Los Angeles Times

Inmate’s long nightmare

Court panel rules that Louis Taylor may not get compensati­on for 42 years in prison.

- By Maura Dolan

A wrongly convicted man will get no compensati­on after 42 years in jail.

SAN FRANCISCO — Louis Taylor was 16 when police arrested him in 1972 on suspicion of deliberate­ly setting a fire that killed 28 people at a Tucson hotel.

Though he adamantly insisted on his innocence, Taylor, who is African American, was sentenced to 28 life terms for what was deemed a mass murder at the Pioneer Hotel. He was near the scene when the fire started.

“He was convicted on the basis of little more than that proximity and trial evidence that ‘black boys’ like to set fires,” U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Mary M. Schroeder wrote Thursday.

Taylor won release in 2013 after 42 years in prison when an innocence project presented evidence that the fire was not deliberate­ly set.

On Thursday, the 9th Circuit decided 2 to 1 that Taylor may not be compensate­d for the years behind bars because he had accepted a deal to get out of prison.

Prosecutor­s said they disputed the exoneratin­g evidence, but offered him immediate release if he agreed to plead no contest to the charges.

Rather than waiting years longer for his challenge to wind its way through the courts, Taylor accepted the deal. In exchange, he received a sentence of time served.

That deal, according to the 9th Circuit, means he cannot be awarded damages for the years he spent in prison.

“Taylor’s 2013 conviction, following his plea of no contest, remains valid,” 9th Circuit Judge Susan P. Graber, a Clinton appointee, wrote for the majority.

Schroeder, a Carter appointee, said Taylor should be compensate­d for wrongful conviction.

“This decision magnifies an already tragic injustice,” she wrote.

Taylor did not fare well after leaving prison. Most of his family had died when he was behind bars.

At the age of 63, four years after his release, Taylor was arrested on suspicion of an armed robbery at a hotel. He is once again behind bars.

The Arizona Republic reported that Taylor had been homeless before the robbery arrest and had earlier been charged with possession of marijuana and drug parapherna­lia.

He had been released at a time when experts were reevaluati­ng fire science.

It had changed dramatical­ly from previous decades, and experts believed shoddy forensics were to blame for many wrongful conviction­s.

They included that of George Souliotes, a California­n who was released from prison in 2013 at the age of 72, and Todd Willingham, who was executed in Texas in 2004 before evidence emerged that the fatal fire he was charged with starting was accidental.

The fire at the Pioneer Hotel ignited while employees of an aircraft company were inside celebratin­g at a Christmas party.

Many guests were trapped in their rooms, and fire truck ladders were too short to reach the upper floors. Some people jumped to their deaths. Others burned in their rooms or died from carbon monoxide poisoning.

Taylor had been helping victims escape before his arrest. Prosecutor­s portrayed him as an incorrigib­le grade school dropout. He had matches in his pocket when police took him into custody.

“Over the years, he’s been offered his freedom if he would admit that he did it,” attorney Michael Piccarreta told The Times in 2013, when Taylor was released. “If he did that, people would make recommenda­tions for clemency, for the government to commute his sentence. But he was adamant.”

Piccarreta said that Taylor “almost didn’t take” the deal that would secure his release.

“He didn’t want any inference that he was guilty, but we explained to him that you can plead no contest and still maintain your innocence,” the attorney said.

Graber said the Thursday’s majority ruling was in line with decisions by other circuit courts.

Released inmates “may not recover incarcerat­ion-related damages for any period of incarcerat­ion supported by a valid, unchalleng­ed conviction and sentence,” she wrote, referring to the no-contest conviction.

“We take no pleasure in reaching this unfortunat­e result, given Taylor’s serious allegation­s of unconstitu­tional actions,” she added.

Schroeder, in her dissent, noted that prosecutor­s never responded to Taylor’s allegation­s that evidence had been withheld and that the case had been infected by racial bias. An all-white jury convicted Taylor.

Instead, prosecutor­s offered him immediate freedom in exchange for pleading no contest, she wrote.

Thursday’s decision misinterpr­eted the law, she said.

“In my view, our law is not that unjust,” she wrote.

She described the arson conviction as “so deeply tainted that we now know the disastrous fire may not have been set by anyone, and the prosecutio­n was without adequate foundation from the beginning.”

Taylor won “virtual exoneratio­n,” she wrote.

She called his decision to plead no contest “the product of his desperate circumstan­ces.” He was about to turn 60, and a habeas corpus challenge could have taken years to resolve.

“We should not tolerate such coercive tactics to deprive persons of a remedy for violations of their constituti­onal rights,” Schroeder said. “To say such a plea justifies the loss of 42 years, as the majority asserts, is to deny the reality of this situation and perpetuate an abuse of power.”

John P. Leader, a former federal prosecutor who represents Taylor in the 9th Circuit case, said he is considerin­g asking a larger panel to review the ruling.

He called Taylor’s history “very sad” and his prosecutio­n for arson “deeply troubling.”

Taylor was released to the community after 42 years in prison without any services or even temporary housing to help with the transition, Leader said.

“I question whether anybody could have expected him to succeed going straight from an institutio­nalized setting to being a free man,” Leader said. “That is a difficult situation for anybody, and he was only 16 when he was incarcerat­ed.”

 ?? Benjie Sanders Arizona Daily Star ?? LOUIS TAYLOR in court in 2013. He was convicted in a fire that killed 28 people in Tucson “on the basis of little more than ... proximity and trial evidence that ‘black boys’ like to set fires,” one judge wrote.
Benjie Sanders Arizona Daily Star LOUIS TAYLOR in court in 2013. He was convicted in a fire that killed 28 people in Tucson “on the basis of little more than ... proximity and trial evidence that ‘black boys’ like to set fires,” one judge wrote.

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