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San Francisco Man Gets $13M Settlement After Being Falsely Framed for Murder by Police

A San Francisco man will receive a $13.1-million settlement after being framed by police and spending years in prison for a 2007 murder he did not commit. Suggested Reading The Root 100 – 2020 Black History Month – 2022 Hip-Hop 50 Year – 2023 Video will return here when scrolled back into view Stefon Diggs…

A San Francisco man will receive a $13.1-million settlement after being framed by police and spending years in prison for a 2007 murder he did not commit.

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

As a young man, Jamal Trulove was tried and convicted in the killing of his friend Seu Kuka in a San Francisco housing project. A state appeals court overturned the conviction in 2014. Trulove was acquitted in a retrial in 2015.

NPR reports that in 2016, Trulove sued the officers involved, and a federal jury determined that the two lead homicide inspectors on the case, Maureen Dโ€™Amico and Michael Johnson, not only made up evidence against Trulove but withheld evidence that would have helped him.

On Tuesday, San Franciscoโ€™s Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a $13.1-million settlement for Trulove.ย CBS News reports that he accepted that in exchange for the cityโ€™s dropping its appeal of the $14.5 million in damages he was awarded by a federal jury in Oakland last year.

Of course thatโ€™s not nearly enough, considering the emotional distress Trulove faced, including, in his words, โ€œthe fear from the time you get up ... the daily humiliationโ€ and the four years he spent without visits from his family because he was held in a remote location, according to the San Francisco Gate.

In a more recent article on his case, the outlet reports:

Trulove was an aspiring actor and hip-hop artist when he was arrested for the 2007 murder of his friend and neighbor in a low-income housing project. A jury convicted him of murder in 2010 and he was sentenced to life in prison. Alex Reisman, one of Truloveโ€™s lawyers, said Trulove spent eight years in maximum security prisons, mostly in Southern California hundreds of miles from family. He was also stabbed, Reisman said.

โ€œHe endured a lot,โ€ Reisman said.

SF Gate reports the jury found that detectives showed an eyewitness a single photo of Trulove rather than presenting the person with photos of other people as part of a lineup. Other evidence showed that the detectives were aware of another suspect whom they did not investigate.

No surprise here: The four officers named in Truloveโ€™s lawsuit have retired. No officers were disciplined for their roles in the case, according to his lawyer.

However, Trulove recently got on Twitter to say that heโ€™s not finished with these โ€œcowards of the law,โ€ not by a longshot.

https://twitter.com/10millimilli/status/1108187169762340866?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

This year, Trulove appears in the movie The Last Black Man in San Francisco, which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival, and scheduled for a wider release in June.

Straight From The Root

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