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Lawmakers reevaluating compensation for individuals who have been exonerated

Lawmakers are expected to make a decision soon about whether to propose changes to Montana’s compensation for those exonerated of a crime.

Duration:
1m
Broadcast on:
29 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

With Montana News, I'm Eleanor Smith. Lawmakers are expected to make a decision soon about whether to propose changes to Montana's compensation for those exonerated of a crime. An interim committee in September will vote on recommended policy changes ahead of next year's legislative session. Montana's Law and Justice Interim Committee Tuesday touched back on an almost five-year-long discussion involving lawmakers and state officials over how Montana should handle compensation for those exonerated and wrongful conviction cases. Republican Representative Barry Usher from Billings spoke in the hearing. "I think all of us agree that we need to do something. It's just the mechanics of it that we're fighting about." Montana's compensation law for the wrongfully convicted expired earlier this year. An attempt to keep the program going with some changes was vetoed in 2023. Both policies had raised concerns about how compensation is paid for between the state and counties and requirements for people to prove their innocence in order to receive the money. Amy sings in the timber is the executive director of the Montana Innocence Project. She attended the hearing and says she's hopeful a compromise can be found. "Our greatest interest is that exonaries receive meaningful compensation through a process that causes them the least amount of pain." The committee will meet again in September to decide if any of their drafts will move forward as a bill during the 2025 legislative session. In Missoula, I'm Eleanor Smith. This is MTPR.