Hypothetical: You are wrongfully convicted of a felony, how would you cope?

Coping may not be as easy as you think, and if you live in New York you may be in for a longer stay than you think.

I’m pretty sure that I’d go nuts.

I probably should have mentioned that I live in Scandinavia. The prisons over here tend to be, uh, somewhat less brutal than the ones across the pond. In an American prison, I’m sure I wouldn’t last 'til lunch.*

*) Source: Blood In, Blood Out.

Oh, yes! You should have mentioned that you live in a country where the word used for “prison” translates as “summer camp” in the rest of the industrialized world. :smiley:

That’s what you say now. That’s what I would be tempted to say about myself, but the fact is that most wrongly convicted people eventually resignate to their fate, as you wrote. It’s a bit presumptuous to assume you wouldn’t. I’m pretty sure they were all as outraged as you would be and as determined as you would be, originally.

And I suppose you’d make those ten years very long for only one party involved : yourself. It’s not like the prosecutor who nailed you or the police officer who arrested you is going to sleep poorly because you filed yet another desperate appeal that will get you nowhere.

This remind me of something I’ve seen some time ago about parole board and the current thread about accused showing remorse.
It seems that, in particular for sexual crimes, parole boards are very insistent on the the culprit “owning” his crime (admiting that he in fact did wrong rather than rationalizing it, etc…)

I wonder how it could not work against the early release of a wrongly convicted person. Presumably, he isn’t going to own his crime or show remorse. Won’t stating “I was innocent” be a sure recipe to not get an early parole?

Reminds me of the (fictional) trope of how, in a mental institution, insisting that you are normal and sane will cause the psychiatrists to label you ‘delusional,’ (even if you ARE normal and sane,) and when you get angry over not being believed, they’ll call it an ‘anger disorder.’

:smiley:

This is really more of an IMHO question than a Great Debate.
Off to happier climes.

[ /Moderating ]