Plain English Summary
The Ronnie Long No Cap Act removes the $750,000 cap on compensation awarded to people exonerated of felonies in North Carolina, allowing them to receive $50,000 per year of wrongful imprisonment. The bill also directs the state to provide Medicaid coverage to exonerees and requires the Department of Adult Correction to offer transition services (housing, employment, sustenance) up to $25,000 per person upon release.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue that people wrongfully imprisoned for decades lose irreplaceable years, including life milestones and opportunities to build skills and savings, and that justice demands full compensation for all years lost rather than limiting payments to roughly 15 years. They contend that removing the cap, providing healthcare access, and offering transition services help exonerees rebuild their lives and reflects North Carolina's commitment to correcting grave injustices, as exemplified by cases like Ronnie Long's 44-year wrongful incarceration.
Arguments Against
Opponents may argue that removing the compensation cap creates significant and unpredictable state budget obligations, particularly for cases involving decades-long incarcerations. They might also question whether unlimited compensation is the most effective use of state resources compared to other priorities, and express concern about the precedent this sets for other claims against the state, though they would likely acknowledge the moral weight of compensating the wrongfully convicted.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors
Primary Sponsor
Senator · District 23

Primary Sponsor
Senator · District 24

Primary Sponsor
Senator · District 12