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Please help Terry with emergency surgery costs!
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Terry Olson was wrongfully convicted of a crime that he did not commit. After working with the Great North Innocence Project, he was freed from his wrongful incarceration in 2016 and spent the next 8 years recovering from this injustice and creating a new life for himself including finding a partner, adopting a dog, and beginning to build a new home.
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Now, Terry is facing an emergency spinal surgery, without which he will no longer be able to walk. Unfortunately, his out-of-pocket medical costs for both the surgery and his recovery will be astronomical. These bills are putting the home he’s worked so hard to build at risk.
Terry acquired property in Wisconsin in 2023 after years of saving and working to stabilize after his wrongful conviction. Terry was never compensated for his wrongful incarceration and has rebuilt his life through determination, grit, his mother’s love, and the support of his partner Tamra and dog Tmoe (the three of them affectionately call their family “Triple T.”)
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About this special home that he risks losing, Terry says, “I call this place a little slice of heaven. It’s fenced in which is great for Tmoe and is surrounded by trees, so it’s secluded from the neighboring properties. It’s quiet, so I get that tranquility I missed for many years."
Despite losing nearly a decade of his life being convicted of a crime that he was innocent of, Terry never gave up on himself or the possibilities that his life could be recovered. After uniting with his mother who never gave up hope of seeing her son freed and working diligently to heal after the extreme injustice he faced, Terry finally found some peace in his home and family. But the journey has been far from easy.
"The fact that I’ve been able to make this happen after my wrongful conviction is a testament to how hard I worked and how much I needed this. Losing it now to another situation that’s beyond my control would just suck. We really love it here. This has been a labor of love.”
Will you help Terry get the surgery he desperately needs and keep the home and life he’s built for himself after the pain and injustice of wrongful conviction?
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Terry's Wrongful Conviction Story
Terry was wrongfully convicted in 2007 for the 1979 death Jeff Hammill. Jeff had been found dead by the side of the road just outside of Buffalo, MN. At the time of his death, law enforcement investigated the case as a possible roadside accident or homicide, and ultimately the case was closed with no charges being filed.
One of the lead investigators on the case, retired Chief Deputy Sheriff Jim Powers, believes to this day that the case was an accident, and Jeff was likely accidentally hit by a piece of farm equipment being moved in the night when the roads are less crowded. Now retired, Chief Deputy Powers contacted the Great North Innocence Project early on in its representation of Terry, and continues to be one of Terry’s strongest advocates because of his strong belief that no crime ever occurred.
In 2003, police reopened the case by interrogating and ultimately securing a confession from a mentally ill man, Dale Todd. They told him that in 1979 they had taken and kept evidence from his car that contained biological evidence that proved he was involved in a murder. This was not true. The police had no such evidence but Dale was so frightened and unstable that he confessed and implicated Terry and another man, Ron Michaels. Ron was brought to trial first in 2006. At Ron’s trial, Dale admitted that he had been coerced to falsely confess and falsely implicate Ron and Terry. Ron was acquitted.
Several months later when Terry was brought to trial, Dale was coerced into reverting to the story he told police in 2003. Terry was convicted and sent to prison for 17 years. Days later, Dale wrote a letter to the trial judge explaining he had lied at Terry’s trial. No hearing was held on Dale’s recantation.
In 2012, Dale contacted the Great North Innocence Project. For the first time in many years, his mental health issues were now stabilized with medication. He wanted to clear his conscience and again tell the truth – as he had at Ron’s trial – that none of them were involved in the death of Jeff and that the police had frightened him into making a false confession. He provided a detailed affidavit explaining the circumstances of his false coerced confession. In addition, at a hearing on Terry’s request for a new trial, Terry’s public defenders admitted that they provided him with poor representation in several key ways. One of the attorneys acknowledged that there were budget cuts and staffing problems in his office, that his caseload was unusually large, and he missed several important issues in Terry’s case.
Although the judge ultimately denied Terry’s request for a new trial, the Wright County Attorney’s Office realized the unfairness of Terry’s situation. Their office agreed that in the interest of justice Terry should be immediately released from prison.
Terry is innocent and the Great North Innocence Project and all who have worked on his case know it too. Terry was given a choice no one should ever have to make, yet so many wrongfully convicted people are forced to make: be freed immediately but not exonerated, or stay in wrongful imprisonment and keep fighting from behind bars. He opted to be freed immediately to reunite with his sick mother in lieu of continuing a lengthy legal battle to be exonerated. Unfortunately, this means that Terry will never receive compensation from the state for his wrongful conviction.
Now, Terry stays in close contact with the team at the Great North Innocence Project and lends his support and voice in advocating for others who have been wrongfully convicted.
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Organizer
Terry Olson
Organizer
Siren, WI