There are always people who use the United States as a benchmark for the rule of law, claiming that under the American legal system, there will be no unjust imprisonment.
So, is this true?
Today, let's take a look at American-style injustice.
Recently, a 71-year-old Oklahoma man, Green Simmons, was acquitted.
However, Green Simmons has been serving 48 years in prison for the crime of **. He spent most of his life in prison.
Now that he is in the twilight of his life, the judge says he is innocent.
The U.S. ** called the Greene Simmons case the longest known wrongful imprisonment case in U.S. history.
So, can Green Simmons, who was unjustly killed, get compensation?
At least the United States did not mention compensation at all.
Let's look at another case of American-style injustice.
In 2011, 18-year-old Darion Harris of Chicago, Illinois, USA, was charged with murder with a gun, resulting in one death and one injury, and was eventually imprisoned for the crime of **.
Darien Harry has always claimed that he was wronged, and of course it is useless.
Darien Harry has not given up his efforts, and recently, Darien Harry's lawyer found in the investigation that the core and most critical witness who accused Darien Harry of guilt was actually a legally blind man.
Because the witness who identified Darien Harry had severe advanced glaucoma, it was impossible for him to see the scene of the so-called Darien Harry shooting.
Well, the accusation of this "blind man" that Darien Harry shot and killed people is extremely absurd. Naturally, the court was forced to reopen the case.
By this time, Darien Harry had been in prison for 12 years.
12 years, that's really little.
Because, in another piece of news, a man in Maryland, USA, was sentenced to prison in 1997 for committing ** crimes. Recently, it was discovered that this was an unjust case, and the man was acquitted. But this man has been in prison for 26 years, and when he was released from prison, he was 66 years old, and all his good youth was deprived by American law.
In Dallas, USA, a man was recently acquitted after 26 years in prison, and he was wrongly convicted of a crime that was also **.
This is the American-style unjust prison, and this is also the so-called American injustice.
It's a pity that the United States has no public knowledge, and there are not so many so-called die-hard lawyers who "fight for the people's lives"!Americans have been wronged for twenty or thirty years or even half a century, but they can't even rush to a hot search.
What a big bad review!