MADISON, Wis. — A man who was freed this month from prison, where he was serving a 102-year sentence for a 1991 rape he didn't commit, is living in a Madison homeless shelter and doesn't have enough money to buy the medication he takes for several serious health problems.
Joseph Frey, 54, was convicted in 1994 of raping a University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh student. He was freed this month after new DNA evidence testing linked the attack to a now deceased man who was convicted of sexually assaulting two sisters in Fond du Lac after the attack on the student. At the time he was convicted, Frey was serving a lengthy prison term for an earlier Brown County sexual assault to which he had pleaded no contest.
When he was released July 12, Frey had less than a week's supply of the dozen or so drugs he needs for a degenerative bone disease, blood clots and other health problems. He can't afford more or the required follow-up visits to the doctor.
"I'm transient," said Frey, who is staying at the homeless shelter at Grace Episcopal Church in Madison. "I have no health coverage. Nothing."
Wisconsin Innocence Project attorney Tricia Bushnell, who helped get Frey exonerated, said the state doesn't provide social services like they would for someone released on a mandatory release date.
"In those cases, they get a social worker, they help provide them transitional housing, they look into helping them look for jobs or education," she told the Wisconsin State Journal (http://bit.ly/1b4WvQY ).
Frey is now relying on the Innocence Project for help in putting his life back together.
Had he been released in 2005 — after completing his confinement for the Brown County assault — Frey would have gotten some help transitioning beyond prison life, Bushnell said.