Santa Clara, CalifMay 19, 2006 — The California State Board of Control awarded $704,700 to John Stoll to compensate him for the 20 years he spent in state prison, wrongfully convicted of child sexual abuse. 

 

The Stoll case was one of eight Kern County multi-offender, multi-victim sex ring cases prosecuted in the mid 1980s in Bakersfield, California.  Stoll was convicted of 17 counts of child molestation in 1984. Witnesses who testified as children recanted their trial testimony and Stoll was exonerated in April 2004 after Kern County Superior Court Judge John Kelley ruled that techniques investigators used to question the children two decades ago “resulted in unreliable testimony.”

 

To this day, Kern County officials refuse to admit they did anything wrong.  Kathleen Ridolfi, Director of the Northern California Innocence Project (NCIP) at Santa Clara University School of Law and one of Stoll’s lawyers said, “It’s great that the state of California has acknowledged that this horrible injustice happened here and that they’ve agreed to pay John compensation, but it’s ironic that WE CONTINUE to allow Kern County police and prosecutors to deny what happened.  When are we going to insist on accountability?”

 

 After Stoll’s release in 2004, NCIP filed a claim for compensation on behalf of John Stoll pursuant to California Penal Code section 4903, which provides $100 a day for each day of wrongful imprisonment.  After investigation of the case, the California Attorney General and State Board of Control determined that John Stoll had not committed the crimes he was convicted of and recommended to the California Legislature that he be awarded $704,700.00.

 

“No amount of money can ever truly repair the harm done to John,” said Linda Starr, Legal Director of the Northern California Innocence Project.  “John was wrongfully imprisoned for almost twenty years – he lost one-third of his life, his relationship with his son, and his mother.  No monetary sum that can replace what he lost.”