It might have been better for Mike Anderson of Missouri if he had been sentenced to life instead of 13 years when he was convicted of armed robbery in 2000. That way the time for his release would never have arrived and, more importantly, no one would have noticed that he had never actually shown up to serve his sentence.
If this sounds like a mess, it is. After being convicted of holding up a Burger King, Anderson, 36, was sentenced and was freed on bail pending an appeal. When his appeal failed he was told to await instructions on when and where to show up to begin his incarceration. He did exactly that, except the instructions never came. The years rolled by: he got married, got a job as a carpenter, had four children and became a local soccer coach.
That would have been that - even Anderson's wife had no clue about his past - except that after failing to bring him to prison because of a clerical error, the bureaucracy did not forget, 13 years later, to set him free, which is when the penny dropped.
Swat team arrived at his home a few days later and he was finally - extremely belatedly - cuffed and led away. He remains in jail now and a judge must decide if he should serve his original full sentence.
The predicament surrounding Anderson, who goes by Mike although his given name is Cornealious, has unleashed a raging legal controversy in Missouri and beyond. On Friday, Governor Jay Nixon received a petition from Anderson's lawyers asking that he grant clemency on the grounds that incarcerating him now, so many years after the event, would constitute cruel and unusual punishment. Not to mention that he has since become a model citizen.