NY to pay $5.5 million to man wrongfully convicted in 1981 rape of Alice Sebold

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New York has agreed to pay a $5.5 million settlement to a Syracuse man wrongfully convicted in the rape of “The Lovely Bones” author Alice Sebold four decades ago, according to the Attorney Generalโ€™s Office and an a lawyer for the man.

Lawyers for Anthony Broadwater, 62, who served nearly 17 years in prison for the 1981 rape of Sebold, and attorneys for the state signed off on the agreement, which was first reported by the Syracuse Post-Stand and the New York Times, and confirmed by Gothamist. A settlement still must receive formal approval by a judge.

Broadwater was โ€œrelievedโ€ by the settlement, one of his attorneys, Melissa Swartz of Syracuse, told Gothamist. He also spent more than two decades on a sex offender registry before being exonerated in 2021 based on the efforts of three law firms, six lawyers and a new district attorney who championed his case.

โ€œHe’s been declined jobs, he’s been terminated from employment, he’s been told he can’t seek educational opportunities because of his sex offender registration,โ€ Swartz said.

“Anthony Broadwater was convicted for a crime he never committed, and was incarcerated despite his innocence,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. “While we cannot undo the wrongs from more than four decades ago, this settlement agreement is a critical step to deliver some semblance of justice to Mr. Broadwater.”

Swartz said the system that resulted in the conviction and incarceration of Broadwater, a Black man, was โ€œthe epitome of racism.โ€

Sebold, the bestselling author of โ€œThe Lovely Bones,โ€ was a first-year student at Syracuse University when she was raped, a crime she described in her 1999 memoir, โ€œLucky.โ€

According to an account in The New York Times, Sebold passed Broadwater on the street five months after the attack and told police she may have seen her assailant. But she identified a different Black man in a police lineup. At the time, Broadwater had returned to Syracuse after serving in…

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