Roberto Miranda, a Cuban native who spent 14 years on Nevada’s death row before being cleared of all charges and freed, has settled a lawsuit against Clark County, the public defender’s office, and two former Las Vegas police detectives for $5 million. Miranda’s conviction and death sentence were thrown out in 1996 when a federal judge ruled that the defense attorney who represented him during his 1982 trial had committed glaring errors. The judge ordered a new trial, but prosecutors declined to proceed with the case and Miranda was then freed from prison. He filed a civil complaint two years later in 1998, arguing that his civil rights were violated when public defenders did virtually nothing to defend their Spanish-speaking client after he performed poorly on a polygraph examination by an English speaking examiner. He also claimed that police withheld exculpatory evidence during his trial. At first, a federal judge threw out the suit, finding that Miranda could not sue the county or the public defenders office regarding his representation. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit later reinstated the case, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the Ninth Circuit’s ruling, thereby opening the door for similar suits around the country. Miranda’s attorney, JoNell Thomas, stated, “There’s no amount of money that will give him back those 14 years.” (Associated Press, June 29, 2004; see also Spence, Maoriarity & Shockey Press Release, June 29, 2004). See Innocence.