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Five Pardons Could Receive $750,000 Each In Restitution

Ronnie Long, pictured here in a WRAL interview, is one of five wrongfully convicted Black men who were pardoned this week by Governor Roy Cooper.
Ronnie Long, pictured here in a WRAL interview, is one of five wrongfully convicted Black men who were pardoned this week by Governor Roy Cooper.
Ronnie Long, pictured here in a WRAL interview, is one of five wrongfully convicted Black men who were pardoned this week by Governor Roy Cooper.
Credit screenshot WRAL
Ronnie Long, pictured here in a WRAL interview, is one of five wrongfully convicted Black men who were pardoned this week by Governor Roy Cooper.

Five wrongfully convicted Black men pardoned by Governor Roy Cooper on Thursday are now eligible for up to $750,000 each for compensation for their years behind bars.

One of those men is Ronnie Long. Long spent 44 years in prison after being sentenced to life for raping a white woman. He was exonerated in August.

Attorney Jamie Lau, who represents Long, says the restitution is not enough.

“He missed the funerals of loved ones, birthdays, graduations, the milestones of life,” Lau said. “So there's no amount of compensation that can make up for those losses, but, at the very least, it will help him have some security moving forward."

The other four men pardoned were Teddy Isbell, Kenneth Kagonyera, Damien Mills and Larry Williams. They were convicted of playing a role in a robbery and murder in Buncombe County. All were exonerated.

Lau added that these pardons will help all the men move forward with their lives.

“The recognition this pardon brings and the compensation that comes with it is significant and necessary to make these men whole again for what was stolen from them by the state of North Carolina,” Lau said.

Lau says North Carolina should make receiving restitution for wrongful convictions easier to obtain, and that the state needs to address the systemic problems that lead to the disproportionate incarceration and wrongful convictions of Black men.

For Cooper, who was recently reelected to a second term, these are his first pardons since he took office in 2017.

Copyright 2020 North Carolina Public Radio

Celeste Gracia was born and raised in deep south Texas. She’s always loved to read and write, so when she discovered journalism in high school, she knew it was for her. She graduated from the University of North Texas. She previously interned at CBS News Radio in New York and Morning Edition in Washington D.C. She constantly craves cookies & creme ice cream and enjoys singing along to Broadway musicals.