Joe Ligon, America's oldest and longest-serving juvenile lifer, has been released from a Pennsylvania prison after spending 68 years behind bars.
Ligon was imprisoned in February 1953 at the age of 15, given a mandatory life sentence after pleading guilty to charges from a robbery and stabbing spree in Philadelphia with four other teenage boys which left six people wounded and two people dead.
A hearing found Ligon guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, and Ligon admitted to stabbing at least one of the eight people stabbed that day but his attorney Bradley Bridge said his client maintains he never killed anyone.
"The child that committed those crimes back in 1953 no longer exists.
The person that came out of prison in 2021 is 83 years old, has grown,
changed, and is no longer a threat," Bridge said.
"He has amply repaid society for the damage and harm that he did. And now, it's appropriate that he spends the last years of his life in freedom."
"I'm a grownup now," Ligon said to CNN
"I'm not a kid anymore. Not only am I a grown man, I'm an old man and getting older every day."
In the 1970s, Ligon and his accomplices were granted the option of
clemency from Pennsylvania's governor. But since clemency meant being on
parole, Ligon rejected it.
He turned down another offer of parole in 2017, stating parole would not
grant him the freedom he desired after decades in prison.
"The state parole board presumably would have released him but on
condition that he would be under their supervision for the rest of his
life," Bridge said.
"He chose not to seek parole under those terms."
Bridge, who has represented Ligon for 15 years now, ultimately argued
that a mandatory life sentence for a crime Ligon committed as a juvenile
was unconstitutional.
Bridge brought the case to the federal court and won the issue in
November 2020, which ultimately granted Ligon freedom under his own
terms in 2021.
Now Ligon is out of prison, and is trying to readapt to society.
John Pace, is helping Ligon acclimatize with society.
Pace was only 17 years old when he was incarcerated for mugging and assaulting a man.
He spent the next 31 years imprisoned. After being released, Pace said he felt a sort of sickness after suddenly being exposed to his new reality.
"You're in a prison environment where there's not a lot of stimulation.
You're not allowed to have contact with people. Your interactions are
very limited. And so, there's not a lot of stimulation," said Pace.
"So now you come out of prison, and just imagine all this, you can do what you want now. And what do you do with that?"
"There will always be people who think Joe should be in jail for the rest of his life," Pace said.
"Joe has control over how he demonstrates who he is today, and he hopes
that's enough to help other people realize how he's trying to help other
people use better judgment."
Ligon said he wanted others to learn from his experience.
"I'm really looking forward to pleasing people and help people the way
they're helping me," Ligon said, adding, "meeting some of the younger
generation, with some of the older generation, and some of the reporters
... to share some of my story."
Asked what it was like to be back in the world a day and a half after his release, Ligon said:
"Beautiful," he said. "Beautiful."