Current:Home > MarketsMentally disabled Indiana man wrongfully convicted in slaying reaches $11.7 million settlement -OceanicInvest
Mentally disabled Indiana man wrongfully convicted in slaying reaches $11.7 million settlement
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:43:02
ELKHART, Ind. (AP) — A mentally disabled man who was wrongfully convicted in the slaying of a 94-year-old woman has reached an $11.7 million settlement with a northern Indiana city and former police officers, his attorneys said Friday.
The settlement for Andrew Royer, who spent 16 years in prison after confessing to Helen Sailor’s killing, is the largest known Indiana settlement reached in a wrongful conviction case, said Elliot Slosar, one of Royer’s attorneys.
“It is no coincidence that Andy received the largest wrongful conviction settlement in Indiana history,” Slosar said in a statement. “Andy was among the most vulnerable in our society when he was coerced into a false confession and framed for a crime he did not commit.”
A jury convicted Royer of murder in 2005 and he was sentenced to 55 years in prison for the November 2002 slaying of Sailor, who was found strangled in her Elkhart apartment.
Royer’s attorneys argued on appeal that his confession to Sailor’s killing was coerced during an interrogation that stretched over two days and that an Elkhart police detective exploited their client’s mental disability.
Royer was released from prison in 2020 after a special judge granted his request for a new trial. The judge found that Royer’s confession was “unreliable” and “involuntary” and said investigators fabricated evidence, forced a witness to give false testimony and withheld exculpatory evidence from his attorneys.
After prosecutors sought to reverse the judge’s decision, the Indiana Court of Appeals found that Royer’s rights were violated and that the detective committed perjury when he testified during the trial that Royer knew details that only the killer would have known.
In 2021, prosecutors decided not to try Royer again, and the case against him was dismissed.
Royer’s attorneys sued the city of Elkhart, its police department and others in 2022. The settlement announced Friday resolves allegations against the city and the police department.
Royer’s claims against Elkhart County officials, including the county prosecutor, are still pending.
Messages seeking comment on the settlement were left Friday with the Elkhart mayor’s office and the city’s legal department by The Associated Press.
Royer, who lives in Goshen, told The Indianapolis Star that the settlement money will “change my life.”
“I am now financially set for the rest of my life. I hope to help my family as much as I can,” he said.
The settlement with Royer is the latest instance in which the city of Elkhart has agreed to pay a large sum to settle allegations of troubling police misconduct.
Last year, the city agreed to pay a Chicago man $7.5 million to settle his wrongful conviction lawsuit. Keith Cooper was pardoned after he spent more than seven years in prison for an armed robbery he did not commit.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- TikTok sees a surge of misleading videos that claim to show the invasion of Ukraine
- That big deal for Nvidia to buy computer chip giant Arm has come crashing down
- Uber adds passengers, food orders amid omicron surge
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- When Tracking Your Period Lets Companies Track You
- Are you over the pandemic? We want to hear about your worries or hopes
- If you're clinging to an old BlackBerry, it will officially stop working on Jan. 4
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Credit Suisse faulted over probe of Nazi-linked bank accounts
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- See the Everything Everywhere All at Once Cast Reunite in Teaser for New Disney+ Series
- For $186,000, this private Scottish island could be yours — but don't count on being able to live there
- How some states are trying to upgrade their glitchy, outdated health care technology
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Police solve 1964 rape and murder of girl with help of DNA and a student
- Police document: 19-year-old Elizabeth Holmes reported sexual assault from Stanford
- How Gotham Knights Differs From DC Comics' Titans and Doom Patrol
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Jonathan Van Ness Honors Sweet Queer Eye Alum Tom Jackson After His Death
Apple's Tim Cook wins restraining order against woman, citing trespassing and threats
A court upheld the firing of 2 LAPD officers who ignored a robbery to play Pokémon Go
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
Elizabeth Holmes trial: Jury is deadlocked on 3 of 11 fraud charges
President Biden says a Russian invasion of Ukraine 'would change the world'
China approves coal power surge, risking climate disasters, Greenpeace says