His conviction was overturned after 35 years wrongfully served. State
law caps his compensation at 14 years.
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[March 01, 2024]
By DILPREET RAJU
Capitol News Illinois
draju@capitolnewsillinois.com
In December, 57-year-old Brian Beals spent Christmas with his sister
Pattilyn for the first time 35 years.
Beals was exonerated and freed from Robinson Correctional Center in
southeastern Illinois on Dec. 13 after a Cook County circuit court judge
vacated his conviction and dismissed charges against him.
“In that moment, I was just trying to process how this all happened,”
Beals told Capitol News Illinois. “Prison erases your ability to have
hope.”
In 1990, a jury convicted Beals of first-degree murder for a shooting
that killed a 6-year-old boy and injured his mother in Chicago’s
Englewood neighborhood. He maintained his innocence as he was sentenced
to 80 years in prison – essentially the rest of his life.
But last year, new evidence presented by the Illinois Innocence Project
prompted a reexamination of Beals’ case. A Judge found the assigned
detective had a pattern of police misconduct, and newly enhanced
photographic evidence showed Beals was likely the target, rather than
the perpetrator, of gunfire.
Beals said he’s taking time to celebrate but is also now properly
grieving family he lost while locked up.
“I’m now the second-oldest person in my nuclear family; it’s
dramatically different,” Beals said. “I lost a brother, my mother, I
lost my aunt, my uncle. They all passed away while I was incarcerated.”
But for those years he lost in prison, Beals’ exoneration doesn’t mean
any automatic reimbursement from the state of Illinois. And the journey
to get any sort of restitution for his decades of wrongful imprisonment
is complicated, and one Beals believes is unfair.
Because of the way the system is structured, Beals’ potential
compensation essentially stopped accruing after he served 14 years. A
new bill in the General Assembly would seek to remove the roughly
$200,000 cap on payments to exonerees that maxes out at the 14-year
mark, replacing it with a payout of $50,000 per year, capped at just
over $2 million.
Illinois’ compensation practices
The path for most exonerees to find some version of justice travels
through the Illinois Court of Claims, where Illinoisans can file claims
to recover damages against a state agency or employee. Claimants seeking
money for a wrongful conviction must first obtain a certificate of
innocence from the circuit court in which they were convicted; something
Beals’ lawyers say they see no major challenges in obtaining.
It’s a process that more people are undertaking in Illinois than in any
other state in the nation. Illinois leads the U.S. in wrongful
convictions, with 531 exonerees on record at the National Registry of
Exonerations, which is managed by multiple universities and is the only
national database tracking wrongful convictions.
Despite only having about 4 percent of the country’s population,
Illinois is responsible for 16 percent of overturned wrongful
convictions in the U.S. Over 90 percent of exonerees in Illinois are
Black or Latino compared to the nationwide rate of 65 percent. In
January, Illinois saw four more men exonerated – all charged with murder
in Cook County.
But as the state is a national leader in wrongfully convicting people,
it’s near the bottom of all states in reimbursing exonerees for the time
they wrongfully served.
Illinois’ current pay structure allows the court of claims to award
exonerees at their discretion up to a certain amount, limiting maximum
payouts based on time served.
For exonerees who served less than five years in prison, the maximum
payout, which has increased incrementally to adjust for inflation, is
about $85,000. Those who served up to 14 years can receive around
$170,000, and anyone who served more than 14 years is limited to a total
of about $200,000.
For Beals, Illinois’ statute essentially dictates that the court of
claims cannot reimburse him for the last two decades of his wrongful
sentence, due to the 14-year cap. A maximum payout would equate to less
than $6,000 per year spent in prison, well below even half of the
federal poverty line.
Beals said the current structure doesn’t provide justice.
“There needs to be more attention on this issue,” he said. “It’s not
fair, obviously. You’re compensated less (per year) for the time you’re
incarcerated.”
Josh Tepfer, a lawyer at the Exoneration Project – a legal group
providing free aid to those claiming innocence – said he recently
represented a man in a similar position as Beals.
“Francisco Benitez, my client, just spent over 30 years in prison,”
Tepfer said. “Now he can only get the same amount as someone who did 14
years, so that doesn't make a lot of sense.”
For the 373 claimants that have already been compensated under state
statute, Illinois has paid out average sums of about $112,000 per
exoneree, according to the latest data compiled by Jeffrey Gutman,
director of George Washington University Law School’s Public Justice
Advocacy Clinic.
That comes to an average of $15,000 per year imprisoned, the second
lowest amount per year of all states that have paid out statutory claims
to date.
“The way that Illinois has done it has always been unfair to people who
have been in prison the longest,” Gutman said.
Illinois’ proposed fix
Last year the Illinois House unanimously approved a measure that would
increase statutory compensation for those who have been wrongfully
convicted to $50,000 per year of wrongful imprisonment, maxing out at
the $2 million cap that otherwise governs court of claims payouts. It
would apply to all pending and future claims.
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Brian Beals, 57, sits in his sister’s home in January, one month
after being released from prison after serving 35 years for a
wrongful conviction. Beals was studying at Southern Illinois
University when he was arrested for a murder he did not commit in
1988. (Capitol News Illinois Photo by Dilpreet Raju)
It was one of two bills regarding exoneration that cleared the House
unanimously last year, but both are awaiting a committee assignment in
the Senate. Those measures – House Bill 1015 and House Bill 1016 – have
since been combined into a single amendment to HB 1015. Capitol News
Illinois was not able to schedule an interview with the bill’s Senate
sponsors, including lead sponsor Sen. Elgie Sims, D-Chicago, despite
numerous outreach attempts over several weeks.
The proposed amendment to HB 1015 offers partial-year reimbursement and
$25,000 per year awaiting trial, and it indexes pay to increase with
inflation each year up to 5 percent.
Should it become law, about 40 exonerees would be eligible for an
increased payout in addition to the roughly 20 state claims currently
pending in the Illinois Court of Claims, according to the National
Registry of Exonerations.
Gutman said while other states that have upped their pay structures have
applied the changes retroactively, Illinois would face a unique
challenge in doing so because almost 400 claimants have received
compensation over the years.
Louisiana, which has almost 90 exonerees, changed its pay structure in
2022. The legislature addressed equity by allowing prior exonerees one
year to apply for supplemental pay at the new rate.
A rigid $50,000 per year would not only be a significant change in pay
but a shift of power from the court of claims. Under current law, the
court of claims has discretion over the award, only up to the stated
limits.
While Tepfer said the court of claims can be “often very generous”
within the parameters of the law, it’s ultimately the statutory limits
that make the current law unfair. He is supportive of the proposed
change.
“It will up what they receive, and I think that's warranted. I mean,
$50,000, that's a pretty small amount annually…that doesn’t even account
for all the mental anguish and time away from family,” he said.
Lauren Kaeseberg, co-director of the Illinois Innocence Project and
someone who represented Beals, said raising exoneree pay is about doing
what is right. She and Beals spent a week in January in Springfield
speaking to lawmakers about challenges exonerees face.
“The state is acknowledging that ‘We got this wrong and here is this
amount of money that's going to compensate you for the time that you
were taken and held captive for all those years,’” Kaeseberg said. “We
need to compensate people at an amount that is respectful and that
acknowledges their worth.”
Other avenues
Those seeking compensation beyond what the court of claims can offer
also have the right to sue in civil court. Likely due to the restrictive
nature of Illinois’ compensation structure, 473 exonerees have filed
civil claims for damages compared to 404 who have filed direct claims
through state law.
Still, exonerees interested in receiving pay outside of the court of
claims face a more onerous process that can drag on for years and
requires a higher burden of proof. These suits usually take place in
federal court and often focus on allegations of misconduct, rather than
compensating exonerees for time unjustly served. Awards are usually paid
out by taxpayers through the parties named responsible, such as county
or city police department. Some municipalities, including Chicago, have
wrongful conviction insurance to cover parts of the payout.
But less than half of all U.S. plaintiffs who have been wrongfully
convicted and sought pay have received any compensation, according to
the National Registry of Exonerations. In Illinois, civil suits have a
far lower success rate than statutory claims. Most exonerees that seek
pay from the court of claims receive it, but only about 30 percent of
all Illinois exonerees who filed cases in civil court have won them.
Illinois faces a backlog with almost 279 pending wrongful conviction
civil cases, nearly seven times more than the next closest state, New
York at 41.
But with an average payout of more than $5.5 million, the 123 successful
civil claimants in Illinois received millions of dollars beyond what the
court of claims could pay out.
Brian Beals is still waiting to see the outcome of HB 1015 before making
any claims of his own.
He should have no problems obtaining a certificate of innocence since
the Cook County State Attorney’s Office issued a celebratory news
release the day Beals was released. But Kaeseberg said that is not the
same for all counties or cases. Some prosecutors, she said, would prefer
to not have a case they litigated result in an incorrect verdict.
For now, Beals said he is trying to understand technology’s many
advances but is happy to be spending time with family during what has
been a “surreal” couple of months.
“I had three generations of family with me on Christmas Day and I'm very
fortunate to have that experience, my first Christmas at home in 35
years,” Beals said. “I’m catching up.”
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the
Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association.
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