Chicago Sun-Times

COUNTY BOARD TO TAKE VOTE ON ‘ENGLEWOOD FOUR’ SETTLEMENT

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Three of the four men wrongfully convicted in the “Englewood Four” case may receive a $24 million settlement from Cook County when the matter goes before the board Thursday.

The settlement, if approved by the board, would go to Michael Saunders, Harold Richardson and Vincent Thames.

The three men, along with Terrill Swift, said they were coerced into confessing to the 1994 rape and murder of 30-year-old Nina Glover. They were between the ages of 15 and 18 at the time of their arrest in November 1994.

After DNA evidence proved the four men did not commit the crime, a judge overturned the conviction in 2011, releasing Richardson and Saunders after they’d spent nearly 17 years behind bars. Swift and Thames had already been released, though they’d served more than a dozen years by the time of their release.

Richardson’s attorney, Jon Loevy, said that while the money won’t return the time his client lost while incarcerat­ed, Richardson and the other two men “felt this was a fair amount of compensati­on.”

“Anybody that loses two decades of his life in prison for something they didn’t commit has suffered beyond measure,” Loevy said. “There’s certainly appreciati­on that the city and the county acknowledg­e the injustice and attempted to make it right.”

After the four men were exonerated, they filed lawsuits alleging police and prosecutor­s ignored evidence that linked Johnny “Maniac” Douglas, a career criminal, to the crime.

Swift’s lawsuit ended with a $6.75 settlement with the city and a $5.625 million settlement with the county in 2017, according to court records. The city handled the remaining three cases with a $24.25 million settlement.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Terrill Swift (right) speaks while (from left) Harold Richardson, Vincent Thames and Joshua Tepfer of the Center on Wrongful Conviction­s at Northweste­rn University School of Law look on after a January 2012 hearing in Chicago.
AP FILE PHOTO Terrill Swift (right) speaks while (from left) Harold Richardson, Vincent Thames and Joshua Tepfer of the Center on Wrongful Conviction­s at Northweste­rn University School of Law look on after a January 2012 hearing in Chicago.

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