The British government announced Wednesday that it intends to posthumously pardon thousands of men convicted for consensual sexual relationships with other men.
A proposed amendment dubbed the "Turing Law" was announced by the U.K.'s Ministry of Justice in a
press release
"It is hugely important that we pardon people convicted of historical sexual offences who would be innocent of any crime today," said Sam Gyimah, the U.K.'s justice minister. He said his office would seek to put the new policy into effect by supporting an amendment to Britain's Protection of Freedoms Act, part of the country's Policing and Crime Bill.
The BBC quotes Lord John Sharkey, who proposed the amendment, as saying some 65,000 men were convicted under now-repealed indecency laws and 15,000 of them were still alive.
Turing, who died in 1954,
was posthumously pardoned
Until 1967
The writer Oscar Wilde is also among those convicted of crimes related to homosexuality, in his case to
two years of hard labor
Many people who are still alive and were convicted of sexual offenses that are no longer illegal are already able to apply to have their names cleared.
A 2012 law
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