“Two years of pure hell.”
This is how Forensic Justice Project executive director and attorney Janis C. Puracal describes the fight to free her brother, Jason Puracal, after he almost died in Nicaragua’s notorious La Modelo prison.
In 2011, Jason was sentenced to 22 years on drug trafficking and money laundering charges. But Puracal says there was no evidence to support his conviction.
Puracal, then a commercial litigator, got by on a few hours of sleep each night as she worked on the case with a defense attorney and investigators in Nicaragua and brought international attention to the case.
Puracal says Jason lost so much weight that he was “withering away.” He was deprived of food and clean water, and he also was suffering from untreated inflammatory bowel disease, she says.
Finally, in September 2012, an appeals court overturned Jason’s conviction, and he flew back to his family in the United States. It was then that Puracal realized her work had just begun. “I was just so grateful to the community that had rallied around me and my family. I wanted to give back to that community and create that same sense of support around others who have been wrongfully convicted,” Puracal says.