amy: brian stephenson, what about compensation? anthony ray hinton was on death row for 30 years before he was freed, an innocent man. brian: there is no amount of money that can totally compensate you for that. they took something from him that they don't have the power to give back. but i think they ought to want to initiate anything they can do to pay for some of the outrageous injustices that this case creates. but if there is going to be any meaningful response to this, not only should he be compensated, but people should be held accountable. people should apologize. people should do some soul-searching. we should create some procedures that mandate that, when there is evidence that suggests the prison has been wrongly convicted, that that evidence has to be reviewed and he passed a -- b are viewed. he passed a polygraph test when he was first arrested. they ignored that. the court has immunized prosecutors and law enforcement officers and judges. in the thompson case a couple of years ago, i think that is a wrongly prosecuted