Jabbar Collins' 15 years In Jail For Wrongful Murder Conviction Settled With $10million
The city reached a $10
million settlement with a Brooklyn man who spent more than 15 years in
prison for the murder of a rabbi he did not commit, ending a bitter
legal battle that tarnished the legacy of former Brooklyn District
Attorney Charles Hynes.
Jabbar Collins |
Jabbar Collins' wrongful
conviction was one of many in Brooklyn that came to light in recent
years, but his case stood out as the shameful result of an allegedly
rogue prosecutor who railroaded Collins to solve a high-profile crime
that had struck deeply in the Orthodox Jewish community.
The city's top lawyer,
Zachary Carter, made the multimillion-dollar offer on Monday, capping
weeks of intense negotiations with a civil trial scheduled for Oct. 20
in Brooklyn Federal Court.
Collins, 42, agreed to a $3 million settlement last month from the state to settle a separate lawsuit.
"I lost some of the best
years of my life in prison and now I'm starting my life all over again
as a middle-aged man," Collins told the Daily News. "My emotions are all
over the place. A part of me wanted to lay everything out in a full
public trial and put all these people on the witness stand.I've
been litigating this for 20 years and for the first time in 20 years I
don't have to wake up in the morning having to fight that fight
anymore."
Collins' lawyer Joel
Rudin said overturning the conviction and restoring his client to
freedom is only part of the lawsuit's victory.
"I'm gratified that we were able to expose the corruption of the Hynes regime," Rudin said Tuesday.
Hynes, who was voted out
of office last November, acknowledged in a sworn deposition last year
that he no longer believed Collins was guilty of killing Rabbi Abraham
Pollack in 1994. Recently, Hynes' successor, Kenneth Thompson, told the
Daily News editorial board that Collins was innocent.
Collins’ conviction was
tossed out in 2010 by Federal Judge Dora Irizarry, who found that
then-prosecutor Michael Vecchione had coerced witnesses to finger
Collins and withheld evidence during the murder trial that would have
helped clear the accused man.
A key witness at
Collins’ murder trial testified at a hearing in Brooklyn Federal Court
in 2011 that Vecchione had threatened to beat him over the head with a
coffee table and toss him in jail if he did not implicate Collins.
Vecchione has strongly denied the allegations of wrongdoing.
Collins was able to
uncover much of the alleged misconduct on his own by filing Freedom of
Information requests from his upstate prison cell.
IN HOUSE LAWYERS PLEASE WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
Rudin said the
depositions and evidence developed as part of the suit showed Hynes had
no system for disciplining prosecutors for misconduct and civil rights
violations.
In a statement issued by
his lawyer, Hynes said he made the decision not to re-try Collins after
learning that three prosecution witnesses had recanted their testimony.culled
WOW!
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