By Holly Crocco
The Putnam County Legislature’s Rules Committee unanimously approved a $20 million settlement with Andrew Krivak, who was exonerated in 2023 after spending more than two decades “wrongfully imprisoned” for the killing of a 12-year-old girl in Patterson in 1994.
The matter will be voted on by the full Legislature next month.
“I believe this is the right move going forward,” said Legislator Ginny Nacerino, R-Patterson, a member of the Rules Committee, at its Oct. 8 meeting.
Krivak filed a lawsuit Aug. 8, 2023, against the Putnam County District Attorney’s Office, Putnam County Sheriff’s Office and others in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, alleging civil rights violations resulting in his wrongful imprisonment, including an alleged wrongful arrest and prosecution and denial of a fair trial by fabrication of evidence in violation of his due process rights.
While Krivak originally sought $50 million from the county in compensatory damages, as well as other costs related to attorney’s fees and interest, the county – working with counsel, the Claims Committee for the New York Municipal Insurance Reciprocal, and its insurance carrier – negotiated a settlement in the amount of $20 million, of which the county will pay a $200,000 deductible.
Krivak was convicted alongside Anthony DiPippo in 1997 of the rape and murder of Josette Wright, a Carmel middle-schooler whose remains were discovered by a hunter in a wooded area off a dirt road in Patterson in 1995, a year after she went missing.
The two men were accused of raping and strangling the victim in a van that belonged to Krivak’s father, then dumping her body.
In May 2020, Westchester County Judge David Zuckerman vacated Krivak’s conviction and ordered a new trial after hearing evidence about statements that an inmate in a Connecticut state prison allegedly made about Wright in prison. He took his first steps as a free man outside the Putnam County Correctional Facility in November 2020.
The Putnam County D.A.’s Office appealed Zuckerman’s decision to grant Krivak a new trial, but that appeal was denied. The D.A.’s office then ordered a new trial.
That trial ended Feb. 27, 2023, when Krivak was found not guilty.
The conviction for Krivak’s “co-defendant,” DiPippo, was overturned because his trial lawyer never disclosed that he had previously represented Howard Gombert, a convicted serial rapist who is currently serving a 30-year sentence in a Connecticut state prison and who allegedly confessed to Wright’s murder to another prisoner.
DiPippo went back to trial and was again found guilty, but the court did not allow him to present evidence of Gombert’s guilt so that conviction was reversed by the New York Court of Appeals. DiPippo went back to trial a third time and was acquitted.
He went on to file a federal civil rights lawsuit against Putnam County and won more than $12 million in a settlement that cost the county $200,000 in insurance deductibles.
DiPippo and Krivak were tried separately because Krivak signed a confession, which DiPippo did not. However, the defense maintained that the confession was coerced.