top of page

Welcome to Crime and Justice News

Crime and Justice News

Jury Awards $50 Million In Illinois Wrongful Conviction Lawsuit

A jury in Chicago awarded an Illinois man who spent nearly 10 years in prison after he was wrongfully convicted of murder more than $50 million, among the largest rewards for such a case in the United States, the New York Times reports. The man, Marcel Brown, 34, of Berwyn, Ill., had filed a federal lawsuit in 2019 accusing the city of Chicago, Chicago police detectives, the county and the assistant state’s attorney of having violated his civil rights during its investigation into a 2008 killing. “It was like the first time I was able to tell my side,” Brown said on Tuesday. “It was unreal. I was crying holding my lawyer’s hand. I was just thankful that justice was finally being served.” After a two-week trial, a jury in U.S. District Court in Chicago deliberated for two hours before it unanimously agreed with Mr. Brown’s lawyers that the police had fabricated evidence and coerced his false confession to having killed a man in a park, according to court records.


According to Brown’s lawsuit, the police officers who investigated the murder in 2008 kept him in a windowless room for 34 hours, deprived him of sleep and adequate nutrition, did not allow his lawyer to meet with him and “employed illegal and coercive questioning” to force him to make a false confession. The lawsuit also accused the defendants of violating his Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process and his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. “The Chicago Police Department has for many years tolerated and even rewarded Police detectives who ‘solve’ serious crimes,” the lawsuit contended, “via coercive interrogations, frequently targeting young, African-American men and boys.” In an email, the city of Chicago said it was “reviewing the verdict and assessing its legal options.” The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office declined to comment. The Chicago Police Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment, while the officers could not be reached directly. The county also did not immediately respond to requests for comment. “I was just a kid,” Brown said in a statement from his lawyers. “They put me in a den full of lions, and they didn’t care or show remorse.”

75 views

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


A daily report co-sponsored by Arizona State University, Criminal Justice Journalists, and the National Criminal Justice Association

bottom of page