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Posted: 2021-03-03T16:58:40Z | Updated: 2021-03-03T16:58:40Z

The state of Mississippi has been ordered to pay $500,000 to a man wrongfully imprisoned for nearly 23 years the maximum amount state law allows.

Curtis Flowers was incarcerated continuously from his January 1997 arrest until his release in December 2019. He has always maintained his innocence and had no prior criminal record.

I feel good, Flowers, who was 26 at the time of his arrest, told American Public Media Reports on Tuesday after Circuit Judge George Mitchell ordered the state to pay $50,000 each year for 10 years, with an additional $50,000 for attorneys fees.

Thats the maximum allowed under state law. But it denies compensation to Flowers for more than half of his 23 years behind bars.

I believe it should have been more, but I feel good, Flowers said.

District Attorney Doug Evans brought Flowers to trial an incredible six times for the 1996 slayings of four people at a furniture store in Winona, a small town north of Jackson. Defense attorneys argued that physical evidence and statements from witnesses were too weak to convict him.

Two of Flowers trials ended with hung juries. Four resulted in convictions and death sentences all later overturned for prosecutorial misconduct.

Appeals eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court , which voted 7-2 in June 2019 that Evans, a white man, had purposefully sought to exclude Black jurors and thus denied Flowers a fair trial.