Tulessa
Well-Known Member
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- Jul 10, 2009
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Good for the Fergusons! I wish them well.
I hope he buys his parents an island! Welcome home Ryan!

Good for the Fergusons! I wish them well.
Ryan Ferguson is donating $1 for each of his upcoming "Fitness" book to the Innocence Project. I have to say one thing. He has quickly learned how to monetize his life and being a "victim" of the Justice system. Meanwhile Charles Erickson remains in prison for the same crime. What I do not understand is that if Ryan Ferguson's platform is to truly help others that have been wrongfully convicted, why not the co-defendant in his case Charles Erickson? Seemingly not one penny to Charlie's defense fund to help him. It was Charlie's coerced "confession" and other coerced "witness testimony", per Ryan's lawsuit. The witness testimony has been recanted across the board yet Charlie remains in prison. As a matter of fact Charlie has had to be put in Ad Seg due to threats on his life stemming from the re-airing of 48 hours episodes painting him as a "snitch".
JMO's
https://www.facebook.com/FreedRyanFerguson
https://www.facebook.com/FreeCharlesErickson
.In a ruling filed Wednesday, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals sent Ryan Ferguson's $100 million lawsuit against six people from the Columbia Police Department back to the U.S. District Court in Jefferson City, which must decide on the issue of qualified immunity
U.S. District Judge Nanette Laughrey issued the order about three months after the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had sent the case back, instructing her to clarify whether the officers should be entitled to qualified immunity. The order clears up the issue and allows the case to go to trial on several claims of constitutional violations, pending any further appeals at the Eighth Circuit level.
A man whose conviction in a Missouri sports editors death was overturned after spending nearly a decade in prison has settled a portion of his lawsuit against police
According to an online filing in U.S. District Court Western District, a settlement on the liability portion of the case is awaiting signatures and should be final by the end of this week or early next week. Attorneys for both Ferguson and the officers provided the status of the settlement during a Tuesday teleconference with U.S. District Court Judge Nanette Laughrey.
The city paid $297,750.11 to the firm Schreiman, Rackers & Francka, which handled the case for the city and the officers, five retired and one who is still with the department, since Ryan Fergusons attorneys filed the lawsuit in March 2014, Sarah Perry, the citys risk manager, said in an email. The amount paid at the end of April was the latest data Perry had for costs in the case.