laws to allow us Texas residents in on the deal.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            Nope. You guys have been telling us how much better you are since 1909. You get your own weed. 🤣

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Not really, just decent ranching land mainly. There’s a reason the US was willing to briefly give it away to the Native Americans.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 year ago

      A while back I had a cousin living in Oklahoma. He had some troubles and was hanging out with some not great people. An acquaintance’s gf/wife ended up dead and the guy pointed his finger at my cousin. He was held in jail charged with murder, but all his hearings kept getting kicked down the road. After a year they released him and told him to GTFO of the state and never return.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Which, to me, screams that they found evidence he didnt do it, but didnt want to invest money in a trial to prove his innocence, or on finding the actual suspect.

  • Transporter Room 3
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    481 year ago

    If the state stole 50 years of my life and offered me 150k as an apology, I know what candles I’d be lighting.

    Shit like this is Fucking disgusting.

    • Alien Nathan Edward
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      201 year ago

      the fact that they’re gonna fight him on it until he dies is part of the fun, too. he’ll never see a nickel of the pittance he’s entitled to because the state arbitrarily stole and discarded most of his life.

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    That sum is way too low, way too late and way too uncertain. What a fucking shame. He should spend the rest of his life in luxury with every wish fulfilled without even thinking about it. What a fucking shame!

  • @[email protected]
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    441 year ago

    I don’t understand why cases like this aren’t the only rationale needed to abolish the death penalty.

    Also, that poor man - I hope he is able to live as happy a life as can be expected given the injustice that he endured.

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      Because death penalty supporters are okay with killing innocents if they get to feel retribution and kill someone, regardless of “justice”.

      • @[email protected]
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        141 year ago

        And prosecutors who intentionally withhold evidence in cases like this and death penalty cases are also “taking someone’s life”, so to speak. They’re no better than cold-blooded killers.

        (Speaking of which, if only the State of Florida would stop f**king around with Tommy Zeigler.)

        • Xhieron
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          1 year ago

          Lawyer here: Lock’em up. Maybe this is a radical position, but these kinds of cases demonstrate the need to do away with absolute immunity for prosecutors and judges. Qualified immunity would be more appropriate, and unlike with police, there’s never a question whether judges and prosecutors know their obligations. If you withhold evidence in order to take another man’s freedom and it can be proved against you, you should go to the penitentiary, full stop. And if you sell kids to prisons in exchange for kickbacks, you should be hanged.

          This is part of the problem with having a self-regulated profession. As much as I appreciate that the ethical rules to which I’m beholden are created by people who are similarly educated and have experience with the practice of the profession, we’re well past the point that good lawyers and judges need to be holding bad ones genuinely accountable. 50 years of a man’s life isn’t worth a law license or a term on the bench. It’s not even fucking close. If you want prosecutors to stop fucking around with evidence and you want judges to stop taking bribes, their legal responsibilities need to have the same teeth as the ones they wield against others. You perpetrate a fraud on the court and it costs an innocent man 50 years–you go to jail for 50 years. Lex talionis.

          And if that kind of standard means people don’t want to be prosecutors? Well, people who want to be able to withhold evidence shouldn’t be prosecutors!

      • @[email protected]
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        91 year ago

        No it’s because it should only be used in the most cut and dry cases.

        Cases like Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy, Hitler, Putin, Stalin.

        Killing someone because they killed one person or did some heinous thing once is not a good solution.

        Killing someone who has shown they do not care about human life to the point of killing multiple people either directly or indirectly is completely morally sound.

  • Rosco
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    281 year ago

    State takes your freedom for the majority of your life on a mistake, the reparation is not even enough to buy a fucking house, and it has to wait years for it. If they wanted to make fun of him one last time, they should have just given him a “Get Well Soon” card for his cancer, that would have been less cruel.

    • @[email protected]
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      261 year ago

      Let’s treat imprisonment of the innocent as if it were their job while they were in prison.

      Since they can’t ever leave they’re always engaged to wait so need to be paid 24/7, which comes out to 232 hours a week after the overtime bump. Take that money, throw it in the market with an average 5% return and run the numbers

      At 7.25 (current minimum wage) it’d be around 8 million.

      Take the hourly rate of the median individual income, and it’s 80 million.

      The state apparently values an innocent person’s freedom at 17 cents an hour.

  • TechyDad
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    751 year ago

    $175,000 for 50 years? He’s 71 now so he went into prison at 21. That means he spent virtually his entire life in prison. He could have done so many things, but instead he needed to sit in a prison cell. All because he was wrongly convicted.

    And because I’m a math geek and need to figure this stuff out, $175,000 over 50 years is $3,500 a year. If we calculate what he would have earned at the federal minimum wage over that time frame (ignoring bank account interest or inflation just to keep things simple), we’d get over $500,000.

    They’re giving him a third of what he should have earned at bare minimum. (And that ignores all the other horrible things involved with being wrongfully imprisoned for 50 years.)

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      Yeah. The sum they owe him should be a “whoops we fucked up badly, sorry. Take these 175k while we think about what you could have made if we didn’t. It’s just to get you started, there’ll be more next month.”

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      When you did your calculations did you factor in the change in minimum wage and inflation? I’m sure the state owes him more than $500k.

  • @[email protected]
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    681 year ago

    So the prosecutor is going to be held liable for stealing 50 years of this man’s life, right?

    • themeatbridge
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      631 year ago

      Compensation, though, is likely years away, Norwood said and Simmons is currently living on donations while undergoing treatment for cancer that was detected after his release from prison.

      Reminds me of that joke, what did the wrongfully convicted man, who spent 50 years in prison because a prosecutor hid exonerating evidence, get for Christmas? Cancer.

      • @[email protected]
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        191 year ago

        The world is a chaotic, horrid unforgiving place. Have fun while you can because any second now who the fuck knows what’s going to happen to any of us.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I get what you’re saying, but I’ve also seen similar sentiment used to justify cruelty, as if the unpredictable nature of existence somehow absolves people of actively contributing to the misery of others.