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Colorado Inmate Released 90 Years Early Asks to Remain Free


Rene Lima-Marin sits for an interview, May 7, 2014, in a meeting room inside Kit Carson Correctional Center in Burlington, Colorado. Lima-Marin was sent back to prison after being mistakenly released 90 years early.
Rene Lima-Marin sits for an interview, May 7, 2014, in a meeting room inside Kit Carson Correctional Center in Burlington, Colorado. Lima-Marin was sent back to prison after being mistakenly released 90 years early.

A convicted Colorado robber who was sent back to prison after being mistakenly released decades before serving his 98-year sentence asked a judge Wednesday to set him free again, arguing it would be unfair for him to remain imprisoned after he started a family, got a steady job and reformed himself.

Rene Lima-Marin, 38, was convicted in 2000 on multiple counts of robbery, kidnapping and burglary after he and another man robbed two suburban Denver video stores at gunpoint. A judge issued him back-to-back sentences for a total of 98 years.

But a court clerk mistakenly wrote in Lima-Marin's file that the sentences were to run at the same time. Corrections officials depend on that file to determine how much time an inmate should serve.

Lima-Marin was released on parole in 2008. He held a steady job as a window glazier, got married and had a son before authorities realized the mistake in January 2014, when a team of police officers returned him to prison to complete his sentence.

First Assistant Attorney General James Quinn said the case was an unfortunate mistake but not official misconduct, as Lima-Marin's attorneys allege.

Judge Carlos A. Samour Jr. did not immediately decide whether Lima-Marin should be released, saying he needed time to do more legal research. He got the case after Colorado's highest court refused to free Lima-Marin earlier this year, saying he should ask a lower court to consider his release instead.

Lima-Marin fought back tears as he told the judge he's experiencing severe emotional pain because of his separation from his wife, their son and her other son that he adopted.

“I'm supposed to be the head of the household, the person who's supposed to guide and lead them ... and I've been taken away from them,” he said. “I was stupid, and a dumb kid who made a mistake.”

But prosecutors said Lima-Marin should not be freed because he knew about the clerk's error and never notified authorities as he set about rebuilding his life.

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