At a Glance ...

State’s top court hears case on aid for wrongly convicted

DETROIT (AP) — The Michigan Supreme Court heard arguments this week in a case that could provide more money to people who are wrongly convicted of crimes.

A person who is exonerated gets $50,000 for every year spent in prison. But lower courts have declined to count time served in jail or juvenile detention before trials, saying the law doesn’t mention it.

The time can be substantial: People accused of murder, for example, can be held in jail without bond for months or years while awaiting trial.

“This is not as if we’re trying to be misers here,” said Chris Allen of the attorney general’s office. “We believe we’re only entitled to pay what the statute permits. That’s essentially our argument.”

He acknowledged, however, that the 2016 law probably wasn’t “perfectly drafted.”

The case centers on Davontae Sanford, whose murder convictions in Wayne County were thrown out because of police misconduct.

He was paid $408,000 for his time in prison, but he’s also seeking $27,000 for 198 days spent in a detention center for teens.

Sanford’s attorney, Julie Hurwitz, noted that people convicted of crimes get credit on their sentences for time served in pretrial detention. So it makes sense, she added, that the same time should be eligible for compensation.

Chief Justice Bridget McCormack, who at University of Michigan Law School helped free the wrongly convicted before joining the court, told Hurwitz that the “logic of your argument is easy to understand.”

Justice Brian Zahra said he prepared for the case by looking at a reference book on statutory interpretation by late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

“When it’s pre-conviction, is that detention wrongful?” he asked via video conferencing.

“Absolutely,” Hurwitz replied. “Once a person has been determined to have been wrongfully convicted, every moment they spend locked up and deprived of their liberty is wrongful.”


Man arrested trying to quarantine on private Disney island

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Florida deputies arrested a man who had been living out his quarantine on a shuttered Disney World island, telling authorities it felt like a “tropical paradise.”

Orange County Sheriff’s deputies found Richard McGuire on Disney’s Discovery Island last week. He said he’d been there for a few days and had planned to camp there for a week, officials said.

The 42-year-old said he didn’t hear numerous deputies searching the private island for him on foot, by boat and by air because he was asleep in a building. He told the deputy he didn’t know it was a restricted area, despite there being numerous “no trespassing” signs.

McGuire was arrested on a trespassing charge and taken to jail without incident. It was not immediately clear whether he had an attorney who could comment.

Previously called Treasure Island, Discovery Island had been the site of a zoological park before the island was closed to the public in 1999.

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