District Court Dismisses James Haley's Wrongful Conviction Lawsuit - Boston Man Was Represented By Chicago Attorney Jon Loevy
The Boston Globe is reporting that the a federal district court in Boston has dismissed a wrongful conviction lawsuit brought by Cambridge resident James Haley who spent 34 years in prison before a judge overturned his 1972 murder conviction. Haley learned in 2006 that certain police interviews had not been turned over to his attorney. The Suffolk District Attorney's office agreed the evidence should have been turned over and filed a motion to vacate Haley's conviction. Haley was freed on January 18, 2008 and prosecutors later decided not to retry Haley. U.S. district court judge Richard G. Stearns rejected claims that the detectives - now deceased - deliberately withheld inconsistent statements made by key witnesses and found that prosecutors - not the police - were responsible for disclosing evidence to the defense and that in 1972 the law was not clear on whether the prosecutors were obligated to share these witness statements with Haley's lawyer. Haley was represented in his civil suit by Chicago attorney Jon Loevy from the law firm of Loevy & Loevy.