The first person freed from prison through Minnesota's new conviction review unit is now suing a former medical examiner and other authorities, alleging that they fabricated and withheld evidence to wrongfully convict him of his wife's murder.
Thomas Rhodes, now 64, was freed from prison in January 2023, nearly a quarter-century into a lifetime sentence for first- and second-degree murder in connection with his wife's drowning during a nighttime boat ride on Green Lake in Spicer, Minn., in 1996.
Rhodes' lawsuit, filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Minnesota, takes aim at former Ramsey County Medical Examiner Michael McGee, whose conduct has triggered multiple convictions and sentences to be tossed out in the past two decades. Rhodes' lawsuit alleges that, together with now-deceased Kandiyohi County Attorney Boyd Beccue and a Hennepin County investigator, McGee fabricated unsupported conclusions and provided false testimony to describe Jane Rhodes' death as a premeditated homicide.
"I have gained my freedom," Rhodes said in a statement Tuesday. "I now look forward to justice."
Jane Rhodes died after falling overboard during a late evening boat ride with her husband in July 1996. According to the lawsuit, neither person was wearing a life jacket at the time and Jane fell after losing her balance while leaning forward.
Rhodes failed to find his wife in the dark waters after a frantic search, and two fishermen found her body along the shore the next day. Rhodes cooperated with deputies and took a breathalyzer test that found no alcohol in his system.
Because Kandiyohi County's coroner had limited experience assessing drowning victims, McGee examined Jane Rhodes' body and listed her manner of death as "pending investigation." That status remained in place for five months, until McGee and Beccue held what Rhodes' attorneys called an improper private meeting used by the prosecution to "attempt to influence the determination as to the cause and manner of death."
Beccue offered up "circumstantial facts that were completely unrelated to the medical or scientific evidence" — noting that the couple had marriage problems and that officers "perceived" that Rhodes could not pinpoint precisely where Jane had fallen into the water.