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A homeless man was wrongly arrested and then locked up in a psychiatric hospital for nearly three years, lawyers in the USA say.
Hawaii officials are accused of wrongly detaining Joshua Spriestersbach for a crime someone else committed, before forcing him to take psychiatric drugs.
The Hawaii Innocence Project says the authorities then tried to cover up the mistake by quietly setting him free with just 50 cents to his name. A petition filed in court on Monday night has asked a judge to set the record straight on the remarkable ordeal.
The court document says Mr Spriestersbach’s nightmare started with him falling asleep on a pavement, while waiting in a long line for food outside a Honolulu shelter on a hot day in 2017.
When a police officer roused him awake, he thought he was being arrested for the city’s ban on sitting or laying down on public sidewalks.
He did not realise that the officer mistook him for Thomas Castleberry, a man who had a warrant out for his arrest for violating probation in a 2006 drug case.
But Castleberry had been in an Alaska prison since 2016, according to the document.
Mr Spriestersbach, 50, and Castleberry had never met but the homeless man somehow ended up with Castleberry as his alias, even though Mr Spriestersbach never claimed to be the wanted criminal, according to the Hawaii Innocence Project.
Mr Spriestersbach’s legal team say the error could have easily been cleared up if police had just compared the two men’s photographs or fingerprints.
Instead, despite Mr Spriestersbach’s protests that he wasn’t Castleberry, he was eventually committed to the Hawaii State Hospital.
The petition explained: ‘The more Mr Spriestersbach vocalized his innocence by asserting that he is not Mr Castleberry, the more he was declared delusional and psychotic by the H.S.H. staff and doctors and heavily medicated.
he was being wrongfully incarcerated for Mr Castleberry’s crime and despite his continual denial of being Mr Castleberry and providing all of his relevant identification and places where he was located during Mr. Castleberry’s court appearances, no one would believe him or take any meaningful steps to verify his identity and determine that what Mr Spriestersbach was telling the truth.’
No one believed him until a hospital psychiatrist finally intervened.
They made a few Google searches and phone calls to verify that Mr Spriestersbach was on another island when Castleberry was initially arrested, according to the court document.
The psychiatrist asked a detective to come to the hospital, who verified fingerprints and photographs to determine the wrong man had been arrested, two years and eight months after Mr Spriestersbach had been institutionalized.
The petition said it was not hard to determine the real Castleberry had been incarcerated years earlier.
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