INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A Chicago man who was pardoned after spending more than seven years in prison for an armed robbery he didn’t commit has reached a $7.5 million settlement with a northern Indiana city and former police officers.
Keith Cooper’s attorney said Wednesday that it's the largest wrongful conviction settlement in Indiana history.
An Elkhart city spokeswoman says the city hopes it “brings to a conclusion the obvious injustice that has been rendered to Mr. Cooper.”
Cooper was pardoned in February 2017 by Gov. Eric Holcomb, who said he believed Cooper had been wrongly convicted in a 1996 armed robbery in Elkhart during which a teenager was shot. A judge later expunged Cooper's conviction.
Latest Stories
-
Hoosier Voting Guide: Everything to know about the upcoming election
We are just two months away from the 2024 presidential election on Nov. 5. Here is everything Hoosiers need to know to be ready to vote, including critical deadlines, polling locations, and more.Richard Lugar Monument unveiled at Bicentennial Unity Plaza
On Tuesday, national and local leaders gathered downtown for the unveiling of a monument honoring former Indianapolis mayor and U.S. senator Richard Lugar.Man shot, killed on Indy's southside, IMPD believes second shooting related
A man died in a shooting on Indy's south side on Monday, in an incident that police believe was related to another shooting.47 dead, hundreds wounded in Russian missile strike in Ukraine, officials say
Two Russian ballistic missiles struck an educational facility and nearby hospital in a central-eastern region of Ukraine, killing at least 41 people and wounding 180 others.