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Bruce Lisker

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Height
  
5 ft 6 in (168 cm)

Weight
  
160


Name
  
Bruce Lisker

Spouse
  
Kara Noble (m. 2011)

Bruce Lisker Bruce Lisker A life in photos Photo 21 Pictures CBS

Full Name
  
Baby Boy Johnson (adopted)

Born
  
1965
Valley Presbyterian Hospital, Van Nuys, California

Occupation
  
Consultant (incarceration) Web design Motivational speaker Volunteer at Inside-Out Writers

Known for
  
Being wrongly convicted in the March 1983 murder of his adoptive mother, Dorka. He was exonerated and released from prison in August 2009.

Home town
  
Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles

Criminal charge
  
CA Penal Code § 187; Murder, Second Degree

Residence
  
San Fernando Valley, California, United States

Parents
  
Robert Lisker, Dorka Lisker

People also search for
  
Kara Noble, Peter Noble, Marianne Stone

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Bruce Lisker, an American male, at age 17 was wrongly arrested, tried, and convicted for the March 10, 1983 murder of his mother, Dorka, 66, in the family's Sherman Oaks residence.

Contents

Bruce Lisker 53 Bruce Lisker Christopher Ryan PhD

Lisker served more than 26 years of a 16-years-to-life sentence in California prisons, including the California Youth Authority (now California Division of Juvenile Justice; 1986-7), San Quentin State Prison (1987-9), and Mule Creek State Prison (1989-2009). His conviction was overturned in a 2009 ruling by United States district court judge Virginia A. Phillips, in which she found that his 1985 conviction was obtained through use of false evidence and ineffective assistance of counsel.

Bruce Lisker Suit against exLAPD detectives can proceed court rules

Lisker was freed on August 13, 2009.

Bruce Lisker truthinjusticeorgLiskergavinjpg

After initially declaring that Lisker would be retried for the murder of his mother, on September 21, 2009, the Los Angeles County District Attorney instead dropped all charges, admitting that they were unable to proceed with their prosecution of Lisker due to a lack of evidence.

Bruce Lisker The evidence seemed overwhelming against Bruce Lisker but

On August 13, 2011, Lisker married Kara Noble, a woman he had met during his time in prison, on the 2-year anniversary of his release.

On October 15, 2015, the Los Angeles Times reported that Lisker had agreed to a tentative settlement in his lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles in which he "accused police detectives of fabricating evidence to put him behind bars for 26 years." On January 19, 2016, the Los Angeles City Council agreed to the terms of that proposed settlement, awarding $7.6 million to Lisker. Confidential memos from the City Attorney to the Council, obtained by the Los Angeles Times, called Lisker's case "extremely dangerous" for the city should it be put to a jury, and said the results of doing so could be "financially devastating." City Councilman Paul Krekorian, who heads the budget committee that weighs settlement payments, called Lisker's case the “very unfortunate” result of police misconduct in the past, but that it did not reflect how the department operates today.

Commenting on two wrongful conviction settlements the City Council was settling that day - Lisker's, and that of Kash Delano Register, a man who served 34 years in prison for a murder he did not commit - Krekorian stated, “It’s just regrettable that these two individuals spent the better part of their lives in prison as a result of the inadequacy of the investigations that happened back then.”

Lisker's case has been featured in several Los Angeles Times articles, the first of which earned its authors, investigative reporters Matt Lait and Scott Glover, the Heywood Broun award on behalf of the Times. The case was also featured in an episode of the CBS News television program 48 Hours Mysteries, entitled "The Whole Truth," hosted by correspondent Erin Moriarty.

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References

Bruce Lisker Wikipedia