Current:Home > StocksInsurer to pay nearly $5M to 3 of the 4 Alaska men whose convictions in a 1997 killing were vacated -ProsperityStream Academy
Insurer to pay nearly $5M to 3 of the 4 Alaska men whose convictions in a 1997 killing were vacated
View
Date:2025-04-12 12:35:38
Three of the four Indigenous men who served 18 years in prison for a murder conviction that was ultimately vacated will receive a total of nearly $5 million in a settlement confirmed by the city of Fairbanks on Monday.
The convictions of the so-called Fairbanks Four in the 1997 death of Fairbanks teenager John Hartman were vacated in 2015 after a key state witness recanted testimony and following a weeks-long hearing reexamining the case that raised the possibility others had killed Hartman.
The men — George Frese, Eugene Vent, Marvin Roberts and Kevin Pease — argued that an agreement that led to their release in which they agreed not to sue was not legally binding because they were coerced. The men also maintained there was a history of discrimination against Alaska Natives by local police. Pease is Native American; Frese, Vent and Roberts are Athabascan Alaska Natives.
The legal fight over whether the men could sue the city despite the agreement has gone on for years. In 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up the case after a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in their favor.
Pease, Frese and Vent will each receive $1.59 million from the city’s insurer, according to a statement provided by Fairbanks city attorney Tom Chard. Roberts declined a settlement offer and his case is still pending, the statement said.
An attorney for Roberts did not immediately reply to an email sent Monday.
The city’s statement said the decision to settle was made by its insurer, Alaska Municipal League Joint Insurance Association. The association’s executive director did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
The statement said the settlement “is not an admission of liability or fault of any kind,” and the city declined further comment about it.
A federal judge in late September signed off on a request by the parties to have the case involving Pease, Frese and Vent dismissed. The settlement agreement was reported last week by the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.
Thomas Wickwire, an attorney for Frese and Pease, declined comment on the matter, citing Roberts’ pending case.
Terms of the settlement with each of the three men included a “non-publicity” clause in which the men and their attorneys agreed to not make public statements about the case until claims by all the men are resolved.
A state court judge in 2015 approved terms of a settlement that threw out the convictions of the four men, who had maintained their innocence in Hartman’s death. Alaska Native leaders long advocated for the men’s release, calling their convictions racially motivated.
The Alaska attorney general’s office at the time said the settlement was “not an exoneration” and called it a compromise that “reflects the Attorney General’s recognition that if the defendants were retried today it is not clear under the current state of the evidence that they would be convicted.”
veryGood! (88679)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Judge blocks Ohio law banning foreign nationals from donating to ballot campaigns
- Christa McAuliffe, still pioneering, is first woman with a statue on New Hampshire capitol grounds
- RFK Jr. sues North Carolina elections board as he seeks to remove his name from ballot
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Thousands of US hotel workers strike over Labor Day weekend
- Rapper Fatman Scoop dies at 53 after collapsing on stage
- American road cyclist Elouan Gardon wins bronze medal in first Paralympic appearance
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Race for Alaska’s lone US House seat narrows to final candidates
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Meet Bluestockings Cooperative, a 'niche of queer radical bookselling' in New York
- Georgia arrests point to culture problem? Oh, please. Bulldogs show culture is winning
- Trump issues statement from Gold Star families defending Arlington Cemetery visit and ripping Harris
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- On the first day without X, many Brazilians say they feel disconnected from the world
- Fall in love with John Hardy's fall jewelry collection
- Tire failure suspected in deadly Mississippi bus crash, NTSB says
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
New page for indie bookstores: Diverse, in demand, dedicated to making a difference
Police say 1 teen dead, another injured in shooting at outside Michigan State Fair
One man dead, others burned after neighborhood campfire explodes
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Harris calls Trump’s appearance at Arlington a ‘political stunt’ that ‘disrespected sacred ground’
Get 50% Off Ariana Grande Perfume, Kyle Richards' Hair Fix, Paige DeSorbo's Lash Serum & $7 Ulta Deals
Gaudreau’s wife thanks him for ‘the best years of my life’ in Instagram tribute to fallen NHL player