The Arizona legislature is considering new legislation that will compensate exonerated individuals. HB 2813 was introduced in February by Republican Representative Khyl Powell and easily passed in the Arizona House of Representatives in a 59 – 1 vote two weeks later. The bill is now awaiting consideration by the Senate Judiciary and Elections Committee, and according to reporting by the Daily Independent it is being “considered for inclusion as part of a final budget package.”
The bill would entitle individuals who have been exonerated to seek financial compensation, counseling, and job training. In addition, individuals may also seek an evidentiary hearing to seek compensation for “reintegrative services and mental and physical health care costs” post-release, as well as unreimbursed costs, fines, fees or surcharges, restitution, attorney fees up to $25,000, and “any other damages” suffered by the individual as a result of the erroneous conviction.
According to the fiscal note complied by the Arizona Joint Legislative Budget Committee (JLBC) that accompanied the bill, there have been twenty-four exonerations in Arizona since 1989, and DPI data indicates more than a third of that group were serving time on Arizona’s death row prior to exoneration. The JLBC estimates that the costs per individual for “past erroneous convictions” would be $937,5001, not including potential costs arising from an individual who might take advantage of the provisions in the bill that would allow them an evidentiary hearing to determine if additional compensation is warranted.
Since 1973, at least 200 people who were wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in the U.S. have been exonerated. Eleven individuals on Arizona’s death row have been exonerated since 1978. Collectively they spent just under 100 years wrongfully incarcerated before their release and individually almost nine years (8.9 years) on average ¾ more than twice the average time (5.6 years) served for all Arizona exonerees generally, as calculated by the JLBC. Seven of the eleven cases involved perjury or false accusations, and six of the eleven cases involved official misconduct.
Ray Krone would be one of the individuals eligible for compensation should the bill become law. Mr. Krone was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death in 1992 in Arizona for first-degree murder based on now discredited bite-mark evidence. Mr. Krone maintained his innocence throughout his trial. Saliva and blood were found at the crime scene, but the evidence was not subject to DNA testing until twenty years later. Mr. Krone was granted a new trial on appeal in 1996, and was resentenced to life in prison, again on the testimony of experts that bite marks on the victim were a match with Mr. Krone.
When DNA testing was finally undertaken in 2002, it found that the saliva and blood belonged to Kenneth Phillips, who was in prison at the time for an unrelated crime. Mr. Phillips lived near the crime scene and had never been a suspect in the killing. Mr. Krone was released from prison in April 2002 and all charges against him were dropped. According to the Innocence Project, Mr. Krone had “no previous criminal record, had been honorably discharged from the military, and had worked in the postal service for seven years.” According to The Exoneration Registry, Mr. Phillips pled guilty to the murder in 2006 and was sentenced to 53 years in prison. As a result of a lawsuit filed after his release, Mr. Krone was awarded $3 million by the City of Phoenix and $1.4 million by Maricopa County.
A December 2024 report by the Wilson Center for Science and Justice notes 39 states have enacted compensation statutes for the wrongfully convicted, in addition to Washington D.C. and the federal government. According to research by the Exoneration Registry, some states have had some form of compensation statute on the books for over a century: the laws in California and Wisconsin both date to 1913. Twenty-four states have adopted compensation statutes since 2000, most recently in Oregon in 2022. Among the eleven states2 without compensation statutes, four states have legislation pending besides Arizona (Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Arkansas, and South Carolina) according to the Wilson Center.
The compensation that individuals may receive as a result of being wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death represent are another set of costs associated with the use of the death penalty. According to the Exoneration Registry, in states with compensation statutes, the average compensation per exoneree is $838,106. This amount is roughly in line with the amount awarded to Kirk Bloodsworth in 2021, 28 years after his exoneration¾the first exoneree from death row based on DNA evidence. Mr. Bloodsworth was convicted in 1984 of rape and murder, but DNA testing conducted in 1993 excluded him as the perpetrator and identified another man, who was later convicted of the crime. Mr. Bloodsworth was also the first person to receive supplemental compensation under Maryland’s wrongful imprisonment statute. Under Maryland’s law compensation payments are authorized for each year of wrongful incarceration at a rate equal to the average of the state’s annual median income, as calculated over the preceding five years: Mr. Bloodsworth’s compensation was calculated at $721,237.40.
Sources: Howard Fischer, Daily Independent, Arizona lawmakers looking at compensation for exonerated prisoners, June 16, 2025; DPI: Death-Row Exoneree Kirk Bloodsworth Receives Supplemental Compensation Under New Maryland Wrongful Imprisonment Statute; Brandon L. Garrett and Luke Mears, Compensating Exonerees in the United States, Wilson Center for Science and Justice (2024); Exoneration Registry, State Statute Compensation Table (as of May 2025)