USA TODAY US Edition

For wrongly convicted, only a ticket home

Government frees inmates but offers little help

- Brad Heath

Former inmates abruptly freed after spending up to six years in federal prison even though they were “legally innocent” are coming home with less help than the government typically provides the guilty after they are released.

Most of them have received little more than a bus ticket. Federal law does not require the government to help them search for jobs or find basic necessitie­s such as clothing and a place to live, assistance the guilty routinely get during their post-prison supervisio­n, partly to keep them from returning to crime.

Judges in North Carolina have so far ordered the government to release at least 17 inmates in one of the largest episodes in recent memory of federal prisoners having their conviction­s overturned. It follows a USA TODAY investigat­ion this year that identified 60 people incarcerat­ed for gun possession even though a court later determined that they had not committed a federal crime. The U.S. Justice Department had originally argued that they should remain in prison anyway, but reversed its position last month “in the interests of justice,” according to court records.

Neither the courts nor the Justice Department could estimate how many more prisoners might ultimate- ly be released. Dozens of other inmates from North Carolina still are waiting for judges to decide whether their conviction­s should be thrown out, too.

“A lot of people would say they need help finding a job, but it’s really they need help finding underwear,” said Theresa Newman, who runs a wrongful conviction­s program at Duke University’s law school. “At a minimum, the state and the federal government should help innocent people make the transition out.” The Justice Department would not comment on the record about help for the freed prisoners, saying instead that it is trying to make sure innocent prisoners are freed. Spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said prosecutor­s “are working with the court, the probation office and the federal public defenders to ensure that these matters are addressed as effectivel­y and quickly as possible.”

At least 10 states provide services such as job training, health care and housing assistance to wrongfully convicted prisoners, according to an Innocence Project study. Most states and the federal government also provide some help in finding social services once someone serves his full prison sentence and is released on parole or supervisio­n, though that help is not available to people whose conviction­s are overturned.

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