Ruth M. Liebesman, Attorney-at-Law

Ruth M. Liebesman, Attorney-at-Law Defending and appealing federal criminal cases since 1986.

03/15/2026

For 13 years the state forgot to send him to prison… so he spent those years becoming the man they hoped prison would create.

In 1999, a 22-year-old man named Michael Anderson made a decision that changed his life.

He and a cousin robbed a Burger King assistant manager.

The weapon looked real, but it was a BB gun.

About $2,000 was stolen.

It was reckless, impulsive, and wrong.

Mike Anderson was arrested, convicted, and sentenced to 13 years in a Missouri state prison.

But then something almost impossible happened.

The system forgot.

The Call That Never Came

After his conviction, Anderson was released on bail while his appeals were pending.

In 2002, the courts rejected his final appeal.

He expected the call telling him to report to prison.

Instead… nothing happened.

His attorney eventually told him something strange:

The state appeared to believe he was already in prison.

So Anderson did what his lawyer advised.

He waited.

Months passed.

Then years.

Still no call.

The Life He Built in Plain Sight

Here’s what Mike Anderson didn’t do during those years.

He didn’t run.

He didn’t change his name.

He didn’t hide or disappear.

He lived openly under his own name in Missouri.

He renewed his driver’s license.

He paid taxes.

He registered businesses.

He stayed exactly where authorities could easily find him.

But what he did do mattered even more.

Becoming the Man He Should Have Been

Over the next thirteen years, Anderson built an entirely different life.

He started three construction businesses.

He married.

He became a father to four children.

He bought a home.

On weekends, he coached youth football.

He volunteered at his church in Webster Groves, Missouri.

Neighbors knew him as a man who showed up when people needed help.

A man who kept his word.

A man raising his children with responsibility and care.

Without realizing it, Mike Anderson had quietly become the exact kind of person prison rehabilitation is supposed to create.

The Knock at the Door

In July 2013, a corrections official finally looked at his file.

The error became clear.

Thirteen years earlier, someone had failed to send the order to bring him into custody.

That morning, a SWAT team showed up at Anderson’s home.

He was making breakfast for his three-year-old daughter when heavily armed officers knocked on the door.

He was handcuffed and taken away in front of his family.

After thirteen years of freedom, he was suddenly sent to prison.

The Question of Justice

Anderson spent nine months in prison while courts tried to answer a question no one had faced before.

What is justice when the system makes the mistake?

Should a man who rebuilt his life be forced to serve a sentence the state forgot to enforce?

The public debate exploded.

A petition supporting Anderson gathered over 35,000 signatures.

Even the man who had been robbed back in 1999 spoke out.

He told reporters Anderson seemed to have changed.

He said the state had dropped the ball.

And maybe the law should drop it too.

The Judge’s Decision

On May 5, 2014, Judge Terry Lynn Brown delivered his decision.

It took just ten minutes.

The judge acknowledged Anderson’s crime.

But he also looked at the life Anderson had built since then.

He said:

“You've been a good father. You've been a good husband. You've been a good taxpaying citizen of the state of Missouri. That leads me to believe you are a good man and a changed man.”

Then he made a remarkable ruling.

The thirteen years Anderson had spent living responsibly would count as time served.

His sentence was declared complete.

Walking Out Free

Mike Anderson walked out of the courthouse that day with:

his wife

his young daughter

his mother

all beside him.

After everything, he told reporters something simple:

“I just learned God is good.”

The Real Lesson of the Story

This story isn’t just about a mistake in the justice system.

It’s about something deeper.

For thirteen years, Mike Anderson lived responsibly when no one was watching.

He had no guarantee it would matter.

No reward.

No recognition.

Yet he chose to build a life worth defending.

And when the moment finally came—thirteen years later—

the life he had quietly built spoke louder than any lawyer ever could.

Many of the stories we share, especially Black history, were ignored or erased for generations.
Supporting African American History helps us continue bringing these voices and images forward:

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Every coffee helps me keep creating.

12/18/2025

Smith testified about his investigations into Trump at a closed-door hearing with members of the House Judiciary Committee.

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ca3.125818/gov.uscourts.ca3.125818.81.0.pdfAlina Habba is out.
12/01/2025

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ca3.125818/gov.uscourts.ca3.125818.81.0.pdf

Alina Habba is out.

PRECEDENTIAL OPINION. Coram: RESTREPO, SMITH and FISHER, Circuit Judges. Total Pages: 32. Judge: FISHER Authoring. [25-2635, 25-2636] (CJG)

11/11/2025
These are the quiet heroes that make the world a better place.
10/29/2025

These are the quiet heroes that make the world a better place.

This is Sharon, my mother-in-law.
She taught me it’s important work to see someone for who they are and not what you expect.
When I first met my mother-in-law I had a hard time understanding her thick south Virginia accent. And she seemed a little bossy in that southern passive aggressive polite way. But I knew she was important to the love of my life, so I accepted her grudgingly as some of us do when family is forced on us.
After 5 years I still didn’t really know her.
When my wife got leukemia at 30. When our world was shattered and changed forever, Sharon very quietly and very firmly stepped into the role she was born for. She moved, with her dependent Vietnam vet husband, into our house and became Michele’s caretaker too.
Over the last two years she bought most of the groceries, cooked almost every meal, did most of the laundry and cleaning, drove both dependents to almost every one of the 300+ doctor appointments, sorted tens of thousands of pills, and made sure they were all taken on time at every hour every day.
And she did this when she herself was diagnosed with cancer 6 months ago. When she was getting a mastectomy. When she is going through chemo.
She hums when she works. She talks to herself when there’s no one to listen, and she goes about every day with humility and grace.
I took this photo before I left work this morning. She didn’t know I was there.
This, friends, is what greatness looks like in a quiet moment. Waiting on oatmeal to cook for her daughter for the 300th time since she got sick.
Not everyone gets to have a real-world superhero in their lives. And for this I am filled with gratitude every day.
Credit: Scott Mann

10/21/2025

QOTD: "For most of history, Anonymous was a woman." --Virginia Woolf

10/21/2025

Self-sacrifice…. is the biggest sacrifice of them all. 13-year-old Jordan was trapped in the 2011 Queensland floods, along with his younger brother, Blake, who was 10 at the time.
When help finally arrived, time was quickly running out. And Jordan’s first words to those rescuers were: “Take my brother first.” Sadly, those were also Jordan’s Last words.
The teenager couldn’t swim, and chaos was all around him, and he pushed the rescuers away from him and had them take his brother first. Seconds later, after young Blake had been pulled to safety, Jordan, as well as his mother, were swept away by the floodwaters… and to their deaths.
Says Jordan’s father, who wrote about the pain of losing his wife and young son: “Tough isn’t always loud and brash and brazen. Tough is sometimes four words quietly but firmly spoken by a boy who couldn’t swim as water threatened to submerge him. Everyone can be tough when the need arises.”
Rest in peace, Jordan. May your wings take you to all the beautiful spots in heaven.

10/07/2025

There’s a man named John who’s been coming into my work for years. Today, I told him I was heading to Vietnam next week with my girlfriend. He smiled and said he had been there too — during the fall of Saigon. As a Marine, he helped load orphaned babies onto planes and helicopters during the evacuation.

I paused for a moment, then told him, “I was one of those babies.”

He looked at me, eyes filling with tears, and said softly that he might have held me in his arms during that mission — Operation Babylift.

We talked for a while. I thanked him for his service, his courage, and his kindness. Before he left, he said, “I’ll sleep better tonight knowing that one of those little ones grew up to have a good life.”

What an incredible man.
Thank you, John — for your service, your compassion, and for reminding me that I’m no longer an orphan. 🇺🇸❤️
Credit: Aron Moxley

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