Wrongfully jailed men call for change to England and Wales compensation law

. UK edition

Oliver Campbell and other people outside court building holding banner saying: Demand Justice Now for Oliver Campbell Fighting for Justice since 1990
Supporters join Oliver Campbell, centre, who cleared his name after spending 11 years of a life sentence in jail, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London last May. Photograph: Tayfun Salci/Zuma Press/Cover Images

Justin Plummer, Oliver Campbell and Peter Sullivan tell parliamentary inquiry they do not yet qualify for compensation despite being exonerated

Three men who have never been compensated for spending between 11 and 38 years in prison for crimes they did not commit, have joined calls for a change in the law in England and Wales.

Even after being cleared, people who spend years behind bars owing to a wrongful conviction have to prove their innocence “beyond reasonable doubt” to qualify for compensation.

The result is that claims from many high-profile miscarriage of justice survivors have been rejected.

Speaking on Monday at a meeting of the all-party parliamentary group (APPG) on miscarriages of justice, Justin Plummer, who spent 28 years in prison after being twice found guilty of a murder he did not commit, said he could not believe he was being denied compensation.

“It’s ridiculous. I’ve been through a minefield once. Now, on release, I’m thinking ‘oh plain sailing, I should be all right’ but no, no, no,” said Plummer, who was released last year.

“I do really need it [compensation]. I’ve got mental health problems through this wrongful conviction so I don’t want compensation for mad housing, mad holidays, I want it so I can get treatment.”

His lawyer, Katy Thorne KC, said it was absurd that people were required to prove their innocence beyond reasonable doubt, even after having been exonerated by the court of appeal.

“How on earth can you do that?” she asked. “You haven’t got the resources of the police to go and investigate the crime that took place in 1997 and find the culprit.”

Oliver Campbell, who spent 11 years in jail after receiving a life sentence in 1991, aged 21, for conspiracy to rob and murder, but was cleared only in 2024, said: “Everyone said: ‘Are you getting your compo?’ … I’ve been trying to tell someone but I don’t think he knows, [he thinks] ‘he’s got a lot of money’.”

Campbell, who has learning disabilities, says he was bullied into making a false confession. His lawyer, Glyn Maddocks KC, said it was more difficult to prove Campbell’s innocence beyond reasonable doubt because, when quashing his conviction, the court of appeal did not criticise the way in which his confession was obtained, the way Met police officers handled him, nor did it refer to statements by Eric Samuels, who was jailed for involvement in the robbery, exonerating Campbell.

“The message hasn’t got through that people like Oliver and Justin are not going to receive a penny of compensation, said Maddocks. “I think if the public knew that … they could be up in arms.”

Peter Sullivan, who spent 38 years in jail before his murder conviction was quashed last year in what was thought to be the longest-running miscarriage of justice of a living inmate in British history, was also present at the APPG meeting.

His solicitor, Sarah Myatt, said they had been told he would receive compensation but were still waiting, despite a call in parliament for his application to be prioritised.

Meanwhile, he was struggling to get by on benefits, she said. “When somebody has been through that process for all those years they shouldn’t have to face basic difficulties like that, she added. “Why can there not be an interim payment within even a few days?”

The Ministry of Justice has been approached for comment.