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TRUE CRIME CRAZINESS: Man freed for wrongful conviction and given $4.1m settlement pleads guilty to killing a man for $1,200

A Philly man awarded $4.1M by the city for an overturned murder conviction pleads guilty to killing a man over $1,200

Shaurn Thomas, 50, spent 24 years in prison before his 2017 release.

Shaurn Thomas, who was released from prison and paid $4.1 million by the city after serving 24 years for a murder he says he didn’t commit, pleaded guilty Thursday to killing a man over a $1,200 drug debt.

Thomas, whose 1992 murder conviction was overturned in 2017, was convicted of third-degree murder and related crimes for fatally shooting 38-year-old Akeem Edwards last year.

That admission of guilt — by a millionaire who killed someone over a relatively paltry sum — means that the now 50-year-old Thomas, who has already spent half of his life behind bars, will now return there to live out much of what is left of it.

More than 30 years ago, a jury convicted Thomas of second-degree murder for the 1990 robbery and shooting death of a North Philadelphia businessman. For that, he was sentenced to life in prison.

His conviction was vacated by a judge on appeal in 2017, after documents emerged showing that detectives knew Thomas had a potential alibi but did not try to verify it. Investigators zeroed in on Thomas based on statements made by two alleged coconspirators, whose stories shifted and who later recanted their testimony. One of the men said the detectives fed him a false story and assaulted him until he repeated it.

While the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office declined to retry the case after the conviction was vacated, prosecutors said they were not completely convinced Thomas was innocent.

Thomas had been incarcerated since the age of 20, and was released just months before District Attorney Larry Krasner took office and dramatically expanded the office’s focus on reviewing old convictions.

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by Anonymousreply 6December 7, 2024 9:01 PM

The story gets even crazier.

Upon Thomas’ release, he joined a network of other Philadelphians who had been freed from prison after their convictions were overturned. Through those connections, he met Ketra Veasy, whose brother, Willie, had his murder case overturned in 2019.

Veasy and Thomas had been dating on and off for six years when, last fall, Thomas asked her to connect him with her childhood friend, Edwards, to see if he might sell some cocaine for him.

The two men met to discuss the deal. Thomas gave Edwards a sandwich baggie filled with the drugs and told him to bring back $1,200 from the proceeds. But Edwards never pai

by Anonymousreply 1December 7, 2024 6:18 PM

You can take the guy out of prison but you can't take the prison out of the guy.

by Anonymousreply 2December 7, 2024 6:20 PM

And that's the tragedy of overzealous prosecutions lying to put innocent men in prison, R2. After all, prison is the great school of crime.

by Anonymousreply 3December 7, 2024 7:34 PM

He's said he killed three people so even the first sentence was probably just in some way.

My only question is who gets the four million now?

by Anonymousreply 4December 7, 2024 7:41 PM

He got millions in 2017, and most likely by 2018 he didn't have a dime of it left, or anything meaningful to show for it.

These ex-cons who get this kind of money should receive it in monthly installments over a 10 year period. Very few of them have the brains, maturity, or the will power to handle that kind of money in one lump sum.

by Anonymousreply 5December 7, 2024 8:32 PM

Maybe he missed prison and was homesick.

SMH

by Anonymousreply 6December 7, 2024 9:01 PM
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